Yeah you right! A spotlight on Creole cooking


hero_creole

Native to New Orleans, Creole-style cooking is the product of a lively blend of cultures that came together in the Big Easy, including French, Spanish, West African, Native American, Italian, Irish and Portuguese. While Creole and Cajun cooking share some similarities (see Did you know? below), Creole dishes include a wider variety of spices, soups and sauces — and tomatoes, which you’ll find in Creole jambalaya, for instance, but never in the Cajun version.

Creole Gumbo

First described in 1802 and popularized by chef Paul Prudhomme in the 1980s, gumbo is a shellfish stew that includes celery, bell peppers, onions, okra, filé powder (ground sassafras leaves) and tomatoes. Sausage or ham is often added. The dish likely derived its name from the Bantu African word for okra (ki ngombo) or the Choctaw native word for filé (kombo). You’ll find a delectable recipe here.

Red Jambalaya

Possibly derived from Spanish paella, Jambalaya originates from the French Quarter and is traditionally made from celery, peppers and onions, chicken or sausage, tomatoes and other vegetables, seafood, rice and stock, boiled, simmered and stirred. In some versions, the mouthwatering mix is baked after cooking. The “red” is a reference to the Creole-only tomatoes. A recipe for Hattie’s Jambalaya can be found here.

Beignet

If you prefer to skip right to dessert — or breakfast — you really can’t go wrong with Creole beignets (unless you insist on counting calories). Introduced in New Orleans by French colonists, beignets, like English fritters, are a deep-fried pastry powdered with confectioners’ sugar. They are Louisiana’s official state donut. Want to make your own?

What’s your preferred Creole dish? Share your tastes and food ideas in the Shop Talk Blog community forum!

 

callout_creole

Did you know: Creole is not Cajun?

While these two cooking styles are often lumped together, they’re quite distinct. Unlike its big city New Orleans cousin, Cajun food is thought of as country food, derived from the Acadians who were exiled from eastern Canada in the 1700s and resettled in Louisiana.

It’s big on the “holy trinity” of onions, celery and bell peppers, as well as and garlic but no tomatoes! (Source)

3 thoughts on “Yeah you right! A spotlight on Creole cooking

  1. I am a VERY GOOD @home cook/chef….induction ONLY and I own 1 of 6 outdoor 365/24 outdoor burn permits way up here in Northern Ontario Canada out of 7500 people! I/we, If you have any, my adult son and I are VERY interested in Creole/Cajun recipes to cook on our 18ft. wide outdoor firepit…if someone there has a few minutes to send us some recipes we would TRULY appreciate it! Oh…and if any of you plan on travelling to Ontario…we live on our VERY OWN private lake….we 3 are musicians/chefs and avid horseshoe throwers….you have my gmail/street address and phone #….we would love some American company. Thank you and take care! Brian/Ryan/Nancy and Otis…the 130 pound adorable Russian lab doggy.

  2. These recipes are not authentic or even good. Cooked from scratch is what makes these foods great. I’m sure there are more authentic recipes out there.

Leave a Reply to Brian Ensoll Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *