Southern Fried Squash (A Southern Staple)
Yellow and zucchini squash are a staple in most any southern garden. They're also the one vegetable that's easy to grow, thrives well and is abundant during summer! Usually
by mid -late summer, our garden is over-flowing with all those green and yellow beauties.
Squash is also very versatile! You can eat it fried, grilled, stuffed, baked. roasted, sauteed or even pickled. I love to add zucchini to quick breads, muffins and cakes or to use as a replacement for pasta. When it comes to southern fried squash yellow straight neck squash is my favorite (less seeds than crook neck), but I do fry zucchini squash as well. It just depends on what's ready to be picked in the garden.
The key to great fried squash is having a good, flavorful breading that sticks and yields a crisp, outer crust. To achieve this I use equal parts of self-rising flour and cornmeal! I also use buttermilk instead of milk.
I love the tangy flavor of buttermilk and it's also thicker than regular milk, which helps the breading stick really well. This is the time of year that you probably have more squash than you know what to do with, so if you're looking for a simple squash side dish, I hope you'll give this recipe a try.
Southern Fried Squash
salt and pepper, to taste
2 - eggs, beaten
1 - cup buttermilk
Heat a 1/2 inch oil in a deep skillet over medium heat until hot.
Slice the squash as the oil heats up. Slice into 1/4 inch slices and set aside.
Let the squash brown on each side before flipping.
Season fried squash with additional salt and pepper, creole seasoning and hot sauce before serving.
servings: 4-6
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