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03-17-2010, 11:15 AM | #1 |
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Chicken and Sausage gumbo
I thought I had posted this before. Oh well, better to get this from an actual Cajun than
to get it from some regular person on the street. OK, this is not so much a measured recipe as a throw together. As I go along I will add approx measurements. But I will list ingredients centrally now that I think about it. It would be wrong to go through the effort without it. 1 whole chicken, cut up (deboned too for those that don't like to find bones) (substitute 3-4 chicken breasts or equivalent in boneless fresh chicken meat) 1/3 cup of flour 1/4 cup of oil (OR rendered out skin of chicken if you have all day) 1 pack of GOOD smoked sausage or andouille sausage. (no keilbasa please) 2 Med onions chopped fine. 2 cups okra 1 tsp salt 1/2 tsp pepper 1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper (or use hot sausage above) gallon or so of water on hand 3/5 toes minced garlic (you can use a tablespoon of preminced garlic in oil) First make a roux. Duh. Take your oil and heat it in your cooking pot. Always use a dutch oven or other heavy pot. Nonstick fagware is not really useful here. Pardon my no PCness, lol, this is for your own good. This mixture will get REALLY hot and that's not good for coatings. Think carcinogenic. There are two ways to do this. My mother's way or my way. My mother takes an hour to make a roux cause she is fearful of burning it. YOU WILL HAVE TO THROW AWAY A BURNT ROUX. Clean and start over. There is no sense in putting good ingredients into bad roux. Simply lowering the heat will not save you. Only chopped onion added at the point of no return can successfully finish a roux made FAST. What you are doing here is browning a little flour in a little oil. You can stir constantly over a low-med heat for an hour, or over high heat for 5 minutes. You get the same roux. BUT YOU BETTER CHOP YOUR ONIONS FIRST for a FAST ROUX. They will immediately stop the cooking of the roux and save your ass. If your onions are at hand, there is no reason to wait an hour for a freaking roux. Anyway, heat about a third cup of flour in a 1/4 cup of oil (or chicken fat rendered to oil), stir it into a paste with a flat spatula or wooden spoon. Stir constantly until it is the color of a dark caramel. Immediately stop the cooking by adding onion and garlic. Some people add celery, I do not. For that matter I do not add bell pepper. You can do either. It is fine. But cook whatever you add down to wilted veggies over medium heat. Once you are wilted down, add about half your salt and pepper and maybe some rubbed sage. Add your chicken pieces and fill most of pot with water and set to boil. You want to cook down the mixture and lose about half the water. While you are doing this add your OKRA to a pan and a spray of PAM or oil and start to cook this down a bit. It will get so disgustingly stringy you will never want to eat Okra. This is normal. From time to time put a splash of water into the pan to de-glaze the bottom and even steam the okra a little. When the stringy mess starts to be a lot less stringy and more soft and gooey, add this okra to the pot and again cover with water and cook down to about half a pot of gumbo. Cut sausage into bite-size pieces, I like to go diagonally which makes nice ovoid pieces that look bigger. Add to pot for the last 15 mins of cooking. Once your gumbo is one notch less thick than stew, I reckon you are ready to go. Use remaining salt and pepper to taste. You can eat it right then or preferably wait til the next day. You cigar people understand the concept of marrying flavors. There you go. If you took your time and followed the method, you will be in for a treat. I always make a pot of rice, but rarely eat my gumbo over rice. It is a good extender to feed a family, and IS THE TRADITION, but your late night 'quick bowl-a-gumbo' will likely not have rice added. Please note, okra is not an ingredient for an authentic cajun chicken and sausage gumbo. It is used in seafood gumbo. But the first time I cooked mine with okra, I never went back to the old way. Last edited by OLS; 03-17-2010 at 11:29 AM. |
03-17-2010, 11:19 AM | #2 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
I am going to make this recipe real soon.
Pardon my ignorance though, Brad -- is it necessary to use a whole chicken? or could I use some chicken breasts? I don't want to mess with perfection, but 9/10 the grocery store only has whole game hens. |
03-17-2010, 11:24 AM | #3 | |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
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you want, amounts only matter in how much gumbo you get in the end. I also reccommend doing it now while there is still some snap in the air. It is really good in the cool weather. |
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03-17-2010, 11:28 AM | #4 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
Brad, growing up my dad always made slow roux, until I introduced him to my oven roux I learned how to make in college. Flour and oil in a pan in the oven, 350 degrees, stir every 20ish minutes, cook until you get the color you are looking for. I love it as I can start the roux as I cut up everything else.... Otherwise, good recipe! Most Cajun chefs consider the holy trinity mandatory (bell pepper, celery, and onion) for people wanting to try it.
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03-17-2010, 11:34 AM | #5 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
Heard about that, never knew the details. For me it is a matter of pride between me and my mama.
