Day 3: The “Glossy” Pan Sauce

Glossy Pan Sauce (Gravy)
After you’ve cooked your chicken or salmon, don’t wash that pan just yet — that’s where the magic happens. All those little browned bits left behind hold big flavor, and turning them into a quick pan sauce is how we make simple dinners taste restaurant‑level. A splash of broth, a dab of butter, maybe a squeeze of lemon — that’s all it takes to whisk those bits into a glossy, rich sauce. It’s fast, it feels fancy, and it turns a plain piece of protein into something you’ll want to make again and again. Gluten‑free cooking doesn’t have to be complicated — sometimes it’s just about knowing how to use what’s already there.

The Goal: How to turn the “brown bits” (fond) left in the pan from Day 2 into a restaurant-quality sauce (gravy).

  • Tools: The same skillet used for the meat and a wooden spoon.
  • Ingredients: 1/2 cup chicken stock, 1 tsp Dijon mustard, and 2 tbsp cold unsalted butter (cubed).
  • Method:
    1. After removing the meat, pour off excess grease but keep the brown bits.
    2. Pour in the stock (it will hiss—this is “deglazing”). Use the spoon to scrape the brown bits into the liquid.
    3. Let the liquid bubble and reduce by half until it looks slightly syrupy.
    4. Turn off the heat. Whisk in the cold butter one cube at a time.
  • How to know it’s done: The “Nappe” Test. Dip a spoon into the sauce. Run your finger across the back of the spoon; if the line stays clean and the sauce doesn’t run, it’s the perfect thickness.

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