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Sausage Rice Recipe is the kind of one skillet Cajun comfort dinner that turns leftover rice into a deeply savory main dish, and Lizzie still asks for seconds every time it hits the table even though she swears she does not like spicy food. If you have ever loved our chicken sausage and shrimp gumbo, this is the same Louisiana style flavor without the long simmer time.

One dark roux, one pound of pork sausage, and pantry spices turn cooked rice into a 30 minute dinner that tastes like it simmered all afternoon.
Sausage Rice Recipe Quick Look
- 🕐 Prep Time: 5 minutes
- 🍴 Cook Time: 25 minutes
- ⏳ Total Time: 30 minutes
- 🍽 Serving: 6 servings
- ⚡ Calories: 440kcal
- 🌶 Flavor Profile: Savory, smoky, deeply seasoned (with mild Cajun warmth)
- ✋ Difficulty: Beginner friendly, on par with our easy smoked kielbasa sausage recipe
Quick Answer
Start by making a roux: whisk flour and unsalted butter in a small skillet over medium heat until the mixture turns medium to dark brown, about 5 minutes. Set aside. In a Dutch oven, sear ground pork sausage with cumin, pepper, and paprika over medium heat, breaking into crumbles. Deglaze with half a cup of chicken stock, then stir in garlic until fragrant. Add the roux, stir to combine, then simmer uncovered 10 minutes adding the remaining stock slowly so it does not dry out. Fold in cooked white rice, warm through, and garnish with scallions. One skillet, 30 minutes, true Cajun comfort dinner.
Jump to:
- Sausage Rice Recipe Quick Look
- Quick Answer
- Why This Recipe Works
- Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Key Ingredients
- Variations and Substitutions
- How to Make Sausage Rice Recipe
- Recipe Tips & Tricks
- Serving Ideas and Suggestions
- Sausage Rice Recipe FAQs
- Other Recommended Easy Sausage and Cajun Recipes
- Easy Sausage Rice Recipe (Cajun Dirty Rice)
Why This Recipe Works
Click to see the technique science
- Dark roux, not light. A light blonde roux just thickens. A medium to dark brown roux adds the nutty toasted flavor that defines Cajun cooking. Five minutes of whisking on medium heat is what unlocks the trinity-base flavor that separates dirty rice from regular sausage and rice.
- Sausage fat is the flavor foundation. Traditional dirty rice uses chicken livers and gizzards for the “dirty” color and deep savory flavor. This version skips the offal entirely and uses ground pork sausage instead. When you brown the sausage first, it renders fat into the pan, and that fat becomes the cooking medium for everything that follows. The onion, celery, and bell pepper saute in sausage drippings instead of plain oil, which means every vegetable in the pan picks up the savory, slightly spicy flavor of the sausage. By the time the rice goes in, the entire liquid base is seasoned from the ground up.
- No chicken livers, no problem. The most common question people have when researching dirty rice is whether they need to use chicken livers. Traditional dirty rice gets its name from the finely chopped organ meats that give the rice its brown, “dirty” appearance. But liver is a dealbreaker for a lot of home cooks, and that hesitation is exactly why this version exists. Ground pork sausage gives the rice the same savory depth and brown color without the taste or texture of organ meat. If you have been avoiding dirty rice because of the liver, this is the recipe that finally lets you make it.
- Deglaze with stock, scrape the brown. Those caramelized brown bits stuck to the pan after searing ARE the dirty in dirty rice. Pouring in stock and scraping with a wooden spoon lifts all that flavor into the sauce. Skip this step and the rice tastes flat.
- Add roux AFTER deglazing. Adding the roux too early gums up the deglaze and prevents the brown bits from lifting. Wait until the pan is clean and the stock is in, then stir the roux in for the smooth thickened sauce that coats the rice evenly.
- Leftover rice works best. Day-old refrigerated rice has lost surface moisture, so it absorbs the sauce instead of going mushy. Freshly cooked hot rice releases steam that thins the sauce and turns dirty rice into wet rice. Leftover is the move.
- The rice cooks in the broth, not separately. A lot of dirty rice recipes have you cook the rice separately and then mix it into the meat and vegetable mixture at the end. That works, but you lose the best part: the rice absorbing the broth and sausage drippings as it cooks. In this recipe, the rice goes directly into the skillet with the chicken broth. As the rice simmers, it soaks up the seasoned liquid and the sausage fat, so every grain is flavored all the way through. Separately cooked rice just sits on top of the flavor. This method puts the flavor inside the grain.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
- Done in 30 minutes flat. Make the roux while the sausage browns, deglaze the pan, fold in the rice, and dinner is on the plate. Faster than a takeout pickup, and ten times more comforting.
- Leftover rice is a feature, not a bug. The recipe is designed around cooked rice from the night before. Day old rice actually grips the dark roux sauce better than fresh fluffy rice.
- Mild but with backbone. Cumin, paprika, and pepper bring real Cajun depth without making it spicy. Kid friendly out of the box and easy to crank up with hot sausage or cayenne when the grown ups are eating. Pair with our Southern collard greens for a full Louisiana plate.
Key Ingredients

