Mushroom Ragout ‘Gravy’ Recipe (2024)

By Martha Rose Shulman

Mushroom Ragout ‘Gravy’ Recipe (1)

Total Time
1½ hours
Rating
4(282)
Notes
Read community notes

I never make gravy. Some people find that perplexing, but I don’t like it — there’s just too much fat involved. Instead, I make this mushroom ragout and spoon it over the turkey and on the side.

Featured in: Mushroom Ragout ‘Gravy’

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Ingredients

Yield:6 to 8 side dish servings, more as gravy

  • 1ounce (about 1 cup) dried porcini mushrooms
  • 2tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1medium onion or 2 shallots, chopped
  • 4garlic cloves, minced
  • 1pound mushrooms, cleaned, trimmed, and sliced ½ inch thick
  • 1pound wild mushrooms or oyster mushrooms, cleaned, trimmed and sliced thick or torn into pieces
  • Salt to taste
  • 1tablespoon all-purpose flour
  • ½cup fruity red wine, such as a Côtes du Rhone
  • 2teaspoons chopped fresh rosemary or 1 teaspoon crumbled dried
  • 2teaspoons chopped fresh sage or thyme leaves
  • 1cup chicken stock or vegetable stock
  • Black pepper

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

112 calories; 4 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 3 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 13 grams carbohydrates; 4 grams dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 4 grams protein; 410 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Mushroom Ragout ‘Gravy’ Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Place dried mushrooms in a bowl or tempered glass measuring cup, and pour on 2 cups boiling water. Let soak 30 minutes while you prepare the other ingredients.

  2. Step

    2

    Place a strainer over a bowl, line it with cheesecloth or paper towels, and drain mushrooms. Squeeze the mushrooms over the strainer to extract all the flavorful juices, and set aside the liquid in the bowl. Then rinse the mushrooms, away from the bowl with the soaking liquid, until they are free of sand. Squeeze dry and set aside. If very large, chop coarsely.

  3. Step

    3

    Heat oil in a large, heavy nonstick skillet or saucepan over medium heat, and add onion or shallots. Cook, stirring often, until tender, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic, stir together for about 30 seconds, and then add in all the mushrooms except the reconstituted porcini mushrooms and salt to taste. Cook, stirring often, until mushrooms begin to soften and to sweat, about 5 minutes.

  4. Step

    4

    Add the flour and continue to cook mushrooms, stirring, until they have softened a little more and you can no longer see the flour, about 2 minutes. Add the reconstituted dried mushrooms and the wine, and turn the heat to high. Cook, stirring, until the liquid boils down and glazes the mushrooms, 5 to 10 minutes.

  5. Step

    5

    Add rosemary and sage or thyme, stir together, and stir in mushroom soaking liquid and stock. Bring to a simmer, add salt to taste, and cook over medium-high heat, stirring often, until mushrooms are thoroughly tender and fragrant and the surrounding broth is thick and gravy-like, about 20 minutes. If you want a thicker “gravy,” remove a cup and blend until smooth in a blender or a food processor fitted with the steel blade. Stir back into the ragout.

  6. Step

    6

    Remove from the heat, stir in some freshly ground pepper, taste and adjust salt. Set aside in the refrigerator overnight.

Tip

  • The ragoût can be made up to three or four days before you wish to serve it. Reheat gently on top of the stove.

Ratings

4

out of 5

282

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Nathan

One tip I would add: if you are making this for "gravy" then cut the mushrooms smaller -- as small as you will ultimately want them. Per the recipe they are too big to use as a sauce, and if you blend the mushrooms after they have been cooked, it adds a raw flavor and an unappealing color to the sauce. Before blending it is a very pretty and smooth sauce, with a much more developed flavor. I do not recommend blending.

Joanna

I believe you are supposed to rinse the mushrooms under the sink, not in their own soaking water. You want the sand/grit to go down the drain, not into the soaking liquid.

Pikawicca

What is one supposed to do with the remaining quantity of garlic?

Patricia

I used this when I needed to cook up mushrooms sitting almost too long; they were white ones, no mix of the others listed. It was lovely served over fried grit cakes, from leftover grits. I used Marsala as the wine and sage instead of thyme. It made a leftover dinner non leftover and quite delicious, served with a slice of goat cheese on the side. I also added some leftover roasted eggplant in with the mushrooms and no one noticed. Everyone loved it. Very tempting to take seconds.

Jennie

I made this to eat with pasta, and while it made a giant amount, it was an unsatisfactory pasta sauce, even with the addition of Parmesan cheese. However, the second night, I dumped most of a container of sour cream into it, and it became quite delicious.

David Look

That has been corrected. Add all of the garlic in step 3.

