Italian Gravy

  4.0 – 26 reviews  • Pork Gravy

Mexican pizzas are mouthwatering corn tortillas covered with beans, meat, and every mouthwatering taco topping you can think of! They can either be served whole as a main meal or chopped into wedges to be served as an appetizer.

Prep Time: 45 mins
Cook Time: 5 hrs
Total Time: 5 hrs 45 mins
Servings: 12
Yield: 12 servings

Ingredients

  1. 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
  2. 1 large yellow onion, diced
  3. 1 clove garlic, minced
  4. 4 pounds pork shoulder roast
  5. ½ cup white wine
  6. 3 cups water
  7. 2 teaspoons dried oregano
  8. 2 teaspoons dried parsley
  9. 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  10. 1 teaspoon dried rosemary
  11. 3 tablespoons garlic powder
  12. 1 teaspoon salt
  13. 1 teaspoon black pepper
  14. 2 (28 ounce) cans tomato puree
  15. 6 cups water
  16. ¼ cup white sugar

Instructions

  1. Heat olive oil in a large stock pot over medium heat. Saute onions and garlic until lightly browned. Place pork shoulder in pot, and pour in 1/2 cup white wine and 3 cups water. In a small bowl, combine oregano, parsley, thyme, rosemary, garlic powder, salt and pepper. Sprinkle 1/4 of spice mixture over pork. Cover, and cook for 30 minutes turning occasionally. Add water periodically if needed.
  2. Pour in tomato puree. Fill cans with water, and pour in (about 6 cups). Stir in remaining spice mixture and the sugar. When liquid starts to bubble, reduce heat to low, cover, and cook for 4 to 5 hours. Stir occasionally, and adjust seasonings to taste.

Nutrition Facts

Calories 411 kcal
Carbohydrate 19 g
Cholesterol 97 mg
Dietary Fiber 3 g
Protein 32 g
Saturated Fat 7 g
Sodium 794 mg
Sugars 12 g
Fat 22 g
Unsaturated Fat 0 g

