Month: October 2010

Cajun Jambalaya

How to Make Cajun Jambalaya

Cajun Jambalaya with chicken and sausage by Beryl Caillouet Stokes at Cajun Cooking TV. A great Cajun jambalaya recipe does not have to come from a box, a bag or a frozen dinner.

REVISED January 21, 2018

Smaller Cajun Jambalaya in Cast Iron Skillet

Cajun Jambalaya
Cajun Jambalaya

2 boneless chicken breasts

2 boneless chicken thighs

1 pound of smoked or fresh sausage, sliced

2 cups long grain white rice

4 cups chicken broth (obtained from boiling the chicken)

1 cup seasoning blend (chopped onion, bell pepper, & celery)

1-2 teaspoons Tony’s Creole Seasoning

2 teaspoons salt

2 teaspoons black pepper

2 tablespoons chopped parsley

1 cup chopped green onions

drizzle of oil

In a 3-quart cast iron pot or skillet, add 6 cups water and bring to a boil.

Place the chicken and boil on medium heat for at least 30 minutes.

Add 1 teaspoon each salt & black pepper.

(This will be your chicken broth, or stock).

Remove the chicken to a plate to cool.

Remove the chicken broth to a glass bowl to cool.

Once the chicken is cooled enough to handle, shred or chop into bite size pieces.

In the same pot, add a tablespoon of canola oil or olive oil and heat to medium.

Add sausage and brown on both sides.

Add the 1 cup onion, bell pepper, celery and sauté for 2-3 minutes.

Add the chicken to brown it as well.

Add the chicken broth.

Toss in the Tony’s Creole Seasoning, salt, pepper, parsley, green onions, and then rice.

Stir well.

Cover and turn the heat down to low (number 2 or 3 on the dial).

Set timer for 15 minutes and do not remove the lid.

After 15 minutes, uncover and lightly move the mixture around lifting from the bottom.

(You’re just making sure nothing sticking to the bottom.)

Add the cover and cook another 15 minutes.

We turned ours down to low at this point because the cast iron pot holds heat well.

Uncover and lightly move around again.

Ready to eat!

 

Cajun Jambalaya
Chicken and Sausage Cajun Jambalaya

This essential Acadian (Cajun) dish is an unfussy and wholesome meal that is considered by some as the comfort food of the South. Jambalaya, a dish mostly associated with the Deep South of Louisiana, is one of the most popular Cajun dishes there is.

There is even a Jambalaya Festival held in Gonzales, Louisiana every Memorial Day weekend since 1967. The Jambalaya Festival celebrates the Cajun traditional cooking, plus the joie de vie (joy of life). What would a festival be without a cooking championship?

Traditional Cajun Jambalaya contains the main ingredient – rice. Then add seasoning vegetables and a variety of other meats like: chicken, pork, ham, sausage, shrimp, crawfish, oysters, etc.

One key difference in Jambalaya and Gumbo is that the rice is cooked in with the meat rather than a sauce poured over rice. Think of the Spanish version of Paella.

Got a party or tailgating to do? It’s quite common to see a giant cast iron pot of Cajun Jambalaya at social events and gatherings. I’ve been to so many wedding receptions where the main dish served was Jambalaya. Often we see organizations trying to raise funds by selling Jambalaya plates.

Cajun Jambalaya is a great and economical way to feed a crowd or large group of people. It’s a complete meal all in one pot. There’s even a chain of restaurants in the area called The Jambalaya Shoppe. Guess what their main dish is? Chicken and Sausage Jambalaya.

How to make Chicken and Sausage Jambalaya from the Cajun Recipes at Cajun Cooking TV is easy and simple cooking.

Prep: 30 minutes
Cooking Time: 2 hours
Yield: 8-10 people

Cajun Jambalaya Ingredients

1 whole fresh chicken cut up (boiled for 1 hour and then the meat pulled from the bones)
1 pound smoked sausage (1/4 inch slices)
4 cups long grain white rice
7 cups chicken stock
1 (10 ounce) package Seasoning Blend (or 2 cups of Cajun Trinity)
Salt
Tony’s Creole Seasoning
1/2 bunch fresh parsley
1 bunch chopped green onions
1/8 cup canola oil

Cajun Jambalaya Essentials

8-10 quart cast iron or non-stick pot

Begin by heating oil in a cast iron pot on medium heat.

Brown sausage until brown on both sides.

Add in the chicken and Seasoning Blend.

Cook for 5-10 minutes.

Pour in 7 cups chicken stock and bring to a boil.

Season with salt and Tony’s Creole Seasoning – 1 teaspoon each. A little more if you like it spicy. Just be careful in case the sausage is already spicy.

Add the green onions and parsley.

Let boil 10-15 minutes to develop flavor.

Add in 4 cups rice. Stir well to blend all ingredients.

Cover tightly and reduce heat to low – #2 or #3 on my stove.

Cook for 15 minutes exactly. It is critical to not remove the lid until time.

At the 15 minute mark, remove the lid and use a flat spatula to lift the rice off the bottom in a few spots. Be careful not to actually stir.

Put the lid back on and cook another 15 minutes.

Turn off the heat and remove pot from burner to prevent it from continuing to cook.

Cajun Jambalaya Serving Suggestions

Serve in a bowl garnished with chopped green onions and parsley. Often served with white beans and/or a mixed greens salad and hot rolls.

“O Jambalaya, a crawfish pie, and file’ Gumbo. Tonight I’m gonna see ma’Cher ami o…. We gonna have fun on the bayou.”

