🦐 Authentic Louisiana Seafood Gumbo
🍲 Serves:
6–8 people
⏱ Total Time:
About 2–3 hours
Ingredients
For the roux
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¾ cup vegetable oil
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¾ cup all-purpose flour
For the gumbo
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1 large onion, finely chopped
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1 green bell pepper, finely chopped
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2 celery stalks, finely chopped
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4 garlic cloves, minced
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1 (14.5 oz) can diced tomatoes (optional — more Creole-style)
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6 cups seafood stock (or chicken stock)
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1–2 bay leaves
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1 tsp dried thyme
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1 tsp smoked paprika
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½ tsp cayenne pepper (adjust to taste)
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1 tsp black pepper
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Salt to taste
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1 lb medium shrimp, peeled and deveined
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1 lb lump crabmeat (picked over for shells)
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1 lb okra, sliced (fresh or frozen)
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½ lb andouille sausage, sliced (optional but traditional)
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2 green onions, sliced (for garnish)
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2 Tbsp fresh parsley, chopped (for garnish)
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Cooked white rice, for serving
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Filé powder (sassafras powder, optional but traditional)
Instructions
1. Make the Roux
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In a large heavy pot or Dutch oven, heat oil over medium heat.
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Whisk in flour, stirring constantly for 20–30 minutes until the roux turns a deep chocolate brown (be careful not to burn it).
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If it smells burnt, you’ll need to start over.
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2. Add the Vegetables
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Stir in the onion, bell pepper, celery, and garlic.
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Cook 5–7 minutes until softened and aromatic.
3. Add Stock and Seasonings
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Slowly whisk in the stock, stirring constantly until smooth.
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Add tomatoes (if using), bay leaves, thyme, paprika, cayenne, black pepper, and sausage (if using).
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Simmer uncovered for about 45 minutes, stirring occasionally.
4. Add Okra and Seafood
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Add okra and simmer for another 15 minutes.
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Add shrimp and crabmeat.
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Cook just until the shrimp are pink and cooked through — about 5–10 minutes.
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Taste and adjust seasoning (salt, cayenne, etc.).
5. Serve
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Remove bay leaves.
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Serve hot over steamed white rice.
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Garnish with green onions, parsley, and a pinch of filé powder if desired.
Tips for Perfect Gumbo
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Roux color = flavor. Darker roux = deeper, nuttier taste.
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Don’t rush the roux! Stir constantly; even a small burn ruins the flavor.
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Seafood stock adds the best flavor — you can make it by simmering shrimp shells and crab shells with onion and bay leaf.
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Filé powder is optional but adds a unique earthy thickness.
Would you like me to give you a Cajun-style version (no tomatoes, spicier) or keep it Creole-style (with tomatoes and herbs)?