
My first trip to New Orleans was in 1981. I was six years old and had just transplanted from New Jersey to Pensacola, Florida. Pensacola is the older, slightly less promiscuous sister of New Orleans. The history, architecture, music and food are echoes across Interstate 10, bouncing back and forth through Mobile, Biloxi and little towns like Pass Christian, Spanish Fort and Bayou La Batre. As a kid, we played them all in football and the girls dated the boys they met at church camps tucked into the Alabama pine forests.
As a six year old accustomed to the stony establishment of Philadelphia, New York, New Jersey and Washington D.C., New Orleans looked like a foreign country to me. Our family which fanned across the metroplex lived in shabby colonial and federal style houses which looked nothing like the wooden cracker boxes lining the streets of New Orleans. Stepping out of a car or a house in the Deep South is like being hit in the face with a hot, wet towel. Even at six I didn’t understand why the dry, cold north was set in stone and the hot, wet south was dressed in slowly rotting wood.
As the years went by, I spent a lot of time in New Orleans, especially after my father joined a Mardi Gras Krewe. Instead of a sweet 16 party, I was set loose in the city with my boyfriend, long before a cell phone could have helped us. In the 80s, while the rest of the teenagers in America dreamed of running away to Hollywood, several of my friends had already run away to New Orleans. Back then, it was like a giant slumber party with kids crashing wherever they passed out in whatever house could be procured by other kids old enough to sign a lease and get a job in a restaurant or hotel. For me the city was a commune of runaways, vampire wannabes and hangers on.
I may not have had the money to hit the high-end restaurants, but I knew that if you knocked on the door of the broken looking hotel on St. Charles, just past the Dunkin Donuts and Wendy’s, $2 covered you into the “Hotel Warren” where an enterprising underage lady could procure a full Dixie Cup of Jagermeister for the princely sum of an additional $2. Try finding that in your Lonely Planet Guide.
Drinking may have been entertainment, but so equally was the food. Puffy clouds of fried dough called beignets, raw oysters sold out of the back of a pickup truck in Storyville that had newspapers spread across the tailgate and a smattering of oyster knives open for public use, high school field trips to Paul Prudhomme’s cooking school just off Jackson Square, giant hubcap-shaped muffulettas dripping with olives and dressing and the ever-present shrimp.
Shrimp came in plastic bags, Styrofoam coolers, little tin takeout boxes, laundry baskets lined with garbage sacks full of ice and in butcher paper cones sold in the French Market. While you tore off the heads, you could hear the ping-pong echo of the vendors watching little rabbit-eared black and white TVs while the Saints got their hopes up then the roar of thousands wafting on the wind from the Superdome. There were voices in a dozen accents screaming, “WhoDAT?!?” or “NOOOooooo!” My favorite of those paper cones held “Barbeque Shrimp” – shrimp cooked in a tangy, smoky butter sauce with their heads left on. The funny thing about this dish is that it never sees a grill, it just tastes like it does.
New Orleans Barbequed Shrimp
Ingredients
1 pound of butter (4 sticks)
1 Tbsp. Tony Chachere’s Cajun seasoning
1 Tbsp. chopped fresh rosemary
¼ cup Worcestershire sauce
3 ounces of beer
5 cloves of garlic, finely minced or pressed
1 medium onion, finely minced
2 ribs celery, finely minced
2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley
2 tsp. fresh-squeezed lemon juice
2 pounds shrimp, heads and shells left on
Melt a stick of the butter in a skillet. Saute the garlic, onions, celery, parsley, rosemary and seasoning blend for about 2 - 3 minutes. Melt the rest of the butter. Add the beer (drink the rest of it, of course). Add the vegetables, Worcestershire and lemon juice. Pour the butter mixture over your shrimp in a baking dish. Bake in a 350 degree oven until the shrimp turn pink, about 15 minutes. Serve in big bowls with plenty of the butter sauce and some good French bread to soak up the sauce. If you have a coronary, remember you died happy.
There are a lot of negative things that could be said about even pre-Katrina New Orleans. My own father says that when the levees broke it was God trying to flush the toilet. Harsh, but the New Orleans that Emeril Lagasse and John Besh are selling on television is not the reality for most of the residents. The median income for a pre-Katrina New Orleans resident was just over $27,000 in 1999. (Vanderbilt.edu) In 2000, 67.3% of the residents were African-American, yet only 27% of businesses were owned by African-Americans. (U.S. Census)
Years later, you need never to have stepped foot into New Orleans to understand the horror of Katrina. I still can’t think about it and I am ashamed to say I haven’t had the heart to go back yet. I am hoping if I ignore it all long enough that in a few years, when the kids are older, when the money is better, when… when…
Now “when” has gotten much longer. A giant slick of oil is closing in on the destiny the Gulf states share. Shrimping is being shut down. My hometown outside of Pensacola is bracing for the apocalypse. We’re all used to it. The hurricanes come and wipe us off the map every few years. We all know what to grab when we have to decide which objects can define our lives and fit in the trunk in case there’s nothing left when we come home again. This time it’s different though. It’s a long, slow Bataan death march toward the unthinkable. The oil is coming and it’s still leaking.
