Lobster Etouffee and 5 Cajun Crustacean Recipes | Foodiecrush.com (2024)

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Baby its cold outside and I’m ready for some heat. So this big mama is pointing my cookin’ compass to ‘Nawlins baby!

My first intro to real New Orleans cooking was years ago thanks to my little sister and bro-in-law, both oil execs who were working just outside New Orleans, who had invited us for a visit and our first Jazz Festival excursion—which if you haven’t experienced is a bucket list must do if only to try Crawfish bread. That’s all it took to become big fans of the little suckers.

A couple of years later, and after a transfer to Houston, bro-in-law treated us to another crawfish tastey, his recipe for Crawfish Etouffee. To some cooks, this dish seems out-of-your-league-fancy just by looking at the spelling of its name, what with it’s double ff’s and ee’s and sounding all French and haute.

But here’s the secret: it isn’t fancy, or hard. It’s just good. Spicy and good.

photo > FoodieCrush

So when G and I were recently perusing the lovely aisles of Au Costco, we jumped at the seafood bait when we discovered langostinos in the seafood case.

No they weren’t fresh crawdads like you’d find on the coast, but any quality frozen nugget of the sweet crustacean style is all this recipe needs. So use what you can find: crawfish, shrimp or like us, little lobster longostinos.
This recipe is spiced up with Cajun seasoning and a variety of peppers, so depending on your love of heat, add or minus to your heart’s content. We serve it over steamed rice cooked with 2 bay leaves added to the water for a little flavor boost plus crusty french bread slathered with salty sweet butter for sopping up every nugget of goodness.

And another perk? This is a one-pot meal (if you don’t count the accompanying rice) so dinner will be on the table within an hour and clean up is a cinch.

If you make this recipe, please let me know! Leave a comment below or take a photo and tag me onInstagramwith #foodiecrusheats.

Lobster Etouffee and 5 Cajun Crustacean Recipes | Foodiecrush.com (4)

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5 from 8 votes

Lobster Etouffee

Rich, hearty lobster dish recipe with exotic flavors thats quick and easy.

Ingredients

  • adapted from Paula Deen and Emeril Lagassee
  • ¼ cup oil
  • ¼ cup butter plus 4 tablespoons butter reserved
  • ½ cup flour plus extra flour as needed to form a paste
  • 1 ½ cup chopped yellow onion
  • 1 cup chopped celery
  • ½ cup chopped green bell pepper
  • 3 garlic cloves minced
  • 2 bay leaves
  • ½ teaspoon black pepper
  • ½ teaspoon white pepper
  • ½ teaspoon cayenne pepper or to taste
  • 1 teaspoon Cajun seasoning or to taste
  • 3-5 dashes hot sauce or to taste
  • 1 8- ounce jar clam juice
  • 1 14.5- ounce can diced tomatoes
  • 3 cups chicken stock
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 pound or 4 cups langostinos can substitute crawfish or shrimp
  • ½ cup minced green onions plus extra for garnish
  • ½ cup minced fresh parsley leaves

Instructions

  • To make the roux, melt butter with oil in a large heavy saucepan over low heat. Whisk flour into the oil to form a paste and cooking over low heat and whisk continuously, until the mixture turns a caramel color and gives off a nutty aroma, about 15 to 20 minutes.

  • Add the onion, green pepper, celery, and garlic and cook over low heat until the vegetables are limp, about 5 minutes.

  • Add the black pepper, white pepper, cayenne pepper, Cajun seasoning, green onions, parsley, and hot sauce to taste. Add clam juice, chicken broth, tomatoes with their juice and salt to taste. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to low and simmer for 10 to 15 minutes until mixture thickens.

  • Add lobster meat and cook for 3-5 minutes careful not to overcook. Remove from heat and add the 4 tablespoons reserved butter and stir to melt. Garnish with the green onions, parsley and serve over steamed rice.

But, since we’re always on the lookout for more spicy sweet shellfish recipes, I figured you would be too. Whoa, don’t lose your head, but you’re about to become a very, very happy cook. Enjoy!

Heather gives Cajun shrimp a piquant squeeze of citrus with Squirrel Bread’s Lemon Linguini and Cajun Shrimp where the shrimp are easily baked or skewered on the grill.

Bev says its all in the bread, but rest assured, it’s really all in her spiced up shrimpeez in Bev Cooks Shrimp Po’ Boys. Oh nothin’, it’s just Bev rockin’ ‘Nawlins.

Julie and her hubs share Mommie Cook’s lightly creamy Cajun Lobster Pasta on their romantic living room picnics—minus the kids. Keeping it spicy!

Decadent and fully flavored thanks to creamy potatoes with a splash of wine, Seduction Meal’s spin on Susan Spicer’s recipe for Shrimp Clemenceau brings New Orleans flavors minus the heat.

Peeeza and shreeemps! That’s some serious accent loving when Louisianna shrimp meets its Italian lover in Annie’s Eats Cajun Shrimp Pizza , spiced up as hot as you can take it.

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Lobster Etouffee and 5 Cajun Crustacean Recipes | Foodiecrush.com (2024)
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