Encylopedia Jr
The Kid's Encyclopedia: A great information resource for kids, schools, and anybody who wants to learn.
Kids: Be sure to check with your parents or teachers before using this or any web site.



Browse by Subject
Browse by Letter


This site is designed to be an encyclopedia for use by kids. Kids and children, please ask your parents or teachers prior to using this site or the internet.







Jambalaya

From Encyclopedia Jr, free information reference for Kids

Jambalaya with chicken, sausage, rice, tomatoes, celery, and spices.
Enlarge
Jambalaya with chicken, sausage, rice, tomatoes, celery, and spices.
This article is about the food. For the song, see Jambalaya (song).

Jambalaya (pronounced /dʒɑmbəˈlaɪə/) or <jahm-buh-LIE-uh> or <jum-buh-LIE-uh>, is a Louisiana Cajun or Creole dish.

Jambalaya is traditionally made in one pot, with meats and vegetables, and is completed by adding rice. There are two primary methods of making jambalaya.

A true Cajun jambalaya contains no tomatoes. The meat (usually chicken, or pork, and sausage) is browned in a cast-iron pot. The bits that stick to the bottom of the pot are what give a true Cajun jambalaya its brown color. Next, add a little vegetable oil, if there is not enough fat in the pot, and the trinity (onions, celery, and green bell pepper). Sautee until soft and then add stock, seasonings, and return the chicken or pork and sausage to the pot. Simmer, covered, for at least an hour. Bring to a boil, add rice to the pot, cover, and let simmer over very low heat for at least 1/2 hour. Resist the urge to remove the lid and stir. After a minimum of 1/2 hour, check if rice is cooked.

The first and most common is to cook the meat(s) or sausage (such as Andouille or chorizo), then add vegetables and tomatoes to cook, then add seafood, adding rice and stock in equal proportions at the very end. This is known as "Red Jambalaya."

The secondary method is to cook all ingredients separately from the rice, adding rice cooked in a savory stock, then blending the ingredients to serve. This is called "White Jambalaya."

As well, there are two additional variations of styles of jambalaya, differentiated by the addition or deletion of tomatoes. The traditional northern recipe variation omits tomatoes.

Jambalaya is considered somewhat similar to, or replacement for a simple-to-prepare, yet filling casserole by most Louisianans, while gumbos, étouffées and creoles are considered dishes more difficult to perfect.

Most usually, a long grain white rice is used in making jambalaya, which is mixed with the vegetables and meat, with numerous variations upon that central theme.

Jambalaya is differentiated from other traditional ethnic Louisiana dishes such as gumbo, étouffée, and creoles by the way in which the rice is included. In the latter dishes, the rice is cooked separatedly and is served as a bed upon which the main dish is presented. In the usual method for preparing Jambalaya, a rich stock is created from vegetables, meat, and seafood. Raw rice is then added to the broth and the flavor is aborbed by the grains as the rice cooks.

[edit] History

Improvised looking bowl of jambalaya
Enlarge
Improvised looking bowl of jambalaya

Jambalaya originates from Louisiana's rural, low-lying swamp country where crawfish (aka "mudbugs"), shrimp, oysters, alligator, duck, turtle, boar, venison and other wild meats were readily available. Any variety or combination of meats, including chicken or turkey may be used to make jambalaya. The Gulf Coast area's geographical basin (including Mississippi, Texas, Alabama, and Louisiana) also provided an exceptionally nutritive soil and conducive environment in which rice flourished. Thus the combination of the two foods was quite natural.

The first printed reference to "jambalaya" occurred in 1872, and the 1900 edition of "The Picayune's Creole Cook Book" called it a "Spanish-Creole dish." Jambalaya is also very similar to the Spanish dish Paella.

The origin of the name "jambalaya" is uncertain, and there are many theories surrounding its etymology. Prominent among them is the combination of the French "jambon" meaning ham, the French article "à la" meaning "in the style of" and "ya", thought by some to be of West African origin meaning rice, though "ya-ya" is also an old Creole patois phase meaning "everybody's talking at once."

Alternate etymologies of the word point to the combining of the Creole words "Jhamba" (gift) and "laya" (rice). The name came from the plantation slave meals, which were often a pot of rice (or rice and beans). The slaves considered it a treat to find a "gift" of some meat (normally a left over from the owners meal or a table scrap) in with the rice. This is the current etymology being taught by the St. Louis School of Cooking.

The Dictionary of American Food and Drink offers this colorfully creative, yet unverified explanation on the origin of the word "jambalaya": Late one evening a traveling gentleman stopped by a New Orleans inn which had no food remaining from the evening meal. The inn's owner instructed Jean, the cook, to "balayez" or "mix some things together" in the local dialect. The guest pronounced the resulting hodge-podge dish as "Jean Balayez."

In 1968, Louisiana Governer John J. McKeithen proclaimed Gonzales, Louisiana the Jambalaya Capital of the World. Every Spring, the annual Jambalaya Festival is held in Gonzales.

Jambalaya is also used as a main dish in many MREs (Meals, Ready-to-Eat) for the military.

[edit] See also

Similar dishes:

Other popular Southern - Louisiana dishes:

  • Gumbo
  • Red Beans and Rice
  • Grits
  • Étouffée
  • King Cake
  • pralines
  • Okra And Ham Pilau
  • Dirty Rice
  • Beignets
  • Corn bread
  • Pecan Pie
  • Calas (food)
  • Po' boy
  • Fritters

[edit] External links


Citation Help

APA Style: Reference List

Encyclopedia Jr (2007). Jambalaya. Retrieved May 27, 2012, from http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/j/a/m/jambalaya.

MLA Style: Works Cited Page

"Jambalaya." Encyclopedia Jr. 2007. 27 May 2012 <http://www.encyclopediajr.com/wikiarticle/j/a/m/jambalaya>.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article jambalaya.


Encyclopedia Jr Home Page  Parents and Teachers  About Encyclopedia Junior 


This site is a product of TSI, Copyright 2012, All Rights Reserved. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use.