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April 12, 2010
Blackeye Pea and Pork Gumbo
Originally from: Cochon Restaurant, New Orleans
A delicious gumbo in its own right, this recipe also serves as an excellent base gumbo recipe. Substitute the meats and vegetables (just not the trinity (the onion, celery, and bell pepper)) for whatever else you have leftover in the fridge.
Ingredients
- 1 ½ cup flour
- 1 ½ cup oil
- 2 cup diced onion
- 1 cup diced green pepper
- 1 cup diced celery
- 3 Tablespoon chopped garlic
- 1 ½ gallon pork or chicken stock
- 1 ½ pound okra sliced crosswise ½ inch wide and seared in lard until lightly browned
- 2 cups cooked blackeyed peas (cook in chicken stock with large pieces of mirepoix that can be removed after cooking)
- 2 cups bacon braised greens (collards or mustards cooked in bacon and onions with sugar, vinegar, hot sauce and salt and pepper)
- 2-3# Pork butt (raw weight) fully smoked and chopped
- File 2 Tablespoons
- Thyme 1 Tablespoon
- Chile powder 1 Tablespoon
- Paprika 1 Tablespoon
- White pepper 1 Tablespoon
- Black pepper 2 Tablespoon
- Cayenne pepper 1 Tablespoon
- Bay leaves 3 each
Directions
- Make a dark roux using the oil and flour. (Paul Prudhomme’s Louisiana Kitchen has some good roux techniques, advice and gumbo recipes
- As soon roux is the right color (just past red and turning back to brown but not scorched or smelling really burnt) add the diced vegetables and garlic
- Add the stock and stirring very frequently bring up to a simmer. Simmer for about 1hour stirring lots. Skim all of the fat that separates out.
- Taste the gumbo. It should not taste pasty and like the roux anymore. If it does you may need to add more stock up to ½ gallon. This is different every time depending on the exact measurement of flour, strength of starch in the flour, degree of cooking of the roux among other things so add the stock in stages and let it cook and come together before adding more.
- When the gumbo is the right consistency add the okra, blackeyed peas, greens, pork and seasoning. Allow to return to a simmer and adjust the seasoning. Serve with steamed rice or potato salad
My best method so far for a dark roux is to use peanut oil and not let the oil get above 400F. With constant stirring, the roux should take 45-60 minutes. Be patient and you will be justly rewarded. --Seth
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