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Beginner-friendly cajunandouilleblackenedsausage

Blackened Andouille off the Cypress Smoke

Louisiana's holy sausage meets fire and faith — blackened bark, smoke-kissed soul, no apologies.

Reverend Smoke
Reverend Smoke
@reverendsmoke · Parish Priest of the Pit
Illustration for Blackened Andouille off the Cypress Smoke
Fuel

Pecan burns sweet and nutty — it flatters pork without fighting the spice — and if you can find cypress, it carries the soul of the bayou right into the smoke ring.

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Ingredients

Serves 6

  • andouille sausage links
    3 lbs
    whole links, unsliced — do not touch that casing yet
  • unsalted butter
    4 tbsp
    melted, for the blackening baste
  • smoked paprika
    2 tbsp
    the backbone of the blackening rub
  • garlic powder
    1 tbsp
  • onion powder
    1 tbsp
  • dried thyme
    1 tsp
  • dried oregano
    1 tsp
  • cayenne pepper
    1 tsp
    medium heat — add another half if you are brave and right with God
  • black pepper
    1 tsp
    coarse ground, not that powder from a shaker
  • white pepper
    ½ tsp
    the holy trinity of pepper starts here
  • neutral oil
    1 tbsp
    to bind the rub to the casing before smoke
  • yellow onion
    1 large
    sliced into planks, for the serving platter — the holy trinity begins its welcome
  • celery stalks
    3
    sliced on a bias, served alongside
  • green bell pepper
    1
    sliced thin — the trinity completes itself on the plate

Blackening is not burning, cher. There is a difference, and the parish knows it. You are building a crust — dark, spiced, alive — on the outside of andouille sausage that has already been baptized in smoke. The smoke runs first, low and slow, so the fat renders gentle and the casing tightens like a drumhead. Then you finish her over direct heat, rolling her through the fire until that blackened coat sets hard and fragrant and just shy of fearsome. That is the moment.

Method

  1. 0h
    Build the Rub

    Combine the smoked paprika, garlic powder, onion powder, thyme, oregano, cayenne, black pepper, white pepper, and salt in a bowl. Mix it honest and thorough — this is the blackening covenant, brothers and sisters, and every grain matters. Taste it dry with your fingertip. You should feel the heat build slow, not slap you.

  2. 0h
    Coat the Sausage

    Brush each andouille link all over with neutral oil — just enough so the rub has something to hold onto. Press the blackening rub into every surface, every seam, every curve of that casing. Do not be shy. Set the links on a wire rack and let them sit at room temperature while your smoker comes up. We ask the pig to forgive us, and the pig nods.

  3. 0h
    Fire the Smoker

    Get your smoker to 225°F with pecan wood producing thin blue smoke — not white billowing clouds, cher, blue smoke. White smoke is bitterness and regret. Wait for the fire to settle into its purpose before you open that lid.

  4. 0h
    Run the Smoke

    Lay the andouille links on the grate with space between each one — they need to breathe. Smoke at 225°F for 1.5 to 2 hours, until your probe reads 155°F internal. Do not rush. Do not open the lid every fifteen minutes looking for reassurance. The smoke is doing its ministry. Trust it. Amen.

  5. 1.75h
    Build the Blackening Baste

    While the sausage finishes its smoke, melt the butter in a small pan or cast iron — blessed iron, once it has seen your fire — and keep it warm. You will brush this over the links before and during the finish fire. This is what turns the rub into bark.

  6. 2h
    Finish Over Direct Fire

    Pull the sausage at 155°F and move it directly over high heat — grill grates, or open the firebox door and let that live flame do the work. Brush generously with melted butter and roll the links every 60 to 90 seconds. You are chasing char, not carbon. When the crust is dark as midnight and set hard, pull them at 160°F internal. The fat inside is rendered silk and the outside is built like a revival.

  7. 2.25h
    Rest and Serve

    Let the links rest 5 minutes — do not skip this, the juices are still settling their business. Slice on the bias into thick coins and fan them across a platter laid with the raw onion planks, celery, and bell pepper. The holy trinity receives them. Serve with dirty rice, crusty French bread, or nothing at all except your hands and a cold beer. This is Louisiana. Go now in smoke and peace.

Pit Master picks

Get what we use

Direct links to the rubs, oils, and gear used in this recipe. As an Amazon Associate The Turkey Leg earns from qualifying purchases.

  • Heath Riles
    Pitmaster Blend

    All-purpose blackening seasoning. Chicken, beef, pork — anything but fish.

    sweet + spicy
    Get it on Amazon
  • Diamond Crystal
    Kosher Salt (3 lb)

    The chef-school kosher salt. Big light flakes that adhere to meat, dissolve evenly. Don't substitute Morton 1:1 — Diamond Crystal is half as salty by volume.

    Get it on Amazon
  • ThermoPro
    Bluetooth Wireless Meat Thermometer (Rechargeable)

    Wireless probe, rechargeable, alerts your phone when target temp hits. The tool that turns 'I hope it's done' into 'I know it's done.'

    Get it on Amazon

The Turkey Leg is reader-supported. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases made through the product links on this site. Some recipes are drafted by AI-character voices (the Reverend, Hatch, Mae Mae) and curated by the Pit Master. No ads. No email walls. Ever.