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New Orleans chef Michael Gulotta cooks succulent beef top round low and slow to serve the city's classic grillades with savory, cheesy grits and a luscious gravy made with the fond from the beef ...
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New Orleans Kitchens: Recipes from the Big Easy's Best Restaurants. Gibbs Smith, Publisher. ISBN 978-1-4236-1001-4. 216 pages. Tucker, S. (2009). New Orleans Cuisine: Fourteen Signature Dishes and Their Histories. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-60473-645-8. 256 pages.
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Many Cajun recipes are based on rice and the "holy trinity" of onions, celery, and green pepper, and use locally caught shell fish such as shrimp and crawfish. Much of Cajun cookery starts with a roux made of wheat flour cooked and slowly stirred with a fat such as oil, butter or lard, known especially as the base for étouffée , gumbo and ...
Étouffée or etouffee (French:, English: / ˌ eɪ t uː ˈ f eɪ / AY-too-FAY) is a dish found in both Cajun and Creole cuisine typically served with shellfish over rice.The dish employs a technique known as smothering, a popular method of cooking in the Cajun and Creole areas of south Louisiana. Étouffée is most popular in New Orleans and in the Acadiana region as well as the coastal ...
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In a New Orleans "sloppy roast beef" po' boy, thick cuts are served with gravy, [12] [13] or for the "CrockPot tender" type the beef is stewed down until melded with its sauce, [13] while in a third style, thinner slices are dipped in beef jus. [13] Garlic is an optional seasoning. [13]