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Posted

I made gravy for the first time by taking the liquid from chicken cooked in wine and water and pouring it in a roux. It was delicious bit the gravy seperated and wasn't consitant. Any tips to get a good even consistancy?

Posted (edited)

A gravy made with roux shouldn't separate. Try adding the liquid a little at a time to the roux, stirring and bringing it up to a boil so it thickens, adding more, and repeating until you reach the desired quantity and consistency. If you leave it on a low simmer stirring as needed, it will continue to thicken until the flour absorbs as much liquid as it can.

Edited by David A. Goldfarb (log)
Posted
I made gravy for the first time by taking the liquid from chicken cooked in wine and water and pouring it in a roux. It was delicious bit the gravy seperated and wasn't consitant. Any tips to get a good even consistancy?

did you skim the liguid of excess fat before you added it to the roux? maybe your gravy didnt separate - it could just have been too greasy?

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Posted

David Goldfarb is quite right about the procedure for making a roux-based sauce.

I've made a lot of roasts in the last year or more - there's plenty to do in that last ten or 15 minutes while the meat rests, with looking after the roast potatoes, preparing veg, warming plates and the rest, and I like to be fast with the gravy.

I'll have the roast itself wrapped in foil, sitting on the carving board. I take 2 or 3 tbsp of fat off the meat roasting tin to a frying pan (if there's enough) and take off excess (if too much remains). To the tin I'll add sufficient liquid (beer, wine, stock, water, a mixture) for the gravy, set this over a burner, stir with a wooden spoon and scrape up the crusted juices. I stop when I've dissolved as much as I can, and when the liquid comes to a boil - that's about the same time. This stays on a holding heat.

The fat in the frying pan (made up with butter or oil if it's insufficient) gets a tbsp or two of flour, then I set it over heat, and stir and fry the roux for a minute or two without colouring. Stirring away at the roux with the wooden spoon in the right hand, I lift the roasting pan and pour all the juices in to the fry pan at once (and dump the roasting pan in the sink so I can grab the frypan handle), stirring all the time till the gravy is smooth. It's a matter of ten seconds or so and I don't get lumps this way.

Lastly, I open the foil surrounding the meat, form one edge into a makeshift pouring V, pour off the juices that the roast has shed, into the gravy, stir and adjust seasoning.

If in the end you don't feel it's rich / glossy enough (doesn't have enough fat), you can always mount the gravy with additional butter.

FWIW, when I learned to make gravy 30-odd years ago, we did it by putting a little flour into the roasting pan with the fat & juices, stirring into the fat over heat, then gradually adding either cold or hot water. I find it easier and more workable doing roux and juices separately. A final point is that it allows a chance at recovery if for any reason the juices in the pan are too burnt - you can stop scraping before it's too late and decant the juices to a saucepan.

QUIET!  People are trying to pontificate.

Posted

thanks guys i defenitly think it was just too greasy. im going to try to make it again today, using all these tips.

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