Scanpan - Cooking the Cajun way is an expression of a rich and nature-loving culture. This bayou country cooking that includes a lot of fresh aromatic vegetables, herbs, spices and ingredients offer more than a mere art of swamp to the pantry cooking that has created some of the most delicious dishes known throughout the world.
Cajun cooking style is impressive that many cooks and lay wanted to imitate, yet scarcely that anybody has exactly duplicated the Cajun inherent flavor. It is an awesome scene how Cajun country people have thrived along the swamps, marshes and prairies for more than two centuries marking a never ending cooking story beyond compare.
One of the fascinating facts about Cajun cooking is, not any Cajun will ever cook in a similar way. Cooking often focus on its taste rather than measuring. It’s a sensation how a dish can turn out to taste a little bit different each time it is made. Aside from the famous Cajun cooking expression of “a little of this and a little of that”, another thing that has made a Cajun dish unique is the mood of the one cooking. Cook it joyfully and the food is deliciously wholesome, cook it angrily and you’ll get a hot and spicy dish. The mood of the cook decides the taste of the food. It’s the basic thing about Cajun cooking.
Cajuns care about their recipes. They believe that good food is all about the summit of heart and soul. There is something than the ingredients alone that lies somewhere amid the feeling of the cook, which you can only find in Cajun cooking. If you’re as serious as the legendary Cajun chef Emeril Lagasse who likes to kick it up to notches, the inimitable Cajun style is your rage. This explains why many southern cooked dishes are recognized as “soul food”, in the heart of the Deep South, New Orleans.