Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Yay! Chicken Fried Steak!


penguin

Recommended Posts

penguin Community Regular

I haven't made chicken-fried steak (DH's favorite meal) since January, before I was gluten-free. Needing iron desperately coupled with desperately needing to buy some meat at Sam's, the time had come for me to use up some cube steaks I had kicking around my freezer.

I have been deathly afraid of making chicken-fried steak gluten-free. I didn't want to disappoint. I didn't want to deal with wierd flours. I sucked it up and made the dish thusly:

Flour mixture:

2 c. brown rice flour

3/4 c. potato starch

1/4 c. cornstarch

3 tsp. xanthan gum

Other ingredients:

1c flour mixture

garlic salt

lemon pepper

2-4 cube steaks

2 c. milk or substitute

Oil for frying (I use shortening)

-Heat 1 inch of oil over medium/medium high heat in a heavy pan (I use cast iron)

-Season about a cup of the flour with garlic salt and lemon pepper (I've never measured, but slightly more than you think you need), and dredge cube steaks completely, lightly shake off excess

-Place steaks in the hot oil, and cook about 7 minutes on each side, or until lightly browned. Remove and drain on paper towels, keep warm.

-Remove the oil and reserve ~2 tbsp drippings in the pan. Heat pan over med heat and add ~3 tbsp. of the seasoned flour mixture and make a roux. After a few minutes of cooking the flour (stirring constantly), add 2 c. milk and bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Cook and stir until thickened. Season if necessary (there should be enough from the flour)

Serve with favorite veggies!

This completely made my day! DH didn't know there was anything different, and I'm happy to have this old family favorite back :D


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



wolfie Enthusiast

That sounds great!! I haven't had Chicken fried steak since I was a child!! My Mom used to make it all the time when we lived in Texas. I will have to give this recipe a try! Thanks for sharing!

mouse Enthusiast

This sounds so awesome as I love chicken fried steak. But, I have to leave the cornstartch out. Maybe I will use a little more potaote starch in place of it, unless you have a better idea. Thank you.

penguin Community Regular
This sounds so awesome as I love chicken fried steak. But, I have to leave the cornstartch out. Maybe I will use a little more potaote starch in place of it, unless you have a better idea. Thank you.

Yeah, I think any starch will do, I just had corn starch on hand. You could use tapioca, I don't, because I'm a bit sensitive to it. I don't see why more potato starch wouldn't work :)

Guest Robbin

This sounds great! Thanks Chelsea :D

indyceliac Newbie

that sounds yummy...i never made chicken-fried steak..but im gonna try this. thanks for sharing!

Mango04 Enthusiast

I can't believe I'm admitting this, but I always thought chicken fried steak was made with chicken :ph34r::ph34r::ph34r:

I've obviously never had it. I think I saw it once, in some sort of cafeteria, but the meat was not very identifiable :rolleyes:

Hmmm....it all makes sense now :lol:


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



penguin Community Regular
I can't believe I'm admitting this, but I always thought chicken fried steak was made with chicken :ph34r::ph34r::ph34r:

I've obviously never had it. I think I saw it once, in some sort of cafeteria, but the meat was not very identifiable :rolleyes:

Hmmm....it all makes sense now :lol:

I guess you're not from the South :lol:

When we lived in Syracuse and my friends would ask me what I had for dinner and if I said chicken fried steak, I got met with a :huh:

Same goes for ham hocks and beans, biscuits and gravy....I'm a yank raised by southerners, I'm definitely southern :)

Mango04 Enthusiast
I guess you're not from the South :lol:

When we lived in Syracuse and my friends would ask me what I had for dinner and if I said chicken fried steak, I got met with a :huh:

Same goes for ham hocks and beans, biscuits and gravy....I'm a yank raised by southerners, I'm definitely southern :)

Well I'm kinda sorta from Syracuse, in the sense that I was born there. So I know about things like....half moons? Isn't that a Syracuse thing?

But the Southern stuff...that is all lost on me. I always thought chicken fried steak was just some nasty part of the chicken fried up (I don't know why I thought this) :lol:

VegasCeliacBuckeye Collaborator

Thanks for the recipe Chels,

I made country fried steak tonight and it was delicious!!

It has been too long.

