Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits are so unbelievably good and they can be picked up and eaten with your hands. I love turning comfort food into finger food!

Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits

These Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits are super easy to make. The simple gravy can be made the night before and refrigerated. This is actually preferable because you want the gravy to get cold and thicken up. That way it is super easy to place a spoonful of it between 2 biscuit pieces without it oozing out everywhere.

Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits made with refrigerated biscuits

 

Easy Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits

You want the gravy to be a little thicker than you would normally make it. There will be some leftover gravy and you can thin it with some milk, reheat it, and serve it in a bowl to dip the biscuits in.

Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits

To make this recipe as easy as can be, I use refrigerated biscuits, but you could definitely make a homemade biscuit dough.

Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits

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    Stuffed foods are so much fun. I like that there is a hidden surprise inside. These Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits are great for a weekend breakfast or make the gravy the night before and they are quick and easy enough to whip up for a weekday breakfast!

    Watch the short video below to see how to make Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits.


    Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits

    4.94 from 29 votes

    By Christin Mahrlig

    Prep: 15 minutes
    Cook: 16 minutes
    Total: 31 minutes
    Servings: 8
    These Sausage Gravy Stuffed Biscuits have a hidden pocket of rich and creamy sausage gravy. A delicious and easy southern breakfast!
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    Ingredients

    • 8 ounces bulk country breakfast sausage
    • 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
    • 1 1/4 cups whole milk
    • 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
    • 1/4 teaspoon rubbed sage
    • salt and pepper
    • 1 (8-count) tube Grands refrigerated biscuits
    • 1 egg, lightly beaten with a little water

    Instructions 

    • Cook sausage in a nonstick skillet, breaking it apart with a wooden spoon as it cooks.
    • Sprinkle flour over sausage. Stir and cook 1 minute.
    • Gradually whisk in milk.
    • Add garlic powder, sage, and salt and pepper to taste. Simmer until thick.
    • Either refrigerate gravy overnight or line a baking sheet with parchment paper, spread the gravy thin and freeze for 30 minutes.
    • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Pull each biscuit apart into 2 layers.
    • Place a 1-2 tablespoon spoonful of chilled gravy on a biscuit half and top it with another biscuit piece. Seal around the edges and tuck the edges under somewhat so they are less likely to pull apart. 
    • Repeat for remaining biscuits. Brush top of each biscuit with egg wash.
    • Bake 15 to 18 minutes.

    Notes

    Note: You will have some leftover gravy. You can thin it with a little milk, microwave until warm and spoon over the cooked biscuits.

    Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

    Did you make this?Leave a comment below and tag us @spicysouthernkitchen on social media!

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    Recipe Rating




    88 Comments

    1. Shelly says:

      One word AWESOME!!!!

    2. Kitty. Derian says:

      Fantastic idea. Plus you can season it to your liking. Perfect

      1. PAM TEER says:

        Sounds like a great “on the run” breakfast and with ingredients that I love.

    3. DAVE Davis says:

      SIMPLE AND EASY !

    4. Nick says:

      These are called kolaches, they are a Polish thing. Nice try โ€˜southerners.โ€™

      1. Richard Martin says:

        Kolaches are different. “A kolach is a type of pastry that holds a portion of fruit surrounded by puffy dough. Originating as a semisweet wedding dessert from Central Europe and later a breakfast item in South London, they have become popular in parts of the United States. Places of origin: Czech lands, Slovakia” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kolach

        1. Karen says:

          Actually Richard, Nick is right! Here in America (Houston) they do make these and they are called kolaches. The ones there are filled with a mixture of egg, cheese & meat, and other breakfast type fillings. Now if you keep reading on Wikipedia it will say that, but it says they are usually referred to as klobasniks…but every time I visit my father and we get them at the shop…they are only called kolaches. Hope that helps sort it out!

          1. John says:

            But, the bread is always, in my experience, a yeast roll. At least in southeast Texas. A stuffed biscuit is, more likely, a variant of a pig in a blanket

        2. John Forsythe says:

          One of the best places to get kolaches in Texas is at the Czech stop in West Texas just north of Waco and south of Hillsborough

        3. Dave says:

          No there not polish kolavhes.

          1. Dave says:

            My mom made these when I was a small boy and she was Cajun and Iโ€™m 77 years old, and her mother got the recipe from her mother. And also we put Cayenne pepper in the mix for a little bit

      2. Andrea says:

        This is not kolache. Kolache is fruit filled. In the south, kolache is a sausage link in a pastry. Google it.

      3. Stephanie says:

        More like Pasties! We make them all the time in the UP aka Upper Peninsula Michigan. Lol

        1. Beth says:

          Pasties have meat and potatoes carrots etc. close but not quite.

      4. Skew says:

        Actually it is a Czech not Polish, and Czech that came up with Kolaches came to Texas back in the 1800โ€™s so yes it is a southern thing.

      5. dj says:

        Koล‚acz may be the Polish pastry you are thinking of. Kolaches are Czech…

      6. Cindy says:

        What you described is actually a pig in a blanket. The recipe is simply sausage gravy with biscuits. A kolache is a puff pastry with mostly fruit in the center which can be seen.
        Signedโ€”
        Southern Polish girl

      7. Bitemae says:

        This is nothing like kolaches. Talk about completely different flavor profiles. Have you ever cooked before?

    5. Mike says:

      Where is the video link. I always see the suggestion to watch but seldom find the video

    6. Betty says:

      I make a big batch of sausage and gravy and pour into muffin pans and freeze until solid then remove and put into ziploc bags in freezer so when ever I want some I can just take out what ever I need. I also do the same for the biscuits. I can put 1 sausage and gravy in a bowl and place a plastic microwave dish cover over it and place a biscuit on top and micro a few minutes and have a great breakfast quick and easy

      1. Jackie says:

        That’s a great idea Betty! Thanks for sharing that tip for freezing! I may try the muffin tray portions with other leftovers as well. I think it will definitely cut down on waste too, especially with the kids! ๐Ÿ’ž

        1. Martha Gadberry says:

          Cuts down on waist also. We need to learn portion control in eating.

          1. Kelly says:

            Definitely would not cut down on the WAIST. But surely cuts down on waste. ๐Ÿ˜‰

          2. Breezy says:

            I did end up almost tripling the garlic powder because we are garlic freaks. This was so freakin good.

      2. Kelly says:

        That’s brilliant, Betty. I’ll definitely be taking this idea.

    7. Jaga says:

      Use a can of Cream of Mushroom soup and 1/2 cup of milk (I use almond milk) instead.

    8. LC says:

      Dying at the comments ๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚๐Ÿ˜‚. I think I’ll just keep putting the gravy on the biscuit. Doesn’t seem like enough gravy per biscuit for me.

      1. SD says:

        My thought exactly, so Iโ€™ll just have extra gravy on the side ๐Ÿ˜‚

      2. Lowell Kenney says:

        Looks like a way to get more gravy, but they didn’t show these biscuits smothered with gravy like I would fix them, double that gravy recipe.

    9. Leslie Joline says:

      I freeze gravy all the time so I am pretty sure you can freeze these. I would advise to take out the night before and put in fridge as the gravy will take longer to defrost. Enjoy!

      1. Regal Wood says:

        Freeze the gravy in ice trays. Makes it easier to handle and insert into biscuits.

        1. Pat says:

          I’ve been making them like that for years now. And they freeze well too. Pop a couple out of the freezer when you get up in the morning, by the time you get to work they’re ready to go in the microwave for a couple minutes and breakfast is ready.

    10. Helen says:

      This article is riddled with so many ads that I can’t follow the thread of the recipe