
New Orleans Cookbook - Paperback
New Orleans Cookbook - Paperback
$29.14
/

products.product.pickup_availability.unavailable
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
by Lena Richard (Author)
Lena Richard's New Orleans Cook Book
A Culinary Landmark Rediscovered
Long before the celebrity chef was a cultural phenomenon, Lena Richard was doing it all - and doing it better than almost anyone. Born in New Orleans at the turn of the twentieth century, Richard rose from domestic cook to culinary entrepreneur, building a career that encompassed a cooking school, a catering business, a frozen food line, and one of the first cooking shows ever broadcast on American television - hosted by a Black woman, in the segregated South, in 1949.
This is her book.
First published in 1939, the New Orleans Cook Book is both a practical kitchen manual and a living document of Creole culinary culture at its most authentic. Richard learned to cook in the great households of New Orleans, absorbing the techniques and traditions of a cuisine that is itself a layered history - French, Spanish, African, Native American, and Caribbean influences bound together by generations of Black cooks whose names history largely forgot. Richard's name we remember.
Inside these pages you will find the real New Orleans - not the tourist version, not the romanticized version, but the everyday genius of a cuisine built on making extraordinary food from honest ingredients. Her gumbo is definitive. Her court-bouillon, her daube glacé, her pralines, her bread pudding - each recipe carries the authority of someone who learned not from books but from long practice in kitchens where the food actually mattered.
Richard writes with clarity and confidence, giving the home cook not just instructions but understanding. She explains the why behind the technique, the logic of the roux, the patience required by Creole cooking, the difference between a good dish and a great one. Reading her is like standing in her kitchen, watching someone who has done this ten thousand times make it look effortless.
Why This Book Matters Now
Lena Richard's story is inseparable from the larger story of American culinary history - and from the long overdue recognition that Black cooks, Black women in particular, built much of what we call American food. For too long her name appeared only in footnotes. This reprint returns her to her rightful place at the center of the conversation.
For lovers of New Orleans food, this is an essential text. For students of American culinary history, it is a primary source of the first order. For anyone who has ever stood over a pot wondering how to make something that tastes like it came from somewhere with a real sense of place - this book is for you.



















