---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.01

     Title: Patout's Boiled Crawfish
Categories: Cajun, Fish/sea
     Yield: 8 servings

--------------------------------FOR THE BOIL--------------------------------
    40 lb Live crawfish                     1/2 c  Ground black pepper
     1 c  Salt                                5 lb Small white onions
   1/2 c  Ground white pepper                12 ea Ears of corn, shucked
   1/2 c  Ground red pepper                   5 lb Small new potatoes

----------------------------------SPRINKLE----------------------------------
   1/2 c  Ground white pepper               1/2 c  Ground black pepper
   1/2 c  Ground red pepper                   2 c  Salt

 Alex Patout describes Crawfish as "a delicacy made for sharing--
 in fact, in Cajun country, boiling crawfish for only two people
 counts as a venial sin."
 Wash the crawfish well and pick out any fish bones or other
 debris.  Fill a great big (40-quart) Stockpot a quarter full of
 water.  Add the salt and peppers and bring to boil.  Add the whole
 onions, the corn, and the new potatoes (it will be easy to remove
 them later if you put them in a cloth sack).  Return to boil, cover,
 lower heat to medium, and let cook for 8 minutes.  Add crawfish,
 cover again and raise heat to high.  After steam begins to escape
 from under the lid, cook 7 minutes more.  Remove from heat and
 let sit for 4 minutes.  Do *NOT* remove the lid until this point!
     Remove the onions, corn, and potatoes to a bowl and drain the
 crawfish.  Place the crawfish in a large insulated container (an
 ce chest works well, as do the thick waterproof boxes chickens
 are shipped in, which your butcher may give you for free).  Have
 your *SPRINKLE* ready and sprinkle over the crawfish and mix them
 well to coat.  Cover and let sit for 7 minutes.
     Serve immediately with the onions, corn, new potatoes, and
 lots of French bread on a large table covered with plenty of
 paper.  When everyone has eaten his fill, everyone "peels for
 the house."  The peeled tails can then be used in cold crawfish
 cocktail or salad or for Fried Crawfish the next day.
 Serves 8-10
 NOTE:  Most of the salt is not added until after the cooking
 process because too much salt added during cooking makes the
 flesh of the crawfish adhere to the shell.
 From Alex Patout's "Cajun Home Cooking" -- Random House

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