I have roughly 20 pounds of wild Louisiana shrimp in my freezer. If you have some at your grocery store, you should buy it now. Everything that New Orleans was is now covered for me in a fine patina of pain, grief, loss and soon… oil. Just as we thought things were getting better... You may not know what it means to miss New Orleans, but you’re about to find out what it means to miss shrimp not raised in Asia.
Boycott BP and support alternative energy sources. If it hadn’t been BP, it would have been someone else. Write your congressperson today and demand federal support for alternative energy sources, drilling accountability and for God’s sake, stop listening to that woman who says, “Drill, baby, drill.”

If you enjoyed this article, please visit my website at http://www.eatjax.com/ - where every day is Foodie Tuesday.
All images are free clip art available from cksinfo.com


Salon.com
Comments
~Pat Robertson
The stuff in the sea is more robust than people think. We could be looking at new species of shrimp that are huge. Mega jumbo shrimp.
"The exclusion zone around the Chernobyl nuclear power station is teeming with life. As humans were evacuated from the area 20 years ago, animals moved in. Existing populations multiplied and species not seen for decades, such as the lynx and eagle owl, began to return. There are even tantalising footprints of a bear, an animal that has not trodden this part of Ukraine for centuries. "
Humans have a big environmental footprint. Nature does also.
"Boycott BP and support alternative energy sources. If it hadn’t been BP, it would have been someone else. Write your congressperson today and demand federal support for alternative energy sources, drilling accountability and for God’s sake, stop listening to that woman who says, 'Drill, baby, drill.' "
I'd also like to invite everyone down to Pensacola Beach sometime this summer. Bring some dish soap and a Shamwow. That's where I'll be!
The oil... Ahh Jesus. I am so sick. I am literally tearing up right now; AGAIN. Pat Robertson can smoke a cock.
As far as the recipe, my neighbor Louis in Metairie made something very similar many times. Indescribably delicious, but then again everything Louis made was damned good. Every weekend and many weekdays he'd be outside cooking shrimp, boiling crawfish or crabs... shucking fresh oysters. Redfish and speckled trout. Damn! I would wonder outside acting like I wasn't aware that him and Cynthia were cooking and every single time I did they would yell "you comin' ova ta eat?" to which I would answer YES!
Thanks. I Opened a book by `Diane Wilson.
She wrote`A ay bebop-o
Keep agitating and keep
Raisin Hell!` signed by `
author of`AN UNREASONABLE WOMAN.
`
It's a true story of Shrimpers Politicos Polluters.
Yo'd love her book. I've been thinking of Diane Wilson.
I would love to have the kind of life where I could walk away from oil.
I'm just curious, why boycott BP if it was just a matter of time before one of these deep rigs blew?
Frankly, I'm glad it was a company with enough money to actually spend the couple of billion immediately that it will take to shut in the well and do as much mitigation as possible in the first couple of months.
Every now and then, you have a point.
The subject of BP, the oil spill, etc. is a BIG topic. Jodi wrote a nice piece and threw in a recipe, so....
I will reserve my point of view regarding BP, the oil spill, likely outcome, etc. for my own blog, where I can rant to my hearts content.
And, FWIW, Fuck you too.
Furthermore, if I want to get up in this bitch and scream that BP raped my father and killed my mother, I get to do that too because it's MY beach that's being destroyed. It's MY people who will be losing money, jobs, homes and livelihoods and as an American, it's yours too.
My father is a small business owner that builds custom boat trailers for a living. You want direct impact? Try that. It may be clever to point out the sweet irony that those boats run on petroleum products but your satisfaction won't pay someone to care for my 72 year old Dad. He had to sell his shop after Opal and Ivan so he's been working out of his garage to supplement his Social Security.
If someone dumped a few million barrels of oil in your yard, I'd give you a blank check to be righteously, unapologetically and irrationally pissed too. I'm cool like that.
BE EXCELLENT TO EACH OTHER, DAMMIT!
party on.
Anyone that can us "I'm glad" in any sentence, for any reason, making whatever kind of point they think they are making, when talking about this disaster get's my disdain and disregard. Rant on Nick, at your house. I'm sure it'll be a very popular blog.
Byeeeeeeee!
This is a damn good post.
New Orleans has a great food culture and you evoked some memories for me.
The shrimp recipe sounds great.
Trig was right -- and I agree -- that I should simply do my own post regarding the details of the oil spill.
And if you want, please erase any and all off topic stuff. I believe in deleting stuff if it seems too off topic.
Except your rant against BP was excellent.
