Shrimp & Andouille Gumbo

This Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo recipe is one you’ll want to keep in the ole recipe box. Everything is made from scratch but you’ll find it’s quite an easy recipe!

Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo
Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo

Let’s break this recipe down to Four easy steps.

Step One – The Roux

I feel like roux for gumbo is a fabled creature whom many speak of but few encounter. There’s stories of constant whisking for hours while whispers of hands-off oven-roux seem too good to be true. Let me tell you friends of a new trick to save you time and agony – toasted flour. Yep – if you just add the flour to a dry dutch oven over medium heat, whisk it for about 8 minutes then add the oil, you’ll end up halfway to Rouxville. Placed a lid on the dutch oven and transfer it to a 400Ā°F oven for 45 minutes; checking on it after 30 minutes. If it’s not perfect milk chocolate colored after 45 minutes you might need to finish it on top of the stove for another 5-10 minutes. Still about an hour but there’s far less whisking. Which gives you time for food prep.

Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo
The Roux for Gumbo should be dark, milk chocolate brown. For best results, toast the flour in your dutch oven for 5-10 minutes before adding the vegetable oil.


Step Two – Food Prep

I’d go as far to say that Homemade Shrimp Stock is the single most important part of this recipe. Buy two pounds of the best uncooked shrimp you can find – wild caught Gulf of Mexico Shrimp with heads is ideal. Place the peels and heads in a medium pot and set the shrimp aside. Add celery, onion, black peppercorns, a bay leaf, and 7 cups of water to the pot. Bring to a boil then reduce to a simmer for 20 minutes. Strain reserving broth and discarding everything else.
While the shrimp stock is stocking, prep your other ingredients. Finely dice celery, bell pepper, and onions. Slice the Andouille Sausage and Okra. That’s about it!

Cajun cooking's Holy Trinity.
Cajun cooking’s Holy Trinity.

Note – In about an hour you’ve already made the best roux ever, shrimp stock from scratch, and prepped all your ingredients. Give yourself a high five! This recipe plays out really well. It would be great to cook with someone else or while entertaining guests.

Step Three – Make Gumbo

On your stove top you have a dutch oven with super hot roux (seriously, this stuff is lava) and homemade shrimp stock over low heat to keep warm. On your counter you have all your other ingredients prepped and ready for the gumbo. Add the celery, peppers, onion, and bay leaf to the roux and stir over medium heat until softened – about 20 minutes. Once the vegetables are softened add the aromatics, 5 cups of shrimp stock, and two cups of crushed tomatoes. Bring the sauce up to a low simmer then add the andouille and sliced okra. Heat this for another 20 minutes or so. If you’re serving all the gumbo right away you can add the shrimp about 5 minutes before serving. Otherwise, just add enough shrimp for each serving when you reheat it.

Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo
Add homemade Shrimp Stock to the Roux and Trinity. Then sliced Andouille Sausage and Okra. Add the Shrimp during the last 5 minutes of cooking if serving it all at once.

Step Four – There is no Step Four

I lied. Don’t forget the rice! While not actually part of this Gumbo recipe, I’d be remiss to exclude the rice. Rice is prepared with one part long grain rice, one and a half parts water, and a pinch of salt. RINSE the rice several times in cold water until it runs clear. Add rice, water, and salt to a pot and bring to a boil. Cover tightly and simmer on low heat for ten minutes or until rice is tender. Remove from heat, fluffy with fork, keep covered for ten minutes.

Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo
Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo

What is Gumbo?

I don’t know about you guys but I haven’t aways been clear on a few things surrounding ‘gumbo’. What’s the difference between Creole and Cajun? Is Okra mandatory? What about Jambalaya? In researching recipes for gumbo, I came across some answers I thought I’d share with you.

Creole vs. Cajun – Both Creole and Cajun gumbo generally have sausage and shrimp. Creole gumbo is mostly seafood with tomatoes. Cajun gumbo will generally have chicken in addition to shrimp.
A very simplified break down of the history – Creoles are people from French and Spanish colonization prior to the Louisiana purchase. Creoles also include other people native-born to Louisiana. Cajuns are the descendants of 17th century French speaking settlers of the area near Nova Scotia formally called Acadia. Acadians were expelled in the mid 18th century during France’s colonization of Canada.
This Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo is Creole-style.

