food tourism in Nawlins

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Unity

Executive Chef
Joined
Jun 24, 2006
Messages
2,694
Location
Virginia near Washington DC
On the 1st of April, 2009, we -- John and Jody -- set out on our motorcycles for a ride to New Orleans. We had been planning it for months, ever since Roadfood.com members were offered an opportunity to gather in New Orleans for food adventuring. I couldn't think of a better place to sample wonderful food, and Jody had never been there. Now Jody is ready to return, anytime. And so, of course, am I. (Well, not during a hurricane.)

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We stopped for gas at a BP station in Pachuta, Mississippi, on SR 18 just off I-59. Jody noticed there were tables inside, so we decided to get lunch. "How many sides do you get with the blue plate special," I asked. "All of 'em," our server said. Two pieces of chicken, a mound of beans, a mound of potato salad, a mound of brocolli casserole, skillet cornbread or roll, blackberry cobbler, and sweet tea or a coke for $5.29. We ate all we could and left behind enough food for at least one more meal.

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Those are 12" plates.

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We stood in long lines both mornings (it was the weekend, the busiest time) just to have beignets and café au lait at Cafe Du Monde, an essential part of any New Orleans visit.

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Jody enjoying a beignet. Why did we only get two orders, she asked.

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Two food events were being held in the French Quarter that weekend, the Oyster Jubilee and the Roadfood Festival.

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(Courtesy http://www.louisianaroadfoodfestival.com/)
A coalition of New Orleans chefs builds the world's longest oyster po'boy sandwich on Bourbon Street. The sandwich will occupy the blocks-long table. They fix it, and then the people eat it. For free. I don't think there were leftovers.
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(Courtesy http://www.roadfooddigest.com/post/2009/04/Laissez-Les-Bon-Roadfood-Temps-Rouler-Part-7.aspx

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Vendor booths set up along Royal Street for the First Annual Louisiana Roadfood Festival. There were lots more than pictured here.

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I think this was crawfish boudin.

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A member of a wedding party considers catfish.

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I've eaten several times at the Desire Oyster Bar at Bourbon and Bienville, part of the Royal Sonesta Hotel. It's spotless and the food and service are always very good. Doors all along the Bourbon Street side open to let in the sights and sounds of the street.

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The oyster-shucking team at work. The guy on the left did a lot of jiving, too. He's a funny guy.

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The product (already sampled before the camera came out.)

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We have photographic evidence that Jody and I both eat beignets with our right hands, but I eat oysters with the left. We don't know which hand Jody uses for oysters.

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The Creole crawfish jambalaya was very good, but we prefer the brown Cajun style (made starting with a roux, no tomatoes).

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The Central Grocery is an Italian-Creole wonder. We'd have done some serious shopping if we hadn't been on the bikes.

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Why people were in a line stretching down the sidewalk -- muffaletta sandwiches. The olive salad makes them memorable. We split half a sandwich. It was plenty, considering that we'd recently had beignets for breakfast. Add Central Grocery to your mandatory New Orleans food stops.

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Another line at Mother's, a few blocks from the French Quarter. Add Mother's to your food list too.

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This is Mother's debris po'boy, red beans and rice, and bread pudding. Debris is the name for shredded beef. JB tipped me to Central Grocery and Mother's. I ordered what he told me to. Thanks, JB.

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We Roadfood.com members who had signed up (and paid) for the shrimp and crawfish boil boarded the three Roadfood.com buses for our journey into the swamplands of Jefferson Parish.

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They gave us Mardi Gras beads as we boarded, and some of us actually wore them. My beads are purple, green, and gold, the official Mardi Gras colors, signifying, respectively, justice, faith, and power. (Knowing that I wanted exactly those colors, I nearly got into a tussle to get the green ones.)

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Michael and Jane Stern are the force behind Roadfood.com. We had Jane for our guide.

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The first stop was before leaving New Orleans, Hansen's Sno-Bliz, a business that has stayed in the family for 70 years and still uses the original snoball machine that Ernest Hansen invented.

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Our tour's choices.

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John had Satsuma and Jody had Nectar, both with a dollop of condensed milk, which goes on top just before serving.


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We arrived at the Bayou Barn, our hosts for a shrimp and crawfish boil and whole hog barbecue.

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Have some shrimp ...

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... and some jambalaya, your choice of regular or gator.

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Now them's some boilin' pots.

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I wore my Full Boar Barbecue Tour 2007 t-shirt. Nobody asked about it.

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Those mud bugs are good. JB says he likes to get his ready-peeled, that a guy could starve eating them one crawfish at a time. I understand his point, but we were happy doin' 'em one at a time. We ate nearly 4 of these baskets between us.

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The hog ready to come off the fire after about 15 hours.

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Wood. It's for cooking meat.

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Serving up the pig. They had a red honey sauce and a mustard honey sauce and seafood sauce like we had with the shrimp. I ate mine neat. It was very good picked pig, nice and moist and flavorful. A guy in line with me said he'd been waiting for this -- so far all could eat was rice, potatoes, and corn because he's allergic to shellfish. :shock: Actually, I am too, but reasonable amounts of shrimp and crawfish don't bother me. Just don't offer me lobster.

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Meanwhile, lurking a few feet away from the pit ...

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Michael and Jane Stern thank all the crew who help with Roadfood.com and the tour.

There was a little bit more than food to our trip. If you'd like to see some French Quarter ambience, go here.

--John
 
My Lawdy...that was a great pictorial essay of your trip. Makes me want to go find a co-signer buy a Harley and drive down there to see Jole Blon at the Fa do do.

bigwheel
 
John, great report! I could eat the oyster poboy by myself.
Do you go by Unity on roadfood?

I interviewed the Sterns a couple of years ago, nice folks, and
a great job they've got!
 
Great pics John. I am glad you got to go to a genuine crawfish boil. The frozen stuff served at resturants just don't do it once you eat them fresh out the creek.
 
Captain Morgan said:
Do you go by Unity on roadfood?
Yes, I do, Jim, but I just now put up my first post there, the same trip report as here.

I didn't use Roadfood.com much until we were planning our Carolina bbq tour, and I was so grateful for the site steering us to Ridgewood BBQ, I joined as a subscriber ("insider"). New Orleans was our first participation in their annual roadfood tours.

How the heck are they ever going to match New Orleans for a food-tour destination? I've been there at least a half-dozen times for professional meetings (a much-favored place for conventions, for obvious reasons), and it was high time Jody got to join in the delights of the French Quarter.

If you missed the full report, the smugmug gallery (here) is about twice as long as what I posted.

--John
 
Thanks, everyone, for your kind remarks. Yes, we had a wonderful time. We'd go back in a heartbeat, if we could somehow get a big infusion of cash into our bank account. :shock:

--John
 
Well I got a coupla questions for ya. Do folks really put dill pickle slices on Oyster po bos down there in Nawlins? First I ever seen anybody do dat on the one which was a few blocks long. Or could it have been some type of temporary abberation? Notice Unity say he like cajun style Gumbo with a roux mo betta than the creole version. Think I am vice versa..course I eat either one if it free or on sale etc. Which do you prefer Boy?

bigwheel
 
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