Mardi Gras parade
Saints Influence on Mayoral Race & Mardi Gras 2010
0Mardi Gras approaches, and a relatively big local election looms large. On February 6, the electorate will choose a new Mayor, City Council, Louisiana Senate & Legislature, Assessor, among other important governmental positions.
The Saints have won their first ever League Championship and the Superbowl comes smack dab in the middle of Carnival- the Super Bowl is Sunday, February 7, and Mardi Gras Day is Tuesday, February 16. Carnival and local elections have mixed before, but the Saints haven’t ever played this late in the season, bringing an extra layer of fervor and hedonism to the mix. My own parade, Krewe Du Vieux, rolls on Saturday, January 30. That adds lots of additional FUN to the proceedings. Let’s not forget Cupid’s holiday, Valentine’s Day, which always falls on February 14.
At the time of this posting, the Saints RULE their roost, and it’s a citywide obsession. Therefore, many parading krewes would like to load up on Saints merchandise. However, Saints memorabilia is getting more expensive, not cheaper, making it costly for float riders. Some of the major krewes had the foresight to order Saints footballs, etc. in a timely basis, so they will be throwing highly sought after Saints stuff. Those krewes that parade after Valentine’s Day will load up on 50-75% off sales so you should see plenty of red hearts & arrows coming off the floats.
There are 8 parades in the metro area on Election Day. Parades always have a depressing effect on voter turn out. If less people vote, how does that change the outcome? It depends on who doesn’t vote. Motivated voters turn out regardless, therefore it’s safe to assume those that stay home are less motivated than those that take the time to vote.
You can count on numerous Saints-themed floats this year, and the stars of the team have become the stars of Mardi Gras 2010. Owner Tom Benson is Grand Marshall of Endymion February 13; Drew Brees is Bacchus on February 14; Sean Peyton is a Celebrity Monarch of Orpheus February 15. It’s rare that the Crescent City has such a huge success that everyone can enjoy, and many krewes will develop special floats to commemorate this fabulous occasion.
An announcement from Endymion said Benson will bring an entourage to the parade, including his wife Gayle, his granddaughter and team co-owner Rita Benson LeBlanc and a delegation of Saints players and staff members.
Endymion Captain Ed Muniz said the krewe is having special umbrellas made for Benson, who is known for his umbrella-waving, second-line-style celebrations after big wins. The krewe also said Benson and other riders on his float will throw coins commemorating the 25th anniversary of his ownership of the Saints.
Some parades have changed their day or route because of the Super Bowl, and one parade, Rhea in Metairie, canceled. Alla, a big West Bank parade will parade on the day before the Super Bowl. King Arthur and Pontchartrain Uptown are moving their parade up one hour, so they finish before Super Bowl Kick Off.
Gladiators Cancel Parade in St Bernard 2 Years in a Row
0By Bob Warren, The Times-Picayune
Jan 22, 2010
There won’t be a parade in St. Bernard Parish on Mardi Gras this year after all.
The Krewe of Gladiators, which was trying to restore its parade, as well as the tradition of a Carnival Day parade in the parish, said it won’t roll.
It was too difficult to attact enough riders and krewe officials didn’t want to cause anyone problems by having to possibly cancel the ride closer to Mardi Gras, which is Feb. 16.
“I thought we had an excellent shot. But I was not going to put on a parade if we couldn’t do something at least halfway decent,” Krewe Captain Bill Egan said Friday.
Egan in recent months had been pushing for new members to join the Gladiators organization so that it could parade on Fat Tuesday. A route had been chosen and cleared with the St. Bernard Parish Sheriff’s Office. Egan had said the parade would start early, so that people could still make parades in other areas later in the day.
Gladiators was forced to cancel last year’s ride, as well, due to financial problems and a lack of riders. Egan said the krewe this year wanted to restore the old St. Bernard Parish tradition of having a parade on Fat Tuesday. The parish hasn’t had a Carnival Day parade in nearly 20 years.
But in the end, Egan said there wasn’t time to get enough riders to make it worth while.
“Everybody’s watching their nickels right now – I understand that,” he said. “It’s just a sign of the times.”
King Cake varieties abound this Mardi Gras season
2By Judy Walker, The Times-Picayune
January 18, 2010, 12:54PM
Mardi Gras king cakes are big business. Read about all the varieties in this article originally published by The Times-Picayune on Thursday, January 24, 2008.
It is the earliest Mardi Gras since 1983, and the earliest it will be again until the second half of the century. But ready or not, this year’s Carnival is packed full of sweet new things to eat, strong beer and silly new twists on the usual digestible traditions.
The iconic king cake always is subject to experimentation, but this year’s variation takes the, uh, cake: an amazing crab- and crawfish-shaped king cake at Hi-Do Bakery in Gretna. “Originally, we were making the regular style,” said Kim Do, daughter of owners Ha and Huyen Do. “My dad said everyone here loves the seafood. We ourselves eat that all the time. He said, ‘I bet everyone here would love to have the shape.'”
