Gravy for Salsbury (vegan)
Source of Recipe
http://www.ivu.org/recipes/holiday/vegan-j.html
List of Ingredients
- 8 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 3 cloves garlic -- squashed and minced very well (3 to 6)
- 2 slices yellow onion -- chopped (2 to 3)
- 8 tablespoons all-purpose white flour
- 4 teaspoons nutritional yeast
- 4 tablespoons low- or reduced-sodium tamari (soy sauce)
- 2 cups water
- 1/2 teaspoon sage
- 1/4 teaspoon ground black pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 5 white mushrooms -- sliced (optional) (5 to 6)
- extra flour or cornstarch (optional)
Instructions
- Measure the vegetable oil into a small saucepan.
Cook the garlic and onion in it for about two minutes on medium or medium-low heat, until the onion is a bit tender and translucent.
- Add the flour, yeast, and tamari to make a paste.
Add the water gradually, stirring constantly.
Bring the gravy to a boil on medium to medium-high heat, stirring constantly -- the gravy has to boil for it to thicken.
(Grandma always told me to cook gravy for a full five minutes at a boil to make sure you kill the bugs in the flour, but I don't always bother.)
Add pepper.
Stir in the sliced mushrooms, if desired.
Add salt, if desired.
- If the gravy is too thin for your taste, add one or two tablespoons of flour or small amounts of cornstarch to thicken it and add home-made-looking lumps.
Use a wire whisk to eliminate lumps.
- Pour the piping hot gravy onto toast, bisquits, vegetarian sausage, poultry stuffing, potatoes, or vegetarian burgers.
This gravy takes about ten minutes to prepare.
Flavor tip for the gravy: take a package of dried shiitake mushrooms and reconstitute them with about a cup and a half of very hot (but not boiling) water.
Let it sit for 20 minutes, then strain -- use that mushroom juice plus enough water to make 2 cups of liquid for the recipe.
This gravy refrigerates well.
Freezing is not recommended; unused, undesired quantities should be discarded rather than frozen (the ingredients are inexpensive).
The cooled gravy re-heats well in the microwave or on the stove.
As shown, recipe makes roughly a quart. Recipe can be halved.
Final Comments
NOTES: Use this recipe for biscuits-n-gravy or for any other dish that calls for a gravy -- I even use it for Salisbury "Steak" made with veggie burgers.
It can also be used as a supplement or even substitute for meat gravies, which have much more saturated fat.
Please note that this gravy, however, is not a low-fat food -- each serving has about 2/3 tablespoon of oil.
On the other hand, it can be a low-sodium food; and there is no sugar in the recipe.
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