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  • How Frank Randol Kept Cajun Culture Dancing: Ep. 2
    2026/05/13

    Some places feed you. Others hold your whole history. Sitting at Randall’s with Heidi McDonald and Jason Stoner, we talk about why this room feels like “hallowed ground” for so many people across Acadiana, and how Cajun food and live music can turn a restaurant into a cultural anchor for Lafayette, Breaux Bridge, and beyond.

    We dig into the hard part too: when COVID shut things down and the music stopped, it wasn’t just a business problem, it was an identity problem. Frank Randall shares what it takes to restart without losing the heart of the place, why he stays focused on food and music, and how trust and reputation create the “oof” a comeback needs. Along the way, we talk about a growing national awareness of Cajun cuisine versus Creole cuisine, and why that distinction matters for preserving authentic Louisiana culture.

    Then we bring in the people who actually make it run. Jimmy shares his path from starting at 17 as a busboy and dishwasher to leading operations for decades, plus the lessons that keep teams together when times get rough. We also zoom out with a Breaux Bridge tourism perspective: Crawfish Festival season, where visitors eat, how Zydeco stays alive, and what it looks like when a town fights to protect its historic bridge and its story.

    If you care about Louisiana restaurants, Cajun seafood, live music, and the kind of community that shows up for each other, you’ll feel right at home here. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Acadiana, and leave a review so more people can find the stories behind the food.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    34 分
  • How Frank Randol Kept Cajun Culture Dancing: Ep. 1
    2026/05/06

    He flew crabs across the country, built dance floors people would tear up with crowbars, and kept Cajun culture loud when it would have been easier to let it fade. We’re on location at Mulate’s with the legend Frank Randol, following the threads that connect Randol's Restaurant, Breaux Bridge, Lafayette Louisiana food, and the stubborn pride of Acadiana.

    We talk through Frank’s family history and the weight that comes with land, legacy, and community expectations. He shares why “saving” places like this is never just business, it is about preserving Cajun music, local stories, and the kind of nights where kids learn to dance beside their parents. Along the way, we get honest about loss, military service during the draft, and the way faith, family, and friends become a compass when life forces a pivot.

    Then the stories turn wild in the best South Louisiana way: the crabbing boom, building a seafood operation, and the logistics of moving fresh Louisiana seafood to markets that could not get it any other way. Frank breaks down how the “Louisiana Crab Special” worked, including the now-iconic moment of balancing a plane with thousands of pounds of crabs. We also dig into how Randall’s grew from a simple need into a cultural landmark, plus the Cajun Fest push to put Acadiana on the national stage.

    Hit play, then subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Cajun food and culture, and leave us a review with the local spot you never want to lose.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    48 分
  • How A Greek Immigrant Built A Lafayette Favorite
    2026/04/29

    He moved to Lafayette because he looked at a US map and thought he was landing near the Bahamas. That one mistake turned into Poseidon, one of the most beloved Greek and Mediterranean restaurants in Lafayette, Louisiana and a place where generations celebrate birthdays, lunches, and late-night stories.

    We sit down with Aristos of Poseidon to hear how he came from the island of Cyprus, studied at USL, and built a restaurant around family recipes, Greek hospitality, and relentless attention to detail. We talk about the culture shock of Holly Beach, why philoxenia (welcoming strangers) feels so at home in Cajun country, and how a “meal” becomes an experience when you slow down and share the table.

    Then we get into what serious restaurant ownership really looks like: shopping for fresh ingredients every morning, training a team to hit the same standard every day, and keeping regulars happy while still having fun with off-menu specials like slow-cooked lamb kleftiko and other chef-driven cravings. Aristos also shares his straight talk on COVID, staffing, and why being boldly yourself on social media can be the best marketing a local restaurant has.

    If you love Lafayette food, authentic Greek cooking, and behind-the-scenes stories from a real kitchen, this one’s for you. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube, share with a foodie friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    34 分
  • From Franchise Systems To Chef Creativity In Lafayette
    2026/04/22

    Ronald McDonald showed up at Mark Krampe’s birthday parties at home and that’s only the beginning of how unusual his food story gets.

    We sit down with Mark to talk about growing up in Lafayette inside a family that helped bring McDonald’s to the area, where procedure, cleanliness, and consistency weren’t buzzwords, they were daily life. That early training shaped how he sees restaurants now: strong systems, clear standards, and a team culture that protects the guest experience. Mark shares what it was like having a perfectionist father who secret-shopped his own stores, and how those expectations followed him into every kitchen he’s led.

    Then the path swerves. Mark opens up about getting sent away to boarding school, the early anger, and the unexpected gift of structure, leadership, and exposure to different cultures and cuisines. From there we follow him to Austin, where the restaurant scene and the grind of learning technique pushed him toward culinary school. He also talks candidly about being attacked by a pit bull, the recovery, and how that reset clarified what he wanted to do with his life.

    Coming back to Lafayette, Mark chooses creativity over corporate comfort and helps build what becomes Social, while partnering to support and modernize local institutions like Pete’s, Tap Room, and Marcello’s. We get into what hospitality really means, how to build a management bench, and the dishes that keep people coming back, from brick oven chicken with sweet tea brine to biscuits that have evolved over the years.

    Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube, then share this one with a food lover and leave a review so more people can find the Foodies of Lafayette Podcast.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    50 分
  • How Acadian Superette Became Lafayette’s Handmade Deli And Event Space
    2026/04/15

    A great neighborhood restaurant doesn’t just feed people, it teaches them to come back. From the outside, Acadian Superette looks like a classic Lafayette corner store. Step inside, and you find a carefully rebuilt local market and deli where the history stays on the walls while the food keeps getting sharper.

