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- May 14, 2019
Gravy is a very delicious country and English food that seems to go, in modern cooking, kind of unappreciated. You can make a gravy out of pretty much anything and they have very different uses.
Beef gravy is brown, and mostly you see people eating it on mashed potatoes, but I also like it quite a bit on salisbury steak, country fried steaks, and other cutlet-type meats. In the Lowcountry people put beef gravy over their white rice, which is a wonderful way to eat it. It also goes well in shepherd's pie.
Sausage gravy is white and often studded with sausage bits in it. This is the main gravy to use with biscuits, although I'll happily eat beef gravy on biscuits too. It is less meaty and saucelike in consistency and is more thick and creamy, goopy. I never liked biscuits and gravy as a meal unto itself (feel like a poor), but I like it as part of a broader breakfast platter.
Now, gravies you may be less familiar with include chicken, ham, mushroom, red eye, and pinto bean.
Chicken gravy is tan colored. I pretty much never ran into this (in home, in restaurants, anywhere), until I deliberately went and used it to make a meal I call Carolina korma that was a deliberate Southernization of an Indian dish my mother cooks: diced grilled chicken, peanuts, raisins, white rice, chicken gravy, some other stuff. It's far from my favorite, though, there's something just a little off-putting about the texture and flavor.
Ham gravy I very rarely eat. Don't care much for. It has little use, I think, other than just to eat on ham itself.
Red eye gravy is something I've never had, but is famous as a Southern regional dish, being ham gravy with coffee mixed in.
Lastly, pinto beans don't actually have gravy, but when you cook them long enough they can reduce into a thick broth that, distinctive of gravies, can be ladelled with a spoon but does not run like soup. This is a very rich vegetarian-like gravy, and I would consider using it on mashed potatoes in the future.
Beef gravy is brown, and mostly you see people eating it on mashed potatoes, but I also like it quite a bit on salisbury steak, country fried steaks, and other cutlet-type meats. In the Lowcountry people put beef gravy over their white rice, which is a wonderful way to eat it. It also goes well in shepherd's pie.
Sausage gravy is white and often studded with sausage bits in it. This is the main gravy to use with biscuits, although I'll happily eat beef gravy on biscuits too. It is less meaty and saucelike in consistency and is more thick and creamy, goopy. I never liked biscuits and gravy as a meal unto itself (feel like a poor), but I like it as part of a broader breakfast platter.
Now, gravies you may be less familiar with include chicken, ham, mushroom, red eye, and pinto bean.
Chicken gravy is tan colored. I pretty much never ran into this (in home, in restaurants, anywhere), until I deliberately went and used it to make a meal I call Carolina korma that was a deliberate Southernization of an Indian dish my mother cooks: diced grilled chicken, peanuts, raisins, white rice, chicken gravy, some other stuff. It's far from my favorite, though, there's something just a little off-putting about the texture and flavor.
Ham gravy I very rarely eat. Don't care much for. It has little use, I think, other than just to eat on ham itself.
Red eye gravy is something I've never had, but is famous as a Southern regional dish, being ham gravy with coffee mixed in.
Lastly, pinto beans don't actually have gravy, but when you cook them long enough they can reduce into a thick broth that, distinctive of gravies, can be ladelled with a spoon but does not run like soup. This is a very rich vegetarian-like gravy, and I would consider using it on mashed potatoes in the future.