Sunday, November 29, 2020

Gumbo - to make Indy tolerable

Whew, it’s been a while since I have added a new recipe, but it’s getting cold in Indy and we needed something to keep us warm and in love. We love gumbo and creole food in general, so this seemed fitting. I have made gumbo for years, but never wrote down a recipe till now. Gumbo, like jambalaya and chili and chicken soup, can be made a lot of ways with lots of twists. This is what I have found suits my taste cravings for gumbo. It’s rich, warm, salty and slightly spicy. 

Grocery list at the bottom.

In a large stock pot add the following:
3-4 pounds of bone in chicken pieces. I use thighs and split breasts. 
1 stick of butter
1 tablespoon of Tony Chachere’s creole seasoning
1 tablespoon of Old Bay’s seasoning
2 whole bay leaves
1 Dark beer 
Add the enough water to cover the chicken and give plenty of room room to cook and stir. 6 cups at a minimum. 

Bring stock pot to a boil over high heat, then reduce heat slightly and keep a low boil for 10-20 minutes until chicken pieces are done. Check after 10 minutes, then every 5 minutes. Overcooking makes the chicken tough and rubbery. Once the chicken is done, remove from pot and allow to cool. 

While the chicken is cooling, return the stock pot to a full boil and add 2 pounds of large easy peel shrimp and cook for 3-4 minutes. Cooking the shrimp in the stock adds flavor to the shrimp and the stock. 

Remove shrimp from the pot with a slotted spoon and set aside. Peel them when you have time, we’ll add these to the bowl just before we eat, instead of adding to the pot. You can add them back to the gumbo as well, but add them just before serving so they don’t get over cooked. 

I like to keep the kitchen mess to a minimum, and try to cook with as few dishes as possible, so here’s how I do the rest... you can use a second stock pot if you have it, or a cast iron Dutch oven. I pour the stock off into a large mixing bowl to save and use the same large stock pot for the remaining cooking. 

In the stock pot, over medium high heat, sauté 1 pound of smoked sausage. Brown both sides and set aside. Add chopped veggies and sauté till tender. Set aside to add later. 

In the empty (not cleaned) stock pot, I make my roux. 2/3 cups of oil heated up and add 1 heaping cup of white flour. Stir continuously over med heat until the flour is roasted and the roux turns dark brown. If this is your first roux, do some more googling for better instructions. 

Once the roux is dark brown, reduce heat to low, stir in 4 cups of the stock we saved earlier. Bring to a simmer and add 1 pound of okra and 2 cans of chopped tomatoes. Allow to simmer for 10-15 minutes until the okra is soft. 

Start a pot of water for rice. Cook rice according to the package. I like extra long grained white rice best. 

Next add the pulled chicken, the sausage, and the sautéed veggies back to the gumbo and turn to low heat while the rice finishes cooking. You can add additional stock if needed to get the right consistency. 

Serve the gumbo in a bowl over the rice and top with 4-6 shrimp. “The Bread” makes a great side. 

Grocery list:3-4 pounds of bone in chicken pieces. 1 stick of butter
1 tablespoon of Tony Chachere’s creole seasoning
1 tablespoon of Old Bay’s seasoning
2 whole bay leaves
1 Dark beer 
2 pounds of large easy peel shrimp
1 pound smoked sausage, Conecuh is possible
3 sticks of celery, chopped
1 Large sweet onion chopped
2 bell peppers chopped
2/3 cup of oil
1 cup of white flour
1 pound of okra, cut bite sized. Frozen works. 
2 8oz cans of chopped tomatoes.  
1 pound of extra long grain white rice

https://drive.google.com/uc?export=view&id=1l9NenHhdhO1sqezpETmFMAOmC0bimLHT

Grammys White Chicken Chili - with few minor adjustments.

White Chili with Chicken or Wild Turkey Breast!

1 whole cut up chicken
OR
1 Side of a large wild turkey breast (equivalent of a whole chicken)

4 Quarts water
1 teaspoon salt
1 Tablespoon of Everglade's Seasoning or poultry season
1 stick of butter
(optional smoked ham hock added to the stock for flavor)

1/2 cup oil (or bacon grease)
3/4 cup flour
2 med onions finely diced
4 stalks celery finely diced

1 teaspoon cayenne pepper (more if you like it hot, less if your heat intolerant)
3 Tablespoons chili powder
1/2 Tablespoon of Cumin powder
1/2 Tablespoon of Garlic Powder
1/2 Tablespoon Creole Seasoning
1/2 Tablespoon of Black Pepper
3 cans Bush's navy beans

Rinse Chicken. Put chicken parts, water, salt, Everglade's seasoning and butter in a large stock pot and bring to a boil. Slow boil for about 20 minutes, or until chicken is fully cooked. Remove chicken to a plate to cool and save the broth. Once Chicken is cool, debone and cut/tear into small bite size chunks.

Put oil in skillet on Medium-Low Heat, add flour to hot oil, stir constantly for 20 minutes (don't let it stick and burn) You want to roast the flour before adding the onions and celery, get the rue to a nice golden brown before going on. Then add onions and celery and cook for 8 more minutes. Add a couple of cups of broth to the mixture to thin and release rue.

Pour rue into a large crock pot and add chicken, stir well, add spices, slowly add broth (as much as needed) to reach the desired thickness. Add beans, cover and cook on low setting for an hour or so.

If using wild turkey, cook till the meat starts to get tender. If the meat isn't tender, keep cooking... Once the meat starts to get tender, add beans and cook on low setting for an hour or more until the turkey meat is fully tender.

Options: Cook a pound of bacon and use the bacon grease in place of the oil for the rue. Chop the bacon into small pieces and use as a topping for the chili. If you use bacon grease for the rue, omit the teaspoon of salt in the soup stock.

A dollop of sour cream on top is very good too!


MawJets Chicken Dorito casserole

One of my favorites as a kid, and still love it. I'm writing this because my daughter is moving out and this is the first recipe she asked for.

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

In a deep casserole dish, debone an entire cooked chicken torn into bite sized pieces. We usually buy a large rotisserie chicken but you can boil and debone a whole cut up chicken as well.

Crunch up a bag of your favorite flavor of Doritos and pour on top of the chicken.

In a sauce pan, add the following and heat to a boil:
1 can of cream of chicken
1 can of cream of mushroom
1 can of Rotel tomatoes
1 cup of milk
(Optional 1 block of cream cheese)

After bringing to a boil, pour the mixture over the top of the chips and chicken.

Cover with shredded cheddar cheese, the more the better, but 3-4 cups should be plenty.

Bake at 350 degrees for 45-60 minutes, or until the cheese is melted and bubbly.