Shrimp Étouffée Recipe • The Wicked Noodle (2024)

Jump straight to the recipe here (but you'll miss a lot of good info)!

This Shrimp Étouffée recipe is made with shrimp, the Holy Trinity of onion, celery, and green pepper, and a rich roux sauce. It’s a fantastic Creole dish!

Shrimp Étouffée Recipe • The Wicked Noodle (1)

What is Étouffée?

Étouffée (pronounced “ā-too-FAY”) is a French word for “smothered” and is found in both Cajun and Creole cooking where a type of meat is in a thick roux-based gravy sauce (equal parts flour and fat). Any meat can be used including shrimp, crawfish, or chicken.

This Shrimp Étouffée recipe is shrimp, flour-and-butter roux, onions, bell peppers and celery (known as the “Holy Trinity” of Cajun cooking), traditional Cajun seasoning and hot sauce. The stew is typically served over rice, which soaks up the Étouffée sauce.

There are many versions of étouffée as people disagree on how it should be prepared. For instance, Cajun Étouffée does not contain tomatoes and the addition of tomatoes is the Creole way of preparing etouffee. This is simply my version and the one I humbly think is the best 🙂

Shrimp Étouffée Ingredients

  • Shrimp, peeled and deveined (reserve the shells): Smaller shrimp are best for this recipe to allow for spoonfuls of shrimp and stew.
  • Roux (equal parts flour & unsalted butter): This brown roux will yield a creamy, nutty flavor while thickening the sauce.
  • Chicken Stock: The chicken stock is simmered with the shells for an easy “shrimp stock.”
  • Holy Trinity (Onion, green bell peppers, celery): A classic Cajun flavor base where sautéingthe vegetables in butter releases their flavor into the sauce.
  • Fire Roasted Tomatoes: These are canned tomatoes that are fire roasted over an open flame to accentuate the stews flavor.
  • Green Onion: The addition of green onion adds a more milder onion taste.
  • Creole Seasoning: Your favorite blend and adjust to your tastes. Cajun seasoning can be used, if you prefer.
  • Dried Thyme, Garlic, Salt & Pepper: These seasonings intensify and enhance the natural flavor.
  • Worcestershire Sauce: Another flavor-enhancer with anchovies, garlic and cloves that adds a salty, umami flavor.
  • Hot Sauce (optional): This recipe calls for a few dashes of hot sauce for a little spiciness but not so much that you’re constantly reaching for a glass of water. Die-hards can add even more hot sauce if they prefer; I find the amount of spice here to be spot-on.

(Scroll down to the bottom for the printable recipe card with exact measurements and recipe instructions.)

How to Make Shrimp Étouffée

  1. Peel and Devein Shrimp: Reserve the shells to add to the chicken stock and boil.
  2. Make the Roux: Melt the butter and thoroughly stir in flour over a medium heat until the roux is deep brown. Ensure there are no lumps.
  3. Sauté the Holy Trinity: Add the onions, peppers and celery until vegetables soften and then add the spices and remaining ingredients (except shrimp).
  4. Simmer: Bring it all to simmer and then add shrimp until cooked through.
Shrimp Étouffée Recipe • The Wicked Noodle (2)

Variations & Cooking Tips

  • This Shrimp Étoufféerecipe makes enough for 3-4 people. Because I’m cooking every day, I will often make the recipe as-is; you may want to consider doubling it just for the leftovers. It reheats nicely and you’ll be craving it!
  • Shrimp Étouffée is a fantastic dish for a Mardi Gras get-together or any other dinner-type party you may be throwing. If you think you might serve this to guests (or any other rice dish) I highly suggest purchasing theseinexpensive food ringsto help you when plating the rice. It’s how I plated it for the photos and it’s just so easy and fun to do!
  • This Louisiana seafood stew is a year-round culinary staple in the South but if you’re Catholic, Shrimp Étouffée is the perfect dish to serve during Lent on a Friday.
  • You’re probably tired of me preaching to “buy your seafood frozen”, but it’s true!Most of us don’t have access to seafood that’s truly fresh (as in just caught and fresh off the boat; if you do, then of course buy it fresh). Almost ALL seafood is frozen when caught then shipped to the store for purchase. This means that the seafood you’re buying at the counter has already been frozen once – yet you have no idea when it was thawed and how long it’s been sitting in that seafood case.
  • To thaw your shrimp, simply put it in a colander and runcoldwater over it, tossing the shrimp occasionally. I usually do this while I’m prepping the rest of the ingredients; by the time I’m done, my shrimp are thawed and ready to be peeled.