Ha’s shaped cakes are big, about 22 inches long for the crawfish, priced at $21.99 plain and $25.99 filled. Usually, the bakery can fill orders within a few hours, Kim Do said. Norma’s Sweets Bakery, a four-year-old Hispanic bakery in Kenner, is now baking king cakes with guava, guava and cream cheese or pineapple filling. “Spanish people eat a lot of pineapple and guava,” said owner Norma Castillo, who is originally from Honduras. “And Caribbean people like the guava.”
Steve Himelfarb has an unusual new filling at New Orleans Cake Cafe & Bakery on Chartres Street. Long known as “The Cake Man” for the cakes he delivered, including a king cake stuffed with raspberry filling, Himelfarb wanted something different for the new bakery.
He and chef/partner Allison Gorlin were having “fun with goat cheese,” he said, and they hit upon the idea of pairing fresh green apples with goat cheese.
Voila! The chevre king cake was born.
“It worked immediately,” Himelfarb said. “My thought was maybe we’ll sell a couple and it’ll be fun. People are calling us now and asking for it. It’s been by far our best-selling king cake, even this early on.”
The not-too-sweet cake coils upon itself and is decorated with Jackson Pollock-like stripes of purple-green-and-gold glaze. It’s $25 and is designed to feed 15, “except that people are taking much bigger slices,” Himelfarb said.
This is the first year for king cakes at Sucre, too, the Magazine Street dessert boutique. Co-owner and pastry chef Tariq Hanna said, “Since I’m ‘not from here’ I had to do some research.”
Sucre offers a shimmery finish
The resulting “king of cakes” look like 8-inch ($12) and 10-inch ($16) doughnuts covered in a purple-green-and-gold iridescent luster, and Hanna warns that there is a “baby on board.” He also says the cake should be heated before serving
Gerard Marchal at Croissant d’Or Patisserie on Ursulines Avenue is one of the French bakers who makes the alternative king cake, the traditional French puff pastry with frangipani inside. This year, for Mardi Gras, he is adding something different to the menu.
“I’m making some beignets just for Mardi Gras because they are traditional in France, filled with Bavarian cream,” Marchal said. “I was in France some months ago, and a friend said he used to do that, and I said, ‘Ooop! Let me do that, too!’ ”
Bavarian cream is new on the north shore, too. For the first time at Marguerite’s Cakes in Slidell, king cakes are filled with it, giving the cake the taste of a cream doughnut.
And at Angelo’s Bakery on West Metairie, an old favorite is newly drizzled atop the praline- and strawberry-filled king cakes.
“Everybody around here eats the king cake. Praline is always a favorite, and everybody likes chocolate, so we just combined it,” owner Lisa Seaward said. “It’s going over pretty well.”
Another chocolate-topped king cake, the Zulu king cake with a coconut filling and coconut topping on the chocolate, seems to be in shorter supply this season (although a bakery in Beaumont, Texas, is selling them on the Internet). But the four locations of Coffee & (in Kenner, Gretna, Harvey and Marrero) will make them if you order 24 hours ahead.
Like the Zulu king cake, the concept of ice cream king cakes has spread around. Creole Creamery on Prytania Street has made them the past few Carnivals, and Baskin-Robbins stores in the New Orleans area sell them, too.
David Bergeron of Creole Creamery makes his with seven scoops of cinnamon-and-cream cheese flavored ice cream as the circular base. Then he dyes regular vanilla ice cream in Carnival colors, melts it and pours it on top, and decorates it with sprinkles and cherries. It costs $20 and contains about 10 scoops of ice cream.
“And of course there’s a baby in it,” Bergeron said.
The Baskin-Robbins versions have ovals of vanilla or chocolate cake as the base, with ice cream frozen on top of that. Those who order ahead can specify any flavor ice cream, but the ones in the freezer cases are usually the most popular flavors (vanilla, pralines and cream, or Creole cream cheese), said Carrollton Avenue franchisee Kim Guardiola.
“We’ve been doing the king cakes for about 20 years,” Guardiola said. “There’s no local advertising. It’s new to a lot of people; they still don’t know we do them.”
Although Baskin-Robbins is a global chain, only franchises in the New Orleans area make ice cream king cakes. According to their Web site, Baskin-Robbins has 13 locations in the area (including Mandeville and LaPlace). Ice cream king cakes come in three sizes for around $9, $16 and $20.
That’s not all the ice cream news. King cakes could potentially be topped with Blue Bell’s King Cake ice cream, which is cinnamon flavor with pastry pieces, Carnival-color candy sprinkles and vanilla icing swirls.
One under-reported Carnival treat is the truffle or other sweet goodie in a pretty little box, given to guests as ball favors and party favors at private events.
