Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Nicholas Neveu "Ragin Cajun"

“Seafood Gumbo”

I was snuggled up in blankets, too cold to wake up, until a familiar scent lingered into the room. As soon as I realized what it was, a shock of excitement electrocuted my body. Momma’s Seafood Gumbo. Ever since I was a child in Louisiana, I always loved waking up to the strong smell of my family’s own gumbo.


Seafood gumbo has been in my family as far back as I can trace it. Gumbo originated in Louisiana and can be found in the southern United States up through the Carolinas. It is a stew or soup that is very rich and dark with many variations. My favorite thing about gumbo is that there are never two just alike dishes no matter how many times you eat it. Inside this truly Louisiana dish, there are many options for the meat or main filler. My favorite being the seafood style but I also enjoy chicken, sausage, and smoked pork. Next goes in the holy trinity to Cajuns, bell pepper, celery, and onion. When it comes to the sauce, my family is strictly Cajun and therefore never uses tomatoes like classic Creole cooking but instead a dark roux. After cooked all day, you drown rice with the wonderful concoction and prepare for a feast. This can be a meal entirely by itself but nothing taste better than a side of potato salad. Another side dish popular in New Orleans is French bread for dipping or sweet potatoes. When walking through New Orleans it is very apparent that Gumbo has the ability to grab anyone by the nostrils and lead them to the dish and in my case to the kitchen.


When the smell makes me finally realize it is Gumbo day, the anticipation of eating the dish lingers throughout the whole house until finally lunch time arrives. My mother’s sacrifice of waking up at six will soon be worth every second of sleep missed. I enjoy my seafood gumbo slow at first, or at least I try. I like to take a bite of rice and try to get pieces of each sea creature on my spoon. I soon find it impossible with the shrimp, crawfish, crab, oysters, and bits of lobster not willing to all be stacked at once. I settle with the jumbo shrimp. After a few more mind blowing bites its time to try the potato salad. One bite scooped on the spoon and dunked into the dark, soupy mixture then engulfed. This is where the adventure begins. Praying that when you dunk, you have a seabit stuck to the side of the potato salad. My luck prevails this time!


To me, seafood gumbo is the one true meal for my family and its legacy. Perfected over many generations of Neveus, it is now a masterpiece that can be passed down without further correction. Whenever I eat it, I dream about Louisiana and all of the regional activities and sports found in the swamps. Every Cajun member of my family loves the outdoors and is addicted to golfing and fishing. If I close my eyes when taking a big bite I am immediately transported to my grandpa’s fishing boat or my uncle’s golf cart at the Abbeville Country Club. My 84 year old great grandma has many stories of gumbo in her past. She always tells her grandkids of her and her father going to “da crawfish pand” to get her seafood the freshest way they knew how, by hand. One tradition still rich in Cajun parts of Louisiana is the famous gumbo party. A gumbo party is when all your friends get together with a different style of gumbo cooked and ready for each person to participate and judge the entries. Usually these parties are during big events such as a football game or around mardi gras. Whenever thrown, they are always a great time for family and friends to get together and enjoy terrific food. One of these parties particularly sticks out in my mind. My grandpa and I went fishing the day before the sacred event and we caught over twenty trout. The next day I helped him prepare our rendition of the classic seafood gumbo before the party. After all the judging from our friends and family it was clear that we were the champions. When my grandpa heard the news he announced to everyone “Shoot, Nick caught all the fish, all I did was make the sauce!”
Like the trout and other seafood cooked together in the gumbo, the French and Cajun cultures were assimilated together into the United States of America, mainly in Louisiana. Each seafood represents a different culture all cooked together to create one delicious product, the United States. When my distant ancestors came to the U.S. we had tradition, pride, and a different last name. A fellow Cajun priest changed the name of my great, great grandfather from Neveaux to Neveu. Gumbo can also be related to this by the changing of its ingredients over time to better suit the county and area it is eaten in.


When I go to a restaurant and see GUMBO on the menu I first hesitate before ordering. I know that even though it will be wonderful, it will not be as delicious as my family’s. I have had other variations that taste almost as dark and rich as my mothers but lack the authenticity. You may have too little or too much rice that can kill the mood of the gumbo or just not enough spice. Although some may seem displeasing, I almost always order the crazy combinations. Alligator, rabbit, and duck with oysters are only some of the few you can find in New Orleans that will surely make you leave with a crooked smile on your face.


In conclusion, gumbo is my heritage, youth, and absolute favorite thing to eat. It is a truly changing and developing dish cooked in the bayou and brought to the U.S. kitchens. When it gets cold again I can go to sleep anxious and snuggled in blankets hoping that in the morning I will be awaken by the powerful, always delightful scent of seafood gumbo.

7 comments:

tippstein said...

I was just in New Orleans this weekend--essentially on an eating frenzy. Ever had the rabbit jambalaya at Coops? It's amazing.

kylie said...

I love seafood too, crawfish being my favorite!

Reid Morton said...

My parents used to live in Lake Charles they are always cooking Cajun food, BBQ shrimp is always worth the mess.

ljcaldwell said...

haha, i don't miss madison either!

Marian said...

Your paper was overall really good!! Your descriptions were very well written! I loved your creativity & how you described the smells and feelings. When reading it, I felt like the gumbo was right in front of me. You really connected with the reader!I also like how you really went into detail about making the gumbo and eating it. The way that you described the "creatures" on your spoon was interesting! But, when including the potato salad, maybe you should have said a little more about how it relates to you and the gumbo. It in someway comes out of nowhere. But, I like it! Also, you didn't talk much about the french bread! I know the paper was suppose to be about one food, but I was interested in knowing more about the bread :) Your introduction was awesome, but you could maybe add a little more to it! The beginning of it really catches your eye, I think you could do that with the rest of it! Also, you jumped from one subject to the next in one part. You went from your grandpa to the gumbo party to your grandma. You could probably introduce that a little better. But, your paper was very well written and I enjoyed reading it!!!

jlford said...

This is a very good paper and it is hard to really find anything that you have done wrong with it. But there are some things that I think could help improve it more. First of all you are lucky to come from one of the most culturally rich regions of our country, especially in regard to food. Your essay kind of reminds me of one of those zaxby’s commercials where they say you’ve put a lot of thought into eating it. Your description is great and I can see how your culture and heritage are reflected by the food you like. The only thing that I think could use some improvement would be your writing style. While the content is all very good and rich with adjectives and descriptions, your sentence structure is relatively the same throughout the essay. You speak in a kind of airy manner and sometimes your language does not convey what I know you are trying to say. While this kind of language can be used successfully, it can become a little taxing when reading an essay on a topic as vague as this one. You might want to try to make your sentences a little more contradictory in language, but not in thought process. Also I would say for this essay you might want to use a more light hearted, less serious, and almost even sarcastic tone. Adding some humor to the piece would also help.

Also Nick, could you do me a favor and write a comment on my essay telling me the other papers we are supposed to comment on in our group. I'm not going to be in class tomorrrow and have no other way of finding out. Thanks, James Ford

Ben Stallworth said...

It’s hard to go wrong with a paper about gumbo. I’m a huge fan. Over all your paper was very good. You put a great deal of thought into descriptions and details when it comes to the gumbo itself all the way to how it’s made. I like how you described your family’s gumbo in a time-line type of fashion: you told it when you were young as you got older. That helps the reader understand what’s going on better and makes the essay clear and understandable. The introduction is very luring. There are few grammatical errors, and there is a lot of detail written clearly and organized, which all lead to a good paper.