Have you got some gravy leftover? Don’t throw it out? Here are a whole bunch of ways to use it. You’re totally going to find something for dinner tonight!
One of the most popular posts on my website is about ways to use up leftover cranberry sauce. I figured that if so many people want to know about using up cranberry sauce, there must be something else from the holiday table that they’re also tempted to throw away because they don’t know what else to do with it. The something else I came up with is gravy.
At this time of year I tend to do a lot of roasts and braises (not to mention all the brunches featuring biscuits and my favorite bacon gravy!). These are always accompanied by gravy. Lots and lots and lots of gravy. I love the stuff. So much so that I spent time perfecting how to make it. Do check out my article on How to Make Gravy Perfectly Every Time to see how it gets done.
With all that gravy going down, it’s true that I sometimes have too much. What happens? I put it in a container at the back of the fridge where it sits until I eventually throw it away. Yes, really. That’s what usually happens. Or that’s what used to happen. Today, I threw out one of those containers and decided that it would never happen again. That gravy is way to good to go to waste. Done.
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Buttermilk Biscuits With Sausage Gravy. …
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Turkey Pot Pie for Another Day. …
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Sweet Potato Shepherd’s Pie. …
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Slow Cooker Beef Stroganoff With Mushrooms. …
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Old-School Swedish Meatballs. …
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Pork Tenderloin With Bacon-Apple Cider Pan Gravy. …
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Baked Potatoes With White Pepper Milk Gravy. …
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Carlo Middione’s Polenta Facile.
Uses For Leftover Gravy
So I’ve brainstormed a bunch of uses for leftover gravy. I’m going to print these out and stick them on my fridge so that I don’t ever forget to use it up again. Here we go. All the ideas I could come up with to use up leftover gravy:
- Freeze it: OK, this isn’t technically using it. But it’s keeping it until you can use it on one of the delicious dishes below. It freezes well in a air tight container. Keep it for up to 3 months.
- Meatballs: Make up a batch of these oven-baked meatballs but skip the gravy step and use your leftover gravy instead. Or make quick sausage meatballs like these to put into your gravy.
- Speaking of Soup: You can always add gravy to any soup. It’s going to give it a bit of body and lots of flavor. Get some broth going in a pot with some leftover meat and veggies. Then add in the gravy. It’ll spread out and be delicious. If you want some soup ideas to get you started, check out my 52+ Soups in Under 15 Minutes over here.
- Pasta Sauce: Gravy is fantastic as a pasta sauce. I especially love it on egg noodles. Think Stroganoff. One way to do it is to heat up your gravy and then swirl in some sour cream. Get your noodles under there and eat. I also really like a gravy-based sauce with sautéed mushrooms over gnocchi. That totally works too!
- Shepherd’s Pie: This is the thing to do if you have leftover mashed potatoes too. Fry up some ground meat and add your gravy. You want it well moistened but not soupy. Go in with some veggies (leftover ones or even frozen mixed vegetables will do). Top with the leftover mashed potatoes and bake until heated through.
- Fries and Gravy: Where I come from in Central Canada, whenever you order fries they ask if you want gravy. It’s a standard question. “An order of fries please.” “Gravy” “Yes.” How to do it? Make fries. Put them on a plate. Top with hot gravy. If you’ve never had it before, to answer your other question, yes, you can still dip the fries in ketchup. You’re allowed. Try it and see what you think.
- Poutine: Have you had this? Have you heard of it? It’s insane. It’s a Canadian dish from the province of Quebec. You basically put hot French fries on a plate, top with cheese and then slosh on hot gravy. The cheese melts there between the gravy and the sauce and each bite is crazy. I have an example recipe over here. For it you make a special Buffalo Chicken Sauce. You can skip that sauce and just use your hot leftover gravy.
- Newfoundland Fries: OK, so we Canadians like our fries and gravy. Clearly. Here’s another Canadian fry and gravy combo, this one coming from Newfoundland. What you do is put hot fries on a plate, top with leftover stuffing (here’s my go-to recipe) and then go in with all that hot gravy. If you’re thinking it sounds weird, it’s so not. Think about it. Your Thanksgiving dinner plate has potatoes, stuffing and gravy and you love getting it all onto one fork. This is the same thing but done with intention. And with French fries.
- Stew: It’s very simple to take your gravy, add leftover meat (or new cooked meat), vegetables and potatoes. If you don’t have enough gravy to justify a stew, you can make a basic white sauce (a bechamel sauce) first. Add in those leftover meat, potatoes, and veg, then stir in the leftover gravy.
- Hot Sandwiches: This is one of the best ways to use leftover gravy. Get out some good sliced bread. Top it with hot cooked meat (leftover roast chicken…mmmm) and then add your hot gravy. Dinner. Is. Served.
