Cheese Grits in a Mason Jar
Stone-ground grits cooked slow with butter and aged cheddar, poured hot into a sealed mason jar — by lunchtime they had firmed into something between grits and polenta. Still warm, creamy, and deeply satisfying, eaten directly from the jar with a spoon. A morning ritual from the Appalachian South that became a portable lunch through necessity.
Stone-ground grits cooked slow with butter and aged cheddar, poured hot into a sealed mason jar — by lunchtime they had firmed into something between grits and polenta. Still warm, creamy, and deeply satisfying, eaten directly from the jar with a spoon. A morning ritual from the Appalachian South that became a portable lunch through necessity.
Ingredients
- 1 cup stone-ground grits (not instant, not quick — stone-ground only)
- 4 cups water
- 1 tsp salt
- 2 tbsp butter
- 1 cup sharp cheddar cheese, shredded
- Salt and black pepper
- Optional: pinch of cayenne
Directions
Bring water to a boil with salt.
- Whisk grits into boiling water in a thin stream, stirring constantly to prevent lumps.
- Reduce heat to very low. Cover and cook 25–35 minutes, stirring every 5 minutes, until grits are thick and the raw starchy taste is gone.
Remove from heat. Stir in butter until melted.
- Add cheddar in handfuls, stirring until completely melted. Season with pepper and cayenne.
- Pour immediately into a wide-mouth mason jar. Seal tightly.
Wrap jar in newspaper for insulation.
- By lunchtime, the grits will have firmed but remain warm and creamy.
- Eat directly from the jar with a spoon.
Notes
Stone-ground grits have germ and hull intact — they taste entirely different from quick grits or instant grits. The texture is slightly coarser and more complex. Cheese grits in a jar were actually superior cold — they firmed into a dense, sliceable block that could be fried the next day (see Cornmeal Mush Cakes for the technique applied to grits).
Source: ClaudeBilly — Historically Accurate 1970s Appalachian Lunches