I once came home from a St. Patrick’s Day parade weighted down with vegetables, an occurrence that as far as I know is exclusive to New Orleans. Hurled from the floats into my waving arms were cabbages, bell peppers, carrots, potatoes and an onion or two. Instead of tossing the stuff out, some of it grabbed off the gritty blacktop, I decided to clean it all up and cook it.
That week for dinner we had cabbage rolls, corned beef and cabbage, stuffed peppers, beef stew, and stuffed potatoes. So did my neighbors and a lot of other residents of Parade City. That wasn’t the last time I was known to cook from the streets. During many a March, I have boiled a cabbage flung from a St. Patrick’s float, seasoned it with ham and served it with spicy cornbread. There are probably more cabbages sold in New Orleans in March than in the rest of the country altogether.
As soon as the cabbages are cooked, it’s time to pull out the cookie sheets and sprinkles. For St. Joseph’s Day, two days after St. Pat’s, there are not only parades but altars, too. Untold amounts of fish, pasta, cakes and cookies are offered up at churches and homes, thanking St. Joseph for personal favors. Many of these altars are open to the dining public, while others are for viewing only. Regardless, each display of Italian cookies, traditional meatless dishes and desserts represents countless hours of work spent by loving hands. Stuffed artichokes and seafood-stuffed peppers are among the specialties spread out by Italian cooks as “devotions” to the patron saint.
Because people here love to cook, they don’t mind taking the extra step of putting a little lagniappe, or stuffing, into a vegetable. In poorer times, stuffing was a way to stretch inexpensive foods into whole meals. And some people who eat for a living are astonished at the degree to which we take this technique. In the late ’80s, I chaired a national conference attended by more than 100 food writers. For nearly a week, we feasted on the best of Creole-Cajun cuisine at the height of its popularity. By the time we had eaten our way through New Orleans, sampled the specialties of Lafayette and were en route to Avery Island, a few journalists began to complain of indigestion and constipation. They needed vegetables, they said, having polished off a meal of chauvin (stuffed pig’s stomach), boudin, pork cooked in a “Cajun microwave” and duck gumbo. One Texas journalist said of Cajun cooking, “If they serve a vegetable, they find a way to stuff it.”
Yes, stuffings are big in these live-to-eat environs. Innumerable dressings stuff our turkeys, veal rolls and ducks. We don’t think of a mirliton without a little seafood and bread crumbs. And where else do stuffed peppers sit right alongside the ham or turkey at holiday dinners?
The stuffings here are different, too. Often there is as much meat in a stuffing as bread or rice. A single stuffing can include gizzards, sausage and ground meat. Why, a Yankee stuffing of bread and apples might get laughed right off the table in south Louisiana.
Spring is the season for California-grown artichokes, although we get them year-round from countries south of the border. They make perfect Lenten dishes, stuffed with seafood in a cream sauce or stuffed with the traditional bread crumbs and cheese and showered with olive oil. Long associated with Italy, stuffed artichokes are also a classic dish in New Orleans.
Cabbage is a staple of many countries, none more so than Ireland, where it has been cultivated since the 17th century. There will be plenty of parades surrounding St. Patrick’s Day, March 17, and St. Joseph’s Day, March 19, so there’s no reason to go without your vegetables. Creolize them with a little stuffing and you’ve got dinner on the table.
If you have lots of patience, you might stuff and roll individual cabbage leaves. Or you might try the old technique of stuffing the whole cabbage.