Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


More Articles

Kitchenware online at Cooking.com: Shop for small appliances, cookware ...
Quality kitchenware and cooking recipes for cooks. Cookware Bakeware Cutlery Small Appliances Knives Cook's Tools Tableware Cookbooks Gift Ideas Housewares Outdoor Grilling
Food Network - Easy Recipes, Healthy Eating Ideas and Chef Recipe ...
Love the Food Network? Find the best recipes, videos, healthy eating advice, party ideas and cooking techniques from top chefs, shows and experts.
Cooking - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cooking is the process of preparing food by applying heat, selecting, measuring and combining of ingredients in an ordered procedure for producing safe and edible food.
Cooking.com Forums
Cooking.com Forums: Discussion about cooking and kitchen equipment, recipe exchange and more. ... Welcome to the Cooking.com forum, a place to dialogue with fellow food lovers ...
Open Directory - Home: Cooking
All Recipes: Advice - Features cooking tips, an encyclopedia of terms and ingredients and a searchable recipe database. AOL Food - Recipes, menus and entertaining ideas. Betty ...
All recipes ? complete resource for recipes and cooking tips
Looking for recipes? You?ve come to the right place. Allrecipes has more than 40,000 free recipes - all created, tested, reviewed and approved by home cooks worldwide
Amazon.com: Cooking: James Peterson: Books
Amazon.com: Cooking: James Peterson: Books ... Amazon.com Review Put simply, Cooking is a revelation. No other cookbook so deftly illustrates as broad a scope of classic culinary ...
Good Cooking is Gourmet Cooking, Cooking Tips, Chef Recipes, Cooking ...
Good Cooking Menu: Cooking Tips, Recipes, Gourmet Recipes, Recipe Conversions, A Cooking Forum, Gourmet Cooking, Cooking with Wine, Wine Information and Culinary Cooking Dictionary
Cooking For Engineers - Step by Step Recipes and Food for the ...
Detailed instructions on food and cooking for those who like to ask not just How? but also Why? ... I spend a lot of time in the kitchen when I'm preparing a recipe for Cooking For ...
Viking Cooking School
The premiere place to explore your love of all things food. Select a location to browse our classes:

 

 

Informative Articles

Apple Cheddar Shortcake
Yield: 6 Servings 1 x ---------shortcake---------- 2 1/2 c Biscuit mix; bisquick 4 oz Cheddar; sharp shredded 2/3 c Milk 1/3 c Butter; melted 1 x -------apple topping-------- 3/4 c Brown sugar; packed 3 ts Cornstarch 1/2 ts Cinnamon;...

Cooking with Green Tea
Recently it has become popular to cook with green tea. In powder and liquid form it's so easy to use, delicious and good for you it's really no surprise. You may ask why people would try to cook with such a thing. Well green tea is filled with a...

Culinary Traditions Of South America: Argentina
Argentina is South America's second largest country, snugly situated between the Andes mountain range, the Pacific Ocean, and the South American countries of Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Brazil, and Chile. Being situated in such a manner, Argentina is...

Is Your Recipe Safe?
(NC)—Sure, it tastes great and earns rave reviews from everyone sitting at the dinner table. But is your favourite recipe also a safe one? To prevent serving up foodborne illness at the dinner table, follow this helpful checklist when preparing...

Reductions; Proving That Less is More
Any liquid can be reduced just by heating it - but why would you want to do that? The answer comes back to two of our old friends, flavor and consistency (texture). By reducing any flavored liquid you intensify its flavor and at the same time...

 
Google
The Greatness Of Gumbo

Perhaps nothing is better known as a staple of Cajun cuisine than gumbo, a spicy, hearty stew or soup whose name literally means "okra". Called one of the greatest contributions of Louisiana Cajun kitchens to American cuisine, it came to that state with the first French settlers, who loved bouillabaisse, a highly seasoned French stew. Unable to find their usual ingredients to make bouillabaisse, they substituted local ingredients such as shrimp, fish, and okra. After a century mixing with Spanish, African, and native cuisine in the region, the step was no longer recognizable as its French precursor and was instead something completely new - gumbo.

Still extremely common in Louisiana, gumbo is also found all along the Gulf of Mexico, and is often eaten in the cooler months, when the extended cooking required to make the usually large batches of the dish will not heat up the room to uncomfortable levels.

Gumbo consists of two main components - rice and broth. The two are mixed together only for serving, and while new rice must be prepared daily, broth can be frozen and saved for future consumption.

Rice for gumbo is usually white or parboiled rice steamed or boiled with salt or a touch of white vinegar for flavor. There is some dispute over the proper ratio of rice to gumbo - "damp rice," for those who like a lot of rice with their broth, and, on the opposite extreme, only a modicum of rice. In some areas, it is also common to add potato salad to the gumbo, either with or without rice.

The broth comes in several varieties. One of the most common is seafood, containing crab, oysters and/or shrimp. Equally common is chicken gumbo with the Cajun sausage called audouille. There is also duck and oyster gumbo, as well as a variety of gumbos made with other fowl, such as quail or turkey. Rabbit can be used


for gumbo, as can the Cajun smoked pork known as tasso. Gumbo z'herbes (from the French gumbo aux herbes), gumbo of smothered greens thickened with roux, also exists, and was commonly eaten during Lent, when meat was traditionally forbidden by the Church.

Gumbo was originally made with okra, and some, especially in Southeast Louisiana would argue that anything made without okra can not rightly be called gumbo. Okra gumbos usually feature lighter meats, such as chicken or shrimp, and the okra is cut into pieces and simmered in the pot along with the meat and the three spices that form the so-called "Holy Trinity" of Cajun cooking - onion, celery, and bell pepper. Other spices, and rarely processed meats such as sausage, are then added to the mix. Contrary to popular belief, it is frowned upon for a chef to make Cajun cooking overly hot or peppery - these are left to the diners themselves if they wish to add more spices later.

Gumbo can also be made with a roux base, which has a much stronger taste and takes any sort of meat. Roux by itself is often very dark, though it can be combined with okra to make a lighter stock. Filé, a powder made of dried and ground sassafras, can also be used as a base for gumbo, though it is never, under any circumstances, combined with okra. Originally, it was used as a substitute when okra was not in season. In modern times, it is commonly added as a powder to a roux based gumbo.

Regardless of its base and history, gumbo remains a tasty staple of Cajun cooking.
About the Author

Kirsten Hawkins is a food and nutrition expert specializing the Mexican, Chinese, and Italian food. Visit http://www.food-and-nutrition.com/ for more information on cooking delicious and healthy meals.