Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (2024)

Up until now, I’ve never thought about sharing a turkey gravy recipe. At our house, making the gravy for Thanksgiving dinner has always just been the assumed final step of cooking a turkey.

You marinate and roast the turkey using our go-to Thanksgiving turkey recipe, and then just use the pan drippings to make gravy…right?

Well, I’ve realized that many people don’t quite have this casual view of gravy-making, so today I’m sharing how to reliably make a flavorful, lump-less, delicious homemade turkey gravy that your entire family will love.

We also have tips and variations we’ve gathered over the years—smooth no nonsense gravy, giblet gravy—all the gravy!

Note:

We first published this recipe on November 20, 2017. We have since updated it with higher resolution photos, clearer instructions, and metric measurements. The recipe remains the same. Enjoy!

The Keys to A Good Turkey Gravy Recipe

Like the best gravy, this recipe is a last-minute effort in our lineup of Thanksgiving Day preparations.

After all, piping hot gravy is usually the final addition to all your hard-earned turkey and sides. In our house, it gets made just as all the other dishes are brought to the table.

Sarah in particular is a gravy fiend. Her entire plate—from the mashed potatoes and stuffing to the cranberry sauce and any other sides we’ve made that year get smothered in it!

Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (1)
Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (2)

The first step to an awesome-tasting turkey gravy is a great base. That is, turkey pan drippings and juices.

If you need advice on how to marinate and roast the perfect turkey, try our recipe for Grandpa’s Perfect Roast Turkey, Roast Turkey Breast, or our Five Spiced Roast Turkey.

Each of these recipes has details on making gravy, but we’ve synthesized them into two key points:

  1. Use a nice base of vegetables as a bed for your roast turkey, so you have plenty of moisture for tasty pan drippings
  2. While the turkey is roasting, add water to the roasting pan if it dries out, because you definitely don’t want gravy that tastes burnt!

If, for whatever reason, your roasting pan gets burned or you don’t have enough pan drippings, don’t fret! You can supplement them with butter and chicken/turkey stock, and still make a tasty gravy.

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Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (4)

Ok, on to the recipe!

Roast Turkey Gravy Recipe Instructions

For this turkey gravy recipe, you’ll need:

  • Turkey juices from the roasting pan
  • Turkey fat drippings from the roasting pan (if you don’t have quite enough, supplement with butter or vegetable oil until you have ⅓ cup)
  • Turkey or chicken broth or stock
  • Butter
  • Paprika
  • Freshly ground black pepper
  • All-purpose flour
  • Turkey giblets and/or shredded meat from the turkey neck (optional)
  • Vegetables from the roasting pan (optional)
  • soy sauce and dark soy sauce (sounds surprising, but don’t knock it till you try it!)
  • Salt, to taste
  • An optional cornstarch slurry

Note that we don’t add additional herbs, like thyme, parsley, rosemary or sage, to our gravy. We want the flavor of the turkey juices to be at the forefront!

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Step 1: Pour Out Your Pan Drippings

A useful gadget that comes in handy for making your turkey gravy is a fat separator. It saves crucial time when you’re in the home stretch of preparing a gravy for any roast turkey, chicken, or even a prime rib.

Once you’ve taken your cooked turkey out of your roasting pan, you should be left with a bunch of vegetables in the pan, the giblets, and your lovely drippings. Cover your turkey with some aluminum foil to keep it warm. While it’s resting, you can make your gravy!

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Carefully pour the pan drippings through a strainer into your fat separator. You will see all of the fat float to the top. The fat separator allows liquid juices to be poured out from the bottom, keeping it separate from the fat that floats to the top. (Neat, right?)

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Now that all your turkey fat and juices are in the fat separator, pour the juices into a measuring cup. At this point, you will have to supplement those drippings with additional liquid to get a total of 3 cups of liquid to make your gravy.

One great tip is to add some hot water to your roasting tray and deglaze it to make additional “broth” from the pan. You can also add a high-quality store-bought chicken broth or turkey stock to get your 3 cups of liquid.

Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (8)

Next, pour the fat left in the fat separator through the strainer into a measuring cup until you have ⅓ cup, and set aside.

If you don’t have ⅓ cup of turkey fat, supplement with vegetable oil or melted butter until you reach ⅓ cup.

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Step 2: Choose Your Enhancements (if Any)

Here is where you are going to decide what kind of gravy you want to make. We have two enhancements:

  1. Use the roasted vegetables and onions from your turkey pan
  2. Use the giblets/neck to enrich the gravy

Of course, they can be combined as well!

