About an hour into making my latest batch of Italian gravy, I could not help by think: Mom is smiling right now.” My house was smelling so good!
I needed to make a batch of gravy because I am planning my next dinner party – a Table for 6 (one per month – non-travel months, in 2026) and pizza is on the menu to go along with Tuscan-grilled New York Strip Steaks and roasted fennel with lemon, butter and parmesan cheese, and am out of pizza sauce.
My pizza sauce is simply Italian red gravy, with an inversion blender inserted into the pot to make the gravy into a smooth sauce.
The photo shows the gravy when all the vegetables, tomatoes, chicken stockand wine has been added, and about to receive the meats – in this case chicken and a few pork rib bones. The upside to this: I now have a nice serving of gravy in the freezer for a future pasta dish, several containers of pizza sauce for future pizzas, including the two that I will make for Valentines’ Day and the aforementioned dinner for 6, and this Sunday I will have a fine chicken cacciatore with pasta dish to share with a friend.
The meats, meanwhile, give both the gravy and sauce a flavor profile sought after by home cooks throughout Southern Italy.
In a 4- or 5-quart pot:
- Lay down a generous amount of premium olive oil
- A Large, yellow onion, chopped coarsely
- 2 sticks celery
- 12 or so garlic cloves, coarsely chopped
- 1 large can diced tomatoes (16 or more ounces)
- 1 average can (15 oz) tomato sauce
- 2 heaping tablespoons tomato paste
- A full teaspoon each dried basil, parsley plus black pepper, a little rosemary, Italian Seasoning if you have it.
- 2 full Tbls good salt
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1.5 cups red wine (for the gravy, but you can drink what’s left in the bottle!)
- 1 cup chicken stock
- 1 full Tbls duck fat, or 1.5 inches of a butter stick if you don’t have the duck fat
- 3-4 previously cooked, leftover pork (baby back) ribs
- 3-4 chicken legs
Cooking
Sauté the onions, garlic and celery on a medium heat until soft – don’t char or brown the onions
Add the tomato paste to the middle/bottom of the vegetables and top that with the sugar. Stir to blend the paste with the vegetables.
Then integrate the cans of tomatoes, and all the spices. Stir well and let cook for about 5 minutes before adding the wine and chicken stock.
Once that is all blended together add the duck fat or butter, and then the meats.
Cover and cook on very slow heat.
After about 40 minutes remove the chicken and ribs. Set these aside to have as a pasta dish (chicken cacciatore) with some of the gravy after it is finished cooking. Refrigerate until you want this meal.
Let the gravy cook, lid on, slowly, another 2 hours or so. Remove from stovetop and let cook with the lid off.
Once cool, ladle out about half of the mixture to use with the vegetables still mostly intact as the basis for pasta dishes, and use an inversion blender to smooth out the rest of it to use as pizza sauce.


