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Easy Biscuits and Gravy

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Easy Biscuits and Gravy - From Hearth to Stove

Jake had been gone two and a half weeks on a pipeline job in Pennsylvania when he walked through the door at 4:30 in the morning. I heard his boots on the porch and was already up. Some wives can sleep through anything. I have never been that wife. When Jake comes home, I know it before the door opens.

Biscuits and gravy is the first thing I make when he gets back. Not because he asks—he’d never ask—but because it’s the meal that says “welcome home” louder than anything else I could cook. The smell of sausage gravy filling the kitchen at 5 AM, the biscuits going golden in the oven, the coffee brewing. By the time he’s showered and changed, breakfast is on the table.

This was Jake’s breakfast growing up. His mom made it every Saturday with Jimmy Dean sausage and Bisquick biscuits, and he loved it. When I started making it with homemade biscuits and scratch gravy, he said it was the best thing that ever happened to Saturday mornings. Coming from a man who doesn’t give compliments easily, that meant something.

The gravy is the whole point. You can use store-bought biscuits if you’re in a hurry, but the gravy has to be made from scratch because nothing in a can or a packet tastes like the real thing. It’s a simple roux—sausage drippings, flour, milk—and it comes together in about ten minutes. Nana Ruth made gravy like this her whole life. She could make a roux with her eyes closed.

How to Make Biscuits and Gravy

Make the biscuits first. Use our buttermilk biscuit recipe or whatever biscuit recipe you trust. If you’re in a hurry, canned biscuits work—I won’t tell anyone. Get them in the oven while you make the gravy so everything comes together at the same time.

Cook the sausage. Brown a pound of breakfast sausage in a large skillet, breaking it into crumbles as it cooks. Don’t drain the fat—that’s your flavor base for the gravy. If you’re using a lean sausage and there’s not much drippings, add a tablespoon of butter.

Build the gravy. Sprinkle about 3 tablespoons of flour over the cooked sausage and stir it in. Cook for a minute or two until the flour is absorbed and starting to smell toasty. Then slowly pour in milk (about 2-3 cups), stirring constantly. Keep stirring over medium heat until the gravy thickens—it should coat the back of a spoon. Season generously with black pepper and salt to taste.

Serve immediately. Split the hot biscuits open on plates and ladle the sausage gravy over the top. Be generous. Jake always says “more gravy” and I always say “that’s enough” and then I give him more anyway. This feeds our whole family with seconds for Jake and the occasional thirds for Wyatt.

Easy Biscuits and Gravy

Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Keyword biscuits and gravy, breakfast & brunch, classic comfort, weeknight dinners
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 6
Author Maggie

Ingredients

  • 1 lb breakfast sausage
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 3 cups whole milk
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon black pepper
  • 1 can refrigerated biscuits or homemade biscuits

Instructions

  1. Bake biscuits according to package directions (or make your own — see Maggie's Buttermilk Biscuits recipe).
  2. While biscuits bake, cook sausage in a large skillet over medium heat, breaking into crumbles, until fully browned.
  3. Sprinkle flour over the sausage and stir to coat. Cook 1 minute.
  4. Slowly pour in milk, stirring constantly. Cook 5-7 minutes, stirring often, until gravy thickens. Season with salt and plenty of pepper.
  5. Split warm biscuits on plates and smother with sausage gravy. Serve immediately.

Common Questions

My gravy is lumpy. What went wrong?
Lumps happen when you add the milk too fast. Pour it in slowly while whisking constantly. If you still get lumps, pour the gravy through a fine mesh strainer—it catches the lumps and saves the gravy. Nana Ruth said lumps mean you weren’t stirring fast enough, and she was right.
Can I make the gravy ahead of time?
You can, but it thickens considerably as it cools. Reheat it over low heat, adding splashes of milk and stirring until it’s the right consistency again. It won’t be quite as good as fresh, but it’s perfectly acceptable for a busy morning.
What kind of sausage should I use?
Regular pork breakfast sausage (like Jimmy Dean) is the classic choice. Sage-flavored is traditional. Hot sausage adds a nice kick if your family likes heat. Turkey sausage works if you want something lighter, but you’ll need to add extra butter for the roux since it’s leaner.
Can I use something besides whole milk?
Whole milk gives the creamiest, richest gravy. 2% works fine but is a little thinner. Skim milk makes a noticeably thinner gravy—I’d add an extra tablespoon of flour to compensate. For an extra rich version, use half milk and half heavy cream.
How do I make this for a crowd?
Double or triple the gravy recipe easily—just use a bigger pan. For the biscuits, make a double batch or use two cans. This scales up beautifully for holidays and family gatherings. When Jake’s parents visit, I always make a double batch and there’s never any left over.

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What I Use for This Recipe

A couple things from my kitchen that make this one easier.

Lodge 10.25-Inch Cast Iron Skillet
Lodge 10.25-Inch Cast Iron Skillet(~$20)

The skillet that never leaves our stovetop. Pre-seasoned, affordable, and built to last.

OXO Good Grips Balloon Whisk
OXO Good Grips Balloon Whisk(~$10)

Smooth gravy, lump-free batter, hot cocoa that is actually mixed. Small tool, big difference.

Microplane Classic Zester
Microplane Classic Zester(~$15)

Lemon zest, fresh parmesan, a little nutmeg. Tiny tool that makes everything taste more alive.

This post contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. I only recommend tools I actually use. See all my kitchen picks

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