These two enhancements will thicken the gravy and add more flavor. They are also totally optional if all you want is a smooth, traditional gravy.

We sometimes make a few versions if we are in the mood. Otherwise, it’s up to the chef for the day! You’ll see how we make each, and decide on the best turkey gravy recipe for your family’s preferences.

A Note on Giblets

If you like giblet gravy, leave out the liver! I don’t recommend using the liver for gravy. Instead, we save it for Barley’s Thanksgiving meal!

Turkey gravy recipe enhancement #1: Roasted Vegetable Turkey Gravy

For our turkey, we use a mix of celery, carrots, and onions as the base in the roasting pan. After roasting the turkey, put one cup of the vegetables into a blender with ¼ cup of your 3 cups of turkey broth.

Remember that the carrots will add sweetness to the gravy. You can put in more onions/celery than carrots if you want to keep the gravy on the saltier side.

Use the juice or soup setting on your blender, and blend for 30 seconds or until smooth. This will get stirred into the gravy.

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Turkey gravy recipe enhancement #2: Giblet Gravy

Mince the giblets (except the liver) and the meat from the turkey neck and set aside.

If you don’t like a chunky texture, you can add them to the blender with the broth. (Or add them to the vegetables from enhancement #1!) Then blend everything together.

The giblet mixture (whether minced or blended) will get stirred into the gravy. Giblet gravy has a richer turkey flavor than regular gravy, and has become a family favorite!

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Turkey gravy recipe enhancement #3: The Combo

A combination of #1 and #2––Add the giblets/neck meat and vegetables to a blender, whizz it all up, and add to the gravy.

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Step 3: Cook the Gravy

Ok, now that you have your fat, your liquid, and your enhancements (if using), here’s how to put it all together.

In a large saucepan over medium heat, add the turkey fat, 1 tablespoon of butter, the paprika, and the fresh ground black pepper.

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Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (14)

When the fat starts bubbling, gradually whisk in ⅓ cup of all-purpose flour until you have a roux.

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Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (16)

Continue to cook the roux on medium heat for 1 to 2 minutes. Cooking the roux longer will darken your gravy. It’ll also add more flavor as the flour cooks.

This combination of turkey fat, oil, and butter adds huge amounts of flavor and thickens your gravy. Theres no water in this step, which is usually the culprit of a lumpy gravy! The oil and fat melts away any lumps of flour as you whisk it in.

Next, whisk in the 3 cups of turkey drippings/stock into the roux. Turn up the heat to medium-high and whisk constantly. Bring to a simmer, and continue to whisk the gravy for another 2 minutes until it has thickened enough to coat a spoon.

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At this point, you can whisk in your giblets and/or vegetable mixture, if you’ve chosen to do one or both of the “gravy enhancements.”

Add the soy sauces, salt, and more pepper to taste. We find that dark soy sauce gives gravy a richer flavor and deeper color, which is why we add it!

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Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (19)

Here’s what the gravy looks like with the vegetable/giblet mixture added:

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Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (21)

At this point, if you need to troubleshoot a bit, there’s no cause for alarm. It’s normal to make minor adjustments to any turkey gravy recipe.

If the gravy is too thin, use a water and cornstarch slurry to thicken the gravy to your preference. If the gravy is too thick, add more stock. Remember that the gravy will always seem thinner when it is hot, and will thicken a bit as it cools.

(Any leftover turkey gravy will solidify when chilled completely in the refrigerator.)

Once you’ve reached your desired gravy consistency, pour it into a gravy boat, and serve immediately with your Thanksgiving turkey and mashed potatoes!

Gluten-free gravy

Is someone in your family gluten-free? When we have a guest at Thanksgiving who can’t eat gluten, we set aside some turkey juices and vegetable/giblet puree to make a separate cornstarch-thickened gravy.

Simply bring all the liquid ingredients to a simmer, and gradually whisk in enough cornstarch slurry (equal parts cornstarch and water) to reach the desired consistency. Simmer for at least 30 seconds (stir constantly) to cook the cornstarch and allow it to fully thicken the gravy.

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Happy Thanksgiving everyone!

