• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to header navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

RecipeTin Eats

Fast Prep, Big Flavours

  • My RecipeTin
  • NEW cookbook!
  • Recipes
  • Recipes By Category
    • Iconic + cult classics
    • Mains
      • Chicken
        • Chicken mince
      • Beef Recipes
        • Ground Beef (Mince)
      • Pork
      • Lamb
      • Turkey
      • Shrimp / Prawns
      • Salmon
      • Fish recipes
      • Salad Meals
    • Quick and Easy
    • Soups
    • One Pot – One Pan
    • Stewy slow-cooked things
    • Slow Cooker
    • Sides
      • All
      • Salads & veg
      • Show Off Salads
      • Rice (all)
      • Fried rice recipes
      • Rice (plain)
      • Potato
    • Pasta
      • All
      • Pasta bakes
      • Pasta salads
    • Sweet
      • Cakes
      • Candy
      • Cheesecakes
      • Cupcakes & Muffins
      • Cookies
      • Puddings & Cosy Desserts
      • Bite Size
      • Pies
      • Slices & Bars
      • Frosting & Icing
      • Ice cream
    • Cuisine
      • Asian
        • All
        • Stir fries
        • Noodles
        • Soups
        • Chinese
        • RecipeTin Japan 🇯🇵
        • Korean
        • Modern Asian
        • Thai
        • Vietnamese
      • French
      • Greek
      • Indian
      • Italian
      • Mediterranean
      • Mexican
      • Middle Eastern
      • South American
    • Dietary
      • Gluten Free
      • Low Calorie
      • Vegetarian
    • Other Categories
      • BBQ
      • Breakfast
      • Burgers
      • 🎄Christmas
      • Cocktails
      • Party Foods
      • Rice Recipes
      • Roasts
      • Sandwiches & Sliders
    • Recipe collections
    • Cookbook recipes
  • My Food Bank
  • About
    • Me
    • RecipeTin Meals
    • My Cookbooks
      • Tonight (NEW!)
      • Dinner
    • Free Recipe Books
    • Contact
    • Nitty Gritty
      • Policy: Use of Recipes & Images
      • Privacy & Disclosure
Home Sauces

Mushroom Gravy

By Nagi Maehashi
135 Comments
Share
  • Copy Link
  • E-mail
  • Facebook
  • WhatsApp
Published17 Mar '21 Updated18 Jun '25
Jump to
Recipe

This is an easy-to-make Mushroom Gravy that will elevate anything you douse it with. It’s a gravy recipe made from scratch but without drippings. Use it as a sauce for steak, chicken, schnitzel, sausages, or even steamed vegetables. Or just mop it up with bread!

Ladle scooping up Mushroom Gravy from saucepan

Mushroom Gravy

If there’s one thing that cooking full-time for a living has taught me, it’s that an arsenal of great sauces is one of the most useful things you arm yourself with in the kitchen.

It can turn the mundane into extraordinary. Take Poached Chicken (meh!) … paired with Ginger Shallot Sauce (now you’re talking! SO GOOD!).

It’s also an easy way to replicate a real fine dining experience at home. Think Béarnaise Sauce with salmon or steak. So very posh!

And it doesn’t have to be time-consuming. Sauces can deliver really quick meals that are seriously delicious, all without resorting to packet mixes. For example, 4-ingredient Honey Garlic Chicken or a Baked Fish with Lemon Cream Sauce. Or in today’s case, Mushroom Gravy with anything!

Just pan-sear or barbecue a piece of chicken, chops or steak with salt and pepper, and smother with this delicious sauce. It’s also excellent to serve over steamed vegetables, a pile of mash, or for mopping up with any starchy vehicle of choice that you serve with dinner (pasta, rice, polenta, bread). It’s endlessly versatile.

In short: Mushroom Gravy is a life essential, believe me!

Fork picking up a piece of schnitzel smothered in Mushroom Gravy
Schnitzel with mash smothered with Mushroom Gravy. Wish I had Rosti on the side instead!

What you need for Mushroom Gravy

Here’s what you need. Yes, the first thing we’ll need for Mushroom Gravy is … mushrooms! 😂

Bowl of mushrooms for Mushroom Gravy

You can use ordinary white button mushrooms or, for slightly more intense mushroom flavour, Cremini / Swiss Browns.

