Seafood Okra Gumbo
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SEAFOOD OKRA GUMBO
Okra, onion, bell peppers, celery and a tiny bit of tomato sauteed and blended with shrimp and crabs into a thick brown Creole soup - served over rice. More details

 Chicken Andouille Gumbo
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CHICKEN ANDOUILLE GUMBO
Boneless chicken, Andouille (a Cajun Sausage) and seasonings simmered in chicken stock - Selected by locals as the best Gumbo in the city. More details

File Gumbo with Chicken & Sausage
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FILE GUMBO with CHICKEN & SAUSAGE
Smoked Sausage and Chicken make up the base of this gumbo, but the taste is entirely different from the Chicken and Andouille version. No okra or roux, this gumbo is thickened and flavored with file', the dried, gound leaves of the sassafras tree, introduced into Creole cooking by the indigenous Choctaw Indians. More details

 

New Orleans is a Mecca of culinary temptations and as a native I wouldn’t want it any other way. Temptation and atonement are part of our culture. With religious roots that are primarily Catholic, thanks to our French founders, the church affects our calendar in a rather unique way: we celebrate Mardi Gras, or Fat Tuesday, the final day of feasting before 40 days of Lent. The traditional abstinence from meat during this time leading up to Easter means that we have to “sacrifice” by enjoying the bounty from nearby waters: fish, shrimp and oysters from the Gulf of Mexico, crabs from Lake Pontchatrain, and crawfish from area swamplands.

New Orleans was founded by the French in 1718 and named after the regent, the Duke d’Orleans. Passed to the Spanish for a while, it went back to France long enough for Napoleon to sell it to a fledgling United States of America in 1803.

Read more about the history of the gumbo shop


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630 Saint Peter Street
504-525-1486
Fax: 504-524-0747
restaurant@gumboshop.com