- Ground Pork Sausage: The savory backbone. Use Jimmy Dean Original or Premio sweet Italian for a mild family friendly version, or swap in hot Italian or andouille for more kick. Avoid pre cooked sausage — you need the rendered fat for the flavor base.
- Butter and Flour Roux: The Cajun flavor secret. Cooking flour and butter together until medium dark brown adds nutty depth and gives the sauce body that coats every grain of rice. Do not skip and do not undercook the roux.
- Chicken Stock: Better than water. Adds savory depth and helps lift the browned sausage bits off the pan. Low sodium gives you control over the final salt level.
- Cooked White Rice: Day old leftover rice is ideal. The slightly dried grains absorb the sauce without turning mushy. Long grain white rice has the best texture, but jasmine or basmati work too.
- Cumin, Paprika, Pepper, Garlic: The Cajun seasoning quartet. These four together give that warm earthy backbone without overwhelming heat. Smoked paprika is a nice upgrade if you have it.
See recipe card for exact quantities.
Variations and Substitutions
- Andouille spice swap: Replace the ground pork sausage with sliced andouille for the authentic Louisiana Cajun version. Pairs beautifully with our chicken and shrimp gumbo for a full Cajun spread.
- Add the Cajun holy trinity: Saute 1/2 cup each of diced onion, celery, and bell pepper before adding the sausage for traditional Cajun depth. Adds 5 minutes and a whole lot of flavor.
- Spicy upgrade: Use hot Italian sausage and add 1/4 teaspoon of cayenne with the other spices. For maximum heat, finish with a few dashes of Crystal hot sauce or Tabasco at the table.
- Brown rice swap: Use cooked brown rice for a heartier nuttier base. The deep roux flavor stands up nicely to brown rice without getting lost.
- Cheesy comfort version: Stir in 1/2 cup of shredded sharp cheddar at the very end for a creamy comfort food twist. Goes great with our cheesy meatloaf for a Southern comfort dinner.
How to Make Sausage Rice Recipe

- Start the roux: place the flour and butter into a small skillet over medium heat and whisk together.

- Continue whisking for about 5 minutes until the roux turns medium to dark brown. Set aside off the heat.

- In a Dutch oven or thick bottomed skillet over medium heat, add the sausage, cumin, pepper, and paprika. Brown hard, breaking the sausage into crumbles. Some bits will stick to the bottom of the pan.

- Deglaze the pan with 1/2 cup of the chicken stock, scraping the browned bits off the bottom with a wooden spoon.

- Add the minced garlic and stir until fragrant, about 1 minute.

- Add the prepared roux to the pan and stir to combine evenly with the sausage and spices.

- Cook uncovered for 10 minutes, slowly adding the remaining stock so the mixture does not dry out. Stir occasionally.

