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Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Jambalaya

With the really odd weather we are having today (I woke up to sunshine, followed by hail, sleet, snow, back to sleet, then some hail, sunshine, snow and now it's snow/sleeting again) I felt that something warm, spicy and hearty would be a good choice.  I had never made Jambalaya before but my good friend's in New Orleans, Danna Jo and her husband Mike had fed me the most delicious pot of jambalaya two summers ago and I've loved it ever since.  Theirs was made in a huge black bot over a burner outside in the New Orleans air and tasted like heaven.  I wasn't sure that jambalaya would taste the same North of the Mason - Dixon line, especially without the New Orleans air to season it.  However, I wanted to give it a try, so I decided that today was the day.  I looked up a Paula Dean recipe for jambalaya with shrimp and sausage in it because let's face it, her stuff tastes amazing, but I knew I wanted to add chicken to it and make some other changes.  So I'll include the original recipe underneath, but I'm urging you to give my recipe a try because let me tell you, it's AMAZING and while you're making it a little bit of New Orleans will come visit you. 

2 Tbsp of butter
4 chicken thighs
4 links of smoked sausage, cut in 1/2 in cubes (I used the new Hillshire Farms Bacon and Monterrey Jack links)
1/2 can of beer
1 onion (I sliced it in half and kept it in halves so I could fish it out when I was done with it)
1 pint of tomato sauce (I used homemade but I'm sure store bought will work too)
1 lb of shrimp cut in half
1 cup long grain rice
3 Tbsp of onion powder
1 Tbsp of parsley flakes
2 packets of sodium free chicken bouillon
1/2 tsp of black pepper
1/4 tsp of salt
2 bay leaves (I used dried)
1 tsp of Tony Cachere's Spice N' Herbs Seasoning (optional for some added kick, if you add this, don't add the rest of the following ingredients
1/4 to 1/2 of cayenne depending on how spicy you want it (remember the rice will soak up a bit of the spice)

In a deep soup pan, melt the butter.  Add the chicken thighs and let them brown on each side and until almost cooked through, about 6 or 7 minutes on each side.  Remove them from the pan and put them in a bowl.  Add the sausage links to the butter and chicken renderings, let cook until browned on each side, remove the sausage from the pan and add the onion.  Cook the onion until you smell the onion flavor, (If you like onion in your food, you could chop it up into pieces and add it to the jambalaya, I don't like onion, so I kept it in half and removed it).  Once you smell the onion, add half a can of beer, deglazing the pan (pouring the beer into the hot pan and scraping all the brown bits off the bottom of the pan).  Let the beer boil until the alcohol is cooked off, about 4 or so minutes, then add the tomato sauce.  At this point add the rice, seasonings, chicken, and sausage back into the pan.  Bring to a boil and then cover the pan.  Cook for 20 minutes, stirring occasionally so the rice doesn't stick to the bottom of the pan.  After the 20 minutes is over, remove the chicken thighs and shred the meat off of them.  They will be hot, so do this carefully.  Add the shredded meat back into the Jambalaya mixture and the halved shrimp.  Cook for an addition 5 to 7 minutes or until the shrimp are done.  Serve warm and possibly with some steamed edamame.  Spicy, delicious, and comforting! 

  Paula Dean's Recipe

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing this...I can't wait to try it...I've never made good jambalaya, but I think this sounds great!

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  2. Melissa, good luck! It's amazing! I can hardly wait for lunch today!

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