No, not an accordion topic, but Cajun none the less. What is the best Cajun cookbook? Not New Orleans Creole, but more the common cooking in the bayous and the prairie. I have been using Tony Chachere's. I am aware that the best cooking is learned in the homes of SW Louisiana, but I don't live there..haha
Tony Chachere's is a good cookbook. Nothing wrong with what he's doing there.
If you're looking for another one, I'd go for the first Talk About Good cookbook published by the Lafayette Junior League. Most of the recipes are submitted by home cooks in the Lafayette area.
If you want a more upscale Cajun cookbook, I'd go with Donald Link's Real Cajun.
"Talk About Good", that's the one you want! It's THE go to cookbook for cajun cooking. Its all submissions from home cooks, family recipes, etc. Its an authentic cook book for cajuns by cajuns. It is a classic and a staple cook book in our area. I pasted the links below but also placed the direct links at website 1 and 2 respectively.
Try to find a used copy of the Prudhomme Family Cookbook, which I think is out of print. I have used it for years for fried chicken, marinated pork, cornbread, blackeyed peas, rice and gravy, chicken sauce piquante, roasts, etc. Don't let the BS about blackened this, blackened that throw you off. Nobody cooks that way in their homes. You need a commercial kitchen or some kind of heroic ventilation system to cook blackened stuff. No, these are everyday recipes from his brothers and sisters. Very detailed steps.
I like the Donald Link book mentioned above but it's a bit impractical if you are not in Louisiana. He says things like "Get a sack of oysters," "start with a bushel of live crabs," etc. I don't have access to that kind of stuff that way. But his recipe for chicken and dumplings is worth the price of the book itself, and very practical!
Talk about Good is a sentimental favorite since my mother even used it, but kind of amateurish by comparison. Directions like "Cook until done." That does not do me much good. Still, I can never seem to go to a family outing anymore without them asking me to bring the crab dip I make from a recipe in Talk about Good II!
Funny you mention the Prudhomme Family Cookbook. At work today I was digging in another fire stations cook book cabinet and found that one, and "borrowed" it, they did't deserve it anyway. It's definitely the country food I grew up with.
I also have a series of cook books I love that goes back quite a ways, kind of a novelty, I think the author was Mercedes Vidrine from Eunice, the first was Quelche Chose Bon, then a few others, Quelch Chose Doux, Quelche Chose Pimente, and one about seafood. You could tell those old cooks were being pinned down to amounts and weren't used to thinking in terms of measurements.