this post was submitted on 25 Aug 2025
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[–] jwmgregory@lemmy.dbzer0.com 40 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

Um, no. White gravies are a strong part of culinary traditions across Europe as a whole. The lumberjacks in Appalachia didn't just decide one day to make biscuits and "ragu" out of nowhere, they had several sources of inspiration for why they made their gravy the way they did.

And, yes, according to basically every culinary school everywhere, ever - the referent sauce is a gravy, not a ragu/ragout as you attempt to imply here. The sauce is far, far too fucking fatty to be a ragu. It is literally made with meat drippings and is primarily composed of sausage fat and roux. The fact that milk is added as a binder/emulsifier + flavor-enhancer doesn't suddenly turn it into a fucking "ragu". Further, even if gravy was the wrong term for this sauce, the correct one certainly isn't a ragu. This is much closer to a velouté and that family of sauces than it is to ragu and other meat sauces. Except, this isn't velouté, either. Why? BECAUSE THE SAUCE IS MOSTLY MADE OF FAT SOURCED FROM DRIPPINGS, THE FUCKING DICTIONARY DEFINITION OF A GRAVY!!!

Have you never had southern American style biscuits and gravy before?

I just can't seem to imagine how someone would think the gravy is a ragu instead of being a gravy unless you've literally never eaten it before and only have seen it visually and know that it is a sauce with meat in it... this whole position is patently fucking ridiculous if you've ever eaten it before, imo.

You can be Western European, pompous, or correct - pick two.

Sorry not to be a dick I just gotta raz you guys when I get the chance lmao, much love from across the seas. This is definitely an interesting hill you've picked to die upon in a thread topically about language barriers, tho, lol.

[–] _stranger_@lemmy.world 7 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Just in case anyone wants to argue with you, here's the tasting history guy backing you up:

https://www.tastinghistory.com/recipes/biscuitsandgravy

[–] chaitae3@lemmy.world -3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Sorry but that is a ridiculous source, they forgot to add yeast to their yeast dough and just went with it. If they dont care about doing things the way they believe it tastes best, why bother with recipes at all?

[–] Schmoo@slrpnk.net 6 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Why are so many people so pompous about cooking? Making a mistake and running with it is how most recipes were invented in the first place. If you're only ever cooking by numbers then you've got no ground to stand on to be critiquing cooking.

And on that note, this attitude is what puts me off of so many cooking shows.

[–] chaitae3@lemmy.world 1 points 10 hours ago

There are many aspects to that question, I could for example say that what hundreds of people eat in a restaurant in a week has to be of consistent quality and perfectly hygienic. I could talk about how knowing when to add salt to a dish makes the difference between stale or juicy lentils. Or that a roux tastes so much better if you just sauté it for a few minutes, which anyone would always do if they just knew about it, and it's the job of a recipe to tell them.

But in the end, I dont think cooks are more pompous about their craft than carpenters or painters are about their work. They wouldn't use steel screws for wood or a broad brush for corners. It's a craft and people get angry if someone gives wrong explanations.

[–] chaitae3@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

The fact that milk is added as a binder/emulsifier + flavor-enhancer doesn't suddenly turn it into a fucking "ragu". Further, even if gravy was the wrong term for this sauce, the correct one certainly isn't a ragu. This is much closer to a velouté [...]

I think it's much closer to a béchamel. The recipes I've found dont really create a roux first, but if they did, a Bechamel is exactly what you're creating if you add milk instead of water or broth and mix it until your wrist falls off.