- Joined
- Jun 9, 2019
Anybody got any good gumbo recipes? I have a crockpot so I'm open to a recipe that uses it, as long as it's delicious
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Seconded. You need real heat to make the roux and reduce the trinity. A dutch oven recipe for sure.It's not really a crock-pot recipe.
I do have a dutch oven. I was thinking of making the roux on the stove and then throwing everything into a crockpot but I guess that just adds unnecessary steps and dirties more dishesLook up Isaac Toups' video.
Personally I like smoked turkey thigh cooked until it shreds up in there rather than chicken. I also don't add sausage until well into the cook to manage how much flavor the sausage loses into the broth - over cooking it means dry crumbly unflavorful bits.
Seconded. You need real heat to make the roux and reduce the trinity. A dutch oven recipe for sure.
That's what I remember doing a long time ago. Just make the roux, combine it with other sauteed ingredients, add liquids, simmer.I do have a dutch oven. I was thinking of making the roux on the stove and then throwing everything into a crockpot but I guess that just adds unnecessary steps and dirties more dishes
Okra or Filé Powder. I’d go with filé (it’s ground sassafras leaves btw) if you don’t like the texture of okra.That's what I remember doing a long time ago. Just make the roux, combine it with other sauteed ingredients, add liquids, simmer.
I would always include okra, which you can find frozen, and probably canned diced tomatoes.
I like the sliminess of okra. It's also good in random curries or bhindi masala.Okra or Filé Powder. I’d go with filé (it’s ground sassafras leaves btw) if you don’t like the texture of okra.
It’s not for various reasons. Doesn’t take the roux anywhere near far enough for one, and it doesn’t have okra or filé.This recipe was published in the Sunday Times about twenty years ago: I doubt it's 'authentic' gumbo, but I've made it dozens of times and it is delicious.
Mussel and Bacon Gumbo
1kg mussels
250ml white wine
4 shallots, peeled and chopped
4 fat cloves garlic, finely chopped
60g butter
2 bay leaves
Salt and black pepper
Pinch of celery salt
½ tsp dried chilli flakes
2 sticks celery, finely chopped
1 red or green pepper, chopped
2 tbsp flour
350ml chicken stock
1 tbsp chopped parsley and marjoram
Good squeeze lemon juice
3 rashers bacon, fried or grilled
until crisp and crumbled
Scrub the mussels, discarding any that
stay open, then soak in lots of cold water
for an hour or two to remove any sand.
Then, rinse the mussels, place in a large
saucepan, pour in the wine, cover and
boil for only 2 minutes. Strain and
reserve the juices, shell three-quarters
of the mussels, and keep to one side.
Next, fry the shallots and garlic with
the butter. Add the bay leaves, salts and
pepper, chilli flakes, celery and green
pepper, and cook until the vegetables
soften. Then, sprinkle over the flour and
cook - scraping the bottom of the pan
regularly until the roux (the mix in
the pan) turns golden. Stir in the wine
juices, stock, parsley and marjoram, then
bubble for 30 minutes or until thickened.
Add all the mussels, and bubble for
2 minutes. Stir in the lemon juice, taste,
and add more seasoning if needed. Pile
onto boiled rice and top with the bacon.
The ”golden“ roux lost it for me, chocolate brown or it doesn’t countIt’s not for various reasons. Doesn’t take the roux anywhere near far enough for one, and it doesn’t have okra or filé.