How to Make the Best Turkey Gravy

How to Make the Best Turkey Gravy - This is simply the most perfect gravy for your Thanksgiving turkey using pan drippings! So rich, so smooth and so easy!

This is simply the most perfect gravy for your Thanksgiving turkey using pan drippings! So rich, so smooth and so easy!

How to Make the Best Turkey Gravy - This is simply the most perfect gravy for your Thanksgiving turkey using pan drippings! So rich, so smooth and so easy!

I promised you a gravy recipe, didn’t I?

I always keep my promises. Plus, this isn’t just any ordinary turkey gravy recipe.

Nope. This is the world’s easiest, quickest, less-than-2o-minute recipe conveniently using the pan drippings from your foolproof turkey.

How to Make the Best Turkey Gravy - This is simply the most perfect gravy for your Thanksgiving turkey using pan drippings! So rich, so smooth and so easy!

Which means, hello, this is also a foolproof gravy!

You just can’t go wrong here. All you have to do is strain your pan drippings and combine it with some butter, flour and fresh herbs.

Season with salt and pepper, to taste, and boom. You’re done.

How to Make the Best Turkey Gravy - This is simply the most perfect gravy for your Thanksgiving turkey using pan drippings! So rich, so smooth and so easy!

How to Make the Best Turkey Gravy

This is simply the most perfect gravy for your Thanksgiving turkey using pan drippings! So rich, so smooth and so easy!

Ingredients:

  • Pan drippings from Easy Thanksgiving Turkey
  • 1/4 cup unsalted butter
  • 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons chopped fresh thyme
  • 1 tablespoon chopped fresh parsley leaves
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Directions:

  1. Strain pan drippings through a fine-mesh sieve; discard solids and reserve 2 1/2 cups pan drippings; set aside.
  2. Melt butter in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Whisk in flour and thyme until lightly browned, about 1 minute.
  3. Gradually whisk in reserved pan drippings. Bring to a boil; reduce heat and simmer, whisking constantly, until thickened, about 5-10 minutes. Stir in parsley; season with salt and pepper, to taste.
  4. Serve warm.

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The post How to Make the Best Turkey Gravy appeared first on Damn Delicious.

Is Wine Gluten-Free? (Wine Spectator)

As its name suggests, a gluten-free diet is all about avoiding gluten, a protein found in wheat, rye, barley and a handful of other grains. This means traditionally prepared breads, pastas, cereals and beers are automatically off the table.

Many have adopted the diet over the past decade as a means of losing weight and boosting energy levels—proponents include celebrity wellness guru Gwyneth Paltrow—but gluten can be a serious health problem for those who have an intolerance or allergy to it, or who suffer from celiac disease, the autoimmune disorder in which the ingestion of gluten leads to damage in the small intestine and other long-term health complications. For people with these medical conditions, knowing whether a food or beverage contains gluten is an absolute necessity.

“If they don’t embrace a gluten-free diet, they are sick,” Dr. Alessio Fasano, director of the Center for Celiac Research and Treatment at Massachusetts General Hospital, told Wine Spectator. “They don’t have a choice, because if they don’t embrace the diet, they will definitely pay a price.”

Regardless of why people opt to let go of gluten, there’s a common question many ask: Can I drink wine on a gluten-free diet?

The short answer is yes. “A classic example of an alcoholic beverage that does not have gluten is wine,” Fasano said. “Typically it is made by grapes, and the process, under normal circumstances, has no exposure to gluten whatsoever.”

And the feds agree. The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau allows wines to be labeled “gluten-free,” as long as they comply with the FDA’s requirements of not being made with any gluten-containing grains and having less than 20 parts per million (ppm) gluten—and the vast majority of wines do comply.

Are there exceptions?

While wine is collectively considered safe for those with gluten-related disorders (barring other health issues related to drinking alcohol), those with severe reactions should still be aware of two instances in which wine may come into contact with gluten.

The first scenario is if a barrel that is used to age wine is sealed with wheat paste, which contains gluten. Across the wine industry, this paste has largely been replaced by non-gluten-based wax substitutes, and even when used the wine’s exposure to it is virtually negligible.

In fact, in 2012, Tricia Thompson, founder of GlutenFreeWatchdog.org, tested this idea by measuring the gluten levels of two different wines finished in wheat paste–sealed barrels. In her study, the wines contained less than 5 and 10 ppm gluten, respectively—far lower than the FDA’s 20 ppm standard for gluten-free foods.

Another potential point of gluten contact is if wheat gluten is used for fining. But this practice is also extremely rare. (In fact, two enologists interviewed for this story were unaware that gluten-containing fining agents even existed.)

