Louisiana Cookin’ | September/October 2019 30
as German names but took on new spellings when
recorded for the census.
However, the German contribution to the area’s
foodways is still evident today. Andouille may have a
French name, but this mainstay of Cajun and Creole
cuisine was heavily infl uenced by German butchering and
sausage-making traditions. Th e German communities
held boucheries, during which a pig was slaughtered and
every part was used to make all manner of pork products,
including andouille and other sausages.
Th e andouille of the German Coast is thick and
smoky, made with lean cuts of pork and a simple blend of
spices. Th is is in contrast to the French style of andouille,
which is made with tripe and chitterlings. In Mémère’s
Country Creole Cookbook (LSU Press, 2018), lifelong
German Coast resident Nancy Tregre Wilson states,
“Th e LaPlace style of andouille, which is coarser, leaner,
and more heavily smoked than that made in other parts of
the state, is refl ective of robust German cuisine.”
Now a staple ingredient in classic Louisiana dishes
like gumbo and jambalaya, andouille is so emblematic
of the German Coast that in the 1970s, the town of
LaPlace in St. John the Baptist Parish was proclaimed the
“Andouille Capital of the World,” and a festival is held
each fall to celebrate its claim to fame.
Today, the German heritage of the area is celebrated at
the German Coast Farmers’ Market and in butcher shops
and meat markets, where local growers and producers
uphold their ancestors’ traditions and show the impact
Germans had on the agriculture and foodways of these
towns along the Mississippi River.
GERMAN COAST ANDOUILLE MAKERS
WAYNE JACOB’S
SMOKEHOUSE AND
RESTAURANT
769 W. 5TH ST.
LaPlace
985.652.9990
wjsmokehouse.com
JACOB’S WORLD
FAMOUS ANDOUILLE
505 W. AIRLINE HWY.
LaPlace
985.652.9080
cajunsausage.com
SPUDDY’S
CAJUN FOODS
2644 HWY. 20
Vacherie
225.265.4013
facebook.com/SpuddysCajunFoods