Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Chicken and Sausage Gumbo



Chicken and sausage gumbo made easy, with authentic Cajun taste. Make a pot for your next party and serve it in cups! 

Dark roux and gumbo is the smell of my grandmother’s house in New Iberia after a long drive from Houston in the winter and the warmth of family greetings and big hugs.  My grandmother is gone now, but gumbo simmering on the stove brings me back to her big round kitchen table where she always sat, chopping and dicing and preparing vegetables or stuffing a roast for the next meal.

My maternal grandmother, Wanda Fleming Gautreaux, sitting in her usual chair in her yellow kitchen.
Being in that yellow kitchen with her made me happy!
And some of my fondest college memories are of visits from my College Station/Houston/Beaumont friends who would come to Austin for the weekend.  Sometimes we went out to enjoy the nightlife of Sixth Street but more often than not, we would stay in, have a number of drinks and make chicken and sausage gumbo.  Truly, I am never happier than when I am in the kitchen, surrounded by friends and family, perhaps sipping some red wine, and stirring a roux.

In most gumbo recipes, you are supposed to cut the chicken in pieces and brown it first.  Unfortunately, I usually find myself starting with the bird still frozen, (Who can remember to take anything out of the freezer in the morning!) so I have developed this method.   Yesterday, I didn’t have a frozen bird, but I stuck to my usual program anyway.

Ingredients
3 1/2 pound or 1 1/2 kilo chicken (If you can find a hen, use her instead. More flavor.) 
Additional chicken breasts (optional)
1 lb or about 500g smoked sausage, sliced in rounds, about ½ inch thick
2 medium onions
1 green bell pepper (capsicum)
4 celery sticks, de-stringed
1 1/2 cups or 190g plain flour
1 cup or 240ml oil (I prefer canola.)
Sea salt
Black pepper
Cayenne
Chicken bouillon or stock cubes

For serving: Light sprinkling of gumbo filé. 

Method
Put whole (frozen or not) chicken to boil in pot with about a gallon of water, about 2 teaspoons of salt and good couple of grinds of fresh black pepper. (If it is frozen and you can’t get the bag of giblets out, don’t worry.  Keep checking back and get it out when the chicken thaws enough.)


Chop onions, bell pepper and celery and put aside in one bowl for later.

My bell pepper looks a little frozen because it was.  I chopped it over the weekend when I thought I was going to make gumbo but, then, couldn't find celery.  As long you are not using it for salad, bell pepper keeps great in the freezer.  So do onions and celery, for that matter. 
In separate pot, preferably a black iron skillet or some other heavy gauge vessel, mix flour and oil.  This is called the roux.  Cook over medium to medium high heat, stirring frequently with a wooden spoon, until roux begins to turn brown. 

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24 minutes
 Depending on temperature and the thickness of your pot, you may have to stir constantly because roux has a tendency to burn.  A medium heat is safer; it just takes longer.  Continue cooking until the roux turns a very dark, chocolate brown.  Should the roux burn (Everyone does it at least once, so don’t feel too bad.) toss it out and start again, otherwise the entire gumbo will have that burnt taste.

27 minutes - it looks delicious but do NOT try to taste it.  It's hotter than the hinges of hell
and will burn your mouth off.  Also it doesn't actually taste good. 
The roux will be VERY hot so be careful when handling it and try to stir without splashing on yourself or nearby “helpers.” 

In fact, it's best if you make the helpers go sit on their beds. 
Add the chopped vegetables and stir. This cools your roux down without too much spitting.




By this time your chicken (or hen) should be falling off its bones.  (If not, turn the roux off, giving it a couple of more stirs, and let the chicken boil for a little longer.)  A good sized hen may take up to two hours to fall off her bones. 

Take the chicken out of the pot, leaving behind the stock, and allow it to cool until you can handle it.  Discard bones and skin, leaving meat in fairly large chunks.




Add stock from the chicken pot gradually to the roux.  Never add roux to stock, always stock to roux.  It may bubble up considerably, depending on how hot your roux is, so when I say gradually, I do mean ladle by ladle.  Stir between ladles.







When the roux has thinned considerably, then you can add the whole mixture back into the stockpot.




Add the sliced sausage.  And the additional chicken breasts if desired.


I cut these into fairly large chunks so they don't disintegrate into shredded chicken. 

Let simmer until the sausage and breasts, if using, are cooked and you are ready to eat.  Depending upon how fatty your sausage is, you might need to use a serving spoon to skim the oil off of the top of the gumbo before serving.


Add the deboned chicken meat and make sure it is warmed through.  Add chicken cubes, as necessary, instead of salt, for more flavor.  Add freshly ground black pepper and cayenne to taste.



