- Everybody eats it during Mardi Gras, just like the good old days.
- Nobody has better sides.
- The chicken strips don't need any sauce, because they are prefect when dipped in mashed poptatoes.
- They invented the loaded chicken wrap. A chicken strip, with red beans and rice, inside of a tortilla. It is retarded. And when you have had a few libations, it is also delicious. (Ok, I even like it sober)
- Southern and Louisianian are the same thing
- The Cajuns must have invented spicy foods, because all spicy things are called Cajun
- All people from Louisiana are Cajun
The current Popey's "spokeswoman" has managed to shoot a perfect score with their latest commercial, in which she talks in her adorable Southern accent about "her" Cajun barbecue sauce. The problem, of course, is that:
(A) She is Southern and not Louisianian.
(B) She calls her barbecue sauce "Cajun" simply because it is spicy. There is actually no defined "Cajun" style of barbecue.
(C) She is not Cajun at all. She is African American. In Louisiana, African Americans are most typically of Creole or simply African descent, but you'll have a better chance finding an African Irishman (Shaq O'Neal excepted, of course) before you'll find an African Cajun. Creoles are known for "Creole Cookin'," which has given us most of our tomato-based goodness down here, like Shrimp or Crawfish Creole (connecting the dots there?), and the most popular forms of jambalaya. Red beans and rice can be credited to this lineage as well, among many other Louisiana - and New Orleans - favorites. The Cajuns come from a group of French refugees, expelled from the Acadia region of French Canada in 1755, following the French and Indian War. They settled west of New Orleans, in the Atchafalaya Basin, and cook their own style of jambalaya, etouffees, and sausages, among many other Louisiana favorites. Both styles were influenced by local indigenous peoples (Injuns, if your textbook is dated before 1970). It was the Cajun's spices that inspired Al Copeland's original Popeye's chicken recipe.
Of course, Popeye's has been based in Atlanta for long enough now to drive anyone representing the firm's Louisiana heritage out of its culture, per its plans when it moved (link). That makes it difficult to maintain a "Louisiana" brand and image. After all, one would expect that such a place would know the difference between New Orleanian and Cajun (or even Cajun and simply spicy), but apparently they no longer do. So it is that monumental disconnect that has finally led to this: a "Louisiana" chicken restaurant parading out a not-even-Louisianaian character to sell wares that aren't even Louisiana-inspired, as an attempt to emphasize their Louisiana roots.
Popeye's picked up those roots years ago, and they have officially dried up. Take me to Chick-Fil-A, please.
There, I said it.
Solid rant, right up until the end. You say, "take me to Chick-Fil-A" suggesting that you would eat anywhere but Popeye's, and I know this is not the case. I think Chick-Fil-A is delicious, enjoy eating there, and I agree with your rant - that woman is totally bogus - but Popeye's is still awesome.
ReplyDeleteI still love Popeye's, but given the choice, I would choose Chick-Fil-A more often than I would choose Popeye's now. I hate that it's true . . . we're all emotionally attached to Popeye's. But Popeye's has changed, and I feel like I don't even know her. Where is the chicken that I fell in love with??? Maybe it's time to start seeing other chicken places. That's all I'm saying.
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