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What’s For Dinner? Chicken and Andouille Gumbo

What’s For Dinner? Chicken and Andouille Gumbo
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The following is a featured recipe in Heinen’s What’s For Dinner program, your solution to easy, delicious and convenient weeknight dinners.

Adventure through the flavors of a classic Louisiana dish with this simple, spice-filled Chicken and Andouille Gumbo that takes only 25 minutes to prepare!

Ingredients for Chicken and Andouille Gumbo.

Zatarain’s flavorful gumbo mix is the foundation of this staple southern meal with a flavorful kick from Chachere’s Creole seasoning. With just a touch of smoke and heat from Andouille sausage, this dish is authentic, flavor-packed, and most importantly, fast to make!

What’s for Dinner is our way of taking the stress out of cooking and making mealtime fun! Each week at the front of your local Heinen’s, you’ll find all the ingredients needed to create one of our simple and delicious chef-inspired meals. Just follow the easy step-by-step recipe card provided to have dinner ready in a matter of minutes.

What’s For Dinner? Chicken and Andouille Gumbo

What’s For Dinner? Chicken and Andouille Gumbo

Ingredients

  • Heinen's Diced Mixed Bell Peppers
  • Greenridge Naturals Andouille Sausage
  • Heinen's Daily Bites Pulled Chicken
  • Zatarain's Gumbo Mix
  • Tony Chachere's Creole Seasoning

Instructions

  1. Heat a pot over medium heat. When hot, add your favorite oil and sweat the peppers until they begin to soften.
  2. Dice the sausage and add to the peppers. Cook until lightly browned.
  3. Add the gumbo mix and some chicken stock. Season lightly with the Creole seasoning and bring to a simmer. Cover and turn the heat to low.
  4. Cook until the liquid is absorbed and the rice is tender. Garnish with sliced green onions, if desired.

Chicken and Andouille Gumbo in a bowl with a side of saltine crackers.

Heinen's Grocery Store

By Heinen's Grocery Store

In 1929, Joe Heinen opened the doors of a small butcher shop on the east side of Cleveland, Ohio, aiming to establish himself as the city’s purveyor of quality meats. As customers came into Heinen’s new shop for their meat purchases, they began asking him to carry groceries as well. Joe added homemade peanut butter, pickles and donuts and by 1933, business had grown enough to include a line of produce and canned goods. Heinen’s Grocery Store was born.

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