Reviews

Brian Lopez
I agree it lack flavor! I adjusted. Used variety of meats. Italian sausage, beef neck bone and during the last hour, dropped in some meatballs. I used a large fresh chopped onion, started with 6 chopped garlic cloves and 2 tblsp of each: dried, oregano, basil, parsley. Added the water and wine. Simmered for 3 hours, stirring every half hour. Make sure, as it reduces, to scape the thick sauce from the sides. No sugar, no tomato paste. If you cook it long enough, it sweetens the sauce and intensifies the flavors. As you stir, taste the sauce. If it need most spices add as you go along with salt and pepper. After three hours, I dropped raw meatballs in gently. Don’t stir for half hour until
Jennifer Duran
I am making this as I type. It looks like there is way too much liquid (recipe calls for 9 cups of water, total) I started with 6 cups, and am getting worried. This has about 3 more hours of simmering to go….. Did I misread something?
Glenda Russell
Not my most favorite meat sauce. Tasted a bit sour and I was expecting more for the amount of time I had to wait for it to cook…
Meagan Frank
Very bland, idea is good, but was dissapointed in lack of flavor.
Brent Norton
This is a keeper!!!!! I stayed very close to this recipe with only a few exceptions; double the wine to a full cup and reduce the water by a 1/2 cup in then first part, I pureed in the blender 2-14.5 oz cans diced tomatoes and 2-14.5 cans whole peeled tomatoes instead of canned puree, just my choice. Since I made mine in the slow cooker I let it cook at consistent temp of med/high, ( checking to make sure it wasn’t popping or boiling hard ) and DID NOT add the additional 6 cups of water in the second part since it retained all the water it needed. In the last hour I tilted the lid to release the steam significantly ( you could even take it off if your slow cooker/crockpot is deep enough) so it would cook down to more of a sauce/gravy like consistency. I substituted boneless pork spare ribs as well. It was delicious!
Robert Pitts
First time made it as written–exception used dry red wine. Turned out great! Have made it since with modifications–personal preference. Used fressh herbs (tripled amount and added some basil)also added 28oz Italian plum peeled tomatoes-chopped. Made it a bit more chunky. Also, added 1 small can tomato paste.
Joseph Aguilar
This recipe is great as written. I always have to make some adjustments because of preference. I browned 1 lb of hot italian sausage and added to the pork shoulder and some diced up pancetta. I did not brown the pancetta just added it to the meats. Instead of white wine, which is fine, I used two cups of red wine. Let is simmer all day long. Freezes well and gets better with age!
Sarah Smith
Yummy
Rhonda Wilkinson
FANTASTIC! I read many Italian gravy recipes and kinda combined what I thought would make not only great pork, but a great sauce at the same time. Pork shoulder is the best. Sometimes I find it at my local market, sometimes I don’t, so a good pork roast has worked well for me as well. I do make my own tomato puree. I use 6 large tomatoes and boil them and peel them, then blend them with the sugar. I add 2 cans of tomato paste when I add the puree. I also add like 4000% more garlic (hehe). I like to carmalize the onions with full bulb of garlic. Other than that, I follow this recipe as is and it makes wonderful sauce for any pasta and especially for Lasagne. I like it so much, it has been hand written in my personal cook book journal. Enjoy.
Kelli Brown
Added a cup of sliced mushrooms, no wine, one pound of ground beef, otherwise followed the recipe. Served over polenta. Woo Hoo…
Geoffrey Moore
YES! This is almost exactly like the gravy we make for Christmas dinner to go over the ravioli we make. We use beef though, instead of pork. It tastes delicious and it’s so good to see someone else who calls it “gravy”, not “sauce”!
Michelle Huber MD
was good, but i substituted sausage and i also put in andoulle sausage for more flavor
Christopher Oneill
Very good. I would definitely cube my pork next time, as it took a really long time to break down into manageable pieces. Also, you’ll probably want to cook this uncovered for about half of the time to let the sauce reduce – it’s quite watery if kept covered the entire time. Still, we enjoyed it with these changes, so I would likely make it again. Thanks for the recipe!
Kimberly Vaughn
I used italian pork sausage/beef mixture in my gravy along with red wine. (didn’t have the roast handy) FANTASTIC!! I don’t know why some reviews said it had no flavor(season to taste, its a no brainer)?!?! This gravy was amazing, and will be my go-to sauce recipe from now on. Thanks for posting!! 🙂
Anne Mcknight
Blah. I dont know if I did something wrong, but the pork did not fall apart into the sauce as I had imagined it would. I like more consistency to my sauce. This would be good over tortolini’s or in lasagne.
Katherine Craig
Originally, my changes were to use cubed meat (half pork, half beef), crushed tomatoes, beef stock instead of water. But while the meat was very tender after simmering for 4 hours, the sauce had no flavor. I added another 28 oz can of crushed tomatoes, 2 small cans of tomato paste and another 2 Tbs garlic and simmered for another half hour. Better, but I still refrigerated overnight to hopefully allow some flavors to develop. Thanks for the recipe and the ideas, but I’ll stick with our favorite: the Sicilian Succo from this site–it’s a better fit for our tastes.
Christina Anderson
This recipe is very close to my former SIL who is Scilian. So very very good! I did buy pork shoulder steaks and trimmed some of the fat. I also browned it before adding to the pot. She used to get the sauce going for an hour or so and then refrigerate overnight and simmer all day the next day. This is WONDERFUl stuff! Thanks for the recipe.
Donna Cowan
This was a delicious recipe. Only changes I made was to first brown the roast on all sides and set aside. Then I sauteed the onions and garlic. Also I used about 1 cup of red wine instead of the white. The smells will drive you crazy during the 4-5 hours.
Heather Martin
Truely italian. Similar to my 85 yr old grandfathers.I prefer a dark red wine, and I well-browned the meat prior to simmering. A delicious recipe.
Mrs. Hannah Collins
This was a good base recipe. I used ground pork instead of the shoulder. I brown the ground pork first before adding to the ingredients. I also added to the sauce some meatballs, hot italian sausage, and chicken thighs for extra flavour and removed them from the sauce for a meal. I used the sauce on spaghetti and homemade gnocci . Also I used about 3 cups of white wine in this dish – it helped give it more flavour, as it was a bit bland at first. I would suggest only using 2 cups if you don’t add the meatballs, sausage, and chicken. I will make this again.
Anthony Bartlett
I used 1 lb hot and 1 lb sweet sausage instead of the pork. The hot sausage gave this sauce the extra kick it was missing. My friends always ask me to make it for Soprano’s Sunday.

 

Leave a Comment