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Seafood New Orleans Seafood 8 Servings

INGREDIENTS

5 tb Lard or bacon drippings
1 c Flour
2 tb Salt butter
1 c Chopped onion
1/4 c Chopped shallots (scallions); white part only
3 tb Thinly sliced green shallot (scallion) tops
2 1/2 tb Chopped celery tops
2 tb Finely minced parsley
1 tb Finely minced garlic
1/2 c Chopped crawfish tails (about 24 tails)
1/4 c Crawfish fat
1 1/2 c Whole crawfish tails (about 30 tails) (up to)
2 qt Cold water (depending on how moist the tails are)
1 tb Salt
1/4 ts Freshly ground pepper (up to)
5/8 ts Cayenne
2 Whole bay leaves; broken in half
1 ts Dried thyme
4 Whole cloves
12 Whole allspice
1/2 ts Mace
1 lb Crawfish tails

INSTRUCTIONS

THE ROUX
THE BISQUE BASE
THE LIQUID AND SEASONING
Date: Sun, 3 Mar 1996 17:15:31 -0500
From: DTNUKE@aol.com
This is my first time posting, so here goes.  Philip asked for a crawfish
recipe, and I just happen to have The New Orleans Cookbook by Rima and
Richard Collin. In it I found a recipe for Crawfish Bisque you may want to
try. Here goes:
Crawfish Bisque is considered to be the highest test of a great Louisiana
cook.  crawfish bisque is a thick soup containing prureed cooked crawfish,
firm crawfish meat, chopped vegetables, and a great deal of pungent cayenne
pepper.
In a large 5 to 6 quart heavy pot or kettle, melt the lard over low heat.
Gradually add the flour, stirring constntly, and cook over low heat until
medium brown roux (the color of rich peanut butter) is formed.  In a
skillet or saute pan, melt the butter and in it slowly brown the copped
onion and white parts of the shallots. (It is possible to make the roux and
saute the onions at the same time on adjoining burners. It takes about 15
to 20 minutes to slowly brown the onions and shallots and about 30 minutes
to make the roux. The roux will not be left unattended; you simply stop
stirring it for a minute from time to time, except during the crucial last
10 minutes. Keep a second spoon handy to stir the sauteing vegetables.)
When the onion and shallot bottoms are browned, turn off the heat and let
them sit in the skillet.  As soon as the roux reaches the desired color,
add the contents of the skillet to it, stirring rapidly, then add the
shallot tops, parsley, garlic, and all the seasonings; mix very thoroughly.
Add the 1/2 cup chopped crawfish meat and the crawfish fat and mix.
Keeping the heat low, very gradually add the water, stirring constantly to
kepp the mixture smooth.  Raise the heat to high and bring the bisque to
aboil, then lower the heat and simmer for 1 hour.  after 15 minutes of
simmering, add the whole crawfish tails.  Five minutes before serving, add
the 1 lb of crawfish tails. Serve in gumbo bowls or deep soup bowls over
boiled rice.
Note:  Any leftover bisque can be refrigerated and served within a day or
two.  Reheat it slowly over low heat, stirring frequently.  Do not let it
come to a boil; it is only necessary to get it hot - boiling will tend to
overcook the crawfish tails.
CHILE-HEADS DIGEST V2 #258
From the Chile-Heads recipe list.  Downloaded from Glen's MM Recipe
Archive, http://www.erols.com/hosey.

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