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I’ll be honest: This is as much a shrimp and andouille gumbo as it is a turkey gumbo. And what’s more, there isn’t any reason you can’t substitute whatever meat makes you happy for the turkey.
But this does happen to be what I think is an excellent turkey gumbo recipe, and it is undeniably a great use for turkey drumsticks, wild or store-bought.
Gumbo is one of those stews that everyone makes in their own way. I happen to prefer a more Cajun method, with a dark roux and not much tomato, if any. The roux (pronounced “roo”) is a mixture of fat and flour that thickens the stew and, when you cook it to the color of dark chocolate, adds a distinctive flavor.
Most gumbos use a roux, either as a base of stirred in at the end, and all gumbos employ the Holy Trinity of onion, green pepper, and celery. Most use garlic, too. And almost all gumbo uses at least one of the three thickeners: the roux, okra or filé, which is dried, powdered sassafras leaf. Rarely will you see all three in a gumbo, however.
Meat is where it gets crazy. You can put pretty much any meat you want in a gumbo, and most include more than one.
This turkey gumbo is pretty typical in that it has the main meat — turkey legs and thighs — plus something smoked, in this case my homemade andouille sausage, and a seafood like shrimp, crab or crawfish.
I do not advise using turkey breast here, because it doesn’t take well to long stewing. If you must use turkey breast, dice it into pieces you’d want to eat, then toss it into the gumbo in the last 10 minutes so it won’t dry out.
Gumbo is usually served with steamed, long-grain rice, or potato salad. A Dixie or Abita beer is a good accompaniment.
If you like this turkey gumbo, I have several other recipes here, including a Cajun seafood gumbo, a Creole okra gumbo and a catch-all wild game gumbo I normally make with venison.
Turkey Gumbo with Andouille and Shrimp
Ingredients
- ½ cup peanut oil, lard, or butter
- 1 cup flour
- 1 quart stock, turkey or other good similar stock
- 2 bell peppers, diced
- 2 celery stalks, diced
- 1 large yellow onion, diced
- 6 garlic cloves, minced
- 2 to 4 turkey drumsticks
- ¼ teaspoon celery seed
- 2 bay leaves
- 2 tablespoons Cajun or Creole seasoning
- ¼ to ½ pound smoked sausage or tasso ham, cut into coins or chunks
- 1 pound peeled, raw shrimp
- 1/2 pound sliced okra (or 2 tablespoons filé powder)
- Tabasco or other hot sauce to taste
- Chopped green onions, for garnish
Instructions
- Pour the stock and 1 quart water into a pot and bring it to a simmer.
- In a large, heavy soup pot, heat the peanut oil over medium-high heat. Stir in the flour to make a roux and cook this, stirring often, until it’s the color of milk chocolate. You’ll need to stir this more often as it cooks so it doesn’t burn. This should take about 15 minutes.
- Add the diced vegetables and the garlic, and mix well. Let this cook over medium heat until soft, about 10 minutes. Stir in the celery seed, bay leaves, and Cajun seasoning.
- Bring the stock to a full boil and start adding it ladle by lade into the soup pot. It will sputter and seize up at first, but keep adding the stock until it has all incorporated. Bring this to a full, rolling boil and let this boil for a couple of minutes.
- Turn the heat back down to a simmer and add the turkey drumsticks. Taste for salt and let this simmer until the meat wants to fall off the bone, a couple of hours. Remove the turkey legs and pull the meat from the bone.
- Add the sausage, shrimp, and okra or about a tablespoon of filé to thicken, and let this simmer 5 minutes. Add Tabasco to taste and serve garnished with green onions over rice.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.