Frank's Famous Sausage Gravy

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100% would make this recipe for Frank's Famous Sausage Gravy again.

Serve with Frank’s Famous Baking Powder Biscuits . . . PLEASE do not spoil my gravy by using those nasty grocery store biscuits in a tube . . . REAL biscuits are just too easy to make!

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Frank's Famous Sausage Gravy Ingredients

1 lb Pork Sausage ground1 tb Freshly ground pepper ground black pepper
1 can (12 oz) Evaporated milkor 1 c milk 1 ts Salt, to taste
1 c all-purpose flour hot sauce

Instructions for Frank's Famous Sausage Gravy

Selecting the right sausage
Part of the secret of good sausage gravy is the FAT. Sorry folks, but the lean “good for you” kind of pork sausage just won’t make good sausage gravy. If you are worried about the fat and cholesterol . . . eat something else!! Select a good brand, just the same. My favorite for making gravy is “Aberdeen” brand, but any brand with a good balance of meat and fat will do. If you have a good meat market in your area where they grind their own sausage, tell the butcher to grind you some with plenty of fat left in.

Pre-measure your milk and flour and have it ready next to the stove, as well as about a liter of water. Heat a deep skillet to medium high heat. Fry up the sausage with about half a teaspoon of hot sauce, until it is well browned and has rendered all of the fat. Break up the sausage into small bit as it fries, so that it is the size of small peas. Lower the heat just a bit, then add the flour to the pan. Mix into the sausage until the flour is totally coated with the rendered grease. You should not be able to see any more bright white flour. If there is not enough grease to coat all of the flour, add vegetable oil or lard until there is. You should now have little brownish sausage/flour nodules. Add salt, to taste, and the black pepper. Add the milk and about a cup of water. Stir with a wooden spoon, breaking up the nodules that have formed. Keep stirring and breaking up the nodules until it begins to smooth out. It will get very thick; add water until you get a nice, smooth, creamy consistency. The only lumps in the gravy should be the sausage! If the flour was well coated with grease, it will not be lumpy. Keep heating and stirring until it stops getting thicker and you have the consistency you want.

Variations

Some folks make their gravy with corn meal instead of flour. I like corn meal gravy, but gravy made with flour comes out smoother and allows the flavors of the sausage and pepper to predominate. The corn meal takes over and gives it a flavor and texture that’s totally different. Give it a try!

I prefer to use the “mild” sausage and decide for myself the type and kind of spice to add. Although it’s hard to make something too hot and spicy for me, my family does not share my taste for hot food, so I have to tone my cooking down for normal humans. Plus, the hot kind just doesn’t make good gravy . . . it’s good for sausage patties or biscuit sandwiches, but not for gravy.

If you want to make “Red-Eye” gravy, add fresh-ground red pepper, and dilute it with coffee rather than water. Some folks love it . . . I’m not one of them. I am a coffee lover, but it just doesn’t fit in with the pork . . . ham or pork sausage are the traditional bases for Red-Eye gravy . . . and to me, the flavors just don’t mix well.

I have tried this recipe with venison sausage as well, but venison is too lean to make good gravy, so you have to add vegetable oil or lard to make up the difference.


Main Ingredient: PorkCuisine: American-South

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Ingredient Insight - look inside this recipe

Fry Sausage Sauces Brunch Breakfast American-South Pork
for flavor and categorization

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I just made the gravy, the biscuits are still baking. I have to say that when I read 1 cup of flour I thought to myself that is wayyy to much. Sure enough it was more like a football and couldn't even stir it. I had to more than triple the milk and water (3 cups ea) and it is still tooo thick. I think about one fourth cup flour would be closer. The flavor is very good though.

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sunnyd36
on Sep 22 2007 11:13PM

This recipe was great. I used whole wheat flour in place of regular and had to add more water since it was so thick. Next time I will try white flouras I suspect it will be even better.

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Unkyfarmer
on Jul 12 2007 7:15PM
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this was awsome and make it again echo

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echodelta
on Feb 18 2007 1:48PM

Just made this 10 mins ago. Best Gravy I've ever had!! Used Tennessee pride hot sausage and grinded it up using a food chooper.

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country_cookin
on Jan 14 2007 7:03AM

This recipe was awsome! I used evaporated milk in place of regular and had to add more water since it was so thick. I doubled the recipe and froze half for another sitting.

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Harveysangel
on Nov 13 2006 4:25PM
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[I made edits to this recipe.]

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Harveysangel
on Jun 4 2006 11:35AM
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This recipe was awsome! I doubled the recipe and froze half for another sitting.

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Harveysangel
on Jun 4 2006 11:30AM
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My kids think I make a pretty mean sausage gravy. This recipe is great, and I plan to make it for variety, but the kids want me to go back to my recipe. :-)

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ajskm6
on Nov 7 2005 1:03AM

Frank is right on with FAT being important. While I have developed a low-fat "sausage gravy" it wouldn't hold a candle to this recipe in a side-by-side tasting. For me this is a once-in-a-great-while recipe but it's worth waiting for.

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promfh
on Nov 6 2005 9:45PM



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FloridaFantum
on Sep 29 2004 12:52PM