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Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (26)

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5 from 7 votes

Perfect Turkey Gravy Recipe: Three Ways

This Perfect Turkey gravy recipe will teach you how to how to make turkey gravy flawlessly for Thanksgiving dinner every year!

by: Bill

Course:Condiments &amp, sauces

Cuisine:Holiday Recipes

Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (27)

serves: 12

Prep: 10 minutes minutes

Cook: 10 minutes minutes

Total: 20 minutes minutes

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Ingredients

  • Turkey juices from the roasting pan
  • 1/3 cup turkey fat drippings from the roasting pan (if you don’t have quite enough, supplement with butter or vegetable oil until you have ⅓ cup)
  • 2 to 3 cups turkey or chicken stock
  • 1 tablespoon butter
  • 1 teaspoon paprika
  • ½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper (or to taste)
  • cup all-purpose flour
  • Turkey giblets (except the liver. May add turkey neck meat, optional)
  • 1 cup vegetables from the roasting pan (optional)
  • 1 teaspoon soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon dark soy sauce
  • Salt (to taste)
  • Optional cornstarch slurry: 1 tablespoon cornstarch mixed with 1 tablespoon water

US CustomaryMetric

Instructions

  • Carefully pour the pan drippings through a strainer into a fat separator. Now that all your turkey fat and juices are in the fat separator, pour the juices into a measuring cup. At this point, you will have to supplement those drippings with additional liquid to get a total of 3 cups of liquid to make your gravy. One great tip is to add some hot water to your roasting tray and deglaze it to make additional “broth” from the pan. You can also add a high-quality store-bought chicken or turkey stock to get your 3 cups of liquid.

  • Next, pour the fat left in the fat separator through the strainer into a measuring cup until you have ⅓ cup, and set aside. If you don’t have ⅓ cup of turkey fat, supplement with vegetable oil or melted butter until you reach ⅓ cup.

  • In a large saucepan over medium heat, add the turkey fat, 1 tablespoon of butter, the paprika, and the fresh ground black pepper. When the fat starts bubbling, gradually whisk in ⅓ cup of all-purpose flour until you have a roux. Continue to cook the roux on medium heat for 1 to 2 minutes. Cooking the roux longer will darken your gravy and add more flavor as the flour in the roux gets cooked.

  • Next, whisk in the 3 cups of turkey drippings/stock into the roux, turning up the heat to medium-high and whisking constantly. Continue to whisk the gravy for another 2 minutes until it has thickened enough to coat a spoon. At this point, you can whisk in minced giblets or a blended mixture of vegetables from the roasting pan, if desired. Add the soy sauces, salt, and more pepper to taste.

  • At this point, if the gravy is too thin, use a water and cornstarch slurry to thicken the gravy to your preference. If the gravy is too thick, add more stock. Remember that the gravy will always seem thinner when it is hot, and will thicken a bit as it cools.

  • Once you’ve reached your desired gravy consistency, pour it into a gravy boat, and serve immediately.

Tips & Notes:

Makes about 4 cups.

nutrition facts

Calories: 121kcal (6%) Carbohydrates: 7g (2%) Protein: 4g (8%) Fat: 8g (12%) Saturated Fat: 3g (15%) Cholesterol: 32mg (11%) Sodium: 230mg (10%) Potassium: 135mg (4%) Fiber: 1g (4%) Sugar: 2g (2%) Vitamin A: 910IU (18%) Vitamin C: 0.2mg Calcium: 4mg Iron: 0.8mg (4%)

nutritional info disclaimer

TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.

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Turkey Gravy Recipe: 3 Easy Variations - The Woks of Life (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to good gravy? ›

Here are my principles for making great gravy without fear:
  • Make it ahead. This is the most important one. ...
  • Make a really good homemade turkey stock first. Don't skimp on this crucial first step. ...
  • Reinforce the stock's flavor. ...
  • Simmer, simmer, simmer. ...
  • Strain and cool. ...
  • Reduce. ...
  • Hot liquids only.
Nov 5, 2021

Is turkey gravy better with flour or cornstarch? ›

Browning adds more flavor to the gravy and gets rid of the raw flour taste. You're basically making a roux. We find that a flour-based gravy holds up better and reheats better later, which is why we tend to prefer using flour over cornstarch to make gravy unless we have a guest who is eating gluten-free.

What to add to turkey gravy to make it taste better? ›

7 Ways to Make a Jar of Turkey Gravy Taste Homemade
  1. Add in some white wine. Add a dash of white wine (nothing too fruity; we recommend a dry Chardonnay) to boost the richness of the turkey gravy. ...
  2. Thicken it with a cornstarch slurry. ...
  3. Stir in pan drippings. ...
  4. Simmer with fresh herbs. ...
  5. Sauté some vegetables.
Oct 26, 2023

How to make gravy from turkey drippings Martha Stewart? ›

Pour in defatted drippings (use only 2 tablespoons of those from dry-brined bird) and 2 cups stock; bring to a boil. Combine remaining 1/2 cup stock and cornstarch in a small jar, seal it, and shake to combine. Pour cornstarch mixture into boiling mixture in pan and boil until thickened, 2 to 3 minutes.

