Skip to main content

You Can Eat Your Bodyweight in Sausage on Louisiana’s Boudin Trail

Southwest Louisiana Boudin Trail

Kentucky has its bourbon trail. Napa, its wine. Then, there’s the barbecue in Texas. However, if you’re after something more offbeat, Southern Louisiana’s Boudin Trail is for you. While understanding how sausage is made is typically an undertaking best avoided, that’s exactly what this classic Cajun trek promises to provide travelers.

Boudin is a unique sausage that’s been a staple finger food for Southern Louisiana locals since as long as anyone can remember. They’re happy to down it for breakfast (add a cold soda for the ideal “Cajun breakfast”), lunch, dinner, or all three. The basics of boudin are simple. First, know that it’s pronounced boo-DAN with a distinct dropping of the “n”. The degree to which you do or do not drop the “n” can immediately brand you as a foreigner.

boudin sausage crackers
Visit Lake Charles/Facebook

As for the ingredients, the list almost always includes some amount of pork, rice, onions, liver, and a handful of dry seasonings like parsley, garlic, red pepper, salt, and black pepper. The exact ratio to create the perfect boudin is a debate likely never to be resolved. Every eatery bears their own secret recipe, and locals often declare allegiance to a select few. It seems there’s no perfect ratio of rice-to-meat, casing crispness, or level of spice to appease everyone. Variations, often subtle, exist between parishes — sometimes within parishes — as every boudin craftsmen looks to brand their own unique sausage.

Beyond the essential ingredients involved in making boudin, there are just as many variations in the preparation. Texas transplants, for example, often prefer their boudin smoked or grilled, no exceptions.

Bergerons Boudin and Cajun Meats of Shreveport Boudin Balls
Bergeron’s Boudin and Cajun Meats of Shreveport Shreveport-Bossier Convention and Tourist Bureau/Flickr

Boudin balls — created by rounding the filling, breading, and deep-frying — is another option. A simple boudin sandwich is as hearty and satisfying as it sounds: take two pieces of white bread and smear a heaping dose of boudin filling in-between. Chic restaurants are also fond of adding more gourmet ingredients like alligator, crawfish, or shrimp. For an out-of-this-world variation, head to B&O Kitchen (no website) in November for a cardiologist-approved, boudin-stuffed turducken (seriously).

To say Southern Louisiana takes its boudin seriously is a gross understatement. The region’s love of sausage borders on clinical obsession. It’s perhaps because of this that there’s no “official” boudin trail. They don’t discriminate. Any mom-and-pop grocery store, full-service restaurant, or roadside food shack that serves boudin along U.S. Interstate 10 is considered part of the trail. The Lake Charles tourism board offers a convenient, searchable sausage database, which currently features 33 eateries.

boudin sausage
Visit Lake Charles/Facebook

Finding a participating boudin-ery (our words, not theirs) is a matter of cruising the interstate with an eye toward the many banners and blinking signs advertising hot boudin. If you start your drive at 9 a.m., you’ll likely be full before 10 a.m.

Like all things in that part of Louisiana, eating boudin is an informal affair. This is due to the fact that it’s meant to be eaten as fresh as possible. For most Acadians, that often means on the spot. Once ordered, the links will be plucked from a steamer or slow cooker, weighed, and presented in butcher paper with a few napkins. “Haute cuisine” this is not, and that’s just way the locals like it. Chances are good the sausage won’t make it out of the parking lot before being consumed. That being said, most establishments also provide delivery service or bulk boudin to pack in your own ice-filled to-go cooler.

To get started on your own boudin-inspired road trip, check out every stop along the officially unofficial boudin trail. Just remember to pack the Prilosec and a change of stretch pants.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Mike Richard
Mike Richard has traveled the world since 2008. He's kayaked in Antarctica, tracked endangered African wild dogs in South…
We know the most popular cocktails — Try these underrated drinks instead
Try some alternatives to the most popular cocktails
Cocktails

Recently, we wrote an article about the 10 most popular cocktails in the US. Not surprisingly, it was littered with classic drinks like the Mojito, Margarita, Old Fashioned, and Moscow Mule. But drinking cocktails isn’t a popularity contest. Just because many people seem to enjoy Espresso Martinis doesn’t mean you have to stop drinking your classic Dirty Martini.

