Published: · Modified: by Chef Dennis Littley
4.69 from 232 votes
Jump to Recipe
Shrimp Étouffée is a Classic Lousiana Seafood Stew made with tender seasoned shrimp, smothered in a cajun sauce that’s packed with the cajun flavors of New Orleans.
You can’t make Shrimp Étouffée without the Holy Trinity (onion, celery, and green peppers), and a simple dark roux to thicken it up. It’s an easy recipe that will have you enjoying the taste of New Orleans in your home tonight.
I’m sure you’ll agree that this is the best Shrimp Etoufee you’ve ever made and truthfully it does take a bit of time to make, but the process is easy and after one taste you’ll agree it was time well spent.
What is Étouffée?
If you look upEtouffee in the dictionary, you’ll find the literal translation to be smothered.
Etouffee usesa technique known as smothering, which is a popular method of cooking in the Cajun areas of southwest Louisiana and thecoastal counties of Mississippi.
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.
Cajun Étouffée does not contain tomatoes. The addition of tomatoes is the Creole way of preparing etouffee.
There are many variations of this classic shrimp dish, some being Cajun and others being Creole. And while there are a lot of similarities in the styles, each has its own unique seasonings and flavors typical of the region and families the recipe came from.
Many people confuseÉtouffée with Jambalayaandthat’s a completely different type of recipe. Even my Tex-Mex Jambalaya doesn’t come close to resembling my ShrimpÉtouffée.
Étouffée is typically made with shellfish, with crawfish being the original star of the dish. But as we all know when it comes to cooking it’s all about whatwe liketo eat and what’s readily available.
While traditionalists may argue that the only Etouffee is Crawfish ÉtoufféeI’ll have to disagree. Crawfish may make the traditional dish, but it’s easier to find shrimp, and shrimp make one delicious etouffee!
Recipe FAQ’s
What is Étouffée sauce made of?
Etouffee means “smothered” when translated from French. It’s basically a stew and typically consists ofa dark roux, the Holy Trinity (onion, celery, and bell pepper), tomatoes, garlic, hot sauce, and can be made with shrimp, crawfish, or chicken
What is the difference between Gumbo and Étouffée?
Gumbo is made with the same ingredients with the addition of file powder and okra (the word “gumbo” even comes from a West African word for okra.
Gumbo is usually made with a mixture of different meats and seafood. Etouffee is usually only made with shrimp or crawfish.
Does Étouffée always have tomatoes?
True Cajun Étouffée does not contain tomatoes, but the creole version does. I prefer the flavor the tomatoes add to the dish, but they can be left out.
Do you have to use Crawfish Tails to make Étouffée?
No, you don’t. Shrimp Étouffée is becoming more popular and it’s easier to get Shrimp from US waters than it is to get crawfish.
More Shrimp Recipes You’ll Love!
- Etouffee Street Tacos Recipe
- New England Steamed Clams Recipe – Paddlefish Restaurant – A Locals Guide to Orlando
- Southern Shrimp and Cheesy Grits Recipe
- Cajun-Style Shrimp and Sausage
Did you make this? Please RATE THE RECIPE below!
Please SUBSCRIBE and FOLLOW ME on FACEBOOK, TWITTER, INSTAGRAM and PINTEREST!
Print Recipe Save
4.69 from 232 votes
Cajun Shrimp Étouffée Recipe
My easy to make Shrimp Étoufféeis perfect for that special date night or to make any night a special occasion!
Prep Time15 minutes mins
Cook Time1 hour hr
Total Time1 hour hr 15 minutes mins
Course: Entree
Cuisine: American
Servings: 2
Calories: 804kcal
Author: Chef Dennis Littley
Ingredients
Broth
- shrimp shells
- ½ lemon sliced
- scraps from cutting onion and celery
- 2 cups chicken broth
Etouffee Sauce
- 4 tablespoons butter
- 4 tablespoons flour
- 1 cup onion small dice
- ½ cup celery small dice
- ½ cup bell pepper small dice
- 4 cloves garlic chopped
- 1 teaspoon fresh thyme chopped
- 14 ounce can diced tomato
- 1 tablespoon Creole or Cajun seasoning your favorite blend and adjust to your tastes
- hot sauce to taste optional
Shrimp
- 14 jumbo shrimp 16-20 count shrimp, tail off shelled and deveined (about ¾ of a pound )
- ½ teaspoon Cajun seasoning
- ½ teaspoon Italian parsley finely chopped
Assembly
- 2 cups cooked rice
- sea salt to taste
- ¼ cup green onions sliced for garnish
- tablespoon Italian parsley chopped for garnish
US Customary – Metric
Instructions
Broth
Add the shrimp shells and scraps of onion and celery to a small saucepot with a little olive oil to saute and cook for a few minutes
then add the sliced lemon and chicken broth. Bring to a boil, reduce the heat to a low simmer for 20 minutes. Add more water if necessary to keep the stock close to 1 ½ cups
Strain the solids from the broth and set aside.
