This Creole version of étouffée is not very spicy. Cajun is the spicier version. You can always serve this with a bottle of your favorite bottle of hot sauce.
Shrimps don’t have fat for the sauce so the addition of mushrooms, Worcestershire sauce, and butter add a wonderful umami flavor. Wild lobster mushrooms go really well with this dish, but store bought mushrooms work wonderfully as well.
Étouffée is the French word for “smothered.” Smothering meat, seafood, or vegetables is a cooking technique used in the Southeastern states. Biscuits smothered in a homemade sausage gravy is a common breakfast food.
Shrimp and Lobster Mushroom Étouffée is shrimp smothered in a rich mushroom and tomato sauce which is served with white rice.
EQUIPMENT: large cast iron skillet, quality heavy bottom pot.
Tags
Clams mushrooms shrimp Wild mushrooms