Spring-Summer 2024 Visitor Guide

Start planning your next escape to The Northshore with a copy of our inspiration guide!

Request Yours Now

Eat Like a Local in St. Tammany 

One glance at a menu here and you know you're in Louisiana even if you aren't familiar with all of the dishes. Here's a brief Louisiana culinary lexicon to help you decipher local menus.

DiCristina's barbequed shrimp

Barbecued shrimp:

Forget shrimp on the barbie or any images you might have of grilled shrimp with barbecue sauce. Here, barbecued shrimp means shrimp left in the shell and almost submerged in a garlicky, peppery butter sauce. It's messy. It's fattening. It's okay: Live a little.

Poboy:

A long sandwich on crusty French bread, the poboy really isn't the same as a submarine or a hoagie, but it can be ordered with a variety of fillings. Among the favorites are fried oysters, fried shrimp and roast beef, featuring long-simmered beef, sliced and slathered in gravy. Order it "dressed," which means with lettuce, tomato, and pickle.

Muffuletta:

Picture this: several layers of ham, salami and Provolone cheese topped with chopped olive salad served on a large, round, crusty Italian bread. Pronounced moof-a-lotta regardless of the spelling, this sandwich is a delicious handful and usually serves two or more people. 

Gumbo:Pyre Provisions Gumbo

Though gumbo has popped up on menus across the U.S., you're not likely to get the real thing outside of South Louisiana unless it's cooked by a transplanted native. A dark, flavorful soup, real gumbo takes a long time to cook and requires a little voodoo to do properly; most gumbos are variations on two themes -- seafood and chicken and sausage. Served with rice, it can be light brown or dark as swamp water. 

Paneed:

Meaning coated in bread crumbs or dredged in flour and pan-fried in butter, as in paneed veal, chicken, frogs' legs or oysters. 

Turtle soup:

A New Orleans classic, turtle soup these days often is made with chicken (so ask your server if it's the real thing). The dark, flavorful soup is typically enhanced by a dash of sherry added at the table. 

Cochon de lait:

Suckling pig is a favorite at Cajun family celebrations. Moist and flavorful, it's tender and, at its best, redolent of garlic. The cochon de lait poboy is a favorite at the New Orleans Jazz Fest and rarely served in restaurants (but occasionally you get lucky).