Now, if I can figure out how to make decent sausage gravy for my whole foods biscuits...

penguin Community Regular
Well I'm kinda sorta from Syracuse, in the sense that I was born there. So I know about things like....half moons? Isn't that a Syracuse thing?

But the Southern stuff...that is all lost on me. I always thought chicken fried steak was just some nasty part of the chicken fried up (I don't know why I thought this) :lol:

Yeah! Half-moons were the best! I thinkthe rest of the state calls them black and white cookies, how lame :P

How cool that you were born in Syracuse! Jersey and I even went to the same high school at different times and had at least one teacher in common :blink:

Now, if I can figure out how to make decent sausage gravy for my whole foods biscuits...

I think if you cook up the sausage and remove it then follow the same method/flour blend for the steaks, you should get good results that way. I made it with just cornstarch once and it was pretty gross.

Guest nini

Thanks for the recipe! Being a southern girl, I miss my chicken fried steak! I'm also missing my chicken biscuits and fried okra... help me! LOL!

oh, and if anyone can come up with a gluten-free recipe for Krispy Kremes I will kiss you!

marciab Enthusiast

Thanks for the recipe Chelse,

I am sitting here this morning trying to force myself to eat another plain rare steak. :blink: THis sounds yummy .. I copied it an will be making it asap. :D Marcia

jerseyangel Proficient
Well I'm kinda sorta from Syracuse, in the sense that I was born there. So I know about things like....half moons? Isn't that a Syracuse thing?

But the Southern stuff...that is all lost on me. I always thought chicken fried steak was just some nasty part of the chicken fried up (I don't know why I thought this) :lol:

Mango--you are from Syracuse, too? What a small world! I love chicken fried steak--my great-aunt introduced it to us years ago--she lived in Florida. Much later, we lived in Georiga for a while, and of course it was very common there.

Not only did Chelsea and I go to the same high school and all, floridanative (Tiffany) actually lives in the same neighborhood in Georgia that we lived in for 7 years before returning to NJ!

penguin Community Regular
Thanks for the recipe! Being a southern girl, I miss my chicken fried steak! I'm also missing my chicken biscuits and fried okra... help me! LOL!

oh, and if anyone can come up with a gluten-free recipe for Krispy Kremes I will kiss you!

What's your old chicken biscuit recipe? Maybe we can modify it :)

As for fried okra (yum!), I'm modifying a recipe from Paula Deen, as she is the perfect Southern cook :P

Open Original Shared Link

FRIED OKRA

6 cups oil, for frying

1/2 cup cornmeal

1 cup flour blend

2 teaspoons garlic salt/lemon pepper

1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper

2 pounds fresh okra, sliced 1/2-inch thick

1/2 cup buttermilk

Heat oil in a large, heavy-bottomed skillet or Dutch oven to 350 degrees F. (You may not need to use this much oil; do not fill the pan more than halfway up the sides with oil.)

In a medium bowl, combine cornmeal, flour, Seasoning, and cayenne pepper. Dip okra in buttermilk and then dredge in cornmeal-flour mixture to coat well. Carefully add okra to the hot oil and cook until golden brown. (It may be necessary to fry the okra in batches.) Remove from oil, drain on paper towels, and then serve immediately.

I'm going to say to use the same flour blend as for the steak, since it seems to work well for frying. I also changed her seasoning, because she had her house seasoning which is on the link I posted. I just changed it to garlic salt/lemon pepper because that's my house seasoning. In reality, her house seasoning is the same as mine except I use lemon pepper instead of plain pepper. :)

Guest nini

recipe for chicken biscuits??? I didn't MAKE them! I got them at Po Folks! LOL or at Bojangles!!! But if I had a good recipe for the chicken, I could put them on 123 gluten-free Southern Glory Biscuits...

oh and thanks for the Fried Okra recipe! I'm gonna have to try that!

jerseyangel Proficient

Po Folks!!! I used to love that place! My husband would go there and buy their sweet tea by the gallon. I think they have the best biscuits in the world!

MtLady Newbie
I haven't made chicken-fried steak (DH's favorite meal) since January, before I was gluten-free. Needing iron desperately coupled with desperately needing to buy some meat at Sam's, the time had come for me to use up some cube steaks I had kicking around my freezer.

