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I find the best way to make brown gravy is to make sure I toast the flour for the roux to a nutty brown without letting it burn, using pan drippings and using a good beef stock to top up my liquid.
If I don't brown my roux I get grey looking gravy.
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Sautee some onion with butter and salt and pepper, add McCormick's brown gravy mix and cup of water, bring to boil... you now have a passable brown gravy. I too struggle with homemade browns... I make a killer white or cheese sauce though.
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I never did learn their secret.
(He made a roux, such as Kiwi mentioned, but he never taught me how to do it. I'm sure I recall his Mom mentioning about browning the flour.)
I haven't tasted good gravy in almost 2 years now.
My gravy is OK.
It tastes good, but I can never quite get it to thicken properly.
If I do get it to thicken, it goes too thick or ends up lumpy.
I started buying gravy mixes and even bought some Bisto. It helps a bit.
Too tired of living and too tired to end it. What a conundrum.
My mom makes the most amazing milk gravy....and she makes it look so easy. Just toss a bit of flour into the pan (that you've fried something delicious in), add milk and water. Stir. I don't know how she does it.
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Abby: "Dance?" ~ NCIS
Another way I've found to thicken pan drippings or broths is to use softened butter mixed with flour, instead of milk + flour, added right to the liquid.
I'll need to dig through my "Good Eats" DVD's but Alton Brown recommended browning the roux in the oven to keep from burning it. ( It was the Cajun episode with the Justin Wilson Parody)
They say crime doesn't pay. That must mean what I'm doing at work is illegal.
I'll need to dig through my "Good Eats" DVD's but Alton Brown recommended browning the roux in the oven to keep from burning it. ( It was the Cajun episode with the Justin Wilson Parody)
Interesting, I'd never heard of browning a roux in the oven. It looks like he doesn't make a full gravy in this recipe, but he does give ingredients and instructions for browning the roux in the oven: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/a...ipe/index.html I will have to try that!
I always just made gravey with drippings, flour, water and the secret ingredient. However as the secret ingredient is Marmite I am not sure what could be used instead.
Another way I've found to thicken pan drippings or broths is to use softened butter mixed with flour, instead of milk + flour, added right to the liquid.
Beurre manié [kneaded butter] classical french cooking technique =) been using it for years. Did you know it freezes nicely molded into little 1 tbsp pats? Then you pop them off the cookie sheet and store them in big ziplok bags until you need them =)
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