Hundreds of favors are sold every year at Blue Frog Chocolates on Magazine Street. New this year in favor boxes are almonds covered in semisweet chocolate in jeweled metallic colors, $14 a pound. And kids can lick Blue Frog’s new purple-green-and-gold whirlie and swirlie lollipops while waiting for parades
Of course, beer is more common on parade routes than lollipops. The newest Abita brews, Mardi Gras Bock and Jockamo IPA, are 6.5 percent alcohol, compared to about 4.5 percent for their amber beer.
Abita has made a winter bock beer for a while, but a couple of years ago everybody on the street was calling it Mardi Gras Bock, so they started putting that on the label, Abita Beer president David Blossman said.
Introduced in mid-November, the company’s new Indian Pale Ale-style brew pays tribute to Mardi Gras Indians.
“A long time ago we made a Jockamo stout that was a specialty beer,” Blossman said. “We love the Mardi Gras Indian culture, and we’re trying to do our part to raise awareness for it.”
Support of a different type is being provided to some of the patrons of the Ritz-Carlton New Orleans, which has had, in the recent past, an oyster butler, a crawfish concierge and a snowball sommelier.
This Lundi Gras and Mardi Gras, patrons staying on the club level can use the services of a “Recovery Concierge,” also known as a hangover helper.
At the recovery station, Russell Sutherland will offer “Cure royale” (instead of Kir royale), mimosas and Bite the Hair of the Dog Bloody Marys, as well as sparkling waters, Alka Seltzer and other pain relievers.
And go-cups.
Food editor Judy Walker can be reached at jwalker@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3485.
Chicago Tribune claims best Mardi Gras parade in LA is in Baton Rouge!!
0BATON ROUGE, La. — The day starts about 7 a.m. and innocently enough: just one little beer.
It’s February and a little chilly — not too chilly for an Abita seasonal Mardi Gras Bock beer — and the streets have been closed to traffic. Locals are emerging from their homes, usually in the day’s signature pink, to wander, drink, smile, laugh and travel between early-morning parties. The visitors will be here soon. Many are already tailgating in nearby parking lots.
Gumbo and jambalaya won’t be ready for hours. Right now, it’s bloody marys, Cajun-spiced eggs and king cake, that deliciously gooey circular pastry in which a small baby figurine has been baked. Beads have yet to fly, but they will. It is the Saturday before Fat Tuesday, and 80 miles north of New Orleans, the best parade in the state is about to happen.
The Spanish Town Mardi Gras Parade is named for the neighborhood where it starts: Spanish Town, a patch of narrow tree-shaded streets and the traditional home of artists, boozers, cross-dressers and any free spirit in this conservative town. It is the city’s oldest and most eclectic neighborhood, appropriately listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The parade begins on its main artery, Spanish Town Road, before heading into Baton Rouge’s downtown of midrise office buildings.
I’ve seen New Orleans parades, small-town parades and rural horseback parades, and Spanish Town’s is the perfect amalgamation: rocking like New Orleans, intimate like a small town, with a dash of the country’s carefree calamity. Remember your birthday as a kid? The glory? The excitement? The knowledge that for one itty-bitty day, no one was more special than you? That’s what the Spanish Town parade feels like. Except that on Saturday, it’s everyone’s birthday. No, it’s not New Orleans, but that’s part of the raunchy, beer-soaked fun. Spanish Town Mardi Gras is tightly packed and joyfully unhinged without the expectation of being New Orleans.
By 10:30 a.m. breakfast is finished and houses start opening their doors, releasing the smell of gumbo. More R-rated costumes arrive, more beers are opened, and a 300-pound man dressed as the Octomom exchanges warm greetings with a uniformed cop. Turns out that 300-pound man was once a higher up in the governor’s office. In the costumes, the floats, even the theme of the parade, you learn that nothing is sacred, particularly power and politics. Months after Hurricane Katrina devastated Louisiana, the 2006 theme was “FEMAture Evacuation.”
The Spanish Town parade starts rolling at noon sharp, led by the grand marshal and, in recent years, the motorcycle-riding Baton Rouge police chief, who gladly poses for photos with drunken revelers.
The floats start inching by, and hands fly into the air. In pursuit of beads, women shake what God gave them. So do men. The roar is steady, cacophonous and endless. People load themselves with beads, load their neighbors, load their friends. Despite beer and homemade drinks aplenty, things don’t get out of hand. Everyone is a friend here.
Time stands so still that it’s hard to say how long the parade lasts. Maybe 90 minutes. Like most, it ends with an inglorious thud, street sweepers trailing the last float but doing little good against the quilt of beads. Beads are everywhere. In bushes, in trees, on power lines, and kids invariably try to shake them loose while adults wobble around them.
Then the house parties start again. Bands play in front yards and backyards. Gumbo and jambalaya steam in cast iron pots, and beer is everywhere. The partying goes on like this until about 5 p.m., when everyone starts hitting the wall. At 6 p.m. you’re done. The wobbliest are still trying to find which house they left their coat under, and everyone else goes home.
For the first time since being a kid, going to sleep at 7 p.m. doesn’t seem so bad. Make that for the first time since the last Spanish Town Mardi Gras. And, Lord willing, it will happen next year too.