Happy National Gumbo Day!
I was just in New Orleans a couple of weekends ago for Megan’s [4] wedding (recap upcoming at some point)! In the city of gumbo, I couldn’t believe that I then had to make gumbo for the food holiday just 15 days later. Really, universe? I’ve never made gumbo before, and I didn’t need NOLA to tell me that gumbo takes years to perfect, but with the reminder, I knew I had some work to do.
First, I needed something that wasn’t shrimp (my husband is allergic, which makes me sigh in all the feelings of pity for the poor guy), but I also wanted to do something a little different than the non-seafood fall back of chicken and andouille sausage. Although a classic, Mike and I have had a hankering for a rabbit dish lately. I first had rabbit at Graffiato [5] in Washington, DC. A restaurant from Top Chef contestant Mike Isabella, it was thanks to the flawless execution of the pappardelle with braised rabbit, lobster mushroom and fennel pollen that sealed my fate forever.
Rabbit and Andouille Sausage Gumbo, it is!
I had a couple of pots going at once yesterday. One for the roux, which I think I let cook just a tad too long, and one to brown the rabbit. First, with an in depth spice mix, the rabbit was covered and placed in oil to seal in those immense flavors. I made extra of the spice mix for other things because it’s too good to not preserve.
After everything was in the pot, including the brown roux, I just let it sit on low for a couple of hours. We went to Whole Foods, perusing every single aisle and spending an erroneous amount of time, and when we got back home, the house smelled fantastic. At 4pm, we couldn’t take it any longer so we made rice, topped it with the gumbo, and ate, gushing about the flavors, but at the same time thinking of ways to make it better, the time I’d have to put into perfecting it – which also includes heightening my love for gumbo in general – and the different ingredients we can use in the future.
The truth is, you can do everything by the book. You can make a great roux, you can use premium ingredients, and you can stand over your stove all day, but gumbo is an art and you just have to continue to work at it to get better. Have fun!
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[4] Megan’s: http://irunforwine.net
[5] Graffiato: https://thefoodiepatootie.com/travel/graffiato/
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