I have been deathly afraid of making chicken-fried steak gluten-free. I didn't want to disappoint. I didn't want to deal with wierd flours. I sucked it up and made the dish thusly:

Flour mixture:

2 c. brown rice flour

3/4 c. potato starch

1/4 c. cornstarch

3 tsp. xanthan gum

Other ingredients:

1c flour mixture

garlic salt

lemon pepper

2-4 cube steaks

2 c. milk or substitute

Oil for frying (I use shortening)

-Heat 1 inch of oil over medium/medium high heat in a heavy pan (I use cast iron)

-Season about a cup of the flour with garlic salt and lemon pepper (I've never measured, but slightly more than you think you need), and dredge cube steaks completely, lightly shake off excess

-Place steaks in the hot oil, and cook about 7 minutes on each side, or until lightly browned. Remove and drain on paper towels, keep warm.

-Remove the oil and reserve ~2 tbsp drippings in the pan. Heat pan over med heat and add ~3 tbsp. of the seasoned flour mixture and make a roux. After a few minutes of cooking the flour (stirring constantly), add 2 c. milk and bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Cook and stir until thickened. Season if necessary (there should be enough from the flour)

Serve with favorite veggies!

This completely made my day! DH didn't know there was anything different, and I'm happy to have this old family favorite back :D

Oh my goush ChelE!! Consider yourself hugged!!! I have a freezer full of elk meat ( wonderful stuff!!) and use to make chicken fried steak with it but haven't since going on the diet.. My family will be so blessed tonight!!

By the way, does anyone have a good meal loaf receipt??? and I use to make a Chocolate mayonnaise cake using Miracle Whip.. anyone got a good substitute for that??.. My kids and Grandkids still ask for it..

Thanks!! MtLady

penguin Community Regular
recipe for chicken biscuits??? I didn't MAKE them! I got them at Po Folks! LOL or at Bojangles!!! But if I had a good recipe for the chicken, I could put them on 123 gluten-free Southern Glory Biscuits...

oh and thanks for the Fried Okra recipe! I'm gonna have to try that!

Oh, you just need the chicken & gravy part? Well that's easy enough! It takes a while but is easy. I guess you could easily do it in a slow cooker. Just dump everything in and leave it alone until you need to make the gravy. I'm going to have to try that!

CHICKEN GRAVY

1 whole chicken or 3 bone in chicken breasts with skin (my mom uses whole, my sister and I use breasts because there's less skin and bone to pick out later)

1 onion quartered

2 cloves of garlic, whole

garlic salt

lemon pepper

3-4 c. water

add a bay leaf if you want (my mom does, I don't) make sure to remove it at the end.

3 tbsp. cornstarch (or some gluten-free flour blend, whatever floats your boat)

1: Liberally season the chicken with garlic salt and lemon pepper. Rub the seasonings into the skin, under the skin, and any exposed part of the chicken.

2: Put the chicken, water, onion, and garlic into a dutch oven or large pot over high heat. Heat to boiling and reduce heat to low/med-low and cover. Simmer for approximately 2 hours until the chicken falls off the bone.

3: Remove the chicken and pick the meat off the bones. Set chicken aside. Discard the skin and bones and either check the broth for skin and bones or strain it. Remove the onion (if you can find it by this point, if not it's ok), remove galic cloves.

4: Bring the broth back up to a boil. Dissolve the cornstarch in a small amount of cold water, shaking it in a mason jar works best. Add the dissolved cornstarch to the broth and stir untl thickened to gravy. Season to taste if necessary, if you seasoned the chicken well enough at the beginning you shouldn't need anyway.

5: Serve over your favorite gluten-free biscuits.

Hope that helps! :)

MtLady Newbie

I'm laughing as I read your posts.. Being a MtLady from the West anyone knows that "Chicken Fried Steak" is made with wild game!!! At least that was the way I was raised.. Never in my life have I heard of a "half moon" unless it was on the out house.. Are we funny or what??? MtLady

Mango04 Enthusiast
Mango--you are from Syracuse, too? What a small world! I love chicken fried steak--my great-aunt introduced it to us years ago--she lived in Florida. Much later, we lived in Georiga for a while, and of course it was very common there.