I LOVED waking up slow on a Saturday morning with the smell of roux wafting down the hall. When you cook it for an hour, you get quite a lingering aroma. And for the record, roux cooking smells better than 80% of the food you will ever throw INTO the roux. It is the perfect aroma. But with my roux, ain't nobody getting the slow wake-up treatment. I get it done and fast. I love that my mama refuses to go fast with it, I will miss her terribly when she is gone. She also still writes letters. (emails, too, but I'm just sayin) She is old school. haha. Last edited by OLS; 03-17-2010 at 11:40 AM. |
03-17-2010, 11:36 AM | #6 | |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
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them out because I never have them on hand. The way I cook I always seem to have a bag of onions in the fridge. But with Bell pepper and celery, it's like a special trip for ingredients, which is why I rarely cook by recipes. But that's also why I say add em if you got em, expecially if you have a garden with these items in it. They BELONG in there, I just think the taste is sufficient without them. |
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03-17-2010, 12:00 PM | #7 |
Grrrrrr
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
D, this is pretty similar to what/how I've been making (it) for years (although I also use tomatoes, but I am from California...), and I've done it with breasts, with thighs/leg quarters and with whole chickens. All breasts work fine, but I feel they tend to lack a bit in the flavor department. All thigh/leg quarters ends up being a bit too greasy for my tastes, I prefer the mixture of the light and dark meats, since I'm not cooking huge quantities, one chicken breast and two thighs or one leg section is what I usually use.
I do know that some markets in the bay area don't regularly carry whole chickens, but I can't believe that you can't find a package of Foster Farms whole cut-up chicken though. Just ask the butcher at the market, they probably have one or the other in the back deep freezer. There is always costco too, they carry whole chickens in a two-pack. |
03-17-2010, 12:02 PM | #8 | |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
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03-17-2010, 12:41 PM | #10 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
A few other thoughts as another son born and raised in LA, listen to what he says about NOT burning the roux! Roux mix ~0.75 cents can ruin an expensive seafood or any other gumbo. Some like to skip the roux - well it just aint the same. I'll fess up to liking the slow cooked roux better and more a 1 to 1 ratio, but that's gumbo, they are all a bit different.
The holy trinity "mandatory" (bell pepper, celery, and onion) - can't remember too meals as a kid that didn't contain the holy trinity On the okra, it can make the gumbo a bit slimey. If that's not to your liking consider file powder as an option. I do recommend you taste and watch the file portion if it's new to you. It has a very destinctive taste and also acts as a thickening agent. Now I think I'll make some seafood gumbo this weekend. Great thread!
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03-17-2010, 12:43 PM | #11 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
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03-19-2010, 01:53 PM | #13 | |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
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I like the thickening of the Okra, it JUST borders on slimy or too gelatinous,but I like the thickening and the taste. But you can easily make this dish without okra, in fact if I was wanting to DO that, I would make a bit more roux. How much roux you use obviously dictates whether or not you get a 'floury' character to your base for the price of it's thickening. But a properly proportioned roux should not make a dish 'floury'. But without the okra, you might need to put a bit more roux, or add a half teaspoon of corn starch in the end. Give it some body. Real chicken and sausage gumbo tend to be more of a soup, kinda thin. That's why a really good sausage is paramount. Chiken and kielbasa with a watery base is not too appetizing. Good luck to all. Like the man said, DO NOT ruin 30-40-50 bucks worth of ingredients for 50 cents worth of ROUX. I can remember burning a roux for my fellow servicemen in NC...50 bucks worth of seafood that I could have saved, but I just dumped it into a burnt roux, and spent 4 months apologizing for my idiotic mistake. |
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03-19-2010, 02:39 PM | #14 | |
Grrrrrr
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
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I've never had a problem finding whole fryers, even when I lived closer to where D. lives. Must just be the stores in his vicinity. One of the markets here, I can even pick from commerical (Foster Farms), free range and free-range organic chickens. *shrug* Every market in CA sells game hens, but I swear, other than the times I've bought them to cook beer-can hens, I've never seen anyone ever buy any, I seriously think that there are maybe 12 people in the entire state that buy game hens and they just travel from market to market to buy them up out of the markdown bins because they never sell until the butchers put them in the markdown bins for $2 for a twin-pack. |
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03-28-2010, 12:20 PM | #15 | |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
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bought one...no. |
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04-29-2010, 11:31 AM | #17 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
I'm going to try this recipe as an alternative to jambalaya.
We get whole chickens at Costco all the time. They come in 2 or 3 packs. Oh, and stuffed game hens are in our regular family meal rotation. Now I'm getting hungry. |
04-29-2010, 11:46 AM | #18 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
You had me excited until I saw the Okra. That is one veggie me no likey. Sounds like a good recipe though.
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04-29-2010, 04:09 PM | #20 |
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Re: Chicken and Sausage gumbo
For me it is a true tossup. I love em both when properly done. I like a meaty and greasy jambalaya
as opposed to a clean and fluffy one. When I was a kid in elem school, we used to get Jambalaya about three times a month. It was orange-red, with nice chunks of smoked sausage in it and a few small shrimp. God it was good. In fact I like jambalaya more cause I like a full fork and you can really pile up a good jambalaya. Gumbo has liquid limits. |
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