Etouffee Sauce
Melt the butter in a large saucepan over medium heat, cook until it starts to brown sprinkle in the flour while mixing and reduce the heat to simmer. Continue to simmer until the roux turns dark brown, about 10 minutes.
Add the onion, celery, and peppers to the roux and cook until tender, about 8-10 minutes.
Add the garlic and thyme and cook for a minute.
Whisk in the broth
Add the tomatoes and seasoning, reduce heat to low and simmer for 20 minutes.
Season with hot sauce and sea salt to taste.
Shrimp
Dry the peeled shrimp with paper towels
Mix some of your seasoning (or paprika if you don't want heat) and chopped parsley with your towel-dried shrimp. Toss the shrimp with the seasoning.
Heat another saute pan over medium-high heat. Add a little oil to the pan and add the seasoned shrimp
Saute the shrimp quickly and cook until just done so they stay moist and tender. You want to get color into the shrimp so it's okay if they seasoning burns a little.
Assembly
Place white rice in center of bowl, add Etouffee Sauce around rice, place cooked shrimp on top
Garnish with parsley and green onions
Video
Nutrition
Calories: 804kcal | Carbohydrates: 93g | Protein: 39g | Fat: 33g | Saturated Fat: 16g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 11g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 275mg | Sodium: 2166mg | Potassium: 1568mg | Fiber: 10g | Sugar: 11g | Vitamin A: 4570IU | Vitamin C: 99mg | Calcium: 732mg | Iron: 18mg
Tried this Recipe? Pin it for Later!Mention @askChefDennis or tag #askChefDennis!
More Seafood Recipes
- Fried Walleye Recipe
- Crispy Fried Catfish
- Fish And Chips
- Baked Salmon and Rice Recipe
About Chef Dennis
Chef Dennis Littley is a classically trained chef with over 40 years of experience working in the food service industry. In his second career as a food blogger he has made it his mission to demistify cooking by sharing his time-tested recipes, knowledge, and chef tips to help you create easy-to-make restaurant-quality meals in your home kitchen. Let Chef Dennis help you bring the joy of cooking into your home.For more details, check out his About page.
Reader Interactions
Comments
Tom
Adding the raw veggies to the roux didn’t allow the veggies to sweat/ cook properly, so they didn’t loose their crunch. I had to use an immersion blender. Next time I make this, I’ll sauté the veggies separately then add that to the broth and add both to the roux.Reply
Kem
You really have to let them cook down. There should be some texture to sauce which you might lose by blending. I cooked mine in roux for about 15 min. They were lovely.Reply
Shona Nicol
Made this recipe for dinner this evening. It was a big hit. Made it with the seafood broth. Doubled the recipe, without any changes. Hubby loved it. Will make it again and again. Thank you for such amazing, delicious recipe.Reply
Andrea
Loved this dish! Excellent flavors— very easy also!Reply
Linda from Perth
What a delicious recipe. I did double the vegetables, and served it with shrimp the first night. The next night I combined it with the rice, reheated it, and topped it with roasted cauliflower. Equally delicious!Reply
Ranae
I made this tonight and it was absolutely delicious! The shrimp broth made all the difference! I have some frozen lobster shells I think I will add next time and maybe double the sauce just so I can keep eating off the spoon! Highly recommend!Reply
Robert deGruiter
I am Dutch, but has lived in New Orleans since the Sixties and love the local cuisine. It has been the last 10 years or so when I started cooking more and going back to cook the dishes which my Mom cooked and we thoroughly enjoyed. I saw the recipe for Étouffée and tried it and love the results. Thank you for sharing this great traditional Louisiana dish. I now live in Mississippi and am retired. Life is good…Reply
Lauren