- Add the cooked rice, stir to combine, and warm through. Serve with scallion garnish if desired.
Recipe Tips & Tricks
- Use day old rice for the best texture. Freshly cooked rice releases too much starch and turns gummy. Cook your rice the day before or pull leftover takeout rice out of the fridge.
- Take the roux to dark brown. The depth of flavor lives here. Aim for the color of milk chocolate or peanut butter. If it smells nutty and toasty you nailed it.
- Brown the sausage hard. Do not stir constantly. Let the sausage sit and sear so it gets those dark crispy bits that flavor the whole dish. Crumble after the first crust forms.
- Deglaze every brown bit. Those fond pieces on the bottom of the pan are pure flavor. Scrape them all up when you pour in the stock or you are wasting the best part.
- Store leftovers in the fridge for 4 days. Reheat in a skillet with a splash of water or stock to loosen the rice. Avoid the microwave — it dries out the dish.
- Freeze in portions for fast weeknight dinners. Cool completely, portion into freezer bags, and freeze flat. Thaws in 10 minutes and reheats in a skillet in 5. Pair with our easy brined pork chops for a Sunday make ahead meal plan.
Serving Ideas and Suggestions
Sausage Rice Recipe works as a complete one bowl dinner or as a hearty side. As a main, plate a big scoop with our Southern collard greens on the side for the full Louisiana style plate. The bitter greens cut through the rich sausage flavor perfectly.
For a Cajun seafood night, serve it next to a small portion of our New Orleans BBQ shrimp or simple blackened catfish. The shared seasoning profile makes the whole table feel intentional.
Want something lighter alongside? A cold cucumber tomato salad or our Chili’s copycat Cajun pasta for a Cajun comfort dinner duo both balance the rich rice beautifully.

Sausage Rice Recipe FAQs
Sausage Rice Recipe is a Cajun and Creole style dish from Louisiana made by simmering cooked white rice with seasoned ground meat (traditionally chicken livers and giblets, but ground pork sausage in this version) in a dark roux based sauce. The dish gets its name from the brown color the rice picks up from the meat and roux.
This Sausage Rice Recipe recipe is mild and kid friendly out of the box. The cumin, paprika, and pepper give warm Cajun depth without heat. For a spicier version, use hot Italian sausage or andouille, or add 1/4 teaspoon of cayenne with the other spices.
No. Traditional dirty rice uses chicken livers and gizzards, which give the rice its brown “dirty” appearance and deep savory flavor. But livers are a dealbreaker for a lot of home cooks. This recipe uses ground pork sausage instead, which gives the same savory depth and brown color without the taste or texture of organ meat. If liver is not your thing, this is the dirty rice recipe for you.
You can use freshly cooked rice for Sausage Rice Recipe, but day old leftover rice gives the best texture. Fresh rice releases more starch and tends to clump, while slightly dried day old grains absorb the dark roux sauce without turning mushy.
Sausage Rice Recipe stays good in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days. Reheat in a skillet over medium heat with a splash of water or stock to loosen the rice. Avoid the microwave — it dries out the dish and makes the sausage rubbery.
Yes, Sausage Rice Recipe freezes great. Cool it completely first, then portion into freezer bags or containers and freeze flat for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge or use the defrost cycle on the microwave, then reheat in a skillet.
Ground pork sausage like Jimmy Dean Original or sweet Italian gives the best classic flavor for Sausage Rice Recipe. For a more authentic Louisiana version, swap in sliced andouille sausage. Hot Italian or chorizo work too if you want extra spice.
Very easy. It is a one-skillet meal with no tricky techniques. Brown the sausage, add the vegetables, add the rice and broth, cover, and wait. The hardest part is resisting the urge to lift the lid while the rice simmers. Maddie makes this as a weeknight dinner and it comes out perfect every time.
Yes. Brown the sausage using the saute function, add the vegetables and spices, then add rice and broth. Cook on high pressure for 8 minutes with a 10-minute natural release. The result is slightly stickier than the skillet version but the flavor is the same and it is completely hands-off once you seal the lid.
Both are Louisiana rice dishes but they are built differently. Dirty rice uses ground meat (traditionally organ meats, here sausage) cooked with rice in broth. Jambalaya uses chunks of meat (sausage, chicken, shrimp) cooked with rice in a tomato-based broth. Dirty rice is simpler, faster, and has a more subtle, earthy flavor. Jambalaya is a bigger production with more proteins and bolder seasoning.
Other Recommended Easy Sausage and Cajun Recipes
If you tried this Sausage Rice Recipe, please leave a ⭐ rating below and drop a comment with what sausage you used or how you spiced it up. Your reviews help other home cooks decide what to make next, and we love hearing how you put your own spin on it!
Pair this Cajun side with our Crispy Fried Chicken Without Buttermilk (Southern Style) for a Southern weeknight dinner that hits every note.
Round out a hearty party menu with our Easy Crockpot Hot Dogs Recipe hands-off in the slow cooker so you can focus the stovetop on this dirty rice.
Easy Sausage Rice Recipe (Cajun Dirty Rice)
Ingredients
- 4 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 2 tablespoons flour
- 1 pound ground pork sausage
- 1 teaspoon ground cumin
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 teaspoon paprika
- 3/4 cup chicken stock divided
- 3 cloves garlic minced
- 3 cups cooked white rice
- 2 scallions thinly sliced for garnish, optional
Instructions
- Start by making the roux, place the flour and the butter into a small skillet over medium heat and whisk together.2 tablespoons flour, 4 tablespoons unsalted butter