But, if you take a moment to peruse the list of the 10 most popular drinks, you might see a few you like and others you aren’t sure about. That’s okay. Lucky for you, we’re here to help. That’s why today we’re all about the underdogs.

Read more
How to start your own home bar: the tools and mixers
the best home bar glassware version 1612854960 for your 2021

So you're building up your home bar. You've got the essential spirits in. You've added a selection of liqueurs and bitters to combine them with. Now, it's time to add the finishing touches. From mixers to tools to glasswear, we're rounding up everything else you'll need to turn a corner of your kitchen into a great home bar.
Speaking of the kitchen – this is, in my experience, the absolute best place for a home bar. While I love a good bar cart for a living room (or even an office, if you have that kind of job!) these are really more decorative than a practical place to mix drinks. The problem with using bar carts for serious cocktail making is twofold: One, the surfaces are usually too low, at below hip height, so you'll be bending over uncomfortably while you try to make your drinks. That's not chic, and it's hard on your back too. Instead you want something that's counter level, hence opting for the kitchen. The second issue is access to ice and a sink. Mixing serious cocktails requires a large amount of ice and frequent washing of glasses and tools. Sure, you can get an attractive ice bucket for your bar cart, and that certainly makes a fun decorative accessory. But you'll still be running back and forth to the kitchen to use the sink all the time anyway.
If you love the style of a bar cart, I certainly wouldn't want to stop you having one. They are great fun, and stylish to boot. I have a bar cart myself in my living room, which I love and use for very simple mixed drinks like negronis (though even then, you still have to go and fetch ice every time you want a drink). It's a great place for occasional special bottles, particularly beautiful glasswear, cocktail books, and other decorative accessories.
But for serious cocktail making, you want an area of clear counter space, near to a sink and to a freezer full of ice, and with easy access to all your bottles and tools. I find a small kitchen island perfect for this purpose, tucked into a corner of the kitchen near the appliances. Store bottles and equipment on the lower shelves of the island or on wall-mounted shelves to save space, and make sure you have a lamp or decent overhead lighting so you can see what you're doing while you mix. You'll want a small chopping board as well for slicing citrus and other fruit, and a small, sharp knife that you can borrow from your kitchen equipment.
Then it's time to turn your attention to home bar tools.

Essential home bar tools

Read more
Big Green Egg brings back a fan-favorite item for a limited time
However spend your evenings outdoors, the Big Green Egg Chiminea is there to help keep things warm
The Big Green Egg Chiminea.

Love good times by the fire on a chilly night? Want to enjoy a few drinks in a toasty spot after a long day at work? Of course, we all do. But throwing some logs in a pit in the ground doesn't quite do it. If you want a cozy evening, Big Green Egg brings the wow with the release of a special Chiminea to celebrate 50 years in business, and it will take your gathering around the fire to a whole new level.
The Big Green Egg update

Big Green Egg has been the go-to for outdoor grillers and smokers looking for an outdoor cooker for decades. But if you want to hang out in the fresh air without cooking, the Chiminea is what you need. Freestanding fireplaces aren't new, and Big Green Egg isn't trying to reinvent them. The vintage version from 1999 is the starting point, with upgrades worthy of a 50th anniversary.
What's cracking with this egg
If it's not broken, don't fix it, right? But even the littlest changes will make something feel fresh. For those who aren't the best at starting a fire and keeping it going, the Chiminea comes with Lava Rocks to keep the flames roaring more evenly and for longer. Made from NASA-grade ceramic, the quality isn't something to worry about, either. And, yes, it's still in that gorgeous, signature deep green color. 

Read more