a sample recipe from Cafe Sassone Cookbook |
Crawfish Bisque photo captured during recipe kitchen testing. |
My all-time favorite thing. I never order this in a restaurant because I will be disappointed, so if I want some, I have to make it myself. Way back when, Mama and Mamie used to order wonderful Crawfish Bisque from a man named Mr. Clade. It came in interestingly-printed round cardboard cartons. Something happened to Mr. Clade, and we no longer had Crawfish Bisque. Terrible dilemma! So one day in the early ’70s at Queenie Regina camp in Little Woods, Mama and I decided to make Crawfish Bisque ourselves. Queenie Regina is gone, but I still have the scribbled and stained recipe card with my notes of what went into that ultimately perfect batch. And here it is for posterity.
Oh, and don’t let anybody try to tell you to skip the step of stuffing the heads and frying them, and the bisque will be the same with just balls of stuffing, and bla bla bla. It’s not the same. I fell for this work-saving suggestion and tried it one year, and the bisque suffered for it. If you’re going to do this much work, and only once a year, you might as well go all the way. (The stuffing is excellent made into balls and fried as an hors d’oeuvre, though, if you aren’t up to making bisque.)
For heads: 1 clove garlic Grind everything except heads, flour, and oil. (Back then we used a meat grinder that clamped onto the counter or table. Mama and Mamie each had one but they went away in Katrina. Now you can just use the Cuisinart, but don’t overprocess.) Mix it all together and stuff into the heads. Dredge the stuffed heads in flour and fry in hot oil. Drain on paper towels. For bisque: ½ cup bacon grease or oil Make roux with bacon grease or oil and flour. When roux is somewhat darker than the color of peanut butter, add the vegetables to the roux. Cook until the vegetables are soft. Add the stock, parsley, and seasonings, and cook a couple of hours, adding more stock or water as needed. Check for seasonings. Add heads and tails, heat through, and serve over rice. Makes 10 servings See more cookbook photos, a list of all of the recipes or order the Cafe Sassone cookbook at http://www.CafeSassone.com |
Tags: bell pepper, cayenne pepper, chili powder, cookbook, Crawfish, Crawfish Bisque, crawfish claws, Crayfish, Creole, French Bread, heads, Paprika, recipe, roux, Sassone, serve over rice, tails
March 25, 2013 at 6:57 pm |
Hello there! This article could not be written much better!
Looking at this post reminds me of my previous roommate!
He continually kept talking about this. I’ll send this article to him. Fairly certain he will have a great read. I appreciate you for sharing!
December 30, 2012 at 11:54 am |
Great recipe I love this dish ,even if does take a while to make
February 12, 2012 at 12:42 am |
Oh, my goodness! Our Pappaw Schexnaidre used to buy round, white cardboard cartons (like ice cream would come in, only smaller) of delicious crawfish bisque for all of our family to eat. (It would have been in the 50’s, 60’s.) We lived in Shreveport, La. The people he bought it from quit making it, the man died, and his family wouldn’t sell the recipe to my Pappaw. I never have been able to even find crawfish bisque at a restaurant! It is my favorite food, also! Thanks for the recipe….I may just have to try it.
February 12, 2012 at 3:19 am |
Anna Marie, let me know what you think. I can’t order Crawfish Bisque anywhere either. I hope you like it, because it’s a lot of work, and them you’ll want the whole cookbook! Bon appetit.
November 2, 2009 at 6:32 pm |
Yummy. I’m drooling! I love Crawfish Bisque done right – with the stuffed heads – and with not just bread crumbs. The French Bread is a must. I’m so glad I have your cookbook.