Crawfish Étouffée (a/k/a Smothered Crawfish) is a south Louisiana favorite during crawfish season.
Ingredients
- 1 lb. clean crawfish tails
- 2 large onions, chopped
- 1 small bell pepper, chopped
- 4 cloves garlic, minced
- 1/4 lb. butter
- 1/2 cup celery, chopped
- 1/2 cup parsley, chopped
- 1/2 cup green onion, chopped
- Salt and pepper to taste
This is the ultimate Crawfish Étouffée recipe and very simple to make. Sauté vegetables and seasonings in butter for approximately 5 minutes. Add crawfish tails and cook on medium heat for one-half hour. Serve over cooked long grain rice. Serves 4.
Bon Appetite! Ahheee!!
Just found this site Jacques, can't wait to try some of your recipes.
ReplyDeleteMy question here is a simple one: I'm not all that fond of crawfish. So can I assume that this Etouffee can be made the same way with other meats like shrimp?
Thank you.
Chad.
Yes! And, you can find a great "shrimp etouffee" recipe on this website. Search our index. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteam I missing something in the recipe? the picture looks like some good stuff and it looks like it has plenty of sauce but the only liquid I see in the recipe is a stick of butter...are we to add ruex to this or something?
ReplyDeleteI'm a big etouffee fan but don't want to waste money on something that doesn't turn out like the pic
Do not add water or any other liquid. The reason is because there is enough liquid in the vegetables and crawfish tails to get the job done right. Thanks for the comment on the pic. The meal was made right here in my kitchen.
Deletewelcome, and thank you for the quick reply...I will deffinitely be trying this soon...originally from louisiana and I miss a good etouffee
DeleteCan you make this recipe ahead of time, freeze and heat it up when you are ready to serve? I'm planning on catering my wedding with a cajun buffet but I need to find recipes I can make in advance and in large batches. If prefer to cook all of my food instead of buying prepackaged if possible.
ReplyDeleteYes and No. Yes, if you don't mind a tiny drop in quality because after freezing some of the ingredients in the recipe, (namely the crawfish), it will come out slightly watery and delicate and will tend to break apart when you defrost it--losing some of it firmness. If you are going to freeze it for later use, it would be better to let it thaw-out in the refrig then slowly warm it up again, mixing very gently as you do. That said, there's nothing like a right-out-of-the-pot piping hot Crawfish Étouffée. Good luck with your decision.
DeleteThis is the recipe my daughter uses and it always comes out GREAT! Gonna try to make it tomorrow evening for my 100% cajun BF!!!
ReplyDelete