There’s nothing to stop you going more gourmet with the mushrooms if you like. Personally though from a best-use perspective, if I have say a fresh wild mushroom mix I’d use it for something like Mushroom Risotto where it can really shine, rather than a gravy.

For the gravy

And here’s what you need for the gravy:

Ingredients in Mushroom Gravy
  • Oil AND butter – For cooking the mushrooms. Why both? Because butter = flavour, but it burns at high heat whereas oil does not. So we need to use a combination of both oil and butter to make the mushrooms nice and golden while minimising the risk of burning the butter;

  • Garlic – Because mushrooms and garlic are very good pals;

  • Flour – This is what thickens gravy; and

  • Beef stock/broth – The higher quality the stock, the better your gravy. Stock is the heart of a sauce and there’s nothing to hide behind. So a homemade beef stock is one of the key things that differentiates the gravy and sauces of fine dining restaurants compared to ones made at home with mass-produced, shelf-stable store beef stock, like Campbell’s (the most common brand in Australia). Homemade chicken stock would also work just as well, with a slightly milder flavour.

    If homemade stock isn’t within your reach, I strongly encourage you to buy the best beef stock you can afford. Check with your friendly neighbourhood butcher, else try to buy the more boutique brands of beef stock/broth or beef bone broth (which is just a trendy name for plain ol’ beef stock!).

Buttery garlic sautéed mushrooms in a skillet

How to make Mushroom Gravy

The gravy part is super-quick – literally 3 minutes. The part that takes the longest is browning the mushrooms!

How to make Mushroom Gravy
  1. Brown mushrooms – We use a combination of both oil and butter to cook the mushrooms. This is because butter provides better flavour, but it burns at the high heat and length of time required to make the mushrooms golden. So by using a combination of both oil and butter, we get the best of both worlds!

  2. Cook in batches – We’re using 400g/14oz of mushrooms in the gravy. However it shrinks down by more than half once cooked.

    Cook the mushrooms in 2 batches rather than trying to cram them all in at once. If you try the latter, the mushrooms just stew and become watery. It then takes forever for the water to be driven off so the mushrooms can start browning. And by the time this happens, the mushrooms have shrivelled down into a sad, dried up state!

  3. Remove first lot of cooked mushrooms onto a plate, then repeat with remaining mushrooms and set aside too;

  4. Make gravy in same pan – Start by melting butter, then add flour and cook for a couple of minutes to cook out the raw flour taste. The texture of the flour-butter mixture (called a roux) depends on how much fat was left in the pan after cooking the mushrooms. Less fat = drier roux, more fat = wetter, more pasty roux. Either consistency is fine, and it will dissolve into the stock. The key thing is how much flour is used – we need just enough to thicken the gravy;

  5. Pour stock in while whisking – While whisking or stirring the roux, slowly pour in the stock. This is the trick to ensure your gravy is lump-free, and it works even without using a whisk! Though a whisk does make life easier :-). Mix until you no longer see lumps in the gravy; and

  6. Simmer until gravy thickens, add mushrooms – Once the mixture heats up and begins bubbling, it will start to thicken. While the mixture is still heating up, you only need to stir every now and then. Once the liquid is starting to get hot, stir frequently to ensure the base doesn’t catch. When making gravy in a skillet or shallow pan, rather than a saucepan like with plain gravy, the larger exposed surface area means it will thicken very quickly – maybe 2 – 3 minutes, depending on the strength of your stove.

    Once the gravy is a thin-syrup consistency, add all mushrooms back in just to warm through. As a gravy cools it will thicken further. So by the time the mushrooms are warmed (30 seconds or so), the gravy will thicken to the perfect consistency!

Mushroom Gravy in a black skillet, fresh off the stove

A note on gravy colour

This is determined by the colour of the stock / broth you use. Brown stock/broth = nice brown gravy. This is why we use beef stock instead of chicken stock – because chicken stock is pale, which results in an un-enticing pale coloured gravy made from scratch like this, whereas beef stock/broth (broth store bought and homemade) is a darker brown colour = darker brown gravy.

As a side note, when making gravy from roast pan drippings, such as Turkey Gravy or this Baked Chicken & Gravy, the browned pan drippings darkens the colour of the gravy which is why you can use chicken stock and still make a nicely coloured gravy.

Gravy is indestructible!

