SOS Casserole combines rich flavors with crispy bread for a comforting slice of home.
The first time I made SOS Casserole, I was moving into my first apartment after culinary school, with boxes still sprawled across the living room. As I surveyed the sparse cabinets, I spotted the essentials: ground beef, a loaf of slightly stale bread, and of course, a block of butter. My dad had always said there's nothing like a good casserole to make you feel settled, so I decided to improvise with what I had. Stoically melting butter in a big skillet, I could almost hear him saying, "Let the flour cook for just a minute, so you won't taste the rawness later." Those little chef secrets never left me.
Balancing on a chair to reach for the big baking dish, I whisked and stirred with purpose, knowing the magical thickening of milk and flour would soon yield a comforting blanket of gravy. As the casserole baked, the apartment filled with a warmth that transcended the sheer function of heating food. It became a signal of home, even when the address was new. I found such joy in tossing those butter-drenched cubes of bread over the bubbling concoction, watching them transform into rich, golden croutons as they baked. The entire process was the culinary equivalent of arranging your new space, both unique and familiarly personal.
When the oven timer dinged, I pulled out a masterpiece of simplicity—crispy bread perched atop savory, saucy beef. Letting it rest for five minutes made for perfect slices, and I savored the first forkful, seated on the floor amidst unopened boxes. It was a dish that promised the stability of the old within a framework of the exhilarating new, much like my life then and now.