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Cottage style decorating, renovating and entertaining Ideas for indoors and out Cottage style decorating, renovating and entertaining Ideas for indoors and out
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Entertaining: How to Have a Mardi Gras Party

  • February 20, 2022
  • Written by Erin Masercola
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We’re thrilled that our 2022 Project House is in Minden, Louisiana. So thrilled, that we feel like throwing a party. A Louisiana-style Mardi Gras party!

I’ve had a lot of fun in my life. Some of the most fun I’ve ever had has been in Louisiana. When I can’t make it to Cajun Country or NOLA during Mardi Gras season, my husband and I serve up a lil’ bit of Louisiana right here at home for our family and friends.

 

 

Mardi Gras season always starts on the twelfth day of Christmas: Epiphany. And it ends on the last day before Lent begins. Like Easter, “Fat Tuesday” moves around on the calendar every Spring. This year, Mardi Gras is on Tuesday, March 1st. So, we’ve all got plenty of time to ‘let the good times roll’ with family and friends. Or as the Cajuns say, “Laissez Les Bons Temps Rouler!”  To which we all answer, “Oui, cher!” Which means, “Yeah, you right!”

3 Simple Mardi Gras Recipes

At first glance and in all its variety, Louisiana cuisine might see intimidating. “Make a roux?” What?

If you wish, you can master high-level, low-and-slow skills by watching videos by folks like Ralph the Baker and Isaac Toups.

But a delicious Mardi Gras meal doesn’t have to be complicated. One of the best cooks I ever learned from was my late mother-in-law, Jane Bonin. Sure, she could cook complicated. But her best dishes were amazingly simple.

Her red beans and rice recipe is cheap, delicious, and simple enough for even a 24-year-old Texas gal to make. Thirty years later, I still make it. On Mardi Gras and throughout the year. I remember her and hope her vivacious spirit is partying right along with the revelers below.

You can double this recipe easily if you’re expecting a crowd.

Jane Bonin’s Red Beans & Rice Recipe

For each pound of dried red beans that you use (such as these or these), you’ll need about one pound of seasoning meat. You can use sausage, ham hocks, or “anything porky or smoky,” as she wrote in her notes.

For one pound of dried beans and seasoning meat …

 Red Beans & Rice Ingredients

1 large, chopped onion

1 toe of chopped garlic

8-10 cups of water

1 large bay leaf, or 2 small bay leaves.

Tabasco sauce

Salt

 Red Beans & Rice, Step by Step

  1. Rinse and sort beans in a colander or strainer. Remove bad beans. (Bad beans will look shriveled. Or just a little “off.”

  2. Cook seasoning meat in a stovetop-safe dutch oven or stewpot until the far is liquid enough to fry onions in.

TIP: If you’re using lean meat like turkey sausage, you may have to add a little olive oil to help to liquify the fat. If you wish to have vegetarian beans, you can skip the seasoning meat and simply heat the olive oil. For vegetarian red beans and rice, Emile recommends you use vegetable broth instead of water and consider adding liquid smoke.

  1. Remove cooked sausage and set aside.

  2. Into the fat still in the dutch oven, dump in the onions and garlic mixture. Cook over medium heat until limp. (About 10 minutes.)

  3. Add 8-10 cups of water, the rinsed beans, the cooked sausage and the bay leaf.

  4. Bring to a gentle boil.

  5. As soon as the bean mixture begins to boil, reduce heat on your stovetop to simmer.

  6. Cook, stirring occasionally, until beans are tender, about 2-3 hours.

TIP: If you prefer not to watch a stovetop carefully, put the bean mixture into a slow cooker once you’ve brought it to a boil and cook for 2-4 hours on high or 5-6 hours on low.

  1. When beans are tender, reduce stovetop heat to lowest setting.

  2. Remove 1-2 tablespoons of beans from pot. Mash them well and return to main pot to make your bean mixture creamier.

  3. Add salt to taste. If you used salty meat like ham to start the beans, taste them first and add the salt slowly at the end to avoid adding in too much.

  4. Add 2-3 “good shakes” of Tabasco sauce. Add a few more if you like them spicy.

  5. Spoon beans in bowls over beds of rice you’ve cooked on the stovetop or in your Insta Pot.

The Easiest Way to Make King Cake

For a classic Louisiana dessert, serve King Cake. Ralph the Baker’s video shows you how to make King Cake from scratch, so if you’re an experienced baker, I recommend checking that out.

If you want a foolproof path to your first King Cake, check out this simple mix with easy-to-follow instructions. Once, I got busy and assigned the task of mixing up the King Cakes to my 17-year-old. He didn’t follow instructions very well, and the cake came out fabulous anyway. You can make the dough in a stand mixer or hand mix and knead it in a big plastic bag that comes with the kit.

 

 

Mam Papaul’s King Cake mix includes all dough ingredients except water, butter, and one egg. You’ll need a little more butter at home to mix up the praline filling in the box, and some water to make the glaze. The kit also includes packets of decorating sugar in purple, green and yellow. These are the traditional colors of the Epiphany and Mardi Gras season.

Traditionally, the French and Louisiana Creoles and Cajuns baked porcelain babies right into their King Cakes to celebrate the Christ Child. If you got the baby in your slice, you are blessed to throw the next Mardi Gras party.

Mam Papaul’s includes a small, plastic baby, and recommends you add the baby to the top to the cake after you bake it to avoid choking hazards.

 How To Mix a Sazarac Cocktail

Finally, what would any Mardi Gras party be without Sazaracs?

A frequent guest at our annual Mardi Gras parties just gave me the recently published Oxford Companion to Spirits & Cocktails. There, I learned that pharmacist Antoine Amedie Peychaud mixed and popularized the first Sazaracs during the 1850s at his pharmacy on Royal Street. Indeed, Peychaud’s Bitters is one foundation of the drink. Find the full recipe here.

Want all the grilling tips you’ll want as Mardi Gras rolls into spring? Check out Tread’s Grill Guide on newsstands at grocery stores, superstores, and bookstores, or preorder your copy here. 

Laissez Les Bons Temps Rouler!

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Related Topics
  • Cajun recipes
  • entertaining
  • Epiphany celebration
  • Fat Tuesday
  • King Cake
  • Louisiana
  • Louisiana cooking
  • mardi gras
  • mardi gras party
  • mardi gras recipes
  • New Orleans
  • New Orleans recipes
  • Project House Louisiana
  • red beans and rice
  • red beans and rice recipes
  • red beans recipes
  • Sazerac
  • Sazerac cocktail recipe
Kelly McMaster

Kelly is the Brand Leader and Editor for American Farmhouse Style's sister publication, Cottages & Bungalows. When she's not decorating and styling her vintage home, Kelly is practicing photography, reading, baking, enjoying nature walks and hunting down treasures at flea markets.

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Kelly McMaster

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