lougord99 wrote:Why would you settle for what you can find within 15 minutes of your house?
Good frozen andouille is far better than fresh mediocre andouille. Make the trip. Buy a lot and freeze into individual serving using seran wrap and freezer bags. Use what you can within 6 months, then throw it out and make another trip.
Tim wrote:Bailey's in LaPlace, LA is the place to mail order wonderful andouille without paying $25 premium on shipping.
lougord99 wrote:That does not negate my point. Or, do you feel that finding the best of mediocre is not worth the effort.
Matt wrote:lougord99 wrote:That does not negate my point. Or, do you feel that finding the best of mediocre is not worth the effort.
That came across as a bit more snobby/snotty than I intended. I am sure there are some decent options locally; my point moreso was that if you we going to freeze it in any event, might as well just place a large order for delivery. Of course, I have the benefit of having parents in Louisiana who will bring me 10 or so pounds at a time when they come to visit their grandkids, so do not find myself in this predicament. While I will get Wayne Jacobs' as first choice if I'm down there, my parents get it from Bergeron's, in Port Allen, across the river from where they live (Baton Rouge) -- and while it's "just" solidly good, it is miles beyond anything I've found around here.
sundevilpeg wrote:Again, Publican Quality Meats andouille is available at Treasure Island stores. It's awful damn good, as you might expect. Just sayin'.
Matt wrote:lougord99 wrote:Why would you settle for what you can find within 15 minutes of your house?
Good frozen andouille is far better than fresh mediocre andouille. Make the trip. Buy a lot and freeze into individual serving using seran wrap and freezer bags. Use what you can within 6 months, then throw it out and make another trip.
No offense, but unless you are willing to make a trip to Louisiana (or maybe parts of east Texas or other neighboring states), you're not going to find anything other than mediocre andouille around here (in the same way you would not find great morcilla or Polish sausage in Louisiana). Andouille ideally should be wide gauge (in beef middle casings), smoked over pecan, and have a spice profile that I've simply not seen replicated up here. I have yet to find a place hereabouts that gets more than one of these three right. I'm sure there are some places that do better than others (and there are probably some really good sausages in the general "style of andouille"), but like many regional specialties, if you want the real deal you either need to pack a cooler on a trip down south or you need to mail order (Wayne Jacobs is probably the best of the shops that do shipments).
boudreaulicious wrote:Unless you group purchase--I'd bet that there are plenty of folks here who'd go in on an order if anyone were to initiate it.