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This recipe used to be a family secret until my sister-in-law submitted it to a fancy cooking contest and the gumbo recipe was a finalist. Ha ha. However, when I gave the recipe to her, I omitted 3 important seasonings that I am including here. It isn’t a family secret any longer! Bwahahaaaa.
First you make the roux. Combine the flour and oil in a cast iron skillet and stir over medium heat until the mixture is the color of caramel. Transfer the rue to a large soup pot.
Add the onions and stir until they are translucent. Add the celery and stir until soft. Add parsley, bay leaf, oregano, chicken broth and stir until the rue is completely dissolved in the broth mixture. Cook for45 minutes.
Next add the cooked chicken and cook for about 15 minutes or until the chicken is heated through. Add the oysters and cook until the oyster edges curl (about 5 – 8 minutes).
If you can’t read a newspaper through the broth, add more chicken stock. Just before serving over cooked white rice, fold in the Gumbo File and chopped green onions. Salt and pepper to taste.
Boil the 4 cups of water, add the rice with salt to taste and boil for 20 minutes our until the rice is tender. Cook the rice while the gumbo is bubbling during the vegetable stage.
I usually make my own chicken broth using the same vegetables and herbs. I debone the chicken from the broth to use in the gumbo. A deli roaster chicken is a great source of cooked chicken meat and a good canned chicken broth will make do if you are in a hurry.
Gumbo is a food of love. You must love the people you are preparing it for because it takes the entire day! Wishing you a loving gumbo, I remain, MS Hospitality.
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MS Hospitality on 8.13.2009
I’m going to make this Gumbo on Saturday and try to take photos to send to you. I am not a food photographer at all… but I will try! If you lived in my area, I would invite you over for a gumbo making party! It is much easier when someone is helping ! Happy Cookin’!
Kelly on 8.12.2009
Thanks! I have heard a lot of different things about this stuff and some people make it seem easy and some make it seem way too hard. 15 minutes is nothing! I will try this one soon and report back.
MS Hospitality on 8.12.2009
Hey Kelly! This gumbo is a light rue and ballparkin’ it … maybe 5 -1o minutes for the rue to become the color or caramel. A heavier gumbo rue can take up to 15 – 20 minutes to get just the right color. This is truly the best light gumbo I’ve ever tasted. It has delicate flavors and the light rue just enhances the fine taste of the oysters.
Kelly on 8.12.2009
I have a question: How much time does it take to make the roux? I’m sort of intimidated by this step because I’ve heard it takes a long time to make! A ballpark estimation is fine for me. I realize it’s not about the actual time but I just wondered if it turns the color of caramel in minutes/hours/whatever. I know when my family makes Cajun food it usually takes a few days due to all the vegetable chopping/broth making/roux cooking. This sounds so good! Thanks.