Showing posts with label crawdad. crayfish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crawdad. crayfish. Show all posts

Dec 7, 2019

Bayou Crawdad Pasta


 Good thing we don't have to live on a bayou - or  a 'crik' .  Or a river.  Or even in the south - to enjoy crawdads.

 Whether you call  them  crawfish, crayfish, or crawdads, the succulent little devils are tasty - and better yet, someone else cleaned and cooked  them!  You may  already have your own  crawdad source, but if not  its a sure  thing that you do have a Wal-Mart nearby where you'll  find wonderful small plastic packages of  frozen, cooked, ready -to -use crawdad meat in the seafood freezer

This recipe is meant for feeding a mob.  Luckily it's simple to make only half, which might feed 8 people, or as I do, quarter it to feed 2  very hungry people with a bit of leftovers.  For quite  some time I have  thought about  making  leftovers into a yummy soup, which I think would be quite do-able just by adding broth or milk or both  to thin it a bit.   Its already a thin sauce.  Broth made from  shrimp ( or crawdad) shells would be awesome, I think.    One of these days I'll deliberately make too much  so I can test out that theory. 

Directions: First, cook about  24 oz of multi-colored rotini pasta - you know, short corkscrews.  They have so many   great  places to collect the sauce, they're  perfect, although I suppose  another  very textured pasta, like   broken up curly fusilli or cavatappi would work.  I know you will remember to use as much salt as your veins will allow in the pasta water.  Cook only to al dente, and don't overboil.    Drain  and set aside- -- what comes next only takes a few minutes, so have   the  table set and sides ready.

While the pasta's  cooking,  open the  thawed   crawdad meat, about  24 ounces total, more or less.  Drain it in a colander. 

In a  large deep  skillet, drop 2 sticks of unsalted butter til its  melted &  bubbly-hot.  Stir in   3 TB Cajun seasoning.*    Stir like crazy  for a few seconds and then pour in 6 cups of heavy cream.  Stir again and  take note of how full your pan is, then let it simmer til its reduced to about half.      Throw in a cup of  chopped green onions, both  the white and much of the green parts.  Add the pasta &  the crawdads, stir,  and let everything  heat through to serve.    It's more liquid-y than a  baked  pasta casserole would be.

Now put on some  jazz or  zydeco  and serve!

* adapt to your own level of heat and/or brand of  seasoning.   My tolerance   is pretty low- I just like the barest hint of heat  so I  use  1 scant  Tablespoon.     I know, I know, I'm a wuss.   That's what hot sauce on the table is for!   If you're  being cautious, start off with  1 TB  and add more  as you go.  Remember that as it  reduces, the heat will intensify  some more . Don't plan to freeze leftovers, the sauce seems to be quickly absorbed and vanishes into thin air.