Southern Low Country Boil with Cajun Lemon Butter
Sea Salt Savorings
This easy one-pot seafood dinner is packed with fresh Gulf shrimp, blue crab, crawfish, cajun sausage, potatoes, sweet corn, beer, and loads of seasoning! Grab a cold one and start cracking those craw daddies open!
Prep Time 5 minutes mins
Cook Time 40 minutes mins
Servings 10
Calories 443 kcal
For the stock
- 5 bottles of pale ale beer
- 1/2 cup Old Bay Seasoning
- 2 3 oz packs of Zatarain's, Crawfish, Shrimp, & Crab Boil in Bag
- 2 bay leaves
- 2 white onions quartered
- 3 heads of garlic halved
- 4 lemons halved
- 8 quarts of water
To build the low country boil
- 1 package cajun sausage
- 3 lbs fresh Gulf shrimp peeled, deveined, with tail on
- 2 lbs precooked crawfish
- 10 blue crabs
- 1 1/2 lbs baby dutch potatoes
- 6 ears of corn halved
For the Cajun Lemon Butter
- 1 cup butter
- 4 tbsp lemon juice
- 1 tsp Tony Chachere creole seasoning
Build the stock
In a large stock pot, add the beer, water, onions, garlic, bay leaves, Old Bay Seasoning, and the Zataria'ns seasoning bags. Squeeze the lemon juice into the stock pot, then toss in the lemons. Allow the stock to come to a rolling boil.
Build the Low Country Boil
Once the stock has come to a rolling boil, add the potatoes and cook for 5 minutes.
Next, add the corn and cook for another 5 minutes.
Add the sausage and blue crab and cook for 5 minutes. If the sausage is thick (more than 1 inch), cook for 10 minutes.
Add the shrimp and crawfish. Boil for another 2-3 minutes. Strain the seafood mix from the stock.
Make the Cajun Lemon Butter
Serve the low country boil
To serve the low country boil, lay newspaper out on the middle of the table (preferably outside). Toss the low country boil onto the newspaper and serve with the cajun lemon butter, wedges of lemon, and more Old Bay Seasoning.
Calories: 443kcalCarbohydrates: 31gProtein: 34gFat: 22gSaturated Fat: 12gCholesterol: 407mgSodium: 1254mgPotassium: 698mgFiber: 5gSugar: 6gVitamin A: 775IUVitamin C: 50mgCalcium: 270mgIron: 5mg
Nutrition values are estimates, for exact values consult a nutritionist.