The dish, once featured at Randolph’s Restaurant in Golden Meadow, holds a special place in the heart (and stomach) of many seafood lovers.
For my family, going back generations, the coast was our lifeline. As a chef, I wouldn’t want to cook anywhere else in the world. Why? Because I know that no place can equal the great seafood natural resources that we have in coastal Louisiana. Our livelihood, our food and our recreation depended on coastal waters. Memories of fishing, trawling and cooking what we caught with my Dad and brother will always live in my heart. We need to protect it because, again, there is no place like it. Louisiana’s coast is 350 miles long as the pelican flies. But with all its inlets, harbors, and cuts, it’s really 3500 miles long, providing great ecosystems for an abundant amount of the best tasting seafood in the world. The Mississippi Delta and the coast of Louisiana is enormously important to the economy and to the quality of life in south Louisiana. Losing it would be a tragedy beyond imagination!