The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Louisiana cuisine is more than NOLA

- By Susan Puckett For the AJC Susan Puckett is a cookbook author and former food editor for The Atlanta Journal Constituti­on. Follow her at susanpucke­tt.com.

Don’t waste your time searching for an alligator recipe in the first cookbook from James Beard Award nominee and “Top Chef ” fan favorite Isaac Toups. You won’t find one.

“Chasing the Gator,” Troups explains in his introducti­on, is a metaphor for how he cooks as a “100 percent Cajun, born and braised.” Toups honed his profession­al chops working in high-profile kitchens run by luminaries like Emeril Lagasse.

But the soul of the cooking that defines his two wildly popular New Orleans restaurant­s – Toups’ Meatery and Toups South – can be traced to the swamps and forests of the Atchafalay­a Basin where his ancestors settled some 300 years ago. That’s where he learned to gig frogs, bag mallards and help his daddy make gumbo “so damn good it might make you cry.”

“Chasing the Gator: Isaac Toups and the New Cajun Cooking” by Isaac Toups and Jennifer V. Cole (Little Brown, $35).

It was there, too, that he learned to weave a colorful tale peppered liberally with humor. Former Southern Living editor Jennifer V. Cole brings that distinctiv­e voice to life as she tags along with Toups on a rowdy, rouxthicke­ned journey into the rich and rustic culture from which he came.

Cajuns, we quickly learn, pride themselves on resourcefu­lness, using every edible part of what’s available to them. Toups spares no graphic detail in describing what goes on at a community “boucherie” – the process of taking an animal from “live to eating” that was once beloved part of Cajun community life and is now making a comeback. It begins with a prayer and a pistol.

If you don’t have the stomach to learn the rest, flip on over to the recipes. For the bold and the bloodthirs­ty, there’s Hog’s Head Cheese, Boudin Balls and Sausages, and Trotters and White Beans – a mess of white beans flavored with pigs’ hooves.

For the rest of us, there’s Double-Cut Pork Chops with Cane Syrup Gastrique, and Roasted Vegetables in a Bacon, Sherry, and Mayonnaise Vinaigrett­e.

From the salty prose to the compelling recipes to the stunning photograph­s , “Chasing the Gator” is a riveting reminder that if what you know about Louisiana cuisine is limited to the tourist-packed restaurant­s of New Orleans, you’ve barely scratched the surface.

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