Deborah

I've made this several times for Thanksgiving and think it's excellent. I prefer it with thyme only because I find sage and rosemary overpower the mushrooms. Also, when I made it, the final step took about 10 minutes, not 20, so keep your eye on it.

Kristen

Yum! Quick, easy. Didn't have wine and didn't use oil and only used a container of criminis and half an onion--let everything simmer all at once in the veg broth. Great for over an oven-roasted potato with parm sprinkled on top and a little non-fat Greek yogurt.

Kam

It was delicious but not gravy-like. I would cut it smaller and add more liquid

JWms

I love this recipe, but as my plan is to serve it with reverse seared ribeyes, I subbed beef broth for chicken. I also believe that gravy is a special occasion sauce, and since I'm preparing this for a special occasion, I doubled the flour, and kicked up all seasoning for a richer punch. I made it the night before the dinner party, and plan to add a knob of butter on reheat, but, the basic recipe works without gilding the lily. Really lovely.

Beachwriter

The only shrooms I had: ~3/4 lb cremini, but I went for it anyway and whipped up a 1/2 recipe. Used a nice red wine, a splash of Maggi seasoning and chicken stock. Served it over Ali Slagle's 2-ingredient potatoes and never looked back. Perfection.

Sara

I loved this!! I chopped the mushrooms smaller as per a commenter here so it was more gravy-like. Added a splash of white wine instead of red (personal preference), skipped the sage (didn't have it) and added some extra fat via vegan butter (we're plant-based) and it was SO GOOD! I'd make this again in a heartbeat.

alex

This was delicious but I felt I needed more fat and liquid to make it gravy-like. After following this recipe, I let the mushrooms cool a bit just sitting in the pan. Then, in a separate pan, I made a roux (1 tbs each butter/flour, and then added liquid -- 1 cup stock 1 cup dry white wine) and then mixed in the mushrooms one scoop at a time. The result was very delicious.

Anne

I like having several vegan versions of gravy on hand. This is a good base from which to variate. No meat, no butter, no problem. Roasted, steamed vegetables shine, with goid sauces. Make sure you tell everyone you want a gravy boat /thermos for a gift.

Mary T.

I am hoping to make this for this Thanksgiving (2021) as we are hosting a vegetarian, gluten, and dairy-free guest. What can I substitute for the flour? Does Cup4Cup work as a thickener?

Panoolie

Modified to use as gravy: rehydrated porcinis sliced small and thin, used 2 med. potatoes instead of more mushrooms for mellower favor and lighter color, replaced wine with a tbsp of balsamic vinegar, used turkey broth instead of water, omitted flour. Puréed with immersion blender until fairly smooth. Well-received by my family, including picky eaters.

carol

I agree that blending made this ragout seem to lack flavor. I will attempt to ‘fix’ it with some half and half but am kinda disappointed.

Deborah

I've made this several times for Thanksgiving and think it's excellent. I prefer it with thyme only because I find sage and rosemary overpower the mushrooms. Also, when I made it, the final step took about 10 minutes, not 20, so keep your eye on it.

Edward in Paris

Made this in a slight variation as a pasta sauce. I reduced the flour to a large teaspoon and only used one cup of water with half the dried mushrooms. I left off the broth but added cream and Creme fraiche at the end. Very nice

Shari

I needed more liquid, perhaps a cup more, than called for here in order to use as 'gravy.' So maybe a cup of red wine and 1.5 cups or even 2 cups broth.

Sara

Made this twice now and it is a winner. Using a variety of mushrooms and a delicious wine helps!

Kristen

Yum! Quick, easy. Didn't have wine and didn't use oil and only used a container of criminis and half an onion--let everything simmer all at once in the veg broth. Great for over an oven-roasted potato with parm sprinkled on top and a little non-fat Greek yogurt.

Jennie

I made this to eat with pasta, and while it made a giant amount, it was an unsatisfactory pasta sauce, even with the addition of Parmesan cheese. However, the second night, I dumped most of a container of sour cream into it, and it became quite delicious.

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Mushroom Ragout ‘Gravy’ Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Mushroom Ragout ‘Gravy’ Recipe? ›

The difference between ragu and ragout isn't really that much ragu is an Italian pasta sauce that is usually made with minced meat or vegetables and ragout is a French style stew that would normally be found on-top of a Paris style mash but the Italians would do this on-top of polenta.

What's the difference between ragout and Ragù? ›

The difference between ragu and ragout isn't really that much ragu is an Italian pasta sauce that is usually made with minced meat or vegetables and ragout is a French style stew that would normally be found on-top of a Paris style mash but the Italians would do this on-top of polenta.

