Stephanie da Silva's Jambalaya Collection

From: arielle@taronga.com (Stephanie da Silva)

Date: Tue, 13 Jul 93 12:39:29 CDT

Index

Chicken and Sausage Jambalaya


 1 package chicken thighs (6 count)
 1/2 package Hilshire Farms Polish Kielbasa (or other smoked sausage), sliced
 1/2 bell pepper, chopped
 5 stalks celery, chopped
 3 large white onions, chopped (DO NOT use a food processor)
 2 cloves garlic, chopped fine
 1/4 cup peanut oil
 2 cups white rice (regular white rice. NOT Minute rice!!!)
 2 1/2 cups water
 1 12oz beer (Budweiser works fine)
 flour to coat chicken
 1 1/2 teaspoons Rosemary
 1 teaspoon Thyme
 A handful of chopped parsley (hard to put too much)
 Salt to taste
 Lots of cayenne pepper


 Start off by washing the chicken and placing it skin side
 down on a plate (you can remove the skin if you want).  Now,
 depending on how spicy you want it, coat the chicken with
 Cayenne pepper until very red (I use a LOT of Cayenne in
 mine).  Don't worry about getting it too hot, since this is
 the majority of the  pepper you are going to add and it will cook
 into the rest of the dish.  Turn the chicken pieces over and
 lightly coat the skin side.  Let sit for 15 minutes or so to
 soak it all up.

 Heat the oil in the bottom of a large heavy cast iron or
 aluminum pot (don't use thin aluminum or stainless steel since
 the rice will tend to stick and burn if you're not really careful).
 Place the flour in a paper bag (season the flour lightly with salt, cayenne
 pepper, black pepper, garlic powder, etc). Place a couple of pieces
 of chicken at a time into the bag and shake to coat.

 Fry the chicken in the oil until golden brown.  Don't worry about
 cooking it all the way through just yet.  Remove the chicken.
 Now place the onions, celery, garlic and bellpepper into the pot
 (along with a bit more oil if necessary) and saute them until the
 onions are transparent, scraping the bottom of the pot often. Add
 the rosemary, thyme and parsley and cook for a minute or so.

 Place the sausage slices, chicken, and a little water into the pot
 and mix well with the vegetables. Turn heat low, cover and simmer for
 about 30 minutes (until the chicken is tender).  Stir the mixture frequently,
 always scraping the bottom to keep things from burning (break the
 chicken up a bit with the spatula as it cooks. It should break up
 naturally as the dish cooks, but this just helps things a little).

 When the chicken is cooked, add the washed rice and stir it into
 everything for a couple of minutes.  Pour the warm beer and
 the water in and stir things for another minute or so.
 Taste it at this point and adjust the salt if necessary.
 Now, keeping the heat low, cover the pot and cook until the rice
 is tender (anywhere from 30 minutes to an hour).  Stir the
 mixture every now and then, scraping the bottom of the pot.

Jambalaya


1 bunch scallions
1 bell pepper
a few cloves garlic
a few stalks celery


meat possibilities:
sausage, pork chop, chicken (dark meat), country ham.

rice and water (1 lb meat with this much veggie is enough for 2-3 cups
rice)

a few large pinches parsley (maybe 1/4 cup)
thyme, bay leaf, etc.
Tony Chachere's Creole Spice (McCormick's will work in a bind)

Brown the meat for a few minutes, then add the veggies to coat them with
the juice.  Add the water, herbs, and spice and boil till the meat is
about cooked; add the rice and cook till the rice is done.

Serve with Tabasco and French bread.

This is a cajun recipe, to make it creole add some tomato paste, use 
a little more water than the rice will absorb so you have some sauce, 
and possibly use seafood instead of the meat.  Since shrimp and crawfish 
cook quickly, they should be added after the rice has been going 15 
minutes or so.

mara

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