What can you add to homemade gravy to make it taste better? ›

Bonus: Seasoning for Tasty Gravy

I only season my homemade gravy with salt and pepper, and it's delicious! If you want to add more spices, avoid anything with large pieces (such as dried rosemary) to keep gravy smooth. Thyme, onion powder, garlic powder, parsley, paprika, and oregano all taste great.

What thickener is best for gravy? ›

Similar to flour, cornstarch is another ingredient that can be used to make gravy thicker. With cornstarch, making a slurry is also an option, but with 1 tablespoon of cornstarch whisked into cold water. Again, you'll want to add the slurry in increments so you don't over-thicken the gravy.

Is stock or broth better for turkey gravy? ›

You can use either stock or broth for keeping dressing moist or as a basis for gravy, but a strong flavor will give you better results.

What is the best thickener for turkey gravy? ›

If your gravy is on the skimpy side, you can thicken it quickly with flour or cornstarch. But don't add your thickener directly to the gravy, which will create lumps. Instead, try stirring in three or four tablespoons of flour or cornstarch into a small amount of cold water until you have a smooth paste.

Why won t my turkey gravy thicken? ›

Cooking for too little time: As the gravy cooks, it slowly thickens, so if you don't allow it to cook long enough, it will be too thin. Set the stove on medium heat and bring your gravy to a boil before letting it simmer. Once the gravy has reached your desired consistency, turn off the stove and let the sauce cool.

How do you doctor up turkey gravy? ›

7 Simple Ways You Can Make Jarred Gravy Taste Homemade
  1. Stir in turkey drippings. Classic turkey gravy is made with the pan drippings from the roasted bird. ...
  2. Brown up some butter. ...
  3. Pour in the wine. ...
  4. Roast a head of garlic. ...
  5. Cheat with aromatics. ...
  6. Boost with umami. ...
  7. Add fresh herbs.
Nov 12, 2018

Why does my homemade gravy taste like flour? ›

Gravy will taste floury when you've added too much flour to it or the flour has not been cooked enough to fold into the gravy ingredients as a whole. To try to fix this problem, add a little more broth and whisk through while heating gently.

How to spice up bland turkey gravy? ›

It's bland.

The solution: The first thing you should try is adding a little more salt, as salt helps bring out the inherent flavors of the gravy that you didn't taste before. If that doesn't work, add umami (savory)-heavy condiments like soy sauce or Worcestershire sauce.

How do you make Nigella Lawson turkey gravy? ›

Place the turkey giblets, water, allspice berries, black peppercorns, bay leaves, cinnamon stick, celery, carrots, onion, salt and clementine zest and juice into a large saucepan and bring the mixture to a boil. Cover the saucepan with a lid and reduce the heat so that the mixture simmers gently. Cook for 2 hours.

How is gravy made from scratch? ›

Melt butter in a medium-sized sauce pan. Add flour and whisk constantly until mixture is golden caramel color and smells fragrant (3-5 minutes). Slowly whisk in liquids, while whisking, until mixture is smooth. Bring to a simmer and cook until thickened and bubbly, 5 minutes or longer.

What can I add to gravy to make it richer? ›

Add flavorful brown butter

Although it will take a little time to prepare this ingredient before adding it to store-bought gravy, it's well worth it. Brown butter can elevate many recipes because it provides a richness that just can't be achieved with ordinary butter.

Why is my gravy not tasty? ›

If the gravy lacks oomph, adjust seasoning as necessary with kosher salt and freshly ground pepper. If you used canned stock instead of homemade, the gravy might not be as flavorful. Homemade stock, even made with chicken stock rather than turkey, will produce a superior gravy—so it's worth the effort.

How can I make my gravy richer? ›

10 ways to spike your gravy
  1. Bacon fat. Combine those pan drippings with some bacon fat (just cook off some bacon first, chop it up and throw it into your potatoes) for that familiar smoky and salty flavour. ...
  2. Gochujang. ...
  3. Whole sprigs of herbs. ...
  4. Grainy mustard. ...
  5. Balsamic vinegar. ...
  6. Heavy cream. ...
  7. Wine. ...
  8. Caramelized onions.
Oct 6, 2015

What is gravy master made out of? ›

Gravy Master® contains a concentrated blend of celery, onion, parsley, garlic, caramel, hydrolyzed vegetable protein, apple vinegar, salt and pure cane sugar. It does not have any chemical preservatives or any artificial coloring. It is a all vegetarian and can be used in any vegetarian or vegan dish.

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