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The Origin of Crawfish Etouffee
Posted on 9/13/09 at 2:52 pm
Posted on 9/13/09 at 2:52 pm
I never heard this before and found it interesting on the origin of Crawfish Etouffee:
LINK
quote:
. . . this Acadian style of cooking found its way into Creole cuisine. The Picayune Creole Cook Book, published in 1901 and the most authoritative reference on traditional Creole cuisine, includes recipes for a few Acadian dishes - pork sausages, red and white boudins, andouille and several recipes for crawfish. Crawfish étouffée does not appear in the cookbook because it wasn't created until the 1920s in Breaux Bridge, now known as the Crawfish Capital of the World.
In Breaux Bridge's Hebert Hotel, Mrs. Charles Hebert and her two daughters, Yolie and Marie, made the first crawfish étouffée by cooking the tails in a lidded pot with crawfish fat and smothered down with onions and pepper. The Heberts passed on the recipe to their friend Aline Guidry Champagne, who opened the Rendez-Vous Cafe in Breaux Bridge in 1947 and introduced the dish to her customers.
LINK
Posted on 9/13/09 at 4:29 pm to Stadium Rat
good find
Posted on 9/13/09 at 5:38 pm to Stadium Rat
also before the depression.. crawfish were not widely eaten in LA....
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