Your Gravy Is Probably Great, but It Can Get Even Better With Tips From the Pros

Fat, flour, and liquid are all you need for gravy — plus tips from experts like Erick Williams, Jonathan Waxman, Anthony Bourdain, and the F&W Test Kitchen.

Gravy is the secret star of the holiday table. It can save a too-dry turkey and under-seasoned mashed potatoes and marry together all the diverse flavors on the plate. Good turkey gravy is like a covert bonus of cooking a turkey — just those caramelized drippings rendered from the turkey's long roast in the oven are enough to bring deep turkey flavor to the whole gravy. Of course, even if you don't eat turkey, or don't have those precious drippings, you can still make gravy. We've worked with dozens of experts over the years to collect their gravy wisdom. Here are our best tips on how to make perfect gravy every time.

Turkey gravy being poured onto sliced turkey
Victor Protasio

What is gravy anyway?

At the most basic level, gravy is a simple pan sauce that requires liquid and a thickener. Traditional turkey gravy usually has fat, flour, and stock. You can make excellent turkey gravy with just those ingredients, plus salt and pepper for seasoning. The flour and fat are cooked together to make a roux, which thickens the stock to spoon-coating consistency. A traditional roux uses roughly an equal amount of flour and fat, but gravies often call for a bit more flour than that, to ensure the gravy is thick enough. (The classic ratio for gravy is three:two:one, so 3 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons fat, and 1 cup of hot stock.) You can add other flavors to the mixture, swap out the stock for another liquid, or use cornstarch rather than flour to thicken your gravy. But the backbone of the sauce is a flavorful liquid plus a thickener to increase the liquid's viscosity.

Erick Williams on roux and sausage gravy

Roux can be taken to a range of stages of cooking, from white to blond to deep brown, and chef Erick Williams relies on that versatility to make a day like Thanksgiving go smoothly. If you’re feeling ambitious, Williams suggests making a double batch of roux at breakfast time, stirring it just until peanut buttery in color, and then splitting the batch in half. Stir milk and stock into half of the roux to make Sausage Gravy for biscuits to tide folks over until dinner. Later, the remaining roux can be returned to the stove and cooked further, to the color of milk chocolate, before stirring in drippings and stock for turkey gravy.

Fat goes first

To build gravy, the first thing that goes in the pan is fat. If you have drippings from your turkey at the bottom of the roasting pan, you can use that. For a gravy that serves about 16 people, former F&W food editor Kelsey Youngman recommends 1/4 cup of drippings for the gravy. If you don't have that much, or any at all, you can supplement or substitute other fats for the drippings. Bacon grease is a great choice, or you can use melted butter or oil. Warm the fat in the saucepan you'll use for the gravy over medium-low heat.

Anthony Bourdain on adding turkey essence

Buy a separate bag of wings and necks to prep the stock that will give the stuffing its essential turkey flavor and provide the base for what you probably call gravy but what is, in fact, a sauce.

Think about aromatics

Now is the time to add an extra flavor element to your gravy if you so choose, like sweet onions and garlic or mushrooms and herbs. Cook the vegetables in the hot fat until they've softened and the onions have just started to brown around the edges. You don't have to include anything additional if you don't want to, but this is the window to enhance your gravy's flavor with herbaceous or onion-y notes.

Dana Cowin and Jonathan Waxman on preventing clumps

Dana Cowin: I started my gravy with bacon and shallots (no drippings required). Everything went well until I spooned in the flour. The gravy clumped mercilessly.
Jonathan Waxman: Spoon the flour into a fine-mesh sieve and then sift it into the pan. Since the flour lands in the skillet like a dusting of snow, it's impossible to create lumps.

Choose your thickener

If you're using flour as your thickener, now is the time to add it. To avoid lumpy gravy, use a fine-mesh sieve to sprinkle the flour over the fat or drippings and the optional cooked vegetables. Youngman's recipe calls for seven tablespoons of flour to 1/4 cup of fat, just shy of a 2:1 ratio of flour to fat. If you're working with less gravy, or worried about it getting too thick, cut down on the amount of flour. You can always thicken the gravy more later. Whisk the flour into the fat slowly over the heat until it's well incorporated.