Not only did Chelsea and I go to the same high school and all, floridanative (Tiffany) actually lives in the same neighborhood in Georgia that we lived in for 7 years before returning to NJ!

That is really crazy about you and Chelsea and floridanative. I didn't live in Syracuse for very long but my parents lived there for a while and we go back to visit every so often.

Never in my life have I heard of a "half moon" unless it was on the out house.. Are we funny or what??? MtLady

:lol:

jerseyangel Proficient
That is really crazy about you and Chelsea and floridanative. I didn't live in Syracuse for very long but my parents lived there for a while and we go back to visit every so often.

:lol:

How about that! We're going up there in a week and a half for my parent's 55th. anniversary. I haven't been up for quite a while--it's been a rough couple of years.

May9 Rookie

Try "Pamela's Products Ultimate Baking and Pancake Mix". I have found it in most speciality food stores. It is good for a flour substitute to roll meat in and fry. It says to add 1/2 cup of fine corn meal to 3/4 cup of the mixture to bread other foods but I haven't tried that yet. It is wheat-free and gluten-free. It has recipes for cookies, pancakes and bread right on the bag using oil, eggs and the mix among other things. All of which are delicious and don't taste wheat free at all to me. They do have a small nutty flavor though.

The ingredients are brown rice flour, white rice flour, cultured buttermilk, natural almond meal, tapioca starch, sweet rice flour, potato starch, grainless and aluminum free baking powder (sodium bicarbonate, sodium acid pyrophosphate, potato starch), baking soda, sea salt and xanthan gum. (I have tried my best to ensure these are complete and accurate.) The bag says the product is produced in a facility that produces products with tree nuts, soy and dairy. Here is the contact information - Pamela's Products Inc. Phone (707) 462-6605, Email info@pamelasproducts.com.

This product is great and I would swear by it for all wheat-free gluten-free diets. I have had no reaction to it and am pleased with their help. They also donate to celiac sprue research as well as Autism.

Guest Robbin

:):):) Chelsea, I made your recipe for chicken fried steak last night and it was a huge success. I used a couple of substitutions-sweet rice flour and potato starch and rice milk and lots of black pepper. (Southern roots here too. :) ) I was so excited I had made extra and had enough for lunch today. Yay! Thanks again.

btw- The "English muffins" by George foods are awesome just as biscuits. They are great with sausage and gravy. Really light and good and gluten, corn, and casein free.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Join eNewsletter
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - Hmart replied to Hmart's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      11

      Is this celiac?

    2. - knitty kitty replied to Trish G's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      7

      Fiber Supplement

    3. - knitty kitty replied to kpf's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      14

      ttg iga high (646 mg/dl) other results are normal

    4. - Trish G replied to Trish G's topic in Gluten-Free Foods, Products, Shopping & Medications
      7

      Fiber Supplement

    5. - Wheatwacked replied to Larzipan's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      36

      Has anyone had terrible TMJ/ Jaw Pain from undiagnosed Celiac?


