Gravy From a Brined Bird
- Total Time
- 25 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4tablespoons unsalted butter
- ½cup all-purpose flour
- Pan drippings to taste
- ½cup dry white wine (or use water)
- 4cups homemade turkey stock or low-salt canned chicken broth
- Salt and black pepper
Preparation
- Step 1
Make a roux: melt butter in a large skillet. Add the flour all at once, whisking until incorporated. Cook, whisking occasionally, until the roux begins to look grainy, 3 to 4 minutes. Set aside.
- Step 2
When the roast turkey is done cooking, pour the pan drippings into a bowl.
- Step 3
Deglaze the roasting pan by adding the wine, bringing it to a boil and scraping the pan with a wooden spoon, adding a little water as needed to incorporate the browned bits. Add to the drippings in the bowl. Skim off the fat with a spoon, or put in the refrigerator or freezer until the fat has congealed on top, then remove fat.
- Step 4
Make the gravy: Bring the broth to a simmer in a covered saucepan, then slowly add 3 cups of the broth to the cold or room-temperature roux, whisking constantly. Slowly add the reserved drippings, starting with a few tablespoons; taste, then whisk in more a little at a time until the gravy tastes right. Season with salt, if needed, and pepper. To adjust the consistency, add more broth for a thinner gravy or simmer for a few minutes for a thicker one. Keep warm until ready to serve.
Private Notes
Comments
Everyone has both great and horrible gravy recipes/ This is the classic and it is difficult to screw up - IF one follows the directions. OK. I too have screwed it up by using too much bird fat and too much flour: (I don't make it for that crowd anymore. having learned a lesson about turkey flavored wallpaper paste!) Follow the directions and serve it HOT. Made well, it is excellent.
This was so, so good. Best gravy I've ever tasted. The roux wasn't creamy. More like rough mashed potatoes. But it all smoothed out when I added the simmered broth and whisked furiously. We'll definitely be making this again. Thanks!
I used this recipe since I made the Kim Severson Dry-brined turkey (the recipes go together). It was delicious and very low stress, definitely a no-fail recipe.
Followed directions as is except adding wine/deglazing the pan as I had enough drippings without it. Turned out great! Simple and easy.