Pronounced Fee' lay - It is ground sassafras leaves.Whats FILE???
For those of us who are novices at the roux making thing, would you be willing to include the portions of flour, oil, etc. for this?My mother makes delicious gumbo!! As always, the secret is not burning the roux! If you burn it -- throw it away and start fresh.
For those of us who are novices at the roux making thing, would you be willing to include the portions of flour, oil, etc. for this?
Thank you.
- Emeril Lagasse (we use this one)Ingredients needed:
1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup flour
Essense
In a large pot, heat the oil. When the oil is almost smoking, whisk in the flour. Cook the roux for 12-15 minutes, stirring constantly for a dark roux.
Yields: 1 cup
I just ordered the light and dark. Now, I'm looking at the turducken.....wow. Thx for the link!Knowing how to make a roux is fine and dandy. I know how to make roux but seldom make one from scratch since I found roux in a jar. This stuff is good, foolproof, has a long shelf life and is inexpensive.
Pick one![]()
One works as well as another, I have tried them all. Rule of thumb is use light roux for seafood and darker roux for chicken, duck and sausage. Some Cajuns say you should not put sausage in seafood and some say you can.
Some like boiled eggs in their gumbo, some like a scoop of potato salad in their bowl. Just about everyone I know that has tasted gumbo likes it.
I have eaten quite a few turduckens. I guess the novelty of them has worn off. I have had some really good ones and some that were just so so. I remember when you could buy one for $25 and now they are probably close to $100. I had a good friend who had a little mom&pop grocery store where they had an actual meat counter who made them but they lost the store when Hurricane Rita removed the store from the face of the earth. Turducken doesn't taste as good after the novelty wears off and you don't have to pay for it. Lately we have been getting boneless chickens stuffed with seafood dressing, cornbread dressing, oyster dressing, crawfish dressing, dirty rice dressing or eggplant dressing. All of them are good and cost about $10.I just ordered the light and dark. Now, I'm looking at the turducken.....wow. Thx for the link!
I do the same without the essense. Am quite willing to try Bayou's suggestion of jarred roux though!-Ingredients needed:
1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup flour
Essense
In a large pot, heat the oil. When the oil is almost smoking, whisk in the flour. Cook the roux for 12-15 minutes, stirring constantly for a dark roux.
When's the next jubilee? I lived in Mobile during the early 90's and attended 3 of these and had a blast. We made some great gumbo with those catches.HuntsvilleTider & bayoutider:
Thanks for such rapid and complete responses to the roux making inquiry. Gonna try the home-made way.
Being a recent transplant to the eastern shore (Fairhope), it is likely the local grocers have canned roux. Reassuring in view of my lack of expertise.![]()
Jubilee is the name used locally for a natural phenomenon that occurs occasionally on the shores of Mobile Bay, Alabama, United States. During a jubilee, blue crabs, shrimp, flounder, stingrays, and eels swarm toward the shore in such numbers that the shallow water near land seems to boil with life. People living near the shore ring bells and call out to alert their neighbors so that everyone can rush down to the water with washtubs, gigs and nets, and gather a bountiful -- and easily reaped -- harvest of seafood. As jubilees only happen on warm summer nights, often in the early pre-dawn hours, the event takes on the aspect of a joyous community beach party, with lights shining into the Bay water.
When's the next jubilee? I lived in Mobile during the early 90's and attended 3 of these and had a blast. We made some great gumbo with those catches.
Being a relatively new arrival, I am less than certain about the local customs. I think we need a little more warm temperatures, though. Any longer-term locals are invited to jump in with a reply.
A jubilee can occur from May - October. On a warm night (if the conditions are just right) a sudden lack of oxygen at the bottom of the bay causes the sealife to go to the surface. Almost like an eruption. The sealife are caught up in the tide and wash ashore. You can pcik them up off the beach, truly amazing.Being a relatively new arrival, I am less than certain about the local customs. I think we need a little more warm temperatures, though. Any longer-term locals are invited to jump in with a reply.
How did I miss that thread??? Man, I miss that and crabbing on the bay.
i too have always been taught that it goes in the bowl upon serving, though i've never heard on the rice specifically. bayou, do you like file on your gumbo?? it was always in my family's kitchen, but it never got used. by the time i was old enough to care i was too set in my ways and didn't care for it.Pronounced Fee' lay - It is ground sassafras leaves.
I was instructed by Chef John Folse to place your rice in your bowl first then sprinkle your file on top of the rice then ladle the gumbo on top. He is a Louisiana historian and he is adamant that you put file on the rice and not in the gumbo pot.
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