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Jim Brown: One man's poison is another man's raccoon stew

U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy has stirred up a hornet’s nest back in the Bayou State over his Facebook comments of eating a Louisiana delicacy.
The senator had this to say: “Found this raccoon in my backyard. We ate him for breakfast.”
He even included a photo of the raccoon. And his Facebook friends went nuts with comments. Who on earth would even consider eating a raccoon?
Actually, raccoons and a host of other wild game are a culinary staple where I come from. And I often received a litany of choice critters.
As a sole attorney practitioner in Ferriday, I took about any case that walked in the door. Often, my clients were slow paying, or could not pay anything at all.
Hunting has always been quite prevalent in northeast Louisiana, and clients would drop off an array of creatures from the wild. I was never short of deer meat, ducks, wild geese, doves, squirrels, frogs, catfish, and yes, raccoons. The assortment of outdoor delicacies seemed endless. And luckily, we had a large freezer in which to pack my culinary acquisitions.
Our home back then was a mile off the highway with access by a dirt road that turned to mud in the winter. Often it was hard to get out of the house, even with my winch-loaded truck. So on rainy weekends, we experimented with creating a variety of recipes using our varied meat collection. A backyard garden added to the flavors, and weekend cookery became a de rigueur ritual. Out of all this gastronomic adventure came my cookbook, Jim Brown’s World-Famous Squirrel Stew and other Country Recipes.
In the rural parishes, you learn to be creative and cook about anything. I gave a speech in Jeanerette one day, and as I headed back home to Ferriday, I stopped at a small country general store for something cold to drink. An older Cajun was on the front poach stirring a large kettle. “Wachya cooking?” I asked.
“Oh, I’m cookin’ up a gumbo,” he replied.
“What kind of gumbo is it?” I pursued.
“I’m cookin’ an owl gumbo.”
Hummm. So, I went on. “What’s an owl gumbo taste like?”
He smiled and said, “About like a hawk gumbo.”
Former Gov. Jimmie Davis spent a lot of time at his farm in northeast Louisiana, traveling back and forth to the state capitol. Ferriday was about half way on his route, and he made it a habit to stop by my law office for a coffee break.
I was as a wet-behind-the-ears, 26-year-old attorney, and often the only one in the office. So Jimmie Davis would sit a while to rest, talk at length about his life, and give me an early preview of what I would eventually learn about Louisiana politics.
He would often ask me to notarize some document, which I was glad to do.
“So what do I owe you, Brother Brown?” he would say.쟅 always settled for a few verses of “Sunshine.” He frequently inquired if I could find him a raccoon. Up in redneck country, we just call it a “coon.” His favorite meal was coon stew. Knowing a request would often come with his visit, I asked some local hunters I represented to drop off a raccoon. I would keep a raccoon or two in the office freezer at the ready for the governor’s stopover.
When I was elected secretary of state some years later, I wrote the cookbook mentioned earlier, and the governor graciously gave me one of his favorite coon recipes to include in my gourmet collection of sumptuous dishes. Here’s good news for you: that same recipe applies to possum. Now I know you're glad to hear that. So here is Gov. Davis’s favorite dish:
Skin and clean coon. Remove musks that are located under each foreleg, and four in the neck. Rub coon with red pepper, sprinkle with salt, add one onion, sliced, and five pods of garlic, minced. Parboil until tender. Place coon in baking dish with three tablespoons of melted oleo and the broth in which the coon was boiled. Place quartered potatoes around the coon and bake at 375 degrees until golden brown.
There you go. You can’t beat that for taste, can you? So all you Facebook beraters, quite complaining. Let your taste buds explore a bit. You just might get hooked on raccoons and other such Bayou State delicacies.
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all of his columns at www.jimbrownusa.com.

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