My first time making etouffee and it was delicious! Cooking for one I’m always looking for recipes that reheat well and I can get multiple meals out of without getting sick of them. This recipe was really easy to follow and be able to modify the spice level to my tolerance; I made my own Cajun seasoning mix to tweak the amount of cayenne. Agree with the others that the shrimp stock makes it. I added a touch of coconut oil to finish my rice and some chopped cilantro to the parsley, which won’t be to everyone’s taste but if like me you’ve taken a liking to Gulf Viet-Cajun cuisine give it a try.Reply
Sharon
I have made this recipe! Fabulous!Reply
J-Rock
Making the broth is always the thing I least want to do when cooking dishes like this, but the broth recipe for this is the best for etouffee I’ve found, makes the whole process more fun and less wasteful feeling. The whole dish was great.Reply
Christina
This recipe is amazing. It really does create such a deep flavor!! So so so good!!! Making the shrimp broth really does make it INCREDIBLE!Reply
Ceal Craig
Thanks for good recipe, especially the explanation for why tomatoes–yes or no– depending on Creole or Cajun (respectively). We tried it without tomatoes. Made my own seasoning with Santa Fe Chile pepper and Smokey Paprika from a local Bay Area spice shop. I did not get a dark brown roux; because I think I missed the key phrase about browning the butter first! I just mixed them and then simmered, after boiling. Made shrimp stock with shells (and roe) that came with spot prawns from our Wild Alaska seafood box (I’ll post a link to your site in the community FB page!). Delicious taste! Very tasty. Thanks!Reply
Loretta
How many servings does this Shrimp Etouffee recipe make?
Reply
Chef Dennis Littley
2, you can always find that information on the recipe card
Shay
I made tonight it was so good n flavorful. I cooked the shrimp about 2 mins each side n then once the etouffee was finished I put the shrimp in the pot to soak up the juice n flavor n finish cooking, so good thank u for this recipeReply
Laurie
Absolutely delicious! The homemade shrimp stock is what makes this dish stand out and sets it far and above standard home cooking. Don’t skip that step, it’s how you build all the flavor! Great recipe, adding it into the hand-written family cookbook.Reply
Chef Dennis Littley
Thanks for the comment and great review Laurie! I’m happy to hear you enjoyed the ettouffe!
Reply
Sidney Allen Fein
Use cayenne instead of jalepenos. Solid recipe though.
Reply
Allison Babb
Made this for my family of six. Everyone d it! It has been added to our rotation of recipes we know we’ll make again. The leftovers were great too. I’m so happy with this recipe.Reply
Susan
Made this for my husband’s birthday dinner Sunday. My daughter and son-in-law came for dinner. And they both raved how wonderful it was. My son-in-law said it was one of the favorite meals I have ever made. And my husband who loves Cajun/creole cooking was thrilled. I followed the recipe to a T, and used creole seasoning because I prefer the little milder flavors. It was delicious.Reply
Amy Liu Dong
Oh my gosh, this dish looks really, delicious and I can’t wait to make this for my family.Reply
Weems McArthur
We grilled lobster and I made a lobster stock out of the shells. I used your shrimp etoufee recipe and substituted the chicken stock with lobster stock. It was fantastic!!Reply
Robert
February 18, 2021.
Made it for myself 2 nights ago. Followed your recipe exactly. So delicious..Made it again tonight and added a dozen fresh muscles to the sauce while it was simmering. Unbelievable! Again, so delicious….gonna surprise girlfriend tomorrow with this dish for lunch….
Thank you for the recipe….already one of my favorites….
Robert….Agawam, MAReply
Chef Dennis Littley
Thanks for the great comment Robert! I hope you find more recipes to try, my shrimp and cheesy grits is another classic!
Reply
Richard Anneler
Thank you for this wonderful recipe
Followed your instruction to the letter, including the shrimp broth. This was a very easy dish with excellent instruction. Didn’t add to or change a thing.
Reply
Leave a Comment
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
« Older Comments