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Crawfish Etouffee recipe request
Posted on 10/6/08 at 7:00 am
Posted on 10/6/08 at 7:00 am
So, my family makes 6 different kinds of etoufee depending on who is cooking. I am up in NYC, and will be making one this week.
Personally, I don't like tomato products in my etouffee (seems like that makes it a creole to me). If I want to serve it over grilled fish, i don't mind adding tomatoes, but by itself, I prefer it sans tomato.
anyone have a good recipe?
My thoughts:
roux
add trinity and garlic and seasonings
add shrimp or fish stock
add crawfish
add green onions and/or parsley
simmer here and there in between the above steps.
anyone have a tried and true recipe?
Personally, I don't like tomato products in my etouffee (seems like that makes it a creole to me). If I want to serve it over grilled fish, i don't mind adding tomatoes, but by itself, I prefer it sans tomato.
anyone have a good recipe?
My thoughts:
roux
add trinity and garlic and seasonings
add shrimp or fish stock
add crawfish
add green onions and/or parsley
simmer here and there in between the above steps.
anyone have a tried and true recipe?
Posted on 10/6/08 at 7:40 am to Spirit of Dunson
I have used this one and found it to be very good. Marc Savoy is from Eunice, La. a musician and accordian builder and a great cook.
Contributed by Sarah Savoy, who says:
"Some people make this dish with a roux, which makes it a much heavier meal. This is my Dad's recipe. It allows the flavor of the crawfish to take the lead."
4 ounces oil
2 pounds crawfish tails (or you can use shrimp)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1-1/2 teaspoons cayenne
1 medium onion, chopped
1/2 bunch scallions, tops only, chopped
1/2 bell pepper, chopped
2 teaspoons minced parsley
3 tablespoons minced garlic
1 small 8-ounce can tomato sauce
1 cup (8 ounces) water
Place the 4 ounces of oil in a thick, cast-iron skillet or pot, add the crawfish, salt, pepper, and cayenne and cook over a high heat until the water is gone, stirring frequently. (This can take some time, especially if you are using frozen crawfish, which have a lot of water in them. If using shrimp, do not cook more than 10 minutes.)
About half an hour before serving, prepare some boiled rice. (Note: Please use real rice, the stuff that doesn't boil in a bag. We HATE that stuff!!) Use two cups of rice and three-and- a-half to four cups of water, a little salt, and boil, uncovered, over medium-high heat until the water boils off the top of the rice. Then, turn the heat to medium and continue to cook it, uncovered, until the rice around the rim of the pot starts to look dry. Turn the heat very low, cover, and cook for about seventeen minutes.
Add the onion, scallions, bell pepper, parsley, and garlic to the crawfish, lower the heat to medium-high, and cook 7 minutes stirring frequently.
Add the tomato sauce and cook 5 minutes, stirring frequently. Add water, lower the heat, and simmer 5 minutes. Serve over rice.
YIELD: 8 portions.
Contributed by Sarah Savoy, who says:
"Some people make this dish with a roux, which makes it a much heavier meal. This is my Dad's recipe. It allows the flavor of the crawfish to take the lead."
4 ounces oil
2 pounds crawfish tails (or you can use shrimp)
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1-1/2 teaspoons cayenne
1 medium onion, chopped
1/2 bunch scallions, tops only, chopped
1/2 bell pepper, chopped
2 teaspoons minced parsley
3 tablespoons minced garlic
1 small 8-ounce can tomato sauce
1 cup (8 ounces) water
Place the 4 ounces of oil in a thick, cast-iron skillet or pot, add the crawfish, salt, pepper, and cayenne and cook over a high heat until the water is gone, stirring frequently. (This can take some time, especially if you are using frozen crawfish, which have a lot of water in them. If using shrimp, do not cook more than 10 minutes.)
About half an hour before serving, prepare some boiled rice. (Note: Please use real rice, the stuff that doesn't boil in a bag. We HATE that stuff!!) Use two cups of rice and three-and- a-half to four cups of water, a little salt, and boil, uncovered, over medium-high heat until the water boils off the top of the rice. Then, turn the heat to medium and continue to cook it, uncovered, until the rice around the rim of the pot starts to look dry. Turn the heat very low, cover, and cook for about seventeen minutes.
Add the onion, scallions, bell pepper, parsley, and garlic to the crawfish, lower the heat to medium-high, and cook 7 minutes stirring frequently.
Add the tomato sauce and cook 5 minutes, stirring frequently. Add water, lower the heat, and simmer 5 minutes. Serve over rice.
YIELD: 8 portions.
Posted on 10/6/08 at 7:47 am to Spirit of Dunson
Very Tried & True Recipe.....
Every Pound of Crawfish gets one Stick of Butter, if crawfish exceeds five pounds reduce amount of butter per pound.
Brown onions,garlic, peppers then add all butter to be used
Let simmer...
If you want you can add Cream of Mushroom or Cream of Garlic Soup to Thicken (Optional)
Add Flour to thicken as desired...
Serve.
This is how my old roommate used to cook it and he got this from his Grandmother in Church Point.
Honestly the best Etouffee I have ever had in my life. Try it.
Don't forget to Season (Not to much, Leave Salt/Pepper on table for individuals to season)
Every Pound of Crawfish gets one Stick of Butter, if crawfish exceeds five pounds reduce amount of butter per pound.