Serve in bowls over a large spoonful of cooked white rice with a couple of drops of hot sauce and a sprinkle of gumbo filé (ground sassafras leaves), if you have it.   We also often serve with fresh baguette slices to dip. 


Enjoy!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Baked Egg Boats



Today was a day of staying home and hanging out with the dog on his leash while various workmen 1. Repaired things  2. Changed all the house locks.  3. Looked at things for quite a while and said they would return to repair them.  4. Removed vital parts of the equipment like the water pump and promised to return with said parts repaired.

Moving into any new house is always like this so I try to remain patient and thank God for the internet and the lovely lady who works for me and can translate when the workers do not speak English.

Meanwhile on the internets, I had plenty of time for browsing.  I found this recipe which sounded different and fun.  I just happened to have, because I usually do, some half baguettes in my freezer so I thought I’d give it a try for dinner tonight.

Ingredients
2 whole wheat demi baguettes
3 eggs
1/4  cup or 59ml heavy cream
2 oz or 57g smoked bacon
2 oz or 57g cheese of your choice – I used one that was called Red Hot Dutch.
1 green onion
Sea salt
Black pepper
Cayenne


Method
Preheat oven to 350°F or 180°C.

Build a stand out of heavy duty foil by folding the foil up in three places so the baguette canoes remain upright.


Cut a deep “V” through the tops of each baguette until about a 1/2 inch to the bottom. Take some of the insides out of the loaves. 






Chop the bacon into little pieces and fry it till it’s crispy.  Drain well.



Grate your cheese and chop your green onion finely.



Place the eggs and cream into a mixing bowl and lightly beat together. Whisk in the remaining ingredients and lightly season with salt, black pepper and a sprinkle of cayenne.





Pour half the mixture into each baguette, which should be standing upright in their foil stand.



Bake for 35-40 minutes or until golden brown, puffed and set in the center. Season with more salt and pepper, if desired.  (The original recipe said 20-25 minutes but the egg was still quite runny so I had to put them back in.)  Mine also didn't puff very much. 



Allow to cool for about five minutes.  Cut and serve along side a mixed green salad.  We thought they were very tasty!  Kind of like quiche without having to make a crust. 


Enjoy!

Oven-roasted Filet of Grouper

This oven-roasted filet of grouper recipe is one of our favorite ways of cooking fish in the oven. The topping of thinly sliced onions and lemons keeps the fish from drying out, plus they add a lot of flavor.

Oven-roasted filet of grouper: This is one of our favorite ways of cooking fish in the oven. The topping of thinly sliced onions and lemons keeps the fish from drying out, plus they add a lot of flavor.

While I was in Cairo on my house-hunting trip, one of the first things I asked about is the availability of seafood, particularly fish. Seafood probably features on the house menu at least once a week in some form: Lemon sole, whole Red Snapper, Prawns, Grouper, Salmon steaks. Pan-fried, grilled, oven-roasted, étouffée or courtbouillon.

I figured we are only about three hours from Alexandria and the Mediterranean Sea so there should be seafood in abundance here, possibly even a fish market.It seems I was wrong.Fortunately my nearby Carrefour has a newly renovated, well-stocked seafood department but that’s the only option I know of so far.

Anyone from Cairo out there reading who would like to set me straight, please, please do. Last week we had Grouper – oven-roasted and topped with an abundance of sliced onions and lemons that kept it moist.Any fish would do here so use what you have.

Ingredients
800g or 1 3/4lb fish filet
2 small onions
1 large lemon
Sea salt
Black pepper
Olive oil
3 generous tablespoons of butter

Method Preheat the oven to 200C or 400F.Cut all the scraggly bits off of your filet and make sure all bones have been removed. Slice your onions and your lemon very thinly.Using your hands, mix the two together and make sure to pick out any lemon seeds.


Drizzle a little olive oil in the bottom of your baking tray and sprinkle a fish-sized area with sea salt and a good few grinds of black pepper.

Lay the fish in the baking tray and sprinkle the top with sea salt and black pepper.


Heap the fish with the lemon and onion slices.  Balance the butter on top and drizzle liberally with olive oil.


Roast in the preheated oven for 20-30 minutes, depending on the thickness of your fish.

Oven-roasted filet of grouper: This is one of our favorite ways of cooking fish in the oven. The topping of thinly sliced onions and lemons keeps the fish from drying out, plus they add a lot of flavor.

Enjoy!

Oven-roasted filet of grouper: This is one of our favorite ways of cooking fish in the oven. The topping of thinly sliced onions and lemons keeps the fish from drying out, plus they add a lot of flavor.
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