Make Ahead of Time

To make ahead prepare the recipe as directed, let the stew cool off and place in the fridge in an airtight container. Make ahead a day or two in advance.

To reheat, turn on stovetop at medium-low heat, add all ingredients in a medium saucepan, and cook until mixture starts to simmer for about 10 minutes, until heated through. Watch carefully when reheating the stew so as to not overcook the shrimp. Skip the microwave too.

Shrimp Étouffée Recipe • The Wicked Noodle (3)

Shrimp Étouffée

Yield: 4

Prep Time: 20 minutes

Cook Time: 40 minutes

Total Time: 1 hour

This Louisiana dish is rich and a little spicy with a sweet and briny shrimp flavor. Perfect year-round, a Mardi Gras celebration or on a Friday afternoon during Lent.

Ingredients

  • 1 pound shrimp, peeled and deveined (reserve the shells)
  • 1/4 cup flour
  • 1/4 cup butter, unsalted
  • 2 cups chicken stock
  • 2/3 cup chopped onion
  • 2/3 cup thinly sliced celery
  • 2/3 cup chopped green pepper
  • 1 tablespoon creole seasoning
  • 1/4 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 can fire-roasted diced tomatoes, drained well
  • 2 teaspoons Worcestershire
  • a few dashes hot sauce
  • kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/4 cup chopped green onion
  • 1/4 cup chopped parsley, for garnish
  • cooked rice, for serving

Instructions

  1. Peel and devein shrimp; reserve shells. Set shrimp on paper towels and pat until thoroughly dried.
  2. Pour stock into small saucepan and add reserved shells. Bring to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 10 minutes. Strain stock through a fine-mesh sieve and set aside.
  3. Melt butter in a large, deep skillet over medium heat. Whisk in flour and continue cooking, whisking frequently, until "roux" is a deep brown, about ten minutes. Add onions, peppers and celery, stir well to combine. Continue cooking for 3-4 minutes or until vegetables start to soften. Add creole seasoning, thyme and garlic; cook for one minute more, stirring frequently.
  4. Add tomatoes, Worcestershire, hot sauce and stock to pan, stirring well to combine. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to low and simmer for another 15 minutes. Add shrimp and cook another 5 minutes or until shrimp are just cooked through. Top with green onion and parsley. Serve immediately with hot rice on the side.
Nutrition Information:

Yield: 4Serving Size: 1
Amount Per Serving:Calories: 404Total Fat: 15gSaturated Fat: 8gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 6gCholesterol: 273mgSodium: 2235mgCarbohydrates: 33gFiber: 3gSugar: 6gProtein: 33g

This data was provided and calculated by Nutritionix.

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  • Author
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Kristy Bernardo

Kristy Bernardo is the recipe creator behind The Wicked Noodle. She's a five-time cookbook author, has taught cooking classes to both kids and adults, and has been creating recipes for nationwide brands since 2009. She learned most of her cooking skills from her mom and grandmother, then honed those skills at boot camp at the Culinary Institute of America.

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Shrimp Étouffée Recipe • The Wicked Noodle (2024)

FAQs

What's the difference between shrimp étouffée and shrimp Creole? ›

Shrimp Creole and Shrimp Etouffee are similar dishes but are not the same. An etouffee has a consistency that is more like gravy and is thicker than shrimp creole sauce. Shrimp creole has a tomato base while shrimp etouffee has a roux for its base.

What is etouffee sauce made of? ›

What's in an Étouffée Sauce? Étouffée is a type of stew if you want to get technical. It's made with a roux, onion, celery, and bell pepper (the holy trinity), tomato, garlic, hot sauce, and either shrimp, crawfish, or chicken.

What is the difference between gumbo and shrimp etouffee? ›

Both etouffee and gumbo are broth-based, using shrimp stock, seafood stock, crawfish tail stock, or chicken stock. But etouffee has a thicker, gravy-like consistency whereas gumbo is a thinner stew.

What is the trinity for etouffee? ›

The "holy trinity" in Cajun cuisine and Louisiana Creole cuisine is the base for several dishes in the regional cuisines of Louisiana and consists of onions, bell peppers and celery. The preparation of Cajun/Creole dishes such as crawfish étouffée, gumbo, and jambalaya all start from this base.

