Chicken and Sausage Gumbo

"This is a culmination of gumbo recipes that I have had over the years. Ideas and ingredients that work and taste good together. Please Enjoy"
 
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Ready In:
2hrs 50mins
Ingredients:
17
Yields:
1 batch
Serves:
10-12
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ingredients

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directions

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
  • Brown chicken and sausage in a cast iron dutch oven. Remove from pot and let cool.
  • Place the vegetable oil and flour into a 5 to 6-quart cast iron Dutch oven and whisk together to combine. Place on the middle shelf of the oven, uncovered, and bake for 1 1/2 hours, whisking 2 to 3 times throughout the cooking process.
  • While the roux is baking, de-bone the chicken and cut into pieces.
  • Once the roux is done, carefully remove it from the oven and set over medium-high heat. Add the onions, celery, green peppers and garlic and cook, moving constantly for 7 to 8 minutes or until the onions begin to turn translucent. Add the tomatoes, okra, salt, black pepper, thyme, cayenne pepper, and bay leaves and stir to combine.
  • Gradually add the chicken stock while whisking continually. Add the Chicken and Sausage. Decrease the heat to low, cover and cook for 35 minutes.
  • Optional; Add the file powder while stirring constantly. Cover and let sit over low heat for 10 minutes.
  • Serve over rice, and garnish with parsley.

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

As my moniker might display, I am a chef and I work in a laboratory. I have working a healthcare lab for the past 18 years. With the exception of the two years that took a break and went culinary school. Let me tell you, working with food is fun, but it really does not pay the bills. So I went back into healthcare. Now I just cook for my friends and family. One thing that I learned in culinary school is once you have the techniques of cooking, you can cook just about anything. I am not saying go out and spend tens of thousands of dollars on culinary school. But try to learn as much about cooking techniques as you can, take a class at your local continuing education location, read a lot, there are many great teaching cooking shows (Good Eats), and of course there is always YouTube. But most of all, cook what you love, and have fun. Do not let cooking be a "I have 30 minutes to make a meal before I have to do X." Cook on your days off or weekends, play some music, have some wine, but have fun. If it does not turn out, do not get mad, but try to figure out why it did not turn out. It usually either a bad recipe, or bad technique.
 
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