PRUDHOMME FAMILY'S NUTRIA CHILI
The nutria (also called ragondin) is a fur bearing herbivore native to South America that was first introduced into the wilds of Louisiana in the late 1930s, when animals were intentionally and/or accidentally released from fur farms. Nutria meat is a very lean red meat quite similar to rabbit meat and tastes like dark turkey meat. If you do not hunt, frozen nutria meat is available year round, and can be shipped nationwide.
Provided by Molly53
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 1h10m
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- In a heavy 5-quart pot on high heat, add oil and heat until very hot.
- Add nutria meat, and cook and stir 10 minutes until browned.
- Add salt, red pepper, chili powder, onion and both bell peppers.
- Cook and stir 15 minutes.
- Add tomato paste and 4 cups stock.
- Cook 30 minutes; reduce heat to medium.
- Add red kidney beans; cook an additional 10 minutes. Serve hot!
Nutrition Facts : Calories 135.6, Fat 7.8, SaturatedFat 1.2, Sodium 2522.6, Carbohydrate 14.4, Fiber 3.8, Sugar 8.2, Protein 4.7
PRUDHOMME'S CRAWFISH BOUDIN - BOUDAIN D'ECREVISSES - LOUISIANA CRAWFISH AND RICE SAUSAGE
A flavorful blast from the Prudhomme family cookbook. To stuff the casings, you will need a meat grinder with a sausage horn attachment. If you don't have such a device, use the mixture to make fried crawfish patties by shaping 1/4 cup of filling into a 1/2 inch thick patty and frying in hot oil until golden brown on both sides.
Provided by Molly53
Categories Lunch/Snacks
Time 1h20m
Yield 2 3/4 pounds, 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- To prepare casings: Let casings soak in cool water about five minutes to remove salt on outer surface (no longer, or they will become too tender to stuff) and flush salt from the inside by placing one end on faucet nozzle and turn on cold tap water (if you see holes or water leaking, cut and discard).
- Remove casing from faucet and gently squeeze out water; cover rinsed casings and refrigerate until ready to use.
- Place the crawfish in a bowl and sprinkle the seasonings on top; mix well and set aside.
- Heat the oil in a saucepan and saute the vegetables over medium heat for about five minutes or until translucent.
- Add the seasoned crawfish and cook about 20 minutes more, stirring occasionally.
- Remove from heat and stir in the rice, mixing very well.
- While the mixture is still hot, fill the casings, making links by twisting the filled casing several turns periodically (a four inch link is a good size).
- To cook:.
- Place the sausage in a single layer in a large pan or dutch oven and cover with water.
- Heat over high until water is nearly simmering and reduce heat to maintain just under simmering until the sausage is heated through about 15 to 20 minutes (cooking over higher heat may lead the casings to burst).
- Drain and serve immediately.
- An alternate method of cooking would be to saute the sausages in a frying pan in a little oil or butter.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 164.9, Fat 5.5, SaturatedFat 0.8, Cholesterol 81, Sodium 437.1, Carbohydrate 15.6, Fiber 0.7, Sugar 0.8, Protein 12.7
CHICKEN AND SAUSAGE GUMBO
This recipe came to The Times in 1983 from Paul Prudhomme, the New Orleans chef who put Louisiana on the American culinary map. It is a hearty, rich Creole stew generously seasoned with black and white pepper, cayenne, paprika and filé powder, a spice made from the leaves of the sassafras tree. Filé powder is readily available in most grocery stores and online, and while it's not 100 percent necessary, it lends a distinctive, earthy quality to the dish. Mr. Prudhomme intended this to be made with chicken, but we've had excellent results using leftover turkey from Thanksgiving, too.
Provided by Paul Prudhomme
Categories dinner, project, sauces and gravies, main course
Time 1h30m
Yield 6 or more servings
Number Of Ingredients 19
Steps:
- Put chicken pieces in a bowl. Blend salt, peppers, mustard, cayenne pepper, paprika, granulated garlic and file powder. Rub four teaspoons of the mixture over the chicken. Set rest of spice mixture aside.
