Louisiana
Nadiya Hussain travels to Louisiana to explore some of America’s most vibrant cuisines, from soul food in New Orleans to living off the land in the timeless Cajun swamps.
Nadiya Hussain has always been fascinated by America, home to more immigrants than any other country, and with some of the most vibrant food on the planet. She wants to find out more about this culinary melting pot, so sets out to explore two states she has always dreamt of visiting, Louisiana and California.
Nadiya’s Louisianan food adventure starts in New Orleans, whose strategic position at the mouth of the Mississippi Delta has attracted newcomers for centuries from as far as Europe, the Caribbean and more recently from Vietnam. Nadiya arrives on the first day of Mardi Gras, which is celebrated by feasting on one of Nadiya’s favourite things – cake. In a bakery in the colourful Bywater neighbourhood, Nadiya rolls up her sleeves and makes iconic and indulgent king cakes bursting with Chantilly cream, before joining a lively street party where jazz musicians play carnival tunes and the Mardi Gras Indians parade.
Next, Nadiya visits the Lower Ninth Ward, an African American neighbourhood that was devastated by Hurricane Katrina. She meets local hero Bernell, who has spent his life savings opening the area's own grocery store and soul food cafe, and learns how resilient residents are still having to fight to keep up with the rest of the city even after so many years. Nadiya helps Bernell’s mum Lily in the cafe before cooking up her twist on a New Orleans classic – a crispy fried chicken po boy sandwich.
As Nadiya embarks on the next leg of her journey, she swaps the vibrancy of the city for the fabled bayous and swamps of Cajun country. Cajuns settled in Louisiana in the 18th century after fleeing persecution in French-speaking Canada and are known for their delicious Cajun cooking. Some of the finest is to be found in a tiny restaurant in the shrimping town of Galliano run by legendary 93-year-old great-great-grandma Alzina Toups. Nadiya joins Alzina in her kitchen and learns the secrets of her shrimp and okra gumbo and her black bean jambalaya, age-old family recipes that have been handed down through the generations.
Curious to find out more about the Cajun lifestyle, Nadiya ventures deep into the eerie but beautiful swamps on a fishing trip with a family who still live off the land. Armed with fresh catfish, Nadiya cooks up a feast for the family before overnighting on a house on stilts. Out of her comfort zone, Nadiya worries that the swamp's notorious alligators may pay her a nighttime visit.
Back in New Orleans, Nadiya heads to a charity that uses music and the tradition of marching bands as a unique way of keeping the city’s kids off the streets. She then immerses herself with a Vietnamese family of restaurateurs and discovers how these relative newcomers to the city are making a big splash on the city’s food scene. She ends her food adventure with an epic crayfish boil with a Vietnamese twist - a perfect example of the Louisianan culinary melting pot.
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Clips
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King Cake 'crack'
Duration: 00:54
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Nadiya's take on a New Orleans classic
Duration: 01:22
Music Played
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Eliza and the Bear
It Gets Cold
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The Meters
Handclapping Song
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Villagers
Set The Tigers Free
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The Meters
Cissy Strut
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The Meters
Chicken Strut
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Liam Dullaghan
Choirs Of Angels Sang
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Eliza and the Bear
Upon the North
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Nadiya Hussain |
Executive Producer | Katy Fryer |
Executive Producer | Anna Miralis |
Producer | Laia Niubo |
Production Manager | Laura Tjia |
Production Company | Wall to Wall Media |
Broadcasts
- Thu 10 Dec 2020 20:00
- Sun 13 Dec 2020 13:50
- Tue 29 Dec 2020 06:30
- Sat 8 Jan 2022 12:00
- Thu 23 Nov 2023 15:15
- Saturday 17:40
Featured in...
Best of 2021
Favourite food shows in 2021