Recipe: Crawfish Etouffee

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Oct 13, 1999
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You can substitute the crawfish with shrimp, crab, alligator, frog legs, gar fish or your favorite road kill.

INGREDIENTS:
1 lb peeled crawfish tails
2 tbsp crawfish fat – crawfish fat comes from the head of the crawfish if not available you can use 2 tbsp cream of celery soup with ok results.
1 stick butter or margarine
1 tbsp flour
salt, pepper, cayenne pepper to taste
1 cup chopped onion
½ cup chopped bell pepper
½ cup chopped celery
about 3 cloves garlic minced
1 bunch green onion tops chopped
1 bunch parsley chopped
have ½ cup water or stock (chicken, fish or vegetable stock) on hand in case you need to thin out your roux. I always use this as I like my Etouffee more like a gravy.
Cooked rice

DIRECTIONS:
Melt the butter in a skillet. Add the flour to make a blond roux. It will take on the color of peanut butter. Add the onion, bell pepper, celery, garlic and seasoning and stir till tender. Add the crawfish fat (or cream of celery soup) and water or stock if you like and cook about 10 minutes stirring occasionally. Add the crawfish tails, cover and let cook on low heat for 15-20 minutes giving an occasional stir. Add the green onion and parsley, check the seasoning and let cook another 10 minutes to let flavors meld.

Serve hot over rice.

The finished dish should have a little kick to it. Adjust the seasoning to your taste. Serve with a green salad, potato salad, fried green tomatoes or okra and french bread. Bon mange!
 
Have I tried this? I have made enough etouffee to float a bass boat.

Crawfish and shrimp would be my two favorites. Great over rice but if you want something different, try it poured over a big hot baked potato.
 
Okay I dug this up when searching this forum and it is making my mouth water. Tell me about crawfish fat. Is that something I'm going to be able to find in Atanta? Do you just get precooked and peeled tails?
 
Okay I dug this up when searching this forum and it is making my mouth water. Tell me about crawfish fat. Is that something I'm going to be able to find in Atanta? Do you just get precooked and peeled tails?

Crawfish fat is found in the body cavity just ahead of the tail meat. This is what you see people sucking out of the head at crawfish boils. Just dig your little finger inside and pull it out.
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If you find this disgusting use Campbells condensed cream of celery soup.
 
If you find this disgusting use Campbells condensed cream of celery soup.

I suck the heads when I go to crawfish boils. Just didn't know what it was called. Can you buy the fat frozen if I want to use frozen tails? Or is that against etouffee law?
 
I suck the heads when I go to crawfish boils. Just didn't know what it was called. Can you buy the fat frozen if I want to use frozen tails? Or is that against etouffee law?

I have never run across frozen crawfish fat. I use frozen tails fairly often but not the ones from China. The Chinese I hear use human excretment to fertilize their fields and I'm not into that so I only buy Louisiana crawfish at about 3X the price but a better product. It really turns out pretty good using the celery soup.
 
I saw a Youtube clip of a news report on seafood inspectors. They were listing some of the stuff they found in the seafood shipments from countries like China and Vietnam ( ban antibiotics , mercury, etc). I pretty much won't buy anything but USA stuff now.
 
try putting it on fried catfish.I'll put my wifes etouffe up against anyones.

Every good restaurant in south Louisiana offers a fish smothered in etouffee on their menu. Good stuff fried, baked, grilled, blackened, catfish, redfish, flounder.

Mulates Menu

Catfish Mulate's
Seasoned catfish fillet, lightly floured and grilled to perfection, topped with Mulate's crawfish etouffeé. Served with jambalaya, sautéed vegetables and a twice-baked potato. $19.99
 
Love creole and cajun food! This looks yummy.

I will soon be attempting my first roux. Should be comedic gold.

Roux is not hard to make but if you can find it where you live in a jar its a whole lot easier.
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I use roux from a jar as often as possible.
 
Roux is not hard to make but if you can find it where you live in a jar its a whole lot easier.


I use roux from a jar as often as possible.

Went the celery soup route, but made the roux. It turned out better than I would have thought. A C+ or maybe B-.

Thanks for the recipe.
 
I can't find this up in Ohio so I rely on Crawfish | Gourmet Turducken | Cajun Food | Boudin and Gumbo for all my cajun stuff....I ordered some boudin, tasso and crawfish from there recently, though I haven't had a chance to use them yet.

Cajun Grocery sells Roux in a jar. Stock up your pantry with either Richards or Savoy's. Get rid of that oil slick on top before using then re add it to the top before putting what you have left away.
 
Cajun Grocery sells Roux in a jar. Stock up your pantry with either Richards or Savoy's. Get rid of that oil slick on top before using then re add it to the top before putting what you have left away.

Bayou I use Roux in a jar also but if your out of it you can brown flour in the oven in a baking pan @ 400 degrees stirring every 15 minutes for about an hour. I use equal parts Roux and water and mix it in the pot.
 
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