Alligator Sausage & Crawfish Casserole
Submitted by carolhay
Alligator Sausage & Crawfish Casserole: a one-pan Louisiana feast with crumbled gator sausage, smoked sausage, crawfish tails, and converted rice baked in tomatoes and creole seasoning.
YIELD
10 servingsPREP
30 minCOOK
60 minREADY
90 minThis Alligator Sausage and Crawfish Casserole is full-throttle Louisiana, the kind of dish you make for a crowd that already understands gumbo and just needs something baked instead of stirred. Three meats (gator sausage, smoked sausage, crawfish tails) layer in distinct textures while converted rice soaks up beef stock, French onion soup, and chile-spiked tomatoes.
Alligator sausage is the headliner. It tastes leaner and cleaner than pork sausage, with a faint chicken-meets-fish quality that makes the dish feel exotic without being weird. If you cannot find it, andouille is the closest swap.
Converted rice is the right call here. Long-grain converted rice keeps individual grains separate under the long bake, where standard long-grain tends to clump. Do not substitute jasmine or basmati. Both turn mushy at this hour-long cook time.
The ingredient list is mostly canned and pantry items, which is the genius of the recipe. Cajun cooking has always known how to stretch a few proteins with rice and a couple of cans of strong-flavored backup.
Stir well at the 30-minute mark to redistribute the rice and prevent the bottom from scorching. The rice on top can finish unevenly without that single stir.
Two bay leaves and a tablespoon of Creole seasoning carry most of the flavor, with black pepper hitting hard. This is not a subtle dish.
Pro Tips
- Brown the alligator sausage well before mixing. Crumbled, well-browned sausage adds Maillard flavor that the bake alone cannot deliver.
- Use Tony Chachere’s or Slap Ya Mama Creole seasoning for authenticity. Generic Cajun blends lack the salt-to-spice ratio that defines real Creole cooking.
- Drain the crawfish tails well. Excess liquid throws off the rice-to-broth ratio and you end up with a soupy casserole.
- Let the dish rest five minutes before serving. The rice continues to absorb liquid and the flavors meld.
Variations
- Substitute andouille for the alligator sausage if you cannot find gator. The smoke profile is slightly different but works.
- Add a cup of frozen okra to the mix for traditional Louisiana texture.
- Stir in half a cup of green bell pepper alongside the green onions for the full Cajun trinity.
Ingredients
Directions
Mix alligator sausage with remaining ingredients.
Place in a covered casserole or pan and cook in preheated 350℉ (180℃) oven for 1 hour.
After 30 minutes, stir well and continue cooking for the remaining time.
Let cool, uncovered, for a few minutes and serve.
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