For a tasty twist on a Louisiana classic, try cookbook author Yvette Jemison’s Thai speckled trout!
“When I married my husband, his mother and grandmother made sure I knew how to cook etouffees, fricassees, you name it! They wanted to be sure I knew how to cook for their Louisiana boy!” Laughing about her introduction to Louisiana cuisine, Texas native Yvette Zuniga Jemison knows that a good dish isn’t just about the ingredients; it’s about the hands of those who came before—the memories, traditions, and cultures of the family in the kitchen. “I’ve always loved to cook and always loved to be in the kitchen because that’s where our family congregated. My earliest memory is making tortillas!” To Yvette, food and family cannot be separated, and her dishes carry the flavors and cultures of both the present and the past.
Yvette, who initially trained in speech pathology, made the transition to food when her two daughters left for college. Originally the “In Great Taste” columnist for Inside New Orleans magazine, Yvette blogs about her cooking adventures at YDelicacies.com. Her first cookbook, Entertain Effortlessly, Gift Deliciously, came out in 2017 and is full of simple recipes for entertaining and gifting around the holidays.
Yvette is currently at work on My South Texas Table. “This one is even more personal because it’s my south Texas family and recipes that have been handed down verbally for generations that no one has ever written down.” Feeling the pressure of the past, Yvette hopes to “capture those flavor memories” of her family and of south Texas that are quickly disappearing. After writing about her home state, Yvette plans to turn her attention to her adopted home with My South Louisiana Table.
Though Yvette’s dishes carry the traditions, flavors, and memories of the past, she likes to innovate and reimagine those dishes for the future, highlighting the diversity of ingredients and possibilities. Her ingredients change with the season, but Yvette doesn’t limit herself just to winter, spring, summer, and fall. “We have more seasons here in New Orleans, too—festival season and Mardi Gras, just to name a few.”
And so, when speckled trout began to run, inspiration struck. Yvette decided to take the Thai flavors she ordinarily uses for marinating beef and apply them to the catch of the day. And thus Thai Speckled Trout with Green Onion Dressing was born. While Yvette has figured out how to make use of her husband’s abundant catch, one question lingers: “The speckled trout come in and lay their eggs in the stillwater grasses. If those grasses are gone and the coast continues to disappear, what happens to speckled trout?”