How to make Cajun Gumbo with The New Orleans School of Cooking

2024 ж. 13 Нау.
1 626 Рет қаралды

During our trip to New Orleans, Tom Nagelin of the New Orleans School of Cooking was nice enough to allow us to stop by and grab some cooking lessons! Nagelin details the history of the many cultures that came to Louisiana and helped influence the creation of what is now known as Cajun Food.
You can view our full history trip to New Orleans here: • Historic New Orleans |...
The American Battlefield Trust preserves America’s hallowed battlegrounds and educates the public about what happened there and why it matters. We permanently protect these battlefields for future generations as a lasting and tangible memorial to the brave soldiers who fought in the American Revolution, the War of 1812, and the Civil War.

Пікірлер
  • yum...slow food at its best...thanks for sharing....our foods are our history...living connections to the past

    @ocrow8079@ocrow80792 ай бұрын
  • Awesome to see! Different from the usual battle field tour but I’m all here for it!

    @j2c695@j2c6952 ай бұрын
  • Excellent- history and food, what could be better! Thanks!!

    @annmcgehee1728@annmcgehee17282 ай бұрын
  • Really, really good presentation

    @FirstNameLastName-ok4xf@FirstNameLastName-ok4xf2 ай бұрын
  • Love learning a little food history…looks delicious 😋

    @michelehumphrey852@michelehumphrey8522 ай бұрын
  • Really interesting history of a typical American mishmash! So many influences. Great presentation!

    @ThreeZeroOne@ThreeZeroOne11 күн бұрын
  • Nice change of pace, well done.

    @daegudiva@daegudiva2 ай бұрын
  • I grew up in Northern Virginia, so Chesapeake Bay Blue Crabs are something I know well and love. I later lived in Metairie, Jefferson Parish, and later in the French Quarter of New Orleans. While I ate and loved lots of wonderful seafood there, Lake Pontchartrain Blue Crabs are tiny and don't begin to compare, nor do the Oysters from the warmer waters of the deep south. The Tappahannock and points north produce the best Oysters I have personally eaten. Many French influenced dishes in America, like Shrimp and Grits, come from South Carolina. The Low Country of SC around Myrtle Beach, Horry County, was once one single huge Plantation producing Rice, Sweet Potatoes, Watermelons, and Beans of all varieties along with Cotton & Tobacco.

    @bassmangotdbluz@bassmangotdbluzАй бұрын
  • I like it with more ingredients and less liquid but im a fatass... It looks great tho 🎉

    @HFFCANADA@HFFCANADA2 ай бұрын
  • I would rather have watched three guys in civil war uniforms cooking over an open fire. Very boring I do know how to cook Gumbo and when did the history part of the show I to stop before. I am glad that Tom was not one of my culinary instructors in college. I would have quit.

    @jh2309@jh23092 ай бұрын
    • He is speaking to people with at least some basic rudimentary cooking skills. 30 years ago, I was a Sous-Chef so it was a nice reminder, a refresher course for me, if you will, reiterating ideas and techniques I have known for years. I'm sorry it didn't suit you, I found it entertaining and historically educational.

      @bassmangotdbluz@bassmangotdbluzАй бұрын
KZhead