- Put the flour in a bowl and add two teaspoons of the reserved spice mixture. Blend well.
- Heat a 10-inch skillet and add the oil. Dredge the chicken pieces in the flour mixture to coat well, shaking off excess. Reserve the leftover flour.
- When the oil is hot and almost smoking, add the chicken pieces skin side down. Cook about two minutes on one side until golden brown. Turn and cook about three minutes on the second side until nicely browned. Do this in batches so as to not crowd the pan. Drain thoroughly on paper towels.
- Pour off all but one cup of fat from the skillet. Heat this oil over high heat until it is almost smoking and add the reserved seasoned flour. Stir rapidly and constantly with a wire whisk until the mixture is golden brown. Do not burn. This is a roux.
- Add the chopped onion, celery and green pepper to the roux and stir to blend well. Remove from the heat.
- Meanwhile, bring the broth to a boil in a large saucepan.
- Add about half a cup of the roux mixture to the broth, stirring rapidly with the whisk. Continue adding the roux mixture, half a cup at a time, always stirring rapidly and constantly.
- Add the smoked sausage and stir. Cook over high heat, stirring often from the bottom, about 15 minutes.
- Add the chicken pieces, bay leaf and finely minced fresh garlic. Cook about 40 minutes, on medium-low, stirring occasionally.
- Remove the chicken pieces. Cut the meat from the bones and discard the bones. Cut the chicken into cubes or shred it and add it back to the pot. Serve with white rice or potato salad (or both) spooned into the gumbo.
NUTRIA SAUSAGE JAMBALAYA
The nutria (also called ragondin) is a fur bearing herbivore native to South America that was first introduced into the wilds of Louisiana in the late 1930s, when animals were intentionally and/or accidentally released from fur farms. Nutria meat is a very lean red meat quite similar to rabbit meat and tastes like dark turkey meat. If you do not hunt, frozen nutria meat is available year round, and can be shipped nationwide. Recipe by: Mattie Harris
Provided by Molly53
Categories Stew
Time 4h15m
Yield 6-8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Heat oil in large dutch oven or stock pot.
- Brown nutria meat and sausage.
- Remove from pot.
- Add all other ingredients except rice.
- Simmer for 20 minutes.
- Return meat to pot.
- Cook 2-3 hours or until meat is tender.
- Add rice and bring to boil.
- Stir and cover.
- Cook over low heat for 35-40 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 573.3, Fat 30.9, SaturatedFat 8.4, Cholesterol 46.3, Sodium 850.4, Carbohydrate 57.9, Fiber 1.6, Sugar 2.6, Protein 14.2
RED BOUDIN - BOUDAIN ROUGE - CAJUN BLOOD SAUSAGE
A historical recipe from Cajun country from Chef Paul Prudhomme. It isn't an easily made recipe due to lack of sources for absolutely fresh ingredients. Cajun families who still do their own butchering continue to make red boudin, but otherwise it's seldom available anywhere commercially. To make the boudin, you will need a meat grinder with a sausage stuffing attachment or "horn".
Provided by Molly53
Categories Lunch/Snacks
Time 2h20m
Yield 5 1/2 pounds, 26 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Combine 2 quarts of the pork stock with the pork steak, onions, 2 1/2 teaspoons red pepper, minced garlic, and 1 tablespoon of the salt in a Dutch oven or large saucepan.
- Bring to a boil over high heat; continue boiling for 90 minutes, stirring occasionally (turn the meat periodically if not totally submerged in the liquid) and adding more stock or water near the end if needed to keep the meat covered with liquid.
- While the meat is cooking, assemble meat grinder and prepare the casings: Choose long pieces of the casings so that you have more control over the size of the links that you wish to make.
- Soak the casings in cool water about 5 minutes (more soaking will make the casings very tender and prone to bursting) about an hour in advance of stuffing to remove the salt on the outer surface.
- Rinse under cool running water.
- To remove excess salt from the inside, hold one end of a casing in place on a faucet nozzle and turn on cold tap water to fill the casing with liquid.
