Cream gravy recipe, the cream of the gravy crop
1. In Texas, what is the correct topping for mashed potatoes?
2. In Texas, what is the correct topping for biscuits, besides butter, honey or jam?
3. In Texas, what is the correct topping for chicken fried steak?
4. In Texas, what is the correct topping for any other piece of meat, fish or sausage and/or any other vegetable?
5. What did my great-grandmother Blanche feed her dog, Rover?
Did you answer “cream gravy” for all five questions? Fantastic, here’s a gold star! Otherwise, let me explain.
While chili gravy is the essence of Tex-Mex, one of the hallmarks of Tex-Tex is cream gravy. This thick, peppery and creamy sauce is poured over everything, as you can see by the above questions. It’s a simple concoction, made with pan drippings, flour, milk and cracked black pepper. But while it may appear plain, it’s infinitely delicious. Sometimes it goes by the name country gravy or white gravy, but in Texas we always call it cream gravy. Or better yet—just gravy because in Texas there really is no other kind.
The history of cream gravy goes back hundreds of years with its origins springing from limited means. People didn’t have the ingredients to make complex meat-stock gravies, but there was always flour, milk and pepper on hand to add to the pan drippings. Not only did my great-grandmothers make the stuff but they probably learned how to make it from their mothers. My grandma tells me they ate it all the time, pouring it over everything as it was a great way to stretch a meal during the Depression. And apparently my great-grandma Blanche even whipped up batches from her bottomless can of bacon grease to feed her dog.

As you can see, my family has a long history with cream gravy. And while I have always loved it, I never thought it was unique because it was always both expected and available. I remember the first time, however, I ordered mashed potatoes outside the state. I asked for extra gravy, which they generously provided, but what they served me wasn’t white, it was brown. I was horrified. “What’s this?” I asked. “It’s gravy,” my server replied. Well, it may have been gravy, but it wasn’t the right kind of gravy.
(Note: Not all cream gravy is pure white. Mine always turns out slightly off white, as you can see in the photos. That’s because of the dark color of my pan drippings and I use King Arthur’s White Whole-Wheat Flour, which isn’t very white, it’s more beige. But I digress.)
It’s still impossible to find cream gravy at restaurants in the Northeast. And I even had a hard time convincing a restaurant in Alabama (of all places!) last year to serve me cream gravy instead of brown gravy. Since cream gravy is rooted in a time when people didn’t have a lot, I bet brown gravy is perceived as a fancy rich-man’s food. But if it comes from a jar or a can as it so often does, brown gravy is not any improvement on the sublime simplicity of cream gravy.
To craft cream gravy is a cinch. I watched my mother prepare it all my life, so it’s just one of those things you know how to do without thinking about precise measurements and such. But if you’ve never made it I will provide you with guidance and a recipe. It’s best cooked with pan drippings, but you can do it from scratch with either vegetable oil or bacon grease. And while cracked black pepper is the traditional seasoning, you can tart it up with chipotles, jalapenos, cayenne or chile powder.

Now, if you’re looking for a vehicle for your gravy, watch this space. To celebrate Texas Independence Day on March 2nd, later this week I’ll talk about our state dish, chicken fried steak—always best served swimming in cream gravy. Until then, you can try it on your potatoes, your biscuits, your rice or anything else you want to drown in peppery, creamy delight. And heck, if for some bizarre reason you decide you don’t like it, you can do as Grandma Blanche and feed it to your dog.
Cream gravy
Ingredients
- 2 tablespoons pan drippings, bacon grease, or vegetable oil
- 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 cups whole milk
- 1 teaspoon black pepper
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
Instructions
- Combine the fat with flour in a hot skillet, continuously stirring, cook on medium for a couple of minutes until a roux is formed.
- Add milk slowly to the skillet, and mix with roux using either a whisk or wooden spoon (be sure and press out any lumps). Turn heat to low and continue stirring until mixture is thickened, a couple more minutes. Add the pepper and salt then taste and adjust seasonings.
- If the gravy is too thick, you can thin it by adding either more milk or water a tablespoon at a time. Goes great with mashed potatoes, fried chicken, biscuits, chicken fried steak, grits, vegetables, rice or anything else you can imagine.








ahh ty finaly made a good gravy my french inlaws liked it as well on some mashed taters its crazy how many of us texans live away now im from houston area live in the sounth of france 8 long long years now i do go back once a year thou have a grr8 1
I just found this post and wanted to let you know that the reason you didnt get cream gravy in Alabama is because we call it "milk gravy". Same recipe, different name. I'm living in TX now and when I made it for my born and bred Texan husband he acted like he didnt know what it was! Come to find out he was raised on the very white kind, while mine looked more like yours. 😀
Hello
I'm from an obscure little country called Malaysia. We just had a meal at a restaurant that served us gravy on fries, gravy on mashed 'taters and gravy on biscuits. We liked it a lot but my wife freaked out after the third dish arrived with the same gravy on it. Now i know how to explain what it is, why it ain't brown, and why its on everything! Thanks for your illuminating post.
After reading your post I see why your gravy is brown-ish. My grandmother always told me never to burn the roux. She instructed me to add the milk to the flour just after it stopped foaming and right before it started to brown. Also cooking the gravy in the cast iron skillet will lend a slight brown coloring to it as well. When the flour browns too much you will also get an acidic flavor to the gravy, but if you do it like my grandmother instructed the sweetness of the milk still comes through. LOL my grandmother didn't like fresh ground pepper, it got stuck in her teeth so she always made me use the canned fine pepper. I still use it to this day for family functions.
As a transplanted Texan (once a Texan always a Texan ), I grew up on my Mom's cream gravy.
Another thing she did to make a "meal" was to fry a jar of chopped chipped beef in the fat (in her case she used butter), mix in the flour, cook that for a while and then add the milk.
I still do this whenever I want something quick and easy for dinner. That's what we are having tonight!
Boy do I miss Texas!!