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      132,345
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    rolland mcclay
    Newest Member
    rolland mcclay
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Hmart
      Hello again. Thank you for the responses to date. I have had several follow-ups and wanted to share what I’ve learned. About a month after my initial blood test and going gluten free, my TtG went from 8.1 to 1.8. I have learned that my copper is low and my B6 is high. My other vitamins and nutrients are more or less in range. After I glutened myself on 10/24, I have been strict about being gluten free - so about a month. I have been eating dairy free and low FODMAP as well because it’s what my stomach allows. Baked fish, potatoes, rice, etc. Whole foods and limited Whole foods. I have continued to lose weight but it has slowed down, but a total of about 15 pounds since I went gluten free. Along with stomach pain, my symptoms included nausea, body and joint pain, a burning sensation throughout my body and heart rate spikes. I still have them but I have them less now. These are the symptoms that led to my doctor appointments and subsequent diagnosis. I also did the DNA screening and was positive. So, at this point, the answer is yes, I have celiac. I have two questions for this group. Any ideas on why my enteropathy was so severe (marsh 3B) and my TtG was so minimal? Is that common? Or are there other things to consider with that combo? And this recovery, still having pain and other symptoms a month later (7 weeks gluten free and 4 weeks after the glutening) normal? I’m going to continue down this path of bland foods and trying to heal but would love to understand the reasons for the long journey. I read so much about people who stop eating gluten and feel amazing. I wish that was my experience but it certainly hasn’t been. Thank you again!
    • knitty kitty
      @Trish G,  I like dates, they have lots if fiber as well.  But what I found helped most was taking Thiamine (in the form Benfotiamine which helps promote intestinal healing), Pyridoxine B 6, Riboflavin B 2, and magnesium, and Omega Three fats. The absorption of nutrients is affected by Celiac disease which damages the intestinal lining of the small intestines where our nutrients are absorbed.  If you have constipation, where your body is rather pushing your food away and not interacting with it, the nutrients in the food are not being released and absorbed.  You can develop deficiencies in all the vitamins and minerals necessary for the body to function properly.   The B vitamins cannot be stored for long, so they must be replenished daily.  Thiamine B 1 stores can run out in as little as three days.  Constipation (or diarrhea or alternating) is one of the first symptoms of thiamine deficiency.  Thiamine needs magnesium, Pyridoxine B 6, and Riboflavin B 2 to make the intestinal tract function.  Thiamine and Niacin make digestive enzymes.  Thiamine provides the energy for nerve impulses to carry messages to the brain and back about digestion.  Thiamine provides the energy for the muscle contractions which move your food through the digestive tract. High calorie meals containing lots of starches and sugars can deplete thiamine stores quickly because more thiamine is required to turn them into energy.   Are you taking any vitamin and mineral supplements?  Correction of malnutrition is very important in Celiac disease.  Thiamine, the other B vitamins and magnesium will help with constipation better than adding more fiber.  What did your nutritionist recommend you take, besides just the fiber? The association between dietary vitamin B1 intake and constipation: a population-based study https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11100033/ Thiamine, gastrointestinal beriberi and acetylcholine signaling https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12014454/ Association between dietary vitamin B6 intake and constipation: a population-based study https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11584952/
    • knitty kitty
      @kpf, Were you eating ten grams or more of gluten daily in the month preceding your antibody blood tests? TTg IgA antibodies are made in the intestines.  Ten grams of gluten per day for several weeks before testing is required to provoke sufficient antibody production for the antibodies to leave the intestines and enter the blood stream and be measured in blood tests. If you had already gone gluten free or if you had lowered your consumption of gluten before testing, your results will be inaccurate and inconclusive.   See link below on gluten challenge guidelines. Have you had any genetic testing done to see if you carry genes for Celiac disease?  If you don't have genes for Celiac, look elsewhere for a diagnosis.  But if you have Celiac genes, you cannot rule out Celiac disease. You mentioned in another post that you are vegetarian.  Have you been checked for nutritional deficiencies?  The best sources of the eight essential B vitamins are found in meats.  Do you supplement any of the B vitamins as a vegetarian? Deficiency in Thiamine Vitamin B 1 is strongly associated with anemia which can cause false negatives on antibody tests.  Fatigue, numbness or tingling in extremities, difficulty with coordination, headaches and anemia are strongly associated with thiamine deficiency.  Other B vitamins that contribute to those symptoms are Riboflavin B 2, Pyridoxine B 6, Folate B 9 and B12 Cobalamine.  The eight B vitamins all work together with minerals like magnesium and iron.  So your symptoms are indicative of B vitamin deficiencies.  You can develop vitamin and mineral deficiencies just being a vegetarian and not eating good sources of B vitamins like meat.  B vitamin deficiencies are found in Celiac due to the malabsorption of nutrients because the lining of the intestines gets damaged by the antibodies produced in response to gluten.    
    • Trish G
      Thanks, I'm not a big fan of prunes but did add them back after stopping the Benefiber. Hoping for the best while I wait to hear back from Nutritionist for a different fiber supplement.  Thanks again
    • Wheatwacked
      If you were wondering why milk protein bothers you with Celiac Disease.  Commercial dairies supplement the cow feed with wheat, which becomes incorporated in the milk protein. Milk omega 6 to omega 3 ratio: Commercial Dairies: 5:1 Organic Milk: 3:1 Grass fed milk: 1:1
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.