Unlike some other sauces (I’m looking at YOU, Hollandaise Sauce!), gravy is very forgiving. It’s easy to reheat, to make thinner or thicker, it keeps for days, it freezes, etc. Even when it looks split after thawing, a good mix is all it takes to bring it back to life again.

I feel like it’s virtually indestructible! In fact, the only thing I can think might go wrong is if you walk away from the stove and the base catches and burns. So, don’t! This part only takes a couple of minutes. Stay by the stove and check your Facebook feed later!

Adjusting gravy thickness (it’s totally easy!)

Whether you’re making it right now or reheating gravy, adjusting the thickness to exactly what you want is very easy. Too thick? Just add boiling water, or some tap water and cook to heat. Too thin? Keep it on the stove for longer to reduce.

TIP: Gravy always thickens more as it cools, even in the time it takes to get from the stove to the gravy jug to the dinner table. So take it off the stove when it’s thinner than what you want! Also, gravy that’s been the fridge and reheated will be very thick and will almost certainly need thinning.

Freshly cooked schnitzel being pulled out of hot foil
Ladling Mushroom Gravy over schnitzel

What to serve with Mushroom Gravy

The full list is lengthy because the possibilities are endless! Here’s a few of my favourites:

  • Schnitzel with a side of mash or rosti – Mushroom gravy is one of the best toppings for schnitzel, if you ask an Aussie! Think, Tuesday night pub special. Or the local RSL. Whatever floats your boat!

  • Steak, chicken, chops, sausages – All of these need nothing more than salt, pepper and cooking in a little oil on the stove or the barbie when you’ve got a sauce this good to pour over them.

    Want to fancy-up your steak cooking? Cook it the cheffy way, basted with garlic-thyme-butter. Or for economical cuts, marinate it;

  • Meatballs, rissoles, meatloaf and other ground meat favourites – All my meatball recipes come with sauces, but if you happen to have plain ones lying around, douse ’em in this sauce! Similarly for rissoles and other such foods.

    Want a meatball recipe to smother with Mushroom Gravy? Use this Baked Meatballs recipe (skip the Sweet ‘n Sour Sauce);

  • Steamed vegetables – Make dull steamed veg irresistible even for the pickiest of eaters!

  • Store bought roast chicken dinner – Make a meal out of store bought roast chicken with a side of steamed greens and this Mushroom Gravy;

  • Chicken rolls – Toss shredded chicken through this Mushroom Gravy and stuff into hot buttered rolls with plenty of black pepper. Great food idea for a casual gathering!

What other of your favourite ways with Mushroom Gravy am I missing? Tell me below and I’ll add it to the list, and credit you! – Nagi x


Watch how to make it

Hungry for more? Subscribe to my newsletter and follow along on Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram for all of the latest updates.

Ladle scooping up Mushroom Gravy

Mushroom Gravy (easy, from scratch, no drippings required)

Author: Nagi
Prep: 10 minutes mins
Cook: 15 minutes mins
Sauce
European, Western
5 from 53 votes
Servings5 – 6 people
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. Mushroom gravy is excellent served over steak or chicken. Though ask an Aussie and they'll tell you the best use is over a schnitzel – preferably with rosti, though mash rates highly too!
Gravy colour note: The deepness and richness of colour will depending on the beef stock you use. Generally speaking, a better stock will have deeper colour = darker (nicer!) -looking gravy.
Makes: 3 cups (freezes perfectly too!)

Ingredients

Mushrooms:

  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 45g / 3 tbsp butter , unsalted
  • 1 1/2 tsp garlic , finely minced (~1 large or 2 medium cloves)
  • 400g / 14oz mushrooms , sliced 3mm / ⅛" thick (white/button or Swiss/Cremini)
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/8 tsp black pepper

Gravy:

  • 30g / 2 tbsp butter , unsalted
  • 4 tbsp flour , plain / all-purpose
  • 2 cups beef stock / broth , low-sodium, the best you can afford (homemade beef stock or chicken stock is the very best option); Note 1
  • 1/4 tsp black pepper
  • Salt , to taste
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

Cook mushrooms:

  • Heat the olive oil in a large skillet over medium-high heat, then add butter and let it melt.
  • Cook half mushrooms: Add half the mushrooms and cook for 2 mins. Add half the salt and pepper, then continue to cook for another 2 mins until most mushrooms are becoming golden. Then add half the garlic and cook until mushrooms are fully golden, and remove to a plate.
  • Cook remaining mushrooms: Melt remaining butter, then cook remaining mushrooms per above (adding salt & pepper partway through, and garlic towards the end). Remove to a plate.

