Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An evocation of New Orleans, its cuisine and its people, December 11, 2008
Marcel Bienvenu writes the "Cooking Creole" column in the "Times Picayune", and and Judy Walker is the food editor for that publication. They've written other books together, but in a sense this one was written by their readers as they sought to recover from Katrina.
On Oct. 7, 2005, Walker invited her readers to take part in a program they called "Rebuilding New Orleans, Recipe by Recipe." Essentially, the idea was to pair readers who needed a particular recipe with folks who still had theirs. Walker writes that the response was over-whelming. "It became a sort of community project; everybody wanted to help.... It was amazing, so many of the requests were for the same recipe, sometimes the same recipe on the same day."
The book contains 250 of the best recipes, each with a short essay that puts the recipe into a human perspective. Only two of the thousands of requested recipes have not been found; a gumbo recipe from a New Orleans Saints football player and a pasta salad recipe.
Some of the recipes are famous, Jamie Shannon's recipe for Tasso Shrimp with Five-Pepper Jelly; Leslie's mirliton gumbo; and the Roosevelt Hotel's shrimp remoulade, for example.
Others are clearly from home cooks, some handed down from generation to generation; these ten were taken from a file of newspaper clippings: Fair Grounds corned beef; Crabmeat Remick; Johnny Becnel's Daddy's okra gumbo; turkey bone gumbo; Jolene Black's cream biscuits; salt and pepper shrimp; Rosie's sweet potato pies; Brownies to die for; Ursuline Academy anise cookies; and rosemary cookies.
Walker describes the importance of this collection in the following words:
"Here in south Louisiana, we still have an intact food culture, thanks to every one of you who's ever made a roux. Restaurants and home cooks keep the cultural and literal flame burning under the emblematic red beans and rice on Mondays. People make their mama's oyster dressing at Thanksgiving. That's reason No. 1: We have something unique, worth saving.
"And, the region is blessed with many only-in-Louisiana ingredients -- crawfish, hot sausage, cane syrup, andouille, Creole mustard -- this list could go on and on until lunchtime. But there are not a lot of recipes in "Joy of Cooking" for crawfish or cane syrup. So that's another reason: Even when you do find a recipe for stuffed peppers, they're not stuffed with seafood as they are here. So these unique recipes, the lost ones, are specific to south Louisiana."
This is a wonderful book for people like me who have gone to New Orleans just to spend a long week-end enjoying restaurant foods on offer. The recipes and stories capture a wonderful city, its cuisine and its citizens.
Robert C. Ross 2008
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Awesome Collection of Recipes, January 21, 2009
This cookbook is not the most visually stimulating, with no pictures and no color. However, I quickly got over my disappointment with the overall look when I began thumbing through these fun dishes, full of Louisiana flavor and ingredients that are universally appealing. I began to realize that this cookbook was put together just as one would on their own: a collection of recipes that have been passed down through the years between family and friends. I immediately ordered 5 more as gifts.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A great service by the Times-Picayune, March 8, 2009
99% of the houses in my community were flooded when the levees failed during and after Katrina, ALL of our possessions were lost. Cooking in Louisiana is almost a religion, much like politics and football, not having family recipes is a big thing to us. The Times-Picayune( picayune-a small coin) newspaper received many requests for lost recipes, over the years they had run weekly columns with favorite local recipes for everyone to share, they were our only hope in trying to recreate a little bit of home by way of favorite cooking. This printing, in book form, of some of the most requested recipes was a god-send to many in the area. The book is invaluable to the people of southeast Louisiana and the Gulf Coast of Mississippi, giving them the ability to once again create for their families great comfort food. All who like to cook will be glad to have this book on their cookbook shelf.
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