Chocolate gravy recipe
A friend and I were comparing notes about our favorite childhood treats. As I was raving about my grandma’s chocolate pie, my friend said, “So how’s your grandma’s chocolate gravy?” Huh? Chocolate gravy—is that like mole, I asked. Nope, it’s spooned on biscuits, she said. I had to admit that I’d never heard of chocolate gravy; clearly I’d been deprived.
Curious why I had been denied the joys of chocolate gravy all my life, I called my grandma and demanded an explanation. “Why don’t you make chocolate gravy?” I asked. She replied, “Because I don’t know what it is.”
I see. Apparently, my grandma was in the dark on this secret as well. My only consolation? At least I wasn’t alone.

So what’s the provenance of chocolate gravy? Because I know everything, I assumed that if I hadn’t heard of it, then it must not be Texan.
I was wrong.
I poked around and not only had my friend—a long-standing Texan—grown up eating it within slapping distance of Dallas, but other Texan friends had been eating it all their lives as well. I heard chocolate-gravy stories from friends as far west as Midland and as far south as Houston. Though friends who had grown up in Arkansas, Tennessee and Georgia had also indulged, so it’s not particular to just Texas. But no matter, my family had been missing out on a very good thing.
I needed to make up for lost time. A little research revealed that there hadn’t been much chocolate-gravy recipe evolution over the years. The biggest schism I found in the chocolate-gravy community was whether to use milk or water as your liquid. I was surprised that no one had thrown some chipotle or bacon into their gravy, but actually this pleased me as it proved that chocolate gravy was indeed a classic that didn’t need any tinkering. But enough about thinking, it was time to eat.
I made my first batch and it was a deep, dark concoction—smooth, creamy and thick. I sliced a biscuit in half and plopped some chocolate gravy on each half. My first bite revealed this gravy’s pleasures. Its pudding-like consistency is pure comfort on a cold, winter morning. And while biscuits are in no way virtuous, their texture and heft prevents the gravy from sliding into total decadence, which is important as this is a breakfast treat after all, not dessert.

Does chocolate gravy and biscuits replace my beloved chocolate pie? No, but I certainly wouldn’t pass up an opportunity to pass an occasional morning with it poured on top of a biscuit. And am I the only one who didn’t grow up eating this? No matter, I am very, very pleased to finally make its acquaintance.
Chocolate gravy
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
- 1/4 cup cocoa powder
- 1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 2 cups whole milk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon unsalted butter
- Biscuits, for serving
Instructions
- Mix together in a pot the sugar, flour, cocoa powder, salt and cinnamon (can sift if it’s too lumpy). Add the milk and while stirring cook on medium heat until it thickens. Stir in the vanilla and butter and serve immediately with biscuits.








this recipe is one of my favorite memories of visiting my Granny Ashe… she would sneak off into the kitchen after dinner and whip up a batch of this gravy… sometimes she added cornstarch to make a chocolate custard style pudding we could pour over her white cake.
I am a native Texan and have just learned about this by reading your blog. Can I use the gravy on other foods?, like broiled shrimp?
lonestaroftejas–It's sweet so I don't think it would be very good on broiled shrimp.
I am 53. I grew up eating Choc. Gravy several times a week for breakfast. And it must be eaten on hot biscuits that are slathered in butter, so that when you cut into it, the butter gushes out the sides. And we always had either bacon or sausage as a side…and those two items dipped into the chocolate gravy…heaven.
I grew up loving chocolate pie in West Texas and had never had chocolate gravy either and asked my mother, who grew up in Arkansas where most of my relatives are, about it. I was flabbergasted to hear her say that my grandma used to make chocolate gravy for them for breakfast as kids. Can you imagine the betrayal I felt? It seems that just about all my cousins know about this too. I couldn't believe it. I'm still reeling! Not only that, it seems there was also a chocolate fried pie that I'd missed out on too. I've had peach fried pies, apple fried pies, apricot fried pies…but where were MY chocolate fried pies? And I always thought I had a good childhood up to now…
Lana in Wisconsin