Should etouffee have tomatoes? ›

Cajun typically doesn't add tomatoes so you can omit if you prefer but either way, it will be delicious based on your preference. Spices: I've added a basic creole seasoning, garlic powder, cayenne pepper and hot sauce for a bit of fiery heat and flavor. Worcestershire sauce: This adds more depth and nuance.

What are 3 main differences between Cajun and creole foods? ›

While they are very similar, they do utilize different ingredients. Cajun food is typically spicier than Creole food, and it also contains more pork and crawfish. Creole food utilizes more ingredients like tomatoes, shrimp, oysters, and crab.

What is the best hot sauce for etouffee? ›

To make my etoufee spicy, I use Louisiana sauce. Louisiana sauce is the best because it has the perfect balance of spicy to acidity, and limited ingredients.

Does etouffee start with a roux? ›

Brown roux is the foundation of roux-based New Orleans dishes such as étouffée and gumbo. Of the three types of roux, brown roux is the darkest and most flavorful. Its color can range from a peanut butter color to a maple syrup color.

What to eat with shrimp etouffee? ›

The best side dishes to serve with etouffee are jasmine rice, cornbread, cauliflower rice, quinoa, polenta, wedge salad, eggplant parmesan, mashed potatoes, green bean almondine, roasted brussel sprouts, southern-style collard greens, sweet potato fries, black-eyed peas salad, grilled asparagus, garlic knots, and apple ...

What is New Orleans gumbo called? ›

Creole gumbo: A true New Orleans Creole gumbo starts with a lighter roux—meaning a shorter-cooked roux with a less intensely toasty flavor—ham or chaurice (spicy fresh-pork sausage), okra, and tomatoes, all simmered in a flavorful stock. The protein in Creole gumbo is often seafood, such as shrimp, oysters, and crab.

What's the difference between jambalaya and etouffee? ›

Both are considered main dishes, but étouffée is more or less a sauce or thick gravy, typically served over rice. Jambalaya, however, is a rice dish, akin to paella, its likely ancestor. One uses rice as a vehicle, the other as a staple component of the dish.

Is jambalaya just gumbo with rice? ›

What Are the Differences Between Gumbo and Jambalaya? The main difference between these two dishes is their use of rice. Gumbo is really a soup or stew that's often served over a little rice, while jambalaya is made with the rice cooked into the dish, making the grain an integral part of it.

What are carrots, onions, and celery called? ›

The French flavor base called mirepoix is a combination of onion, carrot and celery generally cut to the same size. It's used in a ratio that's 2 parts onion to 1 part celery and carrot. Saute in Butter. Mirepoix is the start of many French dishes, such as coq au vin and lamb stew.

Which three ingredients are considered the Cajun Trinity? ›

Similarly, in Creole and Cajun cuisine, the onion, celery, and green bell pepper are three parts of a single flavorful base. The Holy Trinity in cooking is also often called The Cajun Trinity or The Holy Trinity of Cajun Cooking.

What is étouffée in New Orleans? ›

The word étouffée (pronounced eh-too-fey) comes from the French word“to smother.” The best way to describe this dish is a very thick stew, seasoned to perfection and chock full of delicious, plump crawfish (or shrimp) served over rice.

What is the difference between shrimp creole and shrimp jambalaya? ›

WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SHRIMP CREOLE AND JAMBALAYA? Shrimp Creole is a shrimp dish that rests on a bed of rice. Jambalaya is a rice dish. Spanish colonists to the Louisiana area were unable to make paella and jambalaya was the result of attempts to make a variation of paella using ingredients available locally.

What is the difference between shrimp creole and shrimp gumbo? ›

Creole-type dishes combine the qualities of a gumbo and a jambalaya. They are typically thicker and spicier than a gumbo, and the rice is prepared separately and used as a bed for the creole mixture, rather than cooked in the same pot as with a jambalaya.

What does étouffée taste like? ›

In some ways, its similar to gumbo – same types of Creole seasonings, served over rice, and made with a roux, but unlike gumbo, étouffée is often made with a“blonde”roux, giving it a lighter color and a very different almost sweet flavor. It's a unique taste you won't soon forget and worth trying at home.

What's the difference between shrimp etouffee and jambalaya? ›

Both are considered main dishes, but étouffée is more or less a sauce or thick gravy, typically served over rice. Jambalaya, however, is a rice dish, akin to paella, its likely ancestor. One uses rice as a vehicle, the other as a staple component of the dish.

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