Why Andouille?
OR WHY WOULD PEOPLE DEDICATE
A FESTIVAL TO A SAUSAGE?
Why Andouille?
It isnt easy to spell or pronounce. In fact it isnt even easy to eat, if you
have a delicate stomach. Yet it is really not surprising that andouille was chosen as the
single and now shining star of its own festival.
In Colonial days the recipe for an andouille made the trip to
Louisiana safely tucked away in the memories of the new colonists. Being a smoked product
that kept well, it is safe to assume that quite a few andouilles also made the trip with
those first Europeans.
Andouille today is nearly a product of this area as anything to
be found a true representative of the nationalities that first settled here.
When it got to this country it retained its foreign flavor, just
as the generation of people who brought it over were to keep their homeland accents. And
andouille would, just as they did, change as time went on.
A sausage that could be called andouille can be eaten in the
homes of both Germans and French in practically any area where they settled to this day.
So it was something made by both, although most assuredly differently seasoned.
In Louisiana the Germans and French were to live in close
proximity with each other. In this immediate area of the state the Germans by far
outnumber the French, and still do today. As the Germans have always been renowned
sausage-makers, the fact that they settled here certainly did not hurt the evolution of
andouille as it is now.
Living cheek and jowl, the new settlers of several nationalities
(there were Swiss, English and Canadians too), each tried out their own recipes. Then, in
the camraderie of this new land, sent samples on to their neighbors.
In this country were new woods to try, new herbs and spices. Many
times old trusted recipes simply had to be changed because the correct ingredients just
were not available. As often as not the new seasonings became the preferred ones.
Tastes changed as subtly as the people themselves. Sons inherited
recipes from their fathers, and were given new ideas from their wives, who might be of
another nationality.
There was no good community pot into which all ingredients were
dumped no communal smokehouse where the different kinds of wood were regulated.
Andouille, and its specialized making, became as varied as the people who intermarried and
formed this new state.
So it is today. One fine product that has evolved along with its
makers over the years a cherished part of family life, its recipes jealously
guarded and defended.
People here can point with pride to andouille, and this pride is
justified by the products excellence. It is part of the "great melting
pot" of America, and very especially an integral part of South Louisiana and its
people. If it could speak it would do so in the local parlance in unique English
richly flavored with German, French, Acadian and Spanish accents.
Now andouille, this "of the people" sausage, has its
chance to prove it is as everybody around here claims just about the best good
eating to be found anywhere. |