Slow Cooker Grits Recipe

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I’m not sure how old I was when I first tasted grits, most likely my Mother or Grandmother started me eating them as one of my first foods when I was a toddler. They both always made the best grits – creamy, buttery, and cooked to perfection.

I remember spending the night with Grandmother and waking up to the intoxicating, heady aroma of bacon crackling in her cast iron skillet. I’d quickly wipe my eyes and head down the long hallway of her house toward her kitchen where she was humming her favorite hymnals as she prepared our breakfast. I always wanted to be the first one into the kitchen with her when she was cooking to watch her perform her magic and to hopefully be able to taste test any number of dishes she was preparing.

Even as a young girl, I remember being mesmerized watching her in the kitchen. For breakfast she’d have a pitcher of orange juice, a pot of coffee, her bacon nearly done in the cast iron skillet that was slick and shiny from years of use. Her biscuits were neatly placed in one of her biscuit pans and rising in the oven while the eggs sat in a bowl on the counter waiting to be scrambled in a bit of the bacon drippings once the bacon had been cooked. But on the back eye of her stove stood a pot with grits thick from being cooked since very early in the morning with cream and butter just waiting on cheese to top it off.

Pure and total comfort.

Now I can easily buy grits in any number of varieties at just about any grocery store I step into below the Mason Dixon line and have even been shocked to find some when visiting other parts of the country. But old fashioned, stone ground grits are the preferred grit around my house. Luckily for me, you can cook them without having to get up before the rooster crows like my Grandmother did by using the slow cooker.

Here’s how I make them.

Spray the crock of your slow cooker with non-stick cooking spray. Then add in your grits.

Pour in your water..

and add your salt.

Now turn on low and cook overnight for about 7 hours.

When you wake up, add in your cream…

butter…

and grated cheese.

Stir, cover, and cook until all of your cheese has melted.

Serve it with another little bit of cheese and butter and enjoy.

Oh, and maybe scramble a few eggs and bacon to go with it. Grits are always better with a few of her friends.

Slow Cooker Grits Recipe

5 from 9 votes
Slow Cooker Grits make any morning easier. Get this recipe for stone ground grits cooked in the slow cooker.
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 7 hours
Total Time: 7 hours 5 minutes
Servings: 12

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups stone ground grits
  • 6 cups water
  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 2 cups cream
  • 4 tablespoons butter + more
  • 12 ounces grated cheddar cheese + more

Instructions 

  • Spray crock of slow cooker with non-stick cooking spray.
  • Add grits, water and salt. Cook on low setting for 7 hours or overnight.
  • Before ready to serve, remove lid and add cream, butter, and grated cheese.
  • Serve with additional butter and grated cheese.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cup | Calories: 357kcal | Carbohydrates: 17g | Protein: 10g | Fat: 28g | Saturated Fat: 18g | Cholesterol: 94mg | Sodium: 618mg | Potassium: 84mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 1025IU | Vitamin C: 0.2mg | Calcium: 235mg | Iron: 0.4mg

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

What’s your favorite thing to eat alongside grits?

Enjoy!
Robyn

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About Robyn

Robyn Stone is a cookbook author, wife, mom, and passionate home cook. Her tested and trusted recipes give readers the confidence to cook recipes the whole family will love. Robyn has been featured on Food Network, People, Southern Living, and more.

5 from 9 votes (1 rating without comment)

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Recipe Review




62 Comments

  1. Georgia Pellegrini says:

    I love buttery, cheesy goodness like this. I want to just bathe in it 🙂 I’ve never thought about doing it with a slow cooker but it’s such a wonderful idea.

  2. bridget {bake at 350} says:

    I fist saw people eating grits when I was in flight attendant training in Atlanta…I thought they were crazy. 😉 Now, I get it. And slow cooker? How smart!

  3. Kimmy @ Lighter and Local says:

    I have a new-found appreciate for grits and with the odd hours I’m working as of late, this is perfect for some yummy comfort food!

  4. Nelly Rodriguez says:

    This looks delicious! Add some bacon and I am ready to go!

  5. Mary says:

    Knew something looked wrong – once I clicked post comment it stuck out like a sore thumb – YOU’RE talking – not your talking!!!!!

  6. Mary says:

    Those grits – now your talking!!!! A great idea cooking in crockpot – will definitely give these a try. Great recipes with a family connection – what could be better!!! Thanks Robyn!

  7. Jill @ Home Sweet Hopkins says:

    So, when I moved to Georgia at 21, I lived in a home with a few other women. We were renting rooms from a couple who lived in a big ol’ Savannah home. The woman kept her pantry stocked for us. She told me she had never had oatmeal before the girl who was in the room before me moved in. I had never had grits. Still not sure about them but anything with a ton of cheese in it can’t be that bad, I guess. 🙂 This looks like a great way to make them – put it on overnight and grab and go in the morning. Not a bad idea.

  8. Amy | She Wears Many Hats says:

    I have never done them in the crock pot, but that’s the darndest thing!!! And cool too.

  9. Rivki Locker says:

    I can’t claim to know much about grits since I was born and bred in New York. But I do enjoy froed polenta cakes with eggs or garbanzos. I happen to have a post up on my site now with just that! This looks wo derful. I didnt know grits could be made in the slow cooker. So convenient!

  10. Cookbook Queen says:

    I love love love grits.

    But I always have them with sugar and butter. Is that weird? I really need to try them with cheese one of these days!!

    I really love hearing your story about your grandma’s cooking. It made me smile!!

    1. Annie says:

      I don’t like them like that personall, but I do know someone that would have them with sugar…..and jelly, too. So you are not weird. 🙂