As for Nick's comment, well of course we need to lessen demand. You know what we also need? Leadership. People want to help. But they need help to help. There has been no leadership on conservation, higher fuel standards and alternative energy. Give people some real ways to make a difference (or force them to make a difference) and they will make a difference.
I heard something.
a good start to any recipe. I like combining it with my general rule of food: "Cook until it smells like garlic."
That well-crafted sentence about the probable fate of our Gulf Coast states could pretty much describe America's future in light of certain recent Supreme Court decisions.
As for what I think Reverend Pat Robertson and Sarah Palin both need, I cannot say it here on a family-oriented blog.
I spent the evening signing and delivering the agreement to withdraw my listing with our realtor. We've been trying to sell our home and it didn't work out. (Surprise!)
I want to say how much I appreciate all of your comments. This is a deeply emotionally charged subject for many of us and I really love that we can talk about it here with the best interests of the Gulf Coast at heart.
Those of us gathered around the Gulf are holding our breaths waiting for the next blow. I have heard so many people say, "Why don't you just leave?" We can no more leave our homes than anyone else. As someone who just failed to sell a house, I can speak for the logistical as well as the emotional inability to pack up and go when the going gets tough.
I was extremely privileged to grow up on the Gulf Coast and my parents still live in a little town called Gulf Breeze, Florida. (Go Dolphins!) The music, culture, people, history and above all food have made me the person I am. I truly believe that I would not have become a food writer without those formative experiences. I can only hope that it will be around for my children.
Thanks, everyone!
Perhaps on the upside, as Nick briefly mentioned - a new kind of shrimp arises; perhaps it'll be the EZ Flambe Match Light variety.
Jim and I have been going to St. George Island, Florida, for quite a few years now, staying in the same house on the beach, and relishing our short week in one of the most beautiful places I know. I've been to beaches in the Caribbean, but there is something about the Gulf Coast that speaks to me in a way I can hardly even articulate.
Buying a couple pounds of shrimp from Dail's Seafood truck in the late afternoon, boiling them up, cooking up some rice, making a salad, and then sitting on the screened porch while the sun sets, drinking Coronas with lime, feeling that breeze that is like no other, and listening to the surf -- I know that life will never be the same if I can't do that again.
My eyes fill with tears, and my stomach twists up in knots as I type this.
I wish there really was a vengeful God, but not Pat Robertson's. My version would suffocate BP execs in raw crude.
Such sadness about the oil debacle, catastrophe, disaster. Yesterday, driving into work, I listened to the coverage on NPR and just wept while driving, which should be illegal, driving while weeping. I wanted to kill someone, many someones, and then with horror, realized that I was driving my car, my one hour plus commute, burning gasoline. Me, and all of us on Rt. 128 S, killing the shrimps. I can boycott BP, but until I stop driving, my hands are bloody with oil too.
Nobody who's really faithful speaks in so sullying a term of any group of people for any reason whatsoever. I'm reminded of the term, "false prophets."
Love your shrimp recipe. Wish I could eat some--allergic to shellfish! :( ~R~
You only need more money in a hyper-inflated region where housing must be buttressed against roof cave-ins and basements are required so that you can live indoors 7 months of the year.
That's why N'awlins is/was called the Big Easy.
It never fails to amaze me that perfectly intelligent people will move south and rebuild their northern dream-home complete with lawn and statuary where the locals would tell them that Nor'easters wipe that beach clean regularly, and then they howl for a bail-out when it does.
The Seminoles/Creeks rebuilt their naturally air conditioned housing out of light materials so that inevitable rebuilding would be easier.
Or, you can try to build an overly gentrified bulwark against the force of the ocean.
But the recipe sounds great, I'm gonna try it!
Couldn't spell my way out of a paper bag some days......
The BP spill is so damned tragic on so many levels. And so many beautiful ecosystems around the Gulf Coast and beyond. Tar balls are washing up on the beach in Key West. I was planning a dive trip there this fall. Now it may be a rescue mission.
I mourn the shrimp. I mourn the crawfish. I mourn the reef systems and wetlands. Pat Robertson attempting to say what God thinks or feels is at best amusing and at worst infuriating. He wouldn't know Deity if it stomped on his ass. An event that, if there is justice, should be coming forthwith.....
Whether or not this theory turns out to be true (who was it that said never to mistake incompetence for malice?), it makes me crazy to see the latest chapter in the ordeal of the city which was crucial to the development of jazz, and in a more roundabout way, rock.
And, Nick, hydrocarbons are not radiation. Oil makes nothing grow. Apologists who say that nature will bounce back are wrong. When we kill the benthic infauna--the smallest part of the food chain--the entire pyramid collapses.
Unfortunately, I think shrimp are going to be on the grocery shelf with the easy-light charcoal due to the oil spill. Just stick them in a pan and light them with a match - whoosh