Saturday, October 16, 2010

You Make the Call: Great Gator Moments





Which is better? Giving your best Gator cheer in the middle of Univ. Ave. 
on a beautiful autumn day to great applause?





Or walloping your sister with an inflatable Gator hammer in the middle of Univ. Ave.?



It's great to be a Florida Gator!  Go Gators!

Homecoming Parade 2010 Highlights

Here's a few early favorites from the Homecoming Parade.

Gator Gallop  1979









 












Friday, October 15, 2010

It's Five o'clock in Hogtown and it's gonna be a good night!

No one has a homecoming as great as The University of Florida.  And this week's song selection is the Gator Nation's feelings towards the 2010 Gators.  See you at Growl!




Food Friday: Grit Bread

Since the Gators are playing a Mississippi team we thought it would be good to go deep South for today's recipe. Haven't tried this one yet, but will soon. If you try it, let us know how you liked it!

Recipe is from NPR.

Grit bread is similar to cornbread, but it's made with pure stone-ground grits, giving it a texture unlike any you've ever tasted. This bread is dense, moist and not at all sweet on the inside while golden and crusty on the outside. You can find stone-ground cornmeal in specialty and organic grocery stores.

Serves 8

1 cup plain white stone-ground cornmeal (not instant)
3/4 cup yellow self-rising cornbread mix
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/3 teaspoon baking soda

3 tablespoons sausage, bacon, country ham, or pork chop drippings (Crisco or half butter and half Crisco will work as substitutes)

1/4 cup plain white stone-ground grits
3/4 cup water
1 egg
1 cup buttermilk

Preheat oven to 475 degrees.

Sift white cornmeal, cornbread mix, sugar, salt and baking soda into a big mixing bowl. Add fat drippings to a cast-iron cornbread pan (or muffin or cornstick pan) and warm it on the stove. When drippings are melted, tilt pan so the sides and bottom are well greased. Then pour off and reserve two tablespoons of drippings.
Mix grits and water in a bowl and microwave on high for 3 minutes. Stop and stir and then microwave again on high for 3 minutes and set aside. The grits will be about half done, but that's OK. Whisk egg in a bowl. Then mix egg with buttermilk and add to the dry ingredients. Stir until the batter is well mixed but still a bit on the firm and dry side. Add the reserved pan drippings and grits. Mix all of the ingredients well with a large spoon. (If grits and water have cooled, reheat for 30 seconds before adding.) Your batter shouldn't be too dry or too wet, but somewhere in between.

Pour batter into pan and bake for 20 to 25 minutes. (Cornsticks take slightly less time.) Your grit bread is done when a nice, golden brown crust has formed. Now, all you need to do is get a big slab of butter and dig in!

Cooking Tip: Leftover grit bread makes mouthwatering fried cornbread. Just heat up a griddle or cast-iron pan and drop in a small bit of butter. Then fry up your leftover cornbread wedges until they are nice and golden brown.

Gator Rice Crispy Treats



All the way from Panama City courtesy FL15gatorgirl

Thursday, October 14, 2010

You've got the Look: Jenn Brown in Gator Gear


Jenn Brown, at home in front of the Swamp.
Happy Homecoming and Go Gators!


Louis' Closing

Gainesville's oldest restaurant is closing after 82 years of service. Louis' will be closing on Oct. 30.  If you can, stop by one last time, but be prepared to wait.






What would Alberta think?





Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Gator Rides: Old School Cool

In honor of UF Homecoming we'll be going old school today.

A sweet Gator Ride need not necessarily be orange and blue and this is a prime example.
Gator greatness can sometimes be in the details.



UF Graduation tassel on the rear view
and an alligator from Lulu's Bait Shack in Atlanta on the dash.
That's Gator cool.



"Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness." -  Mark Twain
Makes you wonder if Mr. Twain would have liked knowing that his words are on such a sweet ride.

Daisy Dukes



Remember, we don't call them "jorts."  We call them "Daisy Dukes."

You Make the Call: Gator Helmets

Which Gator helmet do you like best?

UF helmet photo courtesy UltraGator

Tuesday, October 12, 2010