© David Loftus
consistently good gravy
methodThere are two things that make a good gravy: a vegetable trivet, which is the layer of vegetables in the bottom of your roasting tray that your meat sits on; and the juices from a roasted piece of good-quality meat.
As long as you always use a vegetable trivet and buy good-quality meat, your gravy will taste like heaven whether you use water or stock. Follow my method for making gravy and you’ll never look back.
To make your gravy • When you come to make your gravy, your chicken will be covered and resting and you’ll have your tray of chicken juices and vegetable trivet in front of you • Using a spoon, carefully remove 90 per cent of the hot fat from the tray by angling it away from yourself and scooping off the fatty layer that settles on top • Put the tray back on the hob over a high heat • Add the flour, stir it around and, holding the tray steady with a tea towel in one hand, use a potato masher to mash all the veg to a pulp – don’t worry if it’s lumpy • You can rip the wings off the chicken and break them up into the tray to add more flavour at this point • When everything is mixed and mashed up, add the alcohol to give a little fragrance before you add your stock (the alcohol will cook away) • Keep it over the heat and let it boil for a few minutes • Pour the stock into the tray, or add 1 litre of hot water • Bring everything in the pan to the boil, scraping all the goodness from the bottom of the pan as you go • Reduce the heat and simmer for 10 minutes, or until you’ve achieved the gravy consistency you’re looking for
To serve your gravy • Get yourself a large jug, bowl or pan and put a coarse sieve over it • Pour your gravy through the sieve, using a ladle to really push all the goodness through • Discard any veg or meat left behind • At this point you’ve got a really cracking gravy, and you can either serve it straight away or put it back on the heat to simmer and thicken up • Depending on which meat I’m serving it with, I’ll add a teaspoonful of horseradish, mustard, redcurrant jelly, cranberry, mint or apple sauce – you certainly don’t have to, but I think the little edge of complementary flavour you get from doing this is brilliant
 • from Jamie's Ministry of Food |
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serves: 4–6
ingredientsAs well as your roasted veg and roast chicken, you’ll need:
• 1 heaped dessertspoon plain flour
• a wine glass of red wine, white wine or cider, or a good splash of port or sherry
• 1 litre vegetable, chicken or beef stock, preferably organic
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