- Continue to whisk until the mixture turns medium to dark brown, about 5 minutes. Set aside off the heat.

- Place a Dutch oven or thick-bottomed large skillet over medium heat. Once hot, add the sausage, cumin, pepper, and paprika. Sear the sausage hard, mixing it with the spices and letting it brown, while breaking it up into crumbles. Bits will stick to the bottom of the pan.1 pound ground pork sausage, 1 teaspoon ground cumin, 1/2 teaspoon black pepper, 1 teaspoon paprika

- Deglaze the pan with 1/2 cup of the stock, scraping off all the browned bits on the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon.3/4 cup chicken stock

- Add the garlic and mix in until fragrant, about 1 minute.3 cloves garlic

- Add the roux and stir to combine.

- Cook uncovered for 10 minutes, adding in the rest of the stock slowly so the mixture doesn’t completely dry out. Stir occasionally.

- Add the rice, stir to combine everything and warm the rice. Serve with scallion garnish, optional.3 cups cooked white rice, 2 scallions

Video
Notes
- Leftover rice is perfect for this recipe.
- We like ground pork sausage for this but hamburger or another sausage can be used.
- Double this recipe if you want to serve a large gathering.
- This can be frozen, see my tips above.
- You can make this as spicy or less spicy as you’d like, see my tips above.
Nutrition
Love This Recipe?
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1/4 – 1/2 teaspoon
How many teaspoons or tablespoons is “5 cracks fresh black pepper,” please? Thanks!
The whole family loved, even the picky teenager! Didn’t change a thing but skipped the scallions (didn’t have any). Will definitely be adding this to the regular menu rotation!
yes, any sausage you like will work
Can you use a sweet seasoned ground sausage ?
This was simple and tasted fantastic. I had all ingredients in hand. Thank you for a fantastic meal.
I’ve made this as described and it’s very good and quick! A couple of variations to change it up a bit –
1. Try another form of sausage like Cajun Style Andouille or another spicy link sausage.
2. Use Smoked Paprika instead of regular Paprika. You’ll really notice a difference!
3. I always keep Bacon grease when we cook Bacon. Substitute for the butter to make the Roux and you’ll get a great flavor! You can do this with Sausage grease too.
These are just variation ideas with absolutely nothing against the original recipe posted. It’s great as it is!
My family LOVES it!
This was WONDERFUL!! I paired it with a plain arugula salad drizzled with olive oil and lemon juice. Thanks for sharing this recipe.
Pretty Tasty!! I will definitely make this again.
came out fabulous will be making it again I added diced onions and diced celery before adding the rue
This dish was DE-licious!!! Excellent flavors. My family loved it. I used mild Italian sausage.
Perfect recipe! Easy and yummy. We all enjoyed – even the kiddos (5, 3, 1).
Great recipe
Hi John! I’m so glad you liked the dirty rice! I do not specialize in gluten-free recipes so I’d hate to steer you in the wrong direction. I do know Brianne from Cupcakes and Kale Chips offers a lot of gluten-free options, I suggest checking out her amazing blog here: https://cupcakesandkalechips.com/