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Jambalaya recipe
Posted on 11/13/25 at 3:43 pm
Posted on 11/13/25 at 3:43 pm
My dad used to make it all the time with chicken and sausage. Is there a consensus best recipe that I can attempt to recreate?
Posted on 11/13/25 at 3:45 pm to DonJuanDaMiles
This is the one. It saved the dish for me.
Posted on 11/13/25 at 3:58 pm to AlxTgr
Looks delicious! No roux?
I thought all Jambs had either a roux base or a tomato base.
I thought all Jambs had either a roux base or a tomato base.
Posted on 11/13/25 at 4:07 pm to DonJuanDaMiles
quote:Not familiar with roux in one and seems tomato is severely frowned upon.
I thought all Jambs had either a roux base or a tomato base.
Posted on 11/13/25 at 4:25 pm to DonJuanDaMiles
quote:
No roux?
No, pay attention to the process when browning the meat to get a gratin as described on that recipe.
quote:
a tomato base.
Certainly not a tomato base but some people put diced tomatoes and a little tomato sauce in their Jambalaya. But it's a source of contention sorta like beans in Chili, some do it and some don't and those that don't bitch about those that do. My Mawmaw was from Lake Chuck and put tomatoes in her jambalaya so I do as well. Don't put too much though.
Posted on 11/13/25 at 4:50 pm to DonJuanDaMiles
Use the link below your original post…pochejp recipe
That’s my cuz; it’s been a while since I’ve had some of his, but some of the best around
That’s my cuz; it’s been a while since I’ve had some of his, but some of the best around
Posted on 11/13/25 at 5:46 pm to AlxTgr
This recipe is amazing, and any fatty pork cut will do.
Posted on 11/13/25 at 9:49 pm to DonJuanDaMiles
I’ll make it easy for you, Google “Jambalaya Calculator”, use that, don’t f&@$ with the recipe at all, just follow it to a T and you’ll be fine
Posted on 11/13/25 at 10:20 pm to DonJuanDaMiles
quote:
Looks delicious! No roux?
There is no roux in jambalaya. Never has been, never will be. I'm from Georgia and I know this.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 7:41 am to Zappas Stache
I'm from Yankee territory, way up here in Bossier City , and I've had 2 different types of Jambalaya. One was more reddish in color and wet and the other I bought at a high school wrestling tournament in Lafayette and it was brown and dry. Which one is preferred by most way down there in the South. I preferred the red wet jambalaya, the brown was way to dry and wasn't as flavorful.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 7:51 am to deeprig9
quote:
There is no roux in jambalaya. Never has been, never will be. I'm from Georgia and I know this.
Every jambalaya I’ve ever witnessed being made started with a roux and then brown the meats. My dad’s family was from Kenner. So, I’m pretty sure some people start with a roux. And then I’ve witnessed restaurants mostly around New Orleans using tomato paste and it being more wet. You can google recipes and about 1/3 of them have a roux.
I’ll try the linked recipe and let yall know how it turns out.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:06 am to Boston911
quote:No need for Google.
I’ll make it easy for you, Google “Jambalaya Calculator”, use that, don’t f&@$ with the recipe at all, just follow it to a T and you’ll be fine
Jambalaya Calculator v 7.3
No roux in jambalaya - you might as well use Kitchen Bouquet.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 8:59 am to DonJuanDaMiles
quote:
Every jambalaya I’ve ever witnessed being made started with a roux

Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:06 am to DonJuanDaMiles
Good enough for my momma. Good enough for me.


Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:13 am to DonJuanDaMiles
quote:
Every jambalaya I’ve ever witnessed being made started with a roux and then brown the meats. My dad’s family was from Kenner.
It makes zero sense to use a roux for jambalaya. Roux is a thickener. Jambalaya is not a soup like dish which a roux would be used for. There's nothing in Jambalaya that needs thickening. It's a meat and rice dish.
quote:
And then I’ve witnessed restaurants mostly around New Orleans using tomato paste and it being more wet.
That's a creole style jambalaya. Tomatoes don't have magical powers to make a Jambalaya wet. If you add enough chicken broth before cooking the rice in it, it will come out wet. More liquid = more wet. Less liquid = more dry. It's not rocket science.
quote:
You can google recipes and about 1/3 of them have a roux.
For authentic ethnic recipes (not just Cajun), google is arse. You can google recipes for gumbo too and they will tell you to add tomatoes and fish. That doesn't mean it is the consensus amongst cajuns. It just means some Karen in NYC or LA decided to post some bullshite recipe and got a lot of clicks.
quote:
I’ll try the linked recipe and let yall know how it turns out.
It's 100% the best and most authentic cajun jambalaya recipe you will find. Report back after you make it.
This post was edited on 11/14/25 at 9:16 am
Posted on 11/14/25 at 9:40 am to Burt Macklin
This is surprisingly good and a quick shortcut to make one in a hurry at home.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 10:03 am to DonJuanDaMiles
quote:
Every jambalaya I’ve ever witnessed being made started with a roux
Watch this simple video as the key is browning all the meats and cooking down the vegetables. Rice absorbs the flavor as a roux and/or tomatoes (paste, sauce) are not needed. Cooking and seasoning a jambalaya varies from region (River Parishes, Cajun Country, etc.. ) and how your parrain taught you.
Posted on 11/14/25 at 11:12 am to Got Blaze
That video is pretty good for a beginner, but he doesn't brown his meats even close to long enough and proudly pours 2 Tbsp of kitchen bouquet in there to make up for it 
This post was edited on 11/14/25 at 11:14 am
Posted on 11/14/25 at 4:42 pm to DonJuanDaMiles
quote:
I thought all Jambs had either a roux base or a tomato base.
You are thinking "creole" jambalaya.
quote:
Creole jambalaya is a Louisiana one-pot rice dish with a tomato-based sauce, unlike its Cajun counterpart which omits tomatoes.
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