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2 tablespoons of cornstarch

3tablespoons of soy sauce

1 1/2 cups of garlic granules

2 tablespoons of tahini

 

Place cornstarch into sauce pan and stir in soy sauce, make smooth, thin

paste. Whisk in water and garlic. Stirring constantly cook until it thickens.

 

Vegan vittles-Joanne Stepaniak

 

 

 

 

 

 

Anna

 

 

 

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In , AnnaJames91@c... wrote:

<snip>

 

Thank you for sharing this, but it contained a couple if errors in the

ingredient list. Here is the recipe and a couple of additional instructions.

 

Brown Gravy

 

2 tablespoons cornstarch

3 tablespoons soy sauce

1 1/2 cups water

1/2 teaspoon garlic granules

2 tablespoons tahini

 

Place cornstarch into sauce pan and stir in soy sauce to make a smooth, thin

paste. Whisk in water and garlic. Place over medium-high heat and stir

constantly until it thickens.

 

She says to whisk in the tahini when the thickened gravy is removed from the

heat. I find it cools a little too much that way, so I place it on a burner on

the lowest possible heat while whisking it in.

 

If I feel like splurging a little, I replace the tahini with 2 tbs. cashew

butter. Yum!

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Thanks for correcting that. I updated it in our files. I bet it would taste very

strong without the addition of the water, eh? *lol*

 

~ feral ~

 

The past is behind, learn from it;

The future is ahead, prepare for it;

The present is here, live in it.

~ Thomas Monson

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>

, " N. Braswell " <meritra@c...>

wrote:

> In , AnnaJames91@c... wrote:

> <snip>

>

> Thank you for sharing this, but it contained a couple if errors in the

ingredient list. Here is the recipe and a couple of additional instructions.

>

> Brown Gravy

>

> 2 tablespoons cornstarch

> 3 tablespoons soy sauce

> 1 1/2 cups water

> 1/2 teaspoon garlic granules

> 2 tablespoons tahini

>

> Place cornstarch into sauce pan and stir in soy sauce to make a smooth,

thin paste. Whisk in water and garlic. Place over medium-high heat and stir

constantly until it thickens.

>

> She says to whisk in the tahini when the thickened gravy is removed from

the heat. I find it cools a little too much that way, so I place it on a burner

on

the lowest possible heat while whisking it in.

>

> If I feel like splurging a little, I replace the tahini with 2 tbs. cashew

butter.

Yum!

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In a message dated 2/3/2003 2:10:37 PM Central Standard Time,

mozsmith writes:

> 1 1/2 cups of garlic granules

> :

oops, that is 1/2 teaspoons, and garlic granules, can be found at herb supply

stores, if you don't have that, you can use garlic powder.

 

 

 

 

Anna

 

 

 

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: 1 1/2 cups of garlic granules

:

so, what exactly are garlic granules? i don't think i have even

encountered them in all of my years of cooking. are there any subs?

 

kate

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It should have read 1 1/2 tsp or simply 1/2 tsp, NOT 1 1/2 cups.

*lol* Yeow,

now that would be garlicy beyond words.

 

Now as to the garlic granules. I have garlic powder, and dried minced

garlic...

I think the granules are somewhere in between. I think also you could

use

either, just not garlic salt since it would be too salty.

 

Others feel free to correct me if I am wrong.

 

~ feral ~

 

The future belongs to people who see possibilities before they become

obvious.

~ Ted Levitt

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~>

, " kate. " <mozsmith@a...>

wrote:

> : 1 1/2 cups of garlic granules

> :

> so, what exactly are garlic granules? i don't think i have even

> encountered them in all of my years of cooking. are there any subs?

>

> kate

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-

kate

 

> so, what exactly are garlic granules? i don't think i have even

> encountered them in all of my years of cooking. are there any subs?

 

You should be able to use fresh garlic or powdered garlic in place of garlic

granules. It is basically just dried garlic.

 

'These fine granules of pure garlic give savoury dishes a mouth-watering

flavour without the texture of fresh chopped garlic.'

 

Lee-Gwen

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