These forums have been archived and are now read-only.

The new forums are live and can be found at https://forums.eveonline.com/

Out of Pod Experience

 
  • Topic is locked indefinitely.
12Next page
 

Do you like gumbo or jambalya?

First post
Author
ReptilesBlade
Science and Trade Institute
Caldari State
#1 - 2012-12-20 08:41:20 UTC
I have learned something wonderful tonight and want to share it with all my friends. Campbell's makes a Healthy Choice Chunky soup called "Grilled Chicken & Sausage Gumbo". By itself it is bland, but if you add a few dashes of Tabasco sauce to it you easily have a good meal. It taste like the gumbo and jambalaya I have to pay $10-15+ for any place else. For $1.50 a can I am certainly going to be buying more of this!
Sidus Isaacs
Center for Advanced Studies
Gallente Federation
#2 - 2012-12-20 09:33:51 UTC
OK
Destination SkillQueue
Doomheim
#3 - 2012-12-20 09:37:47 UTC
I have no idea what either of those foods are.
Shalia Ripper
#4 - 2012-12-20 09:51:32 UTC
Destination SkillQueue wrote:
I have no idea what either of those foods are.


Creole specialties.

And damn tasty when made properly. Which I doubt Campbells is capable of.

Sig blah blah blah blah

Destination SkillQueue
Doomheim
#5 - 2012-12-20 10:18:21 UTC
Shalia Ripper wrote:
Destination SkillQueue wrote:
I have no idea what either of those foods are.


Creole specialties.

And damn tasty when made properly. Which I doubt Campbells is capable of.

And I still have no idea what those foods actually are. They sound messy though.
ISD Dorrim Barstorlode
ISD Community Communications Liaisons
ISD Alliance
#6 - 2012-12-20 12:31:54 UTC
They are wonderfully messy and quite delicious. They also have lots of different ways of being made. I think I saw a recipe for squirrel gumbo somewhere.

ISD Dorrim Barstorlode

Senior Lead

Community Communication Liaisons (CCLs)

Interstellar Services Department

Elias Greyhand
#7 - 2012-12-20 14:06:06 UTC
I've heard of both but then I used to watch cooking shows on the tele almost exclusively.

Never tried either though.

"That which is done cannot be undone. But it can be avenged."

Micheal Dietrich
Kings Gambit Black
#8 - 2012-12-20 14:39:47 UTC
Destination SkillQueue wrote:
I have no idea what either of those foods are.


Pack your bags, travel to Louisiana, and ask for gumbo. Better yet, ask for gator gumbo.


p.s. It's like a thick, meaty soup.

Out of Pod is getting In the Pod - Join in game channel **IG OOPE **

Akita T
Caldari Navy Volunteer Task Force
#9 - 2012-12-20 15:07:34 UTC
Gumbo is a heavily seasoned meaty soup thickened so much you can call it and even serve it as a stew (sometimes on rice).
Jambalaya is a slightly different version of Spanish paellas, so basically a (usually meaty) risotto with less rice and less creamy stuff but a lot more everything else.
I personally like to make something between a risotto and a jambalaya in terms of spice content and rice-to-other ratios.
Graygor
Federal Navy Academy
Gallente Federation
#10 - 2012-12-20 15:09:19 UTC
Gumbo is the food of the gods.

"I think you should buy a new Mayan calendar. Mine has muscle cars on it." - Kenneth O'Hara

"I dont think that can happen, you can see Gray has his invuln field on in his portrait." - Commissar "Cake" Kate

Eurydia Vespasian
Storm Hunters
#11 - 2012-12-20 15:16:19 UTC
i like both quite a bit.

but not out of a can. lol. canned soup is actually, more often than not, not very good for you at all. not as healthy as the marketing teams would have you believe.
Telegram Sam
Sebiestor Tribe
Minmatar Republic
#12 - 2012-12-20 15:52:06 UTC
Make your own gumbo, it's not hard. You can put anything in it-- shrimp, chicken, sausage, fish, turtle, whatever. Steps:

-Make your roux. It's like a flour gravy. Get vegetable oil almost smoking hot in a frying pan. Watching out for explosions, stir in the flour. Turn the heat down to low and brown the flour while breaking up any clumps. You're aiming for a smooth gravy. Brown it from "blonde" up to "brunette", according to your preference. The darker, the stronger the toasted flavor, of course. Set your roux aside.

