Louise brought up the idea of cooking some Cajun stuff in honor of Mardi Gras (which is Tuesday).
A lot of it was just too caloric and too much trouble -- I really miss having neighbors we could cook with, Susan would launch into a cooperative effort at the drop of a hat and it didn't even have to be on the weekend. But I got into reading recipes and decided to tackle a gumbo and make it right this time.
Every single time I have tried to make the long slow-cooked cajun Roux I have wrecked it, usually by burning it. You know I don't mean the 3 minute roux (butter and flour) that is step one for béchamel or many gravy recipes. This is flour and oil stirred attentively for, like, an hour. WELL I found a better option and here's a URL that explains it.
http://www.deepsouthdish.com/2009/03/ea ... z3RmsxVA2zI put 1/4 cup of peanut oil and 1/4 cup of flour into a cast iron fry pan, set the oven at 360 F, stirred the flour together with the oil making it smooth and stuck the pan into the oven for about half an hour. Took it out every few minutes for whisking. What I got was a brown paint-like liquid that smelled nicely toasty and "brown" and was about the color of an old penny. I didn't want to risk anything so I didn't use the grease from frying the chicken thighs, I just used pristine peanut oil and did the roux as a completely separate step. I recommend doing it this way. But when you start frying the vegetables (finely chopped onions, celery stalks, bell peppers, okra, I added a leek because I like adding a leek, etc.) you want to get the roux in there with everything and stir it around. Then there will be bay leaves, thyme, cayenne, salt and pepper. For liquids I used a bottle of clam juice and a couple of cans of Campbell's Chicken Broth with equal amounts of water. When everything was simmering I added back the chicken thighs, along with "coins" of andouille sausage and a sliced up ham steak. Finally I threw in some shrimp. Stuff tastes pretty good. It's hot and savory and the roux gives it a bit of that brown flavor.
The recipe that inspired me was from Best Soups and Stews from the editors of Cook's Illustrated.