Okra – There are three ways to thicken your gumbo; Okra, FilĆ©, and Roux.
Roux is a primary ingredient to gumbo. It should be as dark as possible, a few shades from burnt.
FilĆ© (fee-lay) is a powder of ground sassafras leaves added to gumbo just before serving. It’s used as a thickener and to add earthiness to gumbo. “Kombo” is the Choctaw Indian word for filĆ© and may be where the work Gumbo comes from. If filĆ© is added too soon it becomes ropey and stringy. FilĆ© also means ‘to become ropey’ in French.
Okra is also sometimes called Gumbo. In parts of Africa, “ki ngombo” is the word used to describe okra. But, the word you’re more likely interested in using to describe okra is mucilaginous. This gooeyness is what makes it a great thickener for gumbo.
Generally, either FilƩ or Roux are added to Gumbo as thickeners.

Jambalaya – In gumbo you make a roux, add the trinity, then stock followed by the meat. Gumbo is served with or over rice. Jambalaya is made by cooking the meat with the trinity then adding stock and rice to cook all in the same pot. Think of it more like a jamboree of everyone partying together!

Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo
Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo

Shrimp & Andouille Gumbo

0.0 from 0 votes
Recipe by Anthony Course: Dinner, Food Info, Recipes, StewsCuisine: American, CreoleDifficulty: Moderate
Servings

6

servings
Prep time

30

minutes
Cooking time

1

hour 

55

minutes
Total time

2

hours 

25

minutes

This Shrimp and Andouille Gumbo recipe is one youā€™ll want to keep in the ole recipe box. Everything is made from scratch but youā€™ll find itā€™s quite an easy recipe!

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Ingredients

  • 3/4 cup Flour

  • 1/2 cup Vegetable Oil

  • 1 1/2 cups diced Yellow Onion

  • 1 1/2 cups diced Green Bell Pepper

  • 1 1/2 cups diced chopped Celery

  • 1 1/2 cups chopped Red Bell Pepper

  • 4 cloves Garlic, minced

  • 2 tsp Cayenne

  • 3 Bay Leaves

  • 1/4 cup minced parsley

  • 5-6 sprigs of fresh thyme

  • 2 cups Canned Crushed Tomatoes

  • 5 cups Shrimp Stock Recipe below

  • 1 lb. uncooked Andouille Sausage

  • 12 ounces frozen whole Okra

  • 2 lbs. Uncooked Wild Gulf Shrimp

  • SHRIMP STOCK
  • Peels and Heads from 2lbs. Shrimp

  • 1 cup chopped Onion

  • 1 cup chopped Celery

  • 1 tsp Black Peppercorns

  • 1 Bay Leaf

  • 7 Cups Water

Directions

  • THE ROUX
  • Preheat your oven to 400Ā°F and place a rack at the lower third of the oven.
  • Heat a Dutch oven over medium-low heat on the stove top. Add flour and whisk continuously for 8-10 minutes or until flour becomes almond colored.
  • Add vegetable oil and continue whisking until well combined.
  • Place in the oven for 45 minutes, whisking the roux every 15 minutes.
  • After 45 minutes, place the dutch oven back over medium-low heat and whisk until dark milk chocolate colored – about 5-10 minutes.
  • THE SHRIMP STOCK
  • While the Roux is in the oven, prep your other ingredients. Finely chop the onion, celery, and green bell pepper. Chop the red bell pepper a little bigger. Thinly slice the okra. Slice the andouille into 3/8 inch coins. Set everything aside.
  • Peel the shrimp placing the peels (and heads if you have them) into a medium size pot. Add chopped onion, celery, black peppercorns, bay leaf, and 7 cups of cold water to the pot. Bring to a boil and reduce to a simmer.
  • Simmer for 20 minutes then strain into a clean bowl. Discard all the solids. Return the stock to the pot and keep warm over low heat.
  • THE GUMBO
  • Increase the heat for the dutch oven to medium. Add the celery, green bell pepper, red bell pepper, and onion and stir to combine. Stir occasionally until vegetables are softened – about 20 minutes.
  • Stir in garlic, cayenne, bay leaves, parsley, thyme for about a minute. Then add crushed tomatoes and 5 cups of shrimp stock. Heat for 5-10 minutes until a low simmer begins.
  • Add in andouille sausage and okra. Cook for 20 minutes stirring occasionally.
  • If serving all the gumbo right away, add in all the shrimp and cook for about 5 minutes until shrimp is opaque.

Notes

  • If you’ll be reserving some gumbo for leftovers, save the shrimp until it’s ready to be served. You should account for 5-7 pieces of shrimp per serving.Ā 

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