How to Make Chicken Stock for Jambalaya

Beryl

Beryl Caillouet Stokes

 

 

 

 

 

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Cajun Cooking TV features Beryl Caillouet Stokes and her grand-daughter Addison cooking up some good eating Cajun recipes from their kitchen in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Please Follow Us On Facebook for Daily Updates and New Recipes:
https://www.facebook.com/CajunCookingTV/

The Cajun Cooking TV show airs on local Baton Rouge, Louisiana channel WLFT MeTV channel 30.1 and on Cox cable channel 117 on Tuesday mornings at 10 am.

You Can Write Beryl At:
Cajun Cooking TV
7516 Bluebonnet Blvd # 179
Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70810

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Dry Rub Recipe

Dry Rub Recipe

Dry Rub Recipe
Mixing the Dry Rub Ingredients

A Dry Rub is a seasoning blend of many spices that can be used on pork, beef, or chicken.

For Cajun Cooking TV’s Dry Rub recipe, we blended several ingredients for a tasty and a bit spicy dry rub seasoning.

Beryl Stokes mixed the following ingredients for this Cajun cooking  recipe and recently oven roasted a 5 pound Boston Butt Pork Roast:

1 Tablespoon each

Chili powder
Garlic powder
Onion powder
Salt

1 Teaspoon each

Ground Bay leaves
Dry mustard
Cayenne pepper or Tony’s Creole Seasoning

Other optional ingredients

1 tablespoon cane sugar or light brown sugar
Coarse black pepper

In a large mixing bowl, blend all the ingredients listed above.

To apply to the meat, spray lightly with canola oil to help the Dry Rub stick or put on dry and rub in.

Be sure to apply the Dry Rub seasoning on all sides.

We recently posted a video and recipe for an oven roasted Boston Butt Pork Roast.

Boston Butt Pork Roast
Boston Butt Pork Roast

Here is the Boston Butt Pork Roast Recipe

https://www.cajuncookingtv.com/boston-butt-pork-roast

The Dry Rub seasoning made the meat so flavorful.

If you are not a fan of extra spicy, cut down or eliminate the cayenne pepper. 

Please note that there is no best dry rub recipe, so experiment and try different seasonings that you like

Recipes from the Cajun Recipes at Cajun Cooking TV are easy and simple cooking.  You’ll notice that we use Cajun Seasonings in just about everything.

Prep:  10 minutes
Seasons: 5 lb roast

Beryl Stokes
Cajun Cooking TV Chefs

Boston Butt Pork Roast

Boston Butt Pork Roast

A Boston Butt Pork Roast is a new (for us) recipe at Cajun Cooking TV.

(This is our first time making one, but it won’t be our last time!)

We’ve mastered making pork roasts or beef roasts in the oven like my mom and my Maw Maw used to make.

The “secret“:  low oven temp + long number of hours = tasty tender meat. 

Boston Butt Pork Roast
Boston Butt Pork Roast

A Boston Butt Pork Roast can be used for a variety of different meals:  oven roasted, slow cooked in a crock pot, smoked on a grill, and BBQ pulled pork.

For this Boston Butt pork roast recipe, we made a dry rub of several seasoning ingredients and applied to all sides of the roast.

The dry rub we used today contains: Chili Powder, Garlic Powder, Onion Powder, Salt, Ground Bay Leaves, Dry Mustard, Cayenne Pepper or Tony’s Creole Seasoning, and sugar (we used raw cane sugar).

Boston Butt Pork Roast
Boston Butt Pork Roast

Feel free to use any dry rub you like, or purchase, or just whatever seasonings you may have in your cupboard.

For the Oven Roasted Pork Roast we suggest to thicken the liquid made in the pan with 2 tablespoons flour and 2 tablespoons softened butter to make a hearty gravy.

Pour over rice or try our Mashed Potatoes recipe.

(I make the best mashed potatoes, if I do say so myself.) 

Recipes from the Cajun Recipes at Cajun Cooking TV are easy and simple cooking.

Prep:  30 minutes
Cooking Time: 4-5 hours total
Serves: 6 servings

Boston Butt Pork Roast Ingredients

Boston Butt Pork Roast
Fresh Boston Butt Pork Roast

5 pound Boston Butt Pork Roast
1/2 cup Dry Rub (see above)
1-2 cups water or stock
4 tablespoons canola oil or olive oil
2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons softened butter

Boston Butt Pork Roast Cooking Essentials

=> Roasting Pan with cover if possible
or a disposable Aluminum pan and heavy
duty aluminum foil.

=> Meat Thermometer

For this Oven Roasted Boston Butt Pork Roast recipe, begin by placing the olive oil on bottom of a roasting pan or aluminum pan.

We lined the pan with heavy duty aluminum foil for easy clean-up. 

 

Boston Butt Pork Roast
Just Out the Oven!

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

Place the roast on a platter and season well on all sides with the dry seasoning mixture.

Place the roast in the oiled pan with the fat side down.

Bake uncovered for 1 hour.  Meat will brown.

Then, remove from oven and add 1-2 cups water or pork stock (about 1 inch).

Lower oven temperature to 300 degrees F.

Cover tightly with roasting pan cover or heavy duty foil.

Bake for 3-4 more hours.

Remove from oven and carefully open the foil.

Check the temperature with a meat thermometer.

Insert the thermometer into the middle of the Boston Butt Pork Roast.

The temperature should be a least 160 degrees F.

Gravy Makings
This will make a wonderful gravy!

To serve, pull meat apart with a serving fork.

For a thick gravy, mix 2 tablespoons flour and 2 tablespoons softened butter in a small bowl.

Add to the hot meat juices and stir well until melted and well blended.

Serve meat with gravy poured over it and rice or mashed potatoes.

We had baked potatoes on this particular night.

Options: add sliced sweet onions, whole garlic pods, baby carrots and chopped celery to the pan.

Tasty stuff in a thickened gravy.

Beryl Stokes
Beryl Stokes