Crawfish Etouffee

Prep:

Cook:

Level: Easy

Serves: 10

10

Description

A classic, and delicious one-pot meal that pays a tribute to New Orleans.

Ingredients

  • 8 Tablespoons Unsalted Butter
  • 4 Tablespoons All-purpose Flour
  • 1 whole Onion, Diced
  • 2 cups Celery, Diced
  • 1 cup Green Bell Pepper, Diced
  • 1 whole Bay Leaf
  • 4 cloves Garlic, Minced
  • 1 whole Carrot, Diced
  • 1-½ cup Diced Tomatoes
  • ½ teaspoons Cracked Black Pepper
  • 1 teaspoon Salt, To Your Taste
  • 2 Tablespoons Creole Spice Mix
  • 2 cups Chicken Stock
  • 2 pounds Crawfish Tails (if Frozen, Make Sure They Are Thawed)
  • 1 cup Cooked Jasmine Rice, Per Serving
  • Chopped Flat Leaf Parsley For Garnish

Preparation

Start by getting a large pot onto the stove on medium heat. Add butter and melt. Once you begin seeing the butter foam, tilt the pot, and use a spoon to skim off just the top of the foam. Discard the foam. Return the pot back to the heat, and toss in the flour. Stir the flour into the butter and cook for about 5 minutes, stirring along the way. The flour will become blonde, then begin to darken a bit. Just be careful not to burn the flour.

Add onion, celery, bell pepper, bay leaf, garlic, carrot, and tomatoes, and cook for about 10–15 minutes with the roux, stirring along the way. Cook until onions become translucent.

Once onions turn translucent, add black pepper, salt, and cajun seasoning. Give a good stir, then add chicken stock. Stir well and continue cooking on medium heat until sauce thickens.

Once sauce thickens, add crawfish tails. Stir again, and once the crawfish are warmed through, roughly 5 minutes or so, you are ready to plate and serve.

Some like to serve rice on top, but my preference is to let the crawfish etouffee shine and serve on top of cooked rice.

So get a serving bowl ready, add in some cooked jasmine rice, and ladle on a nice pile of crawfish etouffee. Garnish with chopped parsley and dig in!

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