Gravy:

  • Lower heat to medium. In the same skillet, melt the butter.
  • Add flour and stir continuously for 1 1/2 minutes so the roux doesn't burn. Don't worry if the mixture is a bit dry and sandy, it depends how much fat is left from the mushrooms.
  • While stirring, slowly pour in the beef stock. This should avoid lumps in the gravy. If there are lumps, just whisk vigorously to dissolve them.
  • Cook for 3 to 4 minutes, or until it thickens to a thin-syrup consistency. Stir every now and then at first, then more regularly as the gravy thickens so it doesn't burn on the base of the skillet.
  • Stir in cooked mushrooms, cook for a further 1 minute. Taste and add more salt if needed (if using unsalted homemade stock, you will need more).
  • Pour into a gravy jug and serve with everything! It's particularly great and very Aussie poured over schnitzel with a side of rosti or chips! Otherwise serve with steak, simple pan-seared chops or chicken, sprinkled with salt and pepper before cooking.

Recipe Notes:

1. Beef stock quality is the key variable here that sets apart a decent homemade mushroom gravy from an exceptional restaurant-quality one. Homemade beef stock trumps any store-bought beef stock. However good quality store-bought stock from butchers etc. are still far better than mass-produced (like Campbell’s here in Australia). Alternatively, homemade chicken stock will also work just as well.
Do not use powdered beef stock for this gravy, it just doesn’t have adequate flavour.
2. Gluten-free option – Mix 2 tbsp of cornflour/cornstarch with 3 tbsp of the beef stock. Then add it into the skillet along with the rest of the beef stock. As it heats up, it will thicken.
3. Storage – Gravy will keep in the fridge for up to 5 days, or freezer for 3 months. Reheat using chosen method. It will look split at first but just give it a good stir and it will come together just fine.
To thicken the gravy, just simmer on the stove for a bit – it thickens quickly. To thin it, just add water.
4. Nutrition per serving, assuming 5 servings.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 179cal (9%)Carbohydrates: 8g (3%)Protein: 5g (10%)Fat: 15g (23%)Saturated Fat: 8g (50%)Trans Fat: 1gCholesterol: 32mg (11%)Sodium: 404mg (18%)Potassium: 462mg (13%)Fiber: 1g (4%)Sugar: 2g (2%)Vitamin A: 376IU (8%)Vitamin C: 2mg (2%)Calcium: 9mg (1%)Iron: 1mg (6%)
Keywords: Mushroom gravy, Mushroom Sauce, mushroom sauce recipe
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

More super sauces

Reheated Hollandaise Sauce
Hollandaise Sauce (Quick, easy, foolproof)
Close up of spoon scooping up Creamy Mushroom Sauce
A Mushroom Sauce for Everything!
Pea Puree in a bowl, ready to be servedq
Pea Puree (side / sauce!)
Spooning Bearnaise Sauce over steak
Béarnaise Sauce – world’s finest steak sauce
Ladle scooping up gravy from saucepan
Gravy recipe – easy, from scratch, no drippings
Creamy Dill Sauce with Salmon or Trout - A simple, refreshing sauce that pairs beautifully with rich salmon. Dinner on the table in 15 minutes! www.recipeteineats.com
Creamy Dill Sauce for Salmon or Trout
Overhead photo of a crispy pan fried fish fillet drizzled with Lemon Butter Sauce and sprinkled with parsley. On a white plate.
Killer Lemon Butter Sauce for Fish
Magic Spanish Romesco Sauce - This miracle sauce is simple to make and fabulous to use as a dip, sauce, spread, pesto, as a marinade or even to flavour and thicken soups!
Spanish Romesco Sauce / Dip (capsicum sauce)
Satay Chicken with Peanut Sauce (Indonesian / Bali version)
Satay Chicken with Peanut Sauce (Indonesian/Bali)

Life of Dozer

This is what happens when I try to work on the floor in front of the fire – Dozer laptop table! (Which is all very cute and all until someone rings the doorbell and he jumps up and my computer goes flying!)