What is ragout sauce? ›

What is ragù? Ragù is a meat-based sauce, typically served with pasta. Traditionally, pieces of meat (often beef, pork, game, or even horse), are cooked on a low heat in a braising liquid (this is usually tomato or wine-based) over a long period of time.

What is the method of cooking ragout? ›

Method
  1. Heat the oven to 160C/140C fan/gas 3 and season the beef all over. ...
  2. Wipe out the pan with kitchen paper, then add about 2 tbsp oil, the onions, carrots, celery and garlic with a pinch of salt and cook for 8-10 mins over a low-medium heat. ...
  3. When ready to serve, gently reheat the ragout over a medium heat.

Can I freeze a mushroom sauce? ›

TO STORE: Store leftover mushroom sauce in an airtight container in the refrigerator for 3 to 4 days. TO REHEAT: Warm the sauce in a saucepan set over medium-low heat or microwave it until it's warmed through. TO FREEZE: Transfer the mushroom sauce to an airtight container or freezer bag and freeze for up to 3 months.

What does ragout taste like? ›

Ragù is an Italian meat-based pasta sauce with a little bit of tomato/tomato paste (but not overwhelmingly tomato like a marinara would be). Think bolognese. What is this? Ragout, on the other hand, is a thick and chunky French stew, meat or veg-based and cooked long and slow until the flavors are rich and robust.

Why is it called ragout? ›

The term comes from the French ragoût, meaning: "to revive the taste".

What is the English term for ragout? ›

A ragout is essentially the same as a stew, except that most recipes for ragout are originally French, and often the meat and vegetables are cut into smaller pieces than in a typical stew.

Does ragu mean gravy? ›

Both words translate as “sauce” but never as “gravy.” Ragù doesn't even translate as “gravy” but comes close enough since it involves meat which is what people really mean when they say “gravy” (my personal opinion). Also, the word “gravy” is really, really English!

What pasta is best for ragout? ›

What is beef ragu served with? I prefer a broad pasta noodle like pappardelle, fettuccini, or tagliatelle. You could also do rigatoni, gnocchi, or cavatappi. If you don't want to serve your beef ragu over pasta, any other grain could work (like polenta!) or you could even serve it over mashed potatoes.

Is ragout Italian or French? ›

Ragout, on the other hand, is a slow-cooked French-style stew that can be made with meat or fish and vegetables — or even just vegetables. You can eat it on its own, or with a starch like polenta, couscous, or pasta.

Can you overcook a ragu? ›

It's almost impossible to overcook the ragu unless you are using very lean meat. I salt almost all my food, except for pasta cooking water, at the very end. Adjust salt to taste accordingly and serve with your favorite pasta.

How long should you simmer ragu for? ›

That process should take about an hour, then the rest of the work will be simmering your ragù. You will want to simmer it a minimum of 2 hours but I prefer at least 3, if not 3 1/2. The magic of this sauce is the slow cooking, and using the best ingredients that you can find.

How long does mushroom gravy last in the fridge? ›

how long will mushroom gravy last in the fridge? Mushroom gravy will last for about 4-5 days in the refrigerator, stored in an airtight container.

How do you thicken mushroom sauce? ›

Flour: Helps the mushroom sauce thicken up nicely. All-purpose flour works just fine here. Chicken Broth: Helps to add more flavor to the sauce. Beef broth works as a substitute.

How do you thicken mushroom sauce without cornstarch? ›

Make a roux with a bit of flour to help thicken the sauce. Add milk, stir to work out any lumps of flour, and cook until thickened. Stir in some parmesan, pour your mushroom sauce over pasta/chicken/etc., and enjoy!

What do Italians call ragu? ›

[raˈɡu ] invariable masculine noun. (Cookery) meat sauce. spaghetti al ragù spaghetti with meat sauce.

Why do Italians put milk in ragu? ›

It sounds unconventional to use milk in a meaty red sauce, but upon further investigation, it makes total sense why Italians swear by it. According to our Food Director Amira, not only does milk add a rich flavour to the bolognese, but it also “helps cut through the acidity of the tomatoes and red wine”.

What is the difference between a traditional ragu and a ragu alla bolognese? ›

While Ragu and Bolognese are similar, and in fact, Bolognese is a form of ragu, there are a few key differences worth considering. Ragu sometimes includes vegetable chunks, properly prepared Bolognese does not. Ragu typically uses red wine, while Bolognese calls for white.

How do Italians eat ragu? ›

Traditional service and use. In Bologna ragù is traditionally paired and served with tagliatelle made with eggs and northern Italy's soft wheat flour. Acceptable alternatives to fresh tagliatelle include other broad flat pasta shapes, such as pappardelle or fettuccine, and tube shapes, such as rigatoni and penne.

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