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Delicious and Easy Gravy
Whisk up your smoothest and best-tasting gravy ever with these terrific tips!
With this foolproof easy gravy recipe, and our secrets to getting a perfect, smooth gravy, you’ll never go wrong at a family or holiday dinner.
Foolproof Gravy Recipe
- ¼ cup turkey drippings (fat and juices from roasted turkey)
- ¼ cup Gold Medal® all-purpose flour
- 2 cups liquid (juices from roasted turkey, broth, water)
- Browning sauce, if desired
- ½ tsp salt
- ½ tsp pepper
Making Gravy
- Pour drippings from roasting pan into bowl, leaving brown particles in pan.
- Return ¼ cup of drippings to the roasting pan, then stir in flour.
- Stir in the turkey juices. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly. Cook over low heat, stirring constantly and scraping up brown bits, until mixture is smooth and bubbly.
- Remove from heat. Stir in liquid. Heat to boiling, stirring constantly. Boil and stir 1 minute. Stir in a few drops of browning sauce. Stir in salt and pepper.
Smooth Gravy Secrets
- Keep it lump-free by using a wire whisk when adding the flour to the drippings. Beat the drippings rapidly with the whisk while adding the flour, and there won’t be any lumps.
- Measure accurately. Too little fat can make the gravy lumpy; too much fat can make the gravy greasy.
- Be sure the mixture cooks at a full boil for 1 minute to cook the flour or cornstarch so the gravy does’t have a starchy flavor.
- If you don’t have enough drippings, you can use water from cooking potatoes, wine or tomato juice.
- If you have plenty of pan drippings and like lots of gravy or are serving a crowd, you can double or triple the recipe.
- For thinner gravy, decrease meat drippings and flour to 1 tbsp each.
Common Gravy Problems
What if my gravy is:
Greasy - Place a slice of fresh bread on top of the fat for a few seconds to absorb it; remove bread before it breaks into pieces.
Lumpy - Pour into food processor and process until smooth, or press gravy through a strainer; return to saucepan and heat.
Too thin - Dissolve 1 tbsp flour in 2 tbsp water; stir into gravy with fork or wire whisk. Boil and stir 1 minute.
Too pale - Stir in browning sauce, soy sauce or Worcestershire sauce in color (start with 1 tsp).
Too salty - Add a raw peeled potato, cut into eighths; cook and stir 5 to 10 minutes, then remove potato pieces.