Saturday, December 06, 2008

Gumbo

One of the mainstays of Cajun folk food is gumbo. It's easy to make, from whatever crawls, swims or flies across this earth. My forebears have been cooking it for a century or longer, and one of my favorite memories is of bringing my mother's mother a mess of squirrels, cleaned and ready for the pot. She'd make me a squirrel gumbo, dark and rich and filled with goodness.

Some make a gumbo with tomato products, some don't. I like my gumbo without the tomatoes, just the fowl or seafood, the vegetables and the roux, the darker the better. Some type of sausage always finds its way into my gumbo. Whether andouille, smoked sausage, or a polish kielbasa, it's all good in the mix.

Gumbo is good made fresh, as in a chicken gumbo that comes together on a Saturday afternoon, but another tradition is using leftover meat to make the stew and the leavings from the Thanksgiving turkey has provided the basis for many a pot of wonderful.

Today, PawPaw peeled all the meat off the bones of that Thanksgiving bird, added some sausage from a local butcher shop, made a roux, sauteed some onions and bell pepper, and I have a gumbo on the stove. We'll let the flavors blend for another couple of hours then make a pot of rice. I've filled the stock pot with culture and tradition and the grandkids will be back from the first Christmas parade of the season. Come supper time, we'll fill our bellies with gumbo.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Post a recipe, please. I haven't had good gumbo since my mother in law passed away. I cannot master making the roux. It always burns or is lumpy.

PaulB

Anonymous said...

Alright, that does it. I've still got a few packs of crawfish left in the freezer from my trip a few months ago. Can't do it tomorrow because we won't be home, but Monday is definitely going to be gumbo day.

And thanks for the reminder. :-)

Pawpaw said...

Paul. Follow the links embedded in the post. If your roux is lumpy or burns, you aren't stirring it enough. You've got to stir it from start to finish. You cannot leave a roux to its own devices. Stir it constantly.

Old NFO said...

yum... sigh...

Anonymous said...

I use Savoie's Roux http://www.savoiesfoods.com/products_roux.html instead of making my own. It's easier, and I can't make a better roux.There's also a good recipe for chicken and sausage gumbo on the back of the jar.

Termite

Rivrdog said...

Damn, PawPaw, I'm cursing the day that Boeing decided not to make their SST. On one, I could be in LA in time for that supper....