In Southwest Louisiana, gumbo is a staple that’s cooked in
big cast iron pots and stirred with large wood spoons – or boat oars, depending
on how many people are being fed.
Variations of the roux-based soup include chicken and smoked sausage,
shrimp and okra, wild duck and smoked sausage, even rabbit or seafood gumbo
with shrimp, crab and oysters.
Gumbo is eaten year round in Southwest Louisiana, but home
and professional cooks enjoy it most during the cool months of fall and
winter. It’s gumbo season, y’all!
Everyone makes their gumbo differently and the origin of “gumbo”
is a melting pot, as well. The Southern
Foodways Alliance put together a great oral history of the Southern Gumbo
Trail that even interviews David Papania from Seafood
Palace.
One of the best attended cook-offs in Southwest Louisiana is
the “World Famous Cajun
Extravaganza/Gumbo Cook-off” that occurs the Saturday prior to Mardi Gras
at the Lake Charles Civic Center. With over 50 teams competing, there are
professional and amateur categories for Wild Game, Chicken and Sausage, and
Seafood Gumbos. For $5, you can taste from
event pot!
Learn how to make your own traditional chicken and sausage
gumbo from Chef Scott Landry from Lake
Charles, La.
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