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Started By
Message
Crawfish Etoufee questions
Posted on 8/1/24 at 10:04 pm
Posted on 8/1/24 at 10:04 pm
I have never made it, but watched several videos.
Dark blonde roux.
Trinity.
Sweat out the Trinity.
Add stock, bring to boil, add peeled precooked crawfish tails, reduce to simmer for 20 minutes.
Scoop it over rice in a bowl.
Am I missing anything?
Dark blonde roux.
Trinity.
Sweat out the Trinity.
Add stock, bring to boil, add peeled precooked crawfish tails, reduce to simmer for 20 minutes.
Scoop it over rice in a bowl.
Am I missing anything?
Posted on 8/1/24 at 10:13 pm to deeprig9
Mine has a butter roux. Golden brown. Trinity plus garlic over low heat and cover for 5 mins. Add a little water, salt, pepper, hot sauce. Cover a simmer for an hour. Stir in tails. Cover and simmer for 5 mins. Uncover. Add green onion and parsley and cook until desired thickness. Only thing you should boil is the rice
Posted on 8/2/24 at 3:32 am to deeprig9
Creole or Cajun?
My wife and I prefer Creole but I bet the board leans Cajun.
Ours:
Lt brown butter roux (a touch past blonde, too dark and it overpowers the crawfish and it won't thicken as nicely
Trinity
Creole seasoning (less pepper more herbs)
Scallions cook the white in save the green for garnish
Garlic
Worcestershire
Hot sauce
Crawfish stock but out of season we use homemade shrimp or seafood stock
and
tomatoes
My wife and I prefer Creole but I bet the board leans Cajun.
Ours:
Lt brown butter roux (a touch past blonde, too dark and it overpowers the crawfish and it won't thicken as nicely
Trinity
Creole seasoning (less pepper more herbs)
Scallions cook the white in save the green for garnish
Garlic
Worcestershire
Hot sauce
Crawfish stock but out of season we use homemade shrimp or seafood stock
and
tomatoes
Posted on 8/2/24 at 7:33 am to deeprig9
That’s pretty much it. You don’t need to simmer the tails 20 min. They are already cooked, so you are just heating them up. I would do no more than 10.
Use a good seafood stock.
Use a good seafood stock.
Posted on 8/2/24 at 8:03 am to deeprig9
quote:
Am I missing anything?
Not really, all the same thing I do, except one secret ingredient. I’ll share it only with you, so take it to your grave.
Half a cap to a full cap of liquid crab boil into the pot.
Posted on 8/2/24 at 9:13 am to deeprig9
Tasso goes really good in a crawfish etouffee
Posted on 8/2/24 at 10:51 am to deeprig9
I worked with a guy 20 years ago that won several Etouffee cookoffs and his secret was adding cream of mushroom to it. It was good, but I've never added it since learning his secret.
He was from around Franklin if that's a reginal Hwy. 90 thing?
He was from around Franklin if that's a reginal Hwy. 90 thing?
Posted on 8/2/24 at 10:55 am to deeprig9
I watched a video the other day with chef in the Louisiana Cookin' test kitchen. He made what he called St Mary Parish Etouffee. It didn't have trinity. It only had a ton of green onions. Being an addicted green onion lover, it looked very tasty to me. I'm going to try it at some point.
LINK
LINK
Posted on 8/2/24 at 11:20 am to ragincajun03
quote:
Half a cap to a full cap of liquid crab boil into the pot.
So happy to see this. I always add this to my Cajun or Creole dishes, including gumbo. I just love the taste it adds to the dish.
Posted on 8/2/24 at 11:47 am to deeprig9
the tails are already cooked they don’t need to simmer. Make sure you get the fat out of the bag (rinse it with your cooking liquid)
an easy cheat code for weeknight etouffee is cream of shrimp soup
an easy cheat code for weeknight etouffee is cream of shrimp soup
Posted on 8/2/24 at 12:26 pm to Obtuse1
How would it be with chicken stock instead of shrimp/seafood stock?
Posted on 8/2/24 at 1:18 pm to deeprig9
quote:
How would it be with chicken stock instead of shrimp/seafood stock?
It's better with crawfish or some sort of seafood stock, but you can use chicken. Be sure and get all the juices out of the bag of crawfish if you are using bags of tails. As suggested, you can add some of your cooking liquid and swish it around to get every last drop.
When I've made crawfish gumbo without crawfish stock, I kept out some of the tails and ground them up to cook in the liquid a bit before adding the tails. It added flavor without having overcooked crawfish tails.
Posted on 8/2/24 at 1:24 pm to deeprig9
quote:
How would it be with chicken stock instead of shrimp/seafood stock?
It will be fine, that is what I use 90% of the time, and I live in LA
Posted on 8/2/24 at 1:27 pm to ragincajun03
My secret ingredient is Lobster base by Better Than Bouillon....gives it a fantastic flavor
Posted on 8/2/24 at 1:31 pm to deeprig9
quote:
How would it be with chicken stock instead of shrimp/seafood stock?
go to Walmart or your local grocer and buy this .... it works and better than chicken stock
Posted on 8/2/24 at 1:33 pm to BankLSU
I usually use crawfish stock that I make from boiling shelled heads from a crawfish boil for about an hour.
But this is good too. It is hard to find though, depending on where you are. Whole foods may have it. Or you can order it.
quote:
My secret ingredient is Lobster base by Better Than Bouillon....gives it a fantastic flavor
But this is good too. It is hard to find though, depending on where you are. Whole foods may have it. Or you can order it.
Posted on 8/2/24 at 1:39 pm to DR93Berlin
Regarding butter roux, is this clarified butter?
Posted on 8/2/24 at 1:41 pm to deeprig9
quote:
Regarding butter roux, is this clarified butter?
I can't speak for him, but when I'm making a butter roux, it is not clarified.
Posted on 8/2/24 at 2:11 pm to MeridianDog
quote:
I always add this to my Cajun or Creole dishes, including gumbo.
I add it when making the stock for my aquatic species gumbos, etoufees and fricassees. Not the land animal ones, though.
Posted on 8/2/24 at 2:49 pm to deeprig9
Not clarified. Salted butter.
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