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Origins of Boiled Crawfish?

Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:13 am
Posted by TexasTiger05
Member since Aug 2007
28326 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:13 am
anyone know what region boiled crawfish comes from? Acadiana? New Orleans?

I'll hang up and listen.
Posted by TigerWoody
btwn where I was & where I will be
Member since Dec 2007
11387 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:15 am to
my paw-paw
Posted by TigerWoody
btwn where I was & where I will be
Member since Dec 2007
11387 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:18 am to
Like every other cajun story it all starts with someone named Thibodeaux or Boudreaux.

Not mine but here's one version:

"According to Thibodeaux Comeaux, a rice farmer in Ville Platte, this story is true.

"Few people actually know this, but Crawfish have only been around since 1775. See, it all started when the French living in Acadie, Nova Scotia were expelled from their land by the British. By land and sea they traveled across North America to arrive in South Louisiana. They were then welcomed by the French who already lived there. The Spanish helped out by providing land grants to these "Acadians." Now you may be asking yourself what Crawfish have to do with this story. Actually, they have everything to do with it.

You see, people up in Nova Scotia really liked lobster. So it was only natural that when the Acadians made their move to South Louisiana, they brought their Lobster with them. The problem was that the lobsters lost their appetite along the way and shrunk up quite a bit. Since this smaller lobster didn't really look like a lobster any more, the Acadians, now known as Cajuns, called this small crustacean a Crawfish."
Posted by el tigre
your heart
Member since Sep 2003
49712 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:21 am to
maybe france? do they have crawfish over there? that would be my guess.
Posted by Catman88
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2004
49125 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:22 am to


I was always told that crawfish didnt become really popular until around the great depression. The Fed sent some people down trying to find a source of nutrition for the poor people in rural Louisiana. Thats when they found that the crawfish down here was abundant and full of protein. I would definitly say it originated more in the Bayou towns and the rice towns of acadiana. Its always been more of a rural thing until more recently.
Posted by Catman88
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2004
49125 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:24 am to
Crawfish in indiginous to the area.
Posted by TigerWoody
btwn where I was & where I will be
Member since Dec 2007
11387 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:35 am to
quote:

maybe france? do they have crawfish over there?


They have them but they don't consume them like us. They consider them bait...at least that is what my ex-mother-in-law, who is from Bordeaux, told me.
Posted by Catman88
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2004
49125 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:36 am to
Supposedly Louisiana produces 90% of the worlds crawfish supply and consumes 70% of it..

Of course the source is Wiki..
Posted by Cutty713
Member since Nov 2008
1122 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:37 am to

quote:

Catman88


What he said. It started in Acadiana. Since they are actually "farmed" (meaning you seed the fields and then after they grow you harvest them) it is very much so a rural thing as it takes a good bit to land to do.
Posted by Catman88
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2004
49125 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:46 am to
Well that was what my grandma told me anyway from growing up during the great depression in Crowley which Acadia Parish probably produces the majority of the farm raised crawfish from all the rice fields.
Posted by TigerSpy
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2006
9961 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:48 am to
quote:

They have them but they don't consume them like us. They consider them bait...at least that is what my ex-mother-in-law, who is from Bordeaux, told me.


That's not true. Ecrevisses have always been consumed in France. Veal Marengo, a French dish that dates to Napoleon, is classically garnished with crawfish.
Posted by el tigre
your heart
Member since Sep 2003
49712 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:48 am to
quote:

They have them but they don't consume them like us. They consider them bait...at least that is what my ex-mother-in-law, who is from Bordeaux, told me.


that's what my godmother in Amsterdam told me as well. I just figured if it existed the French tried to eat it at some point.
Posted by Catman88
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2004
49125 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:50 am to
crawfish exist all over the world with different names.. just not as widely consumed as it is in Louisiana.
Posted by Crawdaddy
Slidell. The jewel of Louisiana
Member since Sep 2006
19094 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:57 am to

Lobster was once the poor mans food. Now it's weeks pay at some places. Go figure
Posted by AreJay
Member since Aug 2005
4186 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 11:58 am to
quote:

do they have crawfish over there


I've got several french cookbooks with crawfish recipes
Posted by JustSmokin
Member since Sep 2007
9162 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 12:00 pm to
quote:

It started in Acadiana. Since they are actually "farmed" (meaning you seed the fields and then after they grow you harvest them)

It actually started with wild crawfish in the basin and swamps of Louisiana during the late 1800s. Crawfish ponds didn't really happen until the 60s. Before that, it was only wild crawfish.

They do have different species of crawfish all over the world, though.


Posted by Catman88
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Dec 2004
49125 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 2:09 pm to
This is a VERY good read for the history

LINK
Posted by LSUTygerFan
Homerun Village
Member since Jun 2008
33232 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 2:25 pm to
quote:

anyone know what region boiled crawfish comes from


I always wondered about the first person to decide those ugly friggin bugs would be good to eat. That and the first person to eat a raw oyster.
Posted by BigAppleTiger
New York City
Member since Dec 2008
10905 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 5:34 pm to
The French have used Crawfish for many years, just not with the popularity in Louisiana. The only other place that really has a culinary love of Crawfish to rival Louisiana's is believe it or not... Sweden. They love them. Have Swedish friends and was surprised to hear of it.
Posted by Geaux1
BR
Member since Oct 2008
1806 posts
Posted on 2/6/09 at 5:41 pm to
As much as I love crawfish, the first person to ever cook such a crazy looking think must have been really hungy.
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