- Hot Sandwiches, Take 2: Chop up the meat (and any leftover potatoes, stuffing, etc..) and mix it with the gravy. Heat it up and then spoon it onto nice bread.
- Salisbury Steaks: Here’s a Salisbury Steak recipe. Make up the patties and cook them, but then use your leftover gravy instead of the gravy in the recipe. Add in some sauteed onion to make it totally retro and soooo good.
- Patty Melts (sort of): I worked as a waitress in my parents’ restaurants as a teen. This was my favorite thing to request for lunch when there. Grilled rye bread topped with a burger patty, topped with a slice of ham, topped with a slice of cheese, topped with hot gravy – all hot and melty and good.
- Chicken Pot Pie (or Any-Kind-Of-Meat Pot Pie): Chop up some cooked meat and add veggies. Go in with the gravy and then pop a pie crust over top. Bake.
- Chicken and Dumplings: Get some cooked chicken into a pot with a veg or two. Add your gravy and thin it out a bit with some water or milk. Heat it up and then cook dumplings in it. I don’t make the fluffy Southern-style dumplings. I tend to make ones that are somewhere between a dumpling and spaetzle. Here’s my dumpling recipe.
- Biscuits and Gravy: Cook up some breakfast sausage meat. Add your gravy. You probably want to add a dash or two of hot sauce or some black pepper because sausage gravy usually has a kick to it. Spilt open some hot biscuits and ladle on the gravy. Or, make a Biscuits and Gravy Casserole.
- Chicken Fried Chicken (or Steak): This is often served with gravy on top. As with the Biscuits and Gravy idea above, you’ll want to add a touch of heat with either hot sauce or black pepper.
- Meatloaf, Diner Style: Meatloaf in diners always has gravy on it. Love it. Make a delicious classic meatloaf like this. Slice. Add gravy. (For this one, I feel like I want to sauté some mushrooms, then add the gravy to the mushrooms and then pour it onto sliced meatloaf. What do you think?)
- Hamburger Hash: The way I usually make hamburger hash is to cook up ground beef, add flour, stir, then add milk. It’s a saucy thing. Skip the flour and milk and go with gravy instead. Serve over noodles or potatoes.
- Curries: If you’re not in the mood for the classic American comfort food, you can take a totally different spin. Add some coconut milk and curry powder or curry paste to your gravy. Add some chicken and cauliflower, maybe some chick peas. Serve with rice and naan bread.
- Beef Dips: A true beef dip is served with au jus (the more translucent drippings from a roast). But swapping that out for a gravy dip is definitely an option.
- Philly Cheesesteak (not!): So really, there’s no gravy anywhere near a true Philly Cheesesteak. I totally know that. But I’ve been in restaurants in various places and seen odd things being tacked onto Philly cheesesteak ingredient lists. Gravy is one of them. So load your bun up with beef, cheese and onions then pour on that hot gravy. Just don’t tell ANYONE from Philly that you did so. (And please don’t tell them that I told you to!)
- Eggs Bennedict, Kinda: English muffin, ham, poached egg, gravy. Trust me. It works.
- Leftovers: Why fuss with all that other stuff? If you have leftover gravy, maybe you have leftover other stuff too. Pile it all onto your plate, top it with gravy and microwave till hot.
Best Biscuits and Gravy in the world.. Sausage Gravy recipe in family over a 100 years
What to eat with cube steak & gravy?
Cube steaks and gravy are a hearty home-style dinner your family will love after a busy day. The slow-cooked beef is wonderful served over mashed potatoes or noodles. —Judy Long, Limestone, Tennessee We enjoy these flaky biscuits covered with creamy gravy not only for breakfast, but sometimes for dinner.
Can one eat grapes?
The grape can be consumed raw, with peel and seed, or it can be used in preparations such as juices, sweets, salads, popsicles, jellies, jellies, mousses and in the manufacture of wines. The mineral whose content stands out the most is potassium, with a moderate content of calcium, phosphorus and magnesium.
Do you need gravy?
Yep, they NEED gravy. They crave it. Gravy is such a integral part to a good meal. Don’t settle for bad, lumpy, flavorless gravy. To make the gravy of your dreams, read on. I never realized gravy was such a contentious food item until one year, while we were over at a buddy’s place, someone drunkenly took over the gravy making.
What to do with leftover gravy?
And with French fries. Stew: It’s very simple to take your gravy, add leftover meat (or new cooked meat), vegetables and potatoes. If you don’t have enough gravy to justify a stew, you can make a basic white sauce (a bechamel sauce) first. Add in those leftover meat, potatoes, and veg, then stir in the leftover gravy.