And once again, the resulting wine isn’t likely to have enough (if any) gluten in it to cause a reaction: A 2011 study published in theJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry tested wines fined with gluten-based agents and found that they contained either very little gluten or none at all.

Furthermore, “even if any traces of gluten would accidentally enter a wine—let’s say the winemaker falls into a tank holding a whole-wheat sandwich—as a protein, gluten would react with [wine’s] phenolics,” said Dr. Christian Butzke, a professor of enology at Purdue University. This means the already trace amounts of gluten in the wine would be severely reduced after settling, racking and filtration.

However, while table wine is fine, not all wine (or wine products) are created the same. “Some types of wine do contain an unsafe amount of gluten for people with celiac disease, [including] those with added color or flavoring … and those made from barley malt, such as bottled wine coolers,” Marilyn Geller, CEO of the nonprofit Celiac Disease Foundation, said. “For these, consumers should check the label.”

The bottom line is that, in almost any case, it issafe to enjoy wine while on a gluten-free diet. However, if you want to be 100 percent certain you are drinking a wine that has not come into contact with gluten, contact the winery for confirmation.


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California Wildfires Devastate Malibu Wine Region (Wine Spectator)

One of the wildfires burning across California has chased vintners from their wineries and homes in the Malibu Coast appellation. The Woolsey fire has traveled from Highway 101 in Thousand Oaks down to the Pacific Coast, scorching acres of vineyards and damaging or destroying wineries and other structures.

“It’ll likely be a good six months to a year before the roads into the hills can be traveled again,” said Ken Fasola, owner of Malibu Discovery wine tours and the Sip Malibu Grapes tasting room, which burned down in the blaze.

According to the latest data from Cal Fire, the state’s firefighting agency, the Woolsey fire has burned more than 97,000 acres and destroyed more than 435 structures. As of last night, it was 40 percent contained. The blaze is one of several large fires in the state that ignited this week, aided by dry conditions and high winds. At least 50 people have died in the fires, including two in the Woolsey blaze.

The Malibu Coast AVA is one of the state’s newer appellations, created in 2014. The area encompasses 44,590 acres within the 182,000 acres of the Santa Monica National Recreational Area in Southern California. The local vintners association, the Malibu Coast Vintners & Grape Growers Alliance (MCVGGA), has more than 50 members representing—before the fire—roughly 200 acres of vines.

“We’ve been in contact with at least half of our members and we’ve learned that there has been extensive damage to virtually all the vineyards and wineries throughout the AVA,” said Greg Barnett, president of the MCVGGA and owner of Nabu winery in Westlake Village, in a statement. “The speed with which the fire escalated was terrifying.”

Barnett said reports of damage have ranged from burned vines around vineyard perimeters to total devastation of vineyards, residences and other buildings. Power is out in most of the region, and many roads are closed. The fire began on Nov. 8 in Ventura County, then spread into Los Angeles County. Thanks to high winds, it doubled over the next 48 hours.

Several winemakers observed that their vineyards have served as firebreaks, saving their homes and winery facilities from destruction. Vineyards typically don’t burn in wildfires.

Don Schmitz, owner of Malibu Solstice Vineyard, lost almost everything but his house, which was surrounded on all sides by vineyards. Schmitz said he had been going back and forth from his home to his office all night on Nov. 9, trying to save important documents, when the fire jumped the freeway at about 4 a.m. the next morning and headed down the hills toward the ocean.

He took backroads to the winery and watched as a wall of flames raced across the canyon, burning through a large stand of oaks. “Oaks are tough and can take an incredible beating, but they were reduced to sticks,” he told Wine Spectator. “The fire had 200-foot flames and took out all my equipment, my outbuildings and my barn. All vehicles were burned down to their metal frames, but the house was unscathed, and the vines made all the difference. As the flames reached the vineyard you could see them die down to about a foot tall.”

Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty Images

The Woolsey fire approaches the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu.

“Most everybody around me is gone,” said Richard Hirsh, owner of Cielo Vineyards. “Without a doubt, being surrounded by 10,000 vines saved my house and barn. I’d planned to stay, but when you see the ferocity of 100-foot flames, you feel their heat and the absolute roar of the sound, I knew no way could I stick around to save the property. We’ll probably need to replant 3,000 to 4,000 vines. All the stakes burned down, the posts are gone, the netting virtually evaporated and the irrigation hoses melted away. But the vineyard protected the house.”

Schmitz, like many winery owners and friends who’ve lost everything, plans to rebuild. “I will replant,” he said. “But I gotta tell you, it’s been so devastating to see my neighbors’ houses burn.”


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