-Chop up your "Cajun cooking holy trinity"-- onion, green pepper and celery.

-Brown some Italian sausage, if you have it. If you're using chicken or red meat (not seafood), brown that with the sausage. Add in your trinity mixture and saute it.

-Put all of that in a soup pot. Add tomato sauce, tomato paste, or a chopped tomato. (Note: Not all gumbo has tomato. It's your choice). Add water and your spices: salt, black pepper, bay leaf, thyme maybe, and cayenne pepper.

-Add in cut okra. The okra is mandatory. It makes that gumbo flavor, not the spices. Cook everything slowly. Add in roux to thicken the soup up to how you like it. If you have it, add in file (fee-lay) powder at the end.

This is a simple recipe for amateurs. Real gumbo makers take it seriously and have their own special recipes and techniques. Whatever, make sure you make a huge batch while you're at it. You're going to want enough to have leftovers for a while.
Something Random
Center for Advanced Studies
Gallente Federation
#13 - 2012-12-20 15:56:21 UTC
Destination SkillQueue wrote:
I have no idea what either of those foods are.


Grab a Jambalaya recipe and try it - its kinda simple enough it pretty much makes itself and most recipes are good eating.

You'll like it.

"caught on fire a little bit, just a little."

"Delinquents, check, weirdos, check, hippies, check, pillheads, check, freaks, check, potheads, check .....gangs all here!"

I love Science, it gives me a Hadron.

ReptilesBlade
Science and Trade Institute
Caldari State
#14 - 2012-12-20 23:24:35 UTC  |  Edited by: ReptilesBlade
Telegram Sam wrote:
Make your own gumbo, it's not hard. You can put anything in it-- shrimp, chicken, sausage, fish, turtle, whatever. Steps:

-Make your roux. It's like a flour gravy. Get vegetable oil almost smoking hot in a frying pan. Watching out for explosions, stir in the flour. Turn the heat down to low and brown the flour while breaking up any clumps. You're aiming for a smooth gravy. Brown it from "blonde" up to "brunette", according to your preference. The darker, the stronger the toasted flavor, of course. Set your roux aside.

-Chop up your "Cajun cooking holy trinity"-- onion, green pepper and celery.

-Brown some Italian sausage, if you have it. If you're using chicken or red meat (not seafood), brown that with the sausage. Add in your trinity mixture and saute it.

-Put all of that in a soup pot. Add tomato sauce, tomato paste, or a chopped tomato. (Note: Not all gumbo has tomato. It's your choice). Add water and your spices: salt, black pepper, bay leaf, thyme maybe, and cayenne pepper.

-Add in cut okra. The okra is mandatory. It makes that gumbo flavor, not the spices. Cook everything slowly. Add in roux to thicken the soup up to how you like it. If you have it, add in file (fee-lay) powder at the end.

This is a simple recipe for amateurs. Real gumbo makers take it seriously and have their own special recipes and techniques. Whatever, make sure you make a huge batch while you're at it. You're going to want enough to have leftovers for a while.


I think I will be trying this soon with some chicken. How long do you cook it?