    We talk with the people behind the transformation: how a building dating back to the 1950-51 expansion of the original Petros grocery becomes a community gathering spot again, and why that matters in Freetown near downtown and UL Lafayette. The story gets personal fast, from the unlikely leap into ownership to the real work of earning trust one plate at a time. You’ll hear how the team navigates change without losing the regulars who loved the old-school breakfast and plate lunch routine.

    Then we get into what makes the menu stand out in Cajun Country: in-house meats, smoked barbecue, sausage, tasso, bacon, and a Reuben built on house-cured pastrami that takes about seven days. That kind of process creates a flavor you can’t fake, but it also creates real pressure when demand spikes and you can’t “just order more.” Chef Don Green shares what he brings from culinary school and years in restaurants, plus the behind-the-scenes lessons from food sales that help a kitchen run smarter.

    We also dig into the details that turn a good meal into a loyal following: consistency, cleanliness, and customer service that feels authentic, not scripted. If you care about Lafayette food, local restaurants, and how a true community spot gets built, this one is for you. Subscribe, share it with a friend who loves a great sandwich, and leave a review with the best meal you’ve had in Lafayette lately.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    42 分
  • How Joey’s Became Lafayette’s Go-To Market For Dinner, Catering, And Comfort Food
    2026/04/08

    Eight hundred pounds of lasagna doesn’t happen by accident. We sit down with Joey Beyt of Joey’s, a literal Lafayette icon, to hear how a small, family-built meat market turns into what we love calling the city’s “auxiliary kitchen” a place where you can grab prime steaks, sushi-grade seafood, scratch-made soups and gumbos, and a freezer full of comfort food that saves your weeknight dinner. Joey walks us back to opening day, the early hustle, and the hands-on training that shaped his obsession with quality and consistency.

    We talk about what makes Joey’s feel like five businesses inside one: a meat and seafood department, deli lunches, prepared foods, catering, plus wine and spirits. Joey shares how the menu grows over time through experimentation and customer demand, from pot pies and stuffed bell peppers to a Mexican lasagna-style casserole, plus the behind-the-scenes reality of food trends like turducken, the rising cost of shipping, and why some products disappear even when you think they’re winners.

    Then the story takes a turn into local legend: the move into a building with a surprising past, a massive renovation, and the safe that still hasn’t been opened after 30 years. Along the way, we dig into what keeps a food business alive for decades: long-tenured staff, tight standards, honest feedback from customers, and a genuine love of feeding people. If you care about Lafayette food, Cajun comfort classics, catering in Acadiana, or building a small business that lasts, you’ll get plenty to take with you. Subscribe, share this with a fellow food lover, and leave us a review so more people can find the show.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    44 分
  • Inside Nash’s: Scratch Italian Cooking In A 1908 Louisiana Home
    2026/04/01

    A chef who learned by sanding beer boxes, waxing banquet-room floors, and listening to Creole cooks all day doesn’t need a flashy origin story. He needs consistency, standards, and a dining room full of regulars who keep coming back. From inside Nash’s Restaurant in Broussard, Louisiana, we sit down with Nash and Jenny Barreca to unpack how a family legacy in New Orleans becomes a long-running Acadiana favorite set in a stunning 1908 historic home that still has a few “spirit” stories floating around.


    Nash walks us through his earliest lessons at Frank’s Steakhouse, why he still chases small improvements even when guests already love a dish, and how scratch cooking shapes everything from sauces to dressings. Jenny shares her own crash course in food service and logistics, from supplying offshore rigs to getting thrown into high-volume New Orleans ball catering where “make 1,500 sandwiches” is treated like a casual request. Along the way, we talk restaurant management fundamentals, hiring for personality, and building a menu that respects Italian roots while meeting Louisiana seafood expectations.


    We also get honest about what longevity really costs: soft openings, marketing misfires, being on site constantly, and surviving hurricanes, oilfield downturns, COVID, and inflation without losing heart. If you care about Lafayette and Broussard restaurants, local food culture, and what real hospitality looks like when nobody is watching, this conversation delivers.
    Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube, then share this with a friend who loves a great date-night meal and leave us a review so more people can find the show.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    53 分
  • How A Sicilian Family Built Lafayette’s First Pizza Tradition
    2026/03/25

    Lafayette didn’t always know what pizza was, and Alesi’s Pizza helped change that. We sit down with the family behind one of the oldest Italian restaurants in Lafayette, Louisiana to follow a story that starts in Sicily, passes through Ellis Island, and lands in Acadiana in the most unexpected way: a WWII posting at an old Army air base and a chance meeting with a “little Cajun girl” at a downtown lunch counter. The result is a restaurant legacy that’s about more than food, it’s about how families put down roots and how communities adopt new traditions.

    We talk about the early days when locals asked what fruit went in a “pizza pie,” and how Alesi’s eased Lafayette into Italian food by starting with diner staples and slowly clipping on the Italian menu. You’ll hear why the pizza became the anchor, why fresh dough and fresh sauce still happen daily, and how a simple crust-and-sauce combo can outlast every trend. Along the way, we get into the Johnson Street move, the iconic neon sign, the mid-century feel, and the behind-the-counter moments like learning to toss dough and earning your way up through the unglamorous jobs.

    The conversation also gets real about the restaurant business today: the nights, weekends, holidays, and the feeling of never being fully off. With Alesi’s nearing 70 years, we discuss why selling the business is on the table as an option, what kind of reaction that sparked across Lafayette, and the advice they’d give anyone dreaming of opening a restaurant in Cajun country. If you care about Lafayette food culture, family-owned restaurants, and the history behind the best pizza in Lafayette, this one’s for you.

    Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube, then share the episode with a friend and leave a review so more people can find the stories behind our local legends.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!

    learn more: foodiesoflafayette.com

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    46 分