Check out the menu at Johnson's Boucaniere here. Check out Johnson's Facebook page here.
1 comment:
greg with johnson's boucaniere
said...
Elizabeth,
Thanks for posting links and an update for our Restaurant / Specialty meats Store. It has been very gratifying to perserve Lori's (my wife and the daughter of Wallace Johnson whom was one of the owners of Johnson's Grocery) family business. Here are a couple of links to articlse that you might enjoy
Please let us know when you plan a trip down here again. We would love to get to know you, and as always (even in August) we will have a cup of coffee waiting for you. Auvoir mes amis Greg
I’m trying to figure out what Louisiana means to me.
It’s the place my mother was born, in a town called DeRidder, in the western part of the state. It is the place my grandmother, Aurelia, who was Scarlet O’Hara’s bleach blond twin, was raised, too. And her mother, Anne—my great-grandmother. There’s a tiny cemetery, the Creel Family Cemetery, in Reeves, a tiny town not too far from DeRidder, where the Creel family farm used to be. Anne was a Creel. She moved to DeRidder—a metropolis compared to Reeves, but tiny by most standards--with the insurance money from her first husband’s death. She ran a rooming house, in which she raised Aurelia and Aurelia’s brother, LaRue. And, for a time, she raised my mother, as well.
But I digress already. The point is, this family is, or was, so rooted, so of a place. In that tiny cemetery are generations of extended family. And along those back roads, you can find other family cemeteries, too. How often do you see that? My mother ended up moving north when she was 16. She went to college in Virginia and married a northerner and settled in the north. Or the relative north. I grew up in Bethesda, Maryland. And I grew up with a sick brother, which meant we couldn’t travel often. And my southern relatives weren’t, for the most part, the traveling type. So I grew up not knowing them, or Louisiana, well. And because of that, I think there’s a part of my mother, and grandmother, and myself, that eludes me, too.
Here’s what I think: I think this is a story about identity, and the identity we get from place. We inherit that identity from our parents and where they, and their family of origin, are from. So what happens, what does it mean, when so many of us get geographically further and further away from those places or origin? In my case, it’s also a story about north and south…because, though these people in the south are my family, though this place is part of my heritage, I’m not sure I can know it, by virtue of the northern latitude where I grew up. Can a northerner truly understand a southerner—even if they are members of the same family?
1 comment:
Elizabeth,
Thanks for posting links and an update for our Restaurant / Specialty meats Store. It has been very gratifying to perserve Lori's (my wife and the daughter of Wallace Johnson whom was one of the owners of Johnson's Grocery) family business. Here are a couple of links to articlse that you might enjoy
http://www.theind.com/content/view/2418/1/
http://www.ldaf.state.la.us/portal/Portals/0/News/MarketBulletins/mb2009-11-05.pdf
Please let us know when you plan a trip down here again. We would love to get to know you, and as always (even in August) we will have a cup of coffee waiting for you.
Auvoir mes amis
Greg
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