Dozer Nagi working on floor
Previous Post
Burritos
Next Post
Spanakopita (Greek Spinach Pie)

Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

Read More

Free Recipe eBooks

Join my free email list to receive THREE free cookbooks!

Related Posts

Cowboy butter for steak

Cowboy butter – for steak and more!

Honey mustard dipping sauce

Honey mustard dipping sauce

Making tahini sauce

Tahini sauce

More Sauces

Reader Interactions

Leave a Comment Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Cooked this? Rate this recipe!




135 Comments

  1. Heather says

    March 17, 2021 at 5:17 pm

    This sounds delish! I adore mushrooms but usually end up with mushrooms cooked in a little butter and pepper.
    This sounds heaps better!
    I love the photo of Dozer playing. The pupper beside him looks just like my boy 🙂

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 18, 2021 at 10:00 am

      I hope you try it Heather, love to know what you think!!! N x

      Reply
  2. Tony says

    March 17, 2021 at 5:11 pm

    5 stars
    MMMM great on crumbed chicken

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 18, 2021 at 10:00 am

      YES!!! 🤤🤤🤤🤤

      Reply
  3. Gillian says

    March 17, 2021 at 4:52 pm

    Lovely and earthy beed something uplifting it’s still very cold here in Toronto have a couple steaks for this gravy 😀

    Reply
    • Jo-Ann says

      March 18, 2021 at 1:09 am

      Im from toronto too and love her recipes.

      Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 17, 2021 at 5:02 pm

      Perfect Gillian!!! Enjoy! N x

      Reply
  4. Eha says

    March 17, 2021 at 4:45 pm

    5 stars
    Hello Mommy, hello big boy . . . you two really do look comfy . . . now, Dozer, you are giving her lots of good ideas, aren’t you ? Oh I do love your mushroom sauce (hate the word ‘gravy’ !) and I also call my beef stock, made every fortnight, bone broth . . . well, ’tis me . . . only cook it around 12-15 hours . . . so perhaps I am being a little fancy with my names 🙂 ! And you are totally correct in saying it is absolutely essential in any kitchen . . . methinks the white buttons are fine for it . . . and yours does look moreish . . .

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 18, 2021 at 10:01 am

      It will be amazing with your bone broth Eha!!! N x

      Reply
      • Eha says

        March 18, 2021 at 7:07 pm

        Thursday night – Just as well your house is high up ! Hope you don’t have to go shopping !! best . . .

        Reply
  5. Darlene says

    March 17, 2021 at 4:39 pm

    5 stars
    Can I just say how ironic the advertising is in this recipe. Just under the section ” What you need for mushroom gravy” Yes firstly you need mushrooms, then a ad for Ivory Coat dog biscuits pops up! How hilarious! Dozer has been doing the shopping again!!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 18, 2021 at 10:02 am

      Funnily enough I don’t control the ads Darlene!! 😂 But yes, could you imagine what Dozers shopping list would contain 😂😂😂😂 – N x

      Reply
  6. David Warwick says

    March 17, 2021 at 4:28 pm

    It’s 4.30pm, decide I’m going to bbq myself a steak for dinner and think “I’ll have to look up a mushroom sauce recipe on recipetineats”. Low and behold, what’s in my inbox – mushroom gravy!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 18, 2021 at 10:02 am

      It’s meant to be David!!!! 🙌 N x

      Reply
  7. Macy says

    March 17, 2021 at 3:58 pm

    Oh my goodness..beautiful, sweet boy❤

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      March 18, 2021 at 10:03 am

      Isn’t he just 🥰 – N x

      Reply
Newer Comments

Primary Sidebar

Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative! Read More

Free Recipe eBooks

Join my free email list to receive THREE free cookbooks!

Meet Dozer

Official taste tester of RecipeTin Eats! Meet Dozer
As Featured On

Never miss a recipe!

Subscribe to my newsletter and receive 3 FREE ebooks!

Subscribe
Recipes
  • All Recipes
  • By Category
  • Collections
About
  • About Nagi
  • About Dozer
  • RecipeTin Meals
Related
  • RecipeTin Japan
Help
  • Contact
  • Image Use Policy
© RecipeTin Eats 2025
  • Privacy Policy & Terms
Site Credits
Maintained by Human Made Designed by Melissa Rose Design Developed by Once Coupled
All Rights Reserved

Subscribe to my newsletter

Sign up and receive 3 FREE EBOOKS!