Creole Jambalaya with Okra
I’ve been making biscuits more often than usual (meaning I’ve made them at all) and buttermilk biscuits always make me think of the American south which makes me think of New Orleans. I’m always trying to get back there for so many reasons, the food being right at the top of the list. Probably because we’re thinking about where to go this summer I’ve been daydreaming about The Big Easy. Hence, jambalaya.
When I went to Spain it thoroughly ruined my relationship with making paella at home. It was so good there and so different to what I make in my own kitchen that I have a hard time calling what we make at home paella. But jambalaya in my kitchen for some reason still feels within range of jambalaya on the road. Even when I have to use chorizo instead of Andouille sausage. Considering the French and Spanish influences on the city it doesn’t feel too off the mark.
Jambalaya is an inherently generous dish. It is literally a jumble of so many good vegetables, meats and prawns. There’s nothing bad in it which makes it so good. The spices are also really available and flexible depending on how hot you’d like to make it. I just can’t say enough good things about it. If you don’t have okra near you or you don’t like it, you can leave it out but I think it adds to the overall dish.
When you start thinking about where recipes come from the web of influences from around the world is so fascinating. Food has always connected us as we travel and come home, as people migrate and settle down somewhere new. That voyaging spirit can continue in the kitchen even when you aren’t able to visit your favorite places in person.