I also noticed you do not add any rice. Why?
Bane Necran
Appono Astos
#15 - 2012-12-20 23:35:55 UTC
Obligatory post from me telling you how what you're talking about is going to kill you.P

"In the void is virtue, and no evil. Wisdom has existence, principle has existence, the Way has existence, spirit is nothingness." ~Miyamoto Musashi

Surfin's PlunderBunny
Sebiestor Tribe
Minmatar Republic
#16 - 2012-12-20 23:39:02 UTC
I like jambalaya more because it's better Blink

*Edit: Also good with some (get ready for this, it's real I swear!) crawdad corn bread Shocked

"Little ginger moron" ~David Hasselhoff 

Want to see what Surf is training or how little isk Surf has?  http://eveboard.com/pilot/Surfin%27s_PlunderBunny

Akita T
Caldari Navy Volunteer Task Force
#17 - 2012-12-21 01:47:32 UTC  |  Edited by: Akita T
ReptilesBlade wrote:
Telegram Sam wrote:
Make your own gumbo, it's not hard.[...].

I think I will be trying this soon with some chicken. How long do you cook it?
I also noticed you do not add any rice. Why?

That's for jambalaya. The rice is an optional side-dish for gumbo, not an ingredient.

As for how long do you cook it, the key is constant tasting, and you stop when you're happy with the results.
From the moment you start the "simmer mode", it could take under half an hour, or it could take more than a whole hour.
It depends a lot on how much moisture was in it to begin with and how high your "slow boil" heat really was, and of course, on just how thick you want it and how much of the thickening agents you can stand to use (you really DO NOT want a lot of undercooked roux, so ffs, don't add more near the end if you want it thicker, just simmer some more to get out some moisture instead, even if that means other stuff goes a bit mooshier).

Oh, and by the way, the roux is optional as far as the thickness goes (it's more in there for the added brown than thickness, and you can even skip it altogether, might as well just use butter instead if you like a more fatty flavour), you can just use more okra and/or powdered filè leaves (a.k.a. "american bay leaf" in some countries, where you can even get it at all - very hard to come by in Romania, for instance, and not really that much of a fan of it anyway).
There's lots of gumbos with just one instead of all three thickeners. I'd personally say the okra is the only actual key ingredient in the type of gumbo I personally like, with a bit of roux maybe (but with butter instead of oil), skipping the filè altogether. Then again, that's just a personal preference (I also skip the sausage and use just chicken meat).
Krixtal Icefluxor
INLAND EMPIRE Galactic
#18 - 2012-12-21 02:51:28 UTC
ReptilesBlade wrote:
I have learned something wonderful tonight and want to share it with all my friends. Campbell's makes a Healthy Choice Chunky soup called "Grilled Chicken & Sausage Gumbo". By itself it is bland, but if you add a few dashes of Tabasco sauce to it you easily have a good meal. It taste like the gumbo and jambalaya I have to pay $10-15+ for any place else. For $1.50 a can I am certainly going to be buying more of this!



Gumbo maybe. Needs something fishy in it though. But jambalaya is not even close to a soup.

"He has mounted his hind-legs, and blown crass vapidities through the bowel of his neck."  - Ambrose Bierce on Oscar Wilde's Lecture in San Francisco 1882

Surfin's PlunderBunny
Sebiestor Tribe
Minmatar Republic
#19 - 2012-12-21 05:45:06 UTC
Krixtal Icefluxor wrote:
ReptilesBlade wrote:
I have learned something wonderful tonight and want to share it with all my friends. Campbell's makes a Healthy Choice Chunky soup called "Grilled Chicken & Sausage Gumbo". By itself it is bland, but if you add a few dashes of Tabasco sauce to it you easily have a good meal. It taste like the gumbo and jambalaya I have to pay $10-15+ for any place else. For $1.50 a can I am certainly going to be buying more of this!



Gumbo maybe. Needs something fishy in it though. But jambalaya is not even close to a soup.


It's a soup for the liquid intolerant Blink

"Little ginger moron" ~David Hasselhoff 

Want to see what Surf is training or how little isk Surf has?  http://eveboard.com/pilot/Surfin%27s_PlunderBunny

Rana Ash
Gradient
Electus Matari
#20 - 2012-12-21 13:05:37 UTC
Is'nt there a crawfish pie in there somewhere too?, and something about having fun in the bayu?? Big smile
12Next page