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Chef's Corner Every Cook's favorite place! Post your recipes, share your cooking tips and ideas, etc.


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  #11  
Old 03-03-2007, 09:05 AM
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Gumbo's & The Like

Recipes for Gumbos etc
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  #12  
Old 03-03-2007, 09:15 AM
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I thought this was another bashing thread ... I'm out of here...

BTW ... never have had Gumbo ... this Yankee will not bow down.
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  #13  
Old 03-03-2007, 09:19 AM
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I made this last night... it has been a family favorite for years. So good.

1 whole chicken
1 link sausage (real sausage... not that Eckrich junk)
2 bunches green onions
2 bay leaves
Add pepper flakes to taste (I usually add 8-10-12 somewhere around there.
Roux (make it yourself or buy it in a jar.. there is really no difference. I highly suggest the jar. I buy dark ruex when I buy the jar.
Cooked rice

Boil the chicken in water with the green onions, bay leaves & pepper flakes added.
Keep the water you boiled the chicken in and let the chicken cool.
Cut the link of sausage in half lengthwise.
Cut the halves in half again lengthwise (the sausage is now cut in 1/4's lengthwise.
Cut those pieces in 1/4" pieces and boil the sausage for a few minutes until cooked.
Debone the cooled chicken breacking the chicken up into relatively small pieces that will fit on someones spoon.
Put the deboned chicken meat back in the water you boiled the chicken in.
Add the sausage to the same water.
You can discard the water you boiled the sausage in or you can add some to the gumbo for some additional taste.

Add ruex until you get a good darkness to the liquid and taste it as you add it. The more ruex the darker the water AND the darker the taste. If you buy a jar of ruex then it will require almost 1/2 jar.

Fix a bowl of rice
Spoon the gumbo over the rice
Add some gumbo file' is you so desire (i like to add it)

Enjoy.

One last note. I have always spelled the term Ruex as Rue. I see on the internet it is often spelled Rue. When you buy it around here it is Ruex on the bottle (but I live in Louisiana so it probably isn't spelled that way elsewhere)

In case any of you aren't familiar with Ruex...Ruex is made of equal portions oil & flour. You heat the ruex mix constantly stirring it until it gets to a desired darkness.
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  #14  
Old 03-03-2007, 09:23 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel Alicea View Post


I thought this was another bashing thread ... I'm out of here...

BTW ... never have had Gumbo ... this Yankee will not bow down.
Why would you think that? I have never bashed you. I only asked you a question.
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  #15  
Old 03-03-2007, 10:02 AM
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Restate the question ... Dig.
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  #16  
Old 03-03-2007, 10:06 AM
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I like gumbo. Go easy on the file' though.
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  #17  
Old 03-03-2007, 10:32 AM
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Esther Esther is offline
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This needs to be in the Soup thread.
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  #18  
Old 03-03-2007, 11:26 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Esther View Post
This needs to be in the Soup thread.
SOUP? Are you from up north or something.

There is a "fer piece" of difference between soup & gumbo.
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  #19  
Old 03-03-2007, 11:28 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel Alicea View Post
Restate the question ... Dig.
The question is here.
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  #20  
Old 03-05-2007, 06:43 AM
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Make a Roux
Roux, the start of many great creole dishes.


INGREDIENTS:
1/4 cup flour
1/4 vegetable oil, butter, fat, or lard

INSTRUCTIONS:
A roux is nothing more than flour and fat. The more delicious the fat, the better the roux. For example, duck fat or lard will impart more flavor than vegetable oil (but will be less healthy).
A heavy pot or cast-iron skillet is best for making a beautiful roux. Heat the oil and stir in enough flour to make the consistency of wet sand. For best results, a roux is cooked over low heat and stirred every 15 minutes until it's the desired color (like a copper penny).
You can cook a roux at a higher temperature, but watch carefully--it burns easily. Once it turns a dark golden color, you've got seconds to get it just a wee bit darker; there's a fine line between ready and burned.
For a lower-fat gumbo, you can use a "dry" roux, which is nothing more than flour that's been toasted in an oven until it's reached the desired color (a golden brown). The dry roux is then whisked into a liquid slurry, and the lumps are smoothed out before it's added to the broth.
From the base of either a "wet" or "dry" roux, you can create hundreds of versions by adding fresh herbs and vegetables (corn, potatoes, beans, eggplant, cabbage, squash...). Most seafood can be used (but add delicate oysters and crabmeat at the end, so they won't toughen and/or disintegrate), as well as most kinds of beef.
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