- If you spot any holes in the casing at this time, discard or cut the damaged bit off.
- Remove from faucet and squeeze out water; cover the rinsed and drained casings and refrigerate until ready to use.
- Transfer cooked meat to a bowl to cool, leaving the pot with the boiling stock over high heat.
- Add the liver to the pot and cook about 3 minutes, turning meat once if it's not completely submerged in the stock.
- Remove pot from the heat, remove the liver and set aside.
- Strain the stock, reserving it and the strained onions and garlic separately.
- Cut the pork meat and liver into about 2" cubes, discarding the bones.
- Grind the meat and fat in a meat grinder, using coarse grinding disc (about 3/8" holes).
- In a large bowl or pan, combine the ground meat, rice, reserved onions and garlic, green onions, parsley, garlic powder, 1 cup of the reserved stock and the remaining 1 tablespoon plus 1/2 teaspoon ground red pepper and 1 1/4 teaspoons salt; mix thoroughly (mixture should be moist and taste peppery. If red pepper taste is not clearly present, add a little more. If not moist, a little more stock or water may be added, but take caution that the mixture isn't runny).
- Stir in pork blood, mixing well.
- While the mixture is still hot, fill the casings and make links by twisting the sausage two or three turns at the points where you wish them to be (a 4-inch link is a good snack or lunch size, but smaller ones make good hors d'oeuvres).
- Carefully place the sausages in a large saucepan or Dutch over.
- Cover with reserved 2 cups stock, adding water if necessary to cover.
- Heat over high heat until water reaches 180F (just below a simmer, keeping at that temperature to prevent the sausages from bursting) and continue cooking until the sausage is heated through and the flavors blend, 15 to 20 minutes.
- Drain and let rest about 15 minutes before slicing; serve immediately.
- If you don't plan to serve the boudin right away, immediately pack it in Ziploc bags and give it a rapid cooling in an ice water bath for about 90 minutes or until a thermometer reads 40F or less.
- Poaching the boudin before the rapid cooling will give it a longer life.
- To reheat, poach in 175F to 180F water as directed above.
PRUDHOMME FAMILY'S NUTRIA SAUSAGE
The nutria (also called ragondin) is a fur bearing herbivore native to South America that was first introduced into the wilds of Louisiana in the late 1930s, when animals were intentionally and/or accidentally released from fur farms. Nutria meat is a very lean red meat quite similar to rabbit meat and tastes like dark turkey meat. If you do not hunt, frozen nutria meat is available year round, and can be shipped nationwide. To stuff the casings, you will need a meat grinder with a sausage horn attachment. If you don't have such a device, use the mixture to make fried patties by shaping 1/4 cup of filling into a 1/2 inch thick patty and frying in hot oil until golden brown on both sides. Recipe by: Chef Enola Prudhomme
Provided by Molly53
Categories < 4 Hours
Time 1h45m
Yield 4 1/2 pounds
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- To prepare casings: Let casings soak in cool water about five minutes to remove salt on outer surface (no longer, or they will become too tender to stuff) and flush salt from the inside by placing one end on faucet nozzle and turn on cold tap water (if you see holes or water leaking, cut and discard).
- Remove casing from faucet and gently squeeze out water; cover rinsed casings and refrigerate until ready to use.
- Grind nutria and pork together with potato.
- Add all other ingredients; mix well.
- Fill the casings and make links by twisting the sausage where you wish the links to be.
- Four inches is a good size for a regular serving, smaller links may be made for appetizer servings.
- If using bar-b-que pit to smoke, build fire on one side of pit.
- Place sausage on the other side of pit; this will allow smoke to get to sausage without cooking too fast.
- If you have used bacon fat, put on your fire.
- This will create lots of smoke.
- This will take less time to get a good smoke taste.
- Let sausage smoke 1 hour and 15 minutes; turn and let smoke 1 hour, then remove from pit and let cool.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 253.9, Fat 9.4, SaturatedFat 3.1, Cholesterol 84.6, Sodium 1222.1, Carbohydrate 11.7, Fiber 1.5, Sugar 0.5, Protein 29.1
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