If you're using cornstarch for your thickener, you'll want to wait until you have the stock in the pan to add it. Cornstarch has twice the thickening power of flour, so it's best to go slowly and add a little at a time until the gravy reaches your desired consistency. The best way to do that is to make a slurry of one tablespoon cornstarch to one cup of cool stock, whisked together. Add the stock and cornstarch slowly once the liquid in the pan has gotten up to a simmer, whisking the whole time.

Ann Taylor Pittman on the ideal flour for gravy

Wondra flour helps ensure a smooth consistency.

Deglaze with liquid

Now is the point where you add liquid to the situation. Turkey stock is the traditional gravy ingredient, but you can use whatever stock you have on hand. In Youngman's Best Ever Turkey Gravy, she adds four cups of stock to the pan, but you can adjust that up or down in proportion to the amount of fat and flour you're using. Add a little bit of the stock at first, roughly 1/2 cup, and scrape up the drippings and browned bits of meat or vegetable from the bottom of the pan. Then gradually whisk the rest of the liquid into the mixture slowly, stirring to make sure the broth, thickener, and aromatics are well incorporated.

Hunter Lewis on making turkey stock

Turkey backs, necks, and wings all possess mighty flavor and collagen, which gives your stock more body. You'll find them in the supermarket in the weeks leading up to the feast. Draw out the roasted turkey flavors by browning the turkey parts over a bed of aromatic vegetables in a heavy-duty rimmed baking sheet, a pan low slung enough to aid in caramelization yet tall enough to capture the valuable juices that drip and concentrate on the bottom.

Let it come together

Bring the gravy up to a simmer, continuing to whisk, and it should start to thicken up. The ideal consistency for gravy is memorably described by the French as nappant, or thick enough to coat a spoon. If you dip a spoon in the gravy, you should be able to run your finger along the back of the spoon and leave a trail. If you've simmered the gravy for 10 minutes and it's still not thick enough, don't fret — you've got options. You can always make a quick paste of equal amounts (say, a tablespoon each) of softened butter and flour, which is called a beurre manie. Crumble the paste into the simmering liquid, a bit at a time, whisking all the while and allowing the gravy to thicken for a minute or two before adding more.

Jeremiah Tower on keeping gravy warm

The main protein and accoutrements — Tower is not against turkey, though he himself would prefer goose — go onto a central buffet in the kitchen straight out of the oven, along with a thermos of gravy (gravy, he complains, is always cold).

Season to taste

Once the gravy is lusciously nappant, you can adjust the seasoning. It's always a good policy to wait until the sauce is reduced and sufficiently thickened before adding salt; adding it in the beginning can result in an overly salty sauce. Taste the gravy and add salt and pepper to your liking. You can add other spices as well, depending on what flavor profile you're going for. Smoked paprika or chopped-up chipotle in adobo adds a smoky, spicy hit, for example. Feel free to experiment a bit.

Javier Cabral on building flavorful gravy

This vibrant buttermilk-poblano gravy combines the best of Mexican and American worlds. Fire-roasted poblanos add everything that a fresh green chile has to offer in terms of smokiness and flavor without the heat (unlike a jalapeño or serrano which would be an automatic turn-off to the heat-averse). The buttermilk adds a refreshing tang that will keep you ladling more and more over turkey, chicken, or potatoes. 

Too thick?

The gravy tends to thicken as it sits, particularly in the fridge overnight. Not to worry — whisk in more hot stock or hot water, a tablespoon at a time, until the sauce gets to the consistency you're looking for. It's all gravy.

Tina Ujlaki on fixing gravy mistakes

The consistency of gravy is easy to correct. If your gravy is thin, simply make a smooth paste with equal amounts of all-purpose flour and unsalted butter, bring your gravy to a boil and gradually whisk in bits of the paste until you get the thickness you desire. Be sure to cook the gravy for at least 5 minutes after you've added the paste, in order to eliminate any raw flour flavor. As a general guideline, for 2 cups of liquid, 3 tablespoons each of butter and flour will yield a lightly thickened gravy; 4 tablespoons each will yield a medium-thick one.

Jean Anderson on Storing Gravy

To store, pour leftover gravy into half-pint freezer containers. leaving half an inch headroom. and snap on the lids. Date, label and freeze for up to one month.

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