Brown onions,garlic, peppers then add all butter to be used
Let simmer...
If you want you can add Cream of Mushroom or Cream of Garlic Soup to Thicken (Optional)
Add Flour to thicken as desired...
Serve.
This is how my old roommate used to cook it and he got this from his Grandmother in Church Point.
Honestly the best Etouffee I have ever had in my life. Try it.
Don't forget to Season (Not to much, Leave Salt/Pepper on table for individuals to season)
Posted on 10/6/08 at 10:02 am to cajun83
im makin my first attempt at this soon so any more recipes would be greatly appreciated. i don't think ive ever had etouffee with tomato, i don't think im gonna mess around with that.
im thinking somethin like this:
brown onion, pepper, garlic in butter
add in a couple tbsp flour with water or stock
(how do you make stock? dont want to use store bought)
add in crawfish seasoned with cayenne and salt
simmer for a while and season adding green onions towards the end
any advice?
what seasonings do you add? should i use bay leaf?
how do you make seafood stock (can i even do this if i use frozen crawfish?) any help greatly appreciated
im thinking somethin like this:
brown onion, pepper, garlic in butter
add in a couple tbsp flour with water or stock
(how do you make stock? dont want to use store bought)
add in crawfish seasoned with cayenne and salt
simmer for a while and season adding green onions towards the end
any advice?
what seasonings do you add? should i use bay leaf?
how do you make seafood stock (can i even do this if i use frozen crawfish?) any help greatly appreciated
Posted on 10/6/08 at 10:03 am to tavolatim
quote:
1 small 8-ounce can tomato sauce
This seems out of place for an etouffee. I would expect this out of New Orleans, not Eunice. Makes it more Creole doesn't it. Sounds good though.
Posted on 10/6/08 at 11:03 am to lsujro
quote:take a few pounds of shrimp peels, and simmer them in a few cups of water with thyme, onions, bell pepper, celery, salt and pepper. Simmer for 2-3 hours, then strain.
how do you make stock? dont want to use store bought
If you cook with shrimp, save the shells and use them to make a stock, you can always freeze the stock. Never let good shells go unboiled!
For chicken stock, I just use the carcass of a chicken i cooked with, add a few cups of water, thyme, onions, bell pepper, celery, salt and pepper. Simmer for 2-3 hours, then strain.
As for the suggestions, I agree that etouffee + tomatoes = creole or New Orleans.
Posted on 10/6/08 at 12:04 pm to Spirit of Dunson
dunson, i see nothing wrong with the way you are going to cook it. etoufee is a simple dish and doesn't need much. as long as you include a good seafood stock, you can pretty much anything mentioned in any of these recipes and it will probably be fine. i don't use tomatoes in mine and like to add a little brown roux to the butter also.
Posted on 10/6/08 at 12:48 pm to tavolatim
the recipe that tavolatim posted is pretty close to what my family cooks; probably more tomato sauce than we use (only about 4 ounces) but overall pretty close.
i recently started using paul prudhomme's recipe and it is pretty good. he uses a roux but no tomato sauce in his etouffee; of course, i drastically reduce the amount of butter that prudhomme's recipe calls for because 2 sticks of butter is pretty outrageous (and unnecessary) in my opinion.
i recently started using paul prudhomme's recipe and it is pretty good. he uses a roux but no tomato sauce in his etouffee; of course, i drastically reduce the amount of butter that prudhomme's recipe calls for because 2 sticks of butter is pretty outrageous (and unnecessary) in my opinion.
Posted on 10/6/08 at 1:19 pm to Eddie Vedder
No tomato sauce,
No soup mixes and no Roux.
Butter, trinity, stock and crawfish fat.
Thicken w/ cornstarch and water add fresh parsley and green onions.
The crawfish fat is the key to this dish.
No soup mixes and no Roux.
Butter, trinity, stock and crawfish fat.
Thicken w/ cornstarch and water add fresh parsley and green onions.
The crawfish fat is the key to this dish.
Posted on 10/6/08 at 2:16 pm to Kajungee
quote:
No tomato sauce,
No soup mixes and no Roux.
Butter, trinity, stock and crawfish fat.
Thicken w/ cornstarch and water add fresh parsley and green onions.
The crawfish fat is the key to this dish.
This is how I make my etouffee. It is easy and delicious. It is the recipe in River Roads II. Foolproof!
Posted on 10/6/08 at 2:20 pm to ProudLSUMom
where do you get crawfish fat if you are just buying frozen tails?
Posted on 10/6/08 at 2:26 pm to Neauxla
quote:
where do you get crawfish fat if you are just buying frozen tails?
I just use the fat that is in the bag of crawfish tails. Pour your stock in the bag to rinse the fat out of it and into the pot.
It is enough to give you that etouffee color and taste.
Now, if we are using tails left over from a boil, we always make sure to keep lots of fat while peeling.
Posted on 10/6/08 at 5:27 pm to ProudLSUMom
Not to be too "New Orleans" or "creole", but I often add a tablespoon of tomato paste for depth of flavor. (I watch too many cooking shows)
Posted on 10/6/08 at 7:15 pm to Spirit of Dunson
just so happened my roommate got a buncha crabs today. im gonna use the shells for a stock. will be makin the etouffee this weekend or next week. im excited about it ill let the board know how it turns out
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