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Étouffée

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Type
  
Stew

Place of origin
  
United States of America

Course
  
Main

Main ingredients
  
Shellfish, Rice

Étouffée Shrimp Etouffee Recipe SimplyRecipescom

Similar
  
Gumbo, Jambalaya, Rice, Po' boy, Astacoidea

Crawfish touff e recipe


Étouffée or etouffee ([e.tu.fe] ay-TOO-fay) is a dish found in both Cajun and Creole cuisine typically served with shellfish over rice. The dish employs a technique known as smothering, a popular method of cooking in the Cajun areas of southwest Louisiana. Étouffée is most popular in New Orleans and in the Acadiana area of the southernmost half of Louisiana as well as the coastal counties of Mississippi, Alabama, and eastern Texas.

Contents

Étouffée Louisiana Crawfish Etouffee Recipe Louisiana Travel

Etymology

Étouffée Shrimp touffe The Woks of Life

In French, the word "étouffée" (borrowed into English as "stuffed" or "stifled") means, literally, "smothered" or "suffocated", from the verb "étouffer".

Description

Étouffée httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Étouffée can be made with any shellfish such as crab or shrimp, though the most popular version of the dish is made with crawfish, referred to in the northern US as "crayfish". A sauce is made from a light or blond roux, seasoned, and simmered with the seafood. Étouffée is typically served over rice.

Étouffée Shrimp Etouffee Recipe for down home Louisiana Cookin39

Depending on who is making it and where it is being made it is flavored with either Creole or Cajun seasonings. Although Creole and Cajun cuisines are distinct, there are many similarities. In the case of the Creole version of crawfish étouffée, it is made with a blonde or brown roux and sometimes tomatoes are added. A blond roux is one that is cooked, stirring constantly, for approximately 5 minutes to remove the "raw" flavor of the flour and to add a slightly "nutty" flavor, while a brown roux is cooked longer (30 to 35 minutes) in order to deepen the color and flavor.

History

Étouffée Crawfish touffe Louisiana Entertains BigOven

The dish originated at DeJonghe's Hotel and Restaurant in Chicago. Around the 1950s, crawfish etouffée was introduced to restaurant goers in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana; however, the dish may have been invented as early as the late 1920s, according to some sources. Originally, crawfish étouffée was a popular dish amongst Cajuns in the bayous and backwaters of Louisiana. Around 1983, a waiter at the popular Bourbon Street restaurant Galatoire's brought the dish to his boss to try. At the time, most New Orleans restaurants served French Creole cuisine, but this Cajun dish was a hit.

References

Étouffée Wikipedia


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