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  • Pepin Jose On Food Legacy And Starting Over Part One
    2026/07/15

    He wrote a $50,000 check he couldn’t cover and treated the weekend like a deadline. That’s just one of the stories Pepin Jose shares with us, and it captures the spirit behind a name Lafayette food lovers already know: Pepin, the Cuban sandwich, and a family legacy built on bold decisions.

    We talk through Pepin’s roots in Guantanamo, Cuba, and the life of his father, a promoter and entrepreneur who lived to 105 and somehow managed to be both disciplined and joy-forward. Along the way, we unpack the practical business lessons hidden inside the funny moments: why “put it away yourself” becomes a leadership advantage, how a mule-and-coffee route turns into an early delivery model, and how smart promotions like buy-one-get-one and “bring me a full carriage” create demand before anyone called it marketing.

    Then we get to the food. Pepin explains what makes a Cuban sandwich work, what most people get wrong, and how he tuned the recipe for Louisiana tastes without losing its backbone. Expect real specifics on balance, portion consistency, and why the right amount of mustard matters more than people think, plus a behind-the-scenes look at running steady food costs.

    The story also turns serious as Pepin describes what it takes to leave Cuba, restart through Spain and a stop in Paris, and find opportunity again in Puerto Rico. We end with a tease for part two because there’s no way to fit the next 60 years into one conversation. Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves immigrant stories and great sandwiches, and leave a review telling us what moment hit you the hardest.

    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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    52 分
  • Jack Miller’s Origin Story
    2026/07/08

    A bottle of barbecue sauce doesn’t usually come with a war story, a carhop restaurant, and a family passing the keys from one generation to the next but Jack Miller’s does. We sit down at the Jack Miller’s facility with Kermit and Christian Miller to trace how a Ville Platte restaurant called the American Inn became the roots of one of Louisiana’s most recognizable pantry staples, still made under the same family ownership since 1941. Along the way, we get the kind of details you never hear on a label: rationing-era improvisation, selling cases store-to-store, and the simple genius of letting people taste it on bread so they’d go buy it immediately.

    We also dig into what it takes to keep a small food manufacturing operation running in the modern world. Kermit explains the shift from hand-stirred pots and hand-glued labels to kettles, filling and capping machines, neckbands, and a streamlined process that helps a tiny crew produce thousands of bottles a week. Christian shares the learning curve of coming home after a music career, adapting to new tech like emailed invoices and EDI, and figuring out regulations and broken machinery in real time while keeping the brand consistent.

    Then we get practical for home cooks and pitmasters: how to use Jack Miller’s the way it was designed. They break down the basting method, why the oil on top matters, when to mop to avoid burning onions, and how that technique changes texture and flavor. We also talk Cajun Dip, all-purpose seasoning, and the no-salt version that lets you control heat and salt in everything from gumbo to Bloody Marys. If you care about Louisiana food culture, family business succession, and classic Cajun flavor done right, hit play, then subscribe, share this with a fellow sauce loyalist, and leave a review with your favorite way to cook with it.

    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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    59 分
  • Part Two With David Ervin From The Daiquiri Factory
    2026/07/01

    They tried to shut a young business owner down by writing a brand-new law, but they couldn’t even explain what the law meant. We’re back at Sunday Soda Fountain with David Irvin, and the story picks up as his Lafayette daiquiri shop goes national overnight, putting a spotlight on local enforcement, city politics, and the strange reality of “custom” regulation built around one business.

    David breaks down how an open container ordinance landed on his counter, why the phrase “sealed container” became the entire battle, and how a no-frills solution (a strip of tape over the straw slot) turned into a defining detail of Louisiana daiquiri drive-thru culture. We also talk about the misinformation that spooked customers, the constant police presence, and the pressure of running a business while wondering if tomorrow is the day you get shut down.

    Then the episode turns into full-on Lafayette history: a grand opening timed as a public statement, 4,000 bottles of champagne, media crews everywhere, and troopers writing tickets to customers sitting in line. When no local attorney wants to touch the case, David makes a surprising call that leads him to legendary Louisiana lawyer J. Minus Seymour and a courtroom showdown that helps shape how open container rules are treated beyond Lafayette. If you’re into small business resilience, local government conflict, Louisiana alcohol laws, and the origin story behind the taped daiquiri cup, this one is a must.

    Subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Lafayette stories, 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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    45 分
  • Part One With David Ervin From The Daiquiri Factory
    2026/06/24

    The drive-thru daiquiri feels like it’s always been part of Louisiana, but it started as one person’s risky idea and a whole lot of reading. We’re sitting down with Lafayette icon David “Tater” Ervin, the originator of the very first drive-thru daiquiri, to hear how a forestry major turned a frozen drink machine sighting into the Daiquiri Factory and a global phenomenon.

    Tater breaks down the real playbook behind the legend: the marketing insight he stole from a Baskin-Robbins case study, why he insisted on launching with a huge flavor lineup, and how offering samples helped frozen cocktails feel more like an ice cream shop experience than a bar. If you care about branding, customer psychology, and building an instantly recognizable product, this story delivers practical lessons without the fluff.

    Then it gets intense. He tells us about walking into City Hall and the Alcohol Beverage Control Board for the actual alcohol laws, studying them for months, and opening anyway. You’ll hear the scrappy funding moves, the opening-night surge, the logistics of handling massive demand, and the pressure from law enforcement that forced him to tighten operations and defend the business model in real time. It’s Lafayette Louisiana entrepreneurship at its most honest: bold, messy, funny, and surprisingly strategic.

    If you love origin stories, small business strategy, or Louisiana culture, hit play and share this with a friend who’s building something new. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or YouTube, 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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    57 分
  • A Chat With A Familiar Face in Acadiana, Gerald Gruenig
    2026/06/17

    Gerald Gruenig has the kind of personality you notice from across the room, but the story behind it runs deeper than social clips and zydeco nights. We talk with Gerald about growing up in Gentilly, New Orleans, with a full-blown po-boy shop under his bedroom, and how that front-row seat to plate lunches, regulars, and neighborhood life shaped the way he moves through Louisiana today. If you care about the Lafayette food scene, local restaurants, and the people who keep community culture alive, you’ll feel right at home here.

    From there, we get real about what it means to miss New Orleans while also seeing how it’s changed since Hurricane Katrina. Gerald shares memories of displacement, returning to a wrecked restaurant, and the kind of culture shock that rewires a teenager’s priorities. We also dig into the quieter signs of belonging: greetings on the streetcar, the warmth of Lafayette, and why raising kids in a place that feels connected can matter as much as any big career plan.

    Then the conversation turns to the moment that stopped everything: Gerald’s Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosis, treatment, and remission. He doesn’t just share the timeline, he shares the emotional whiplash of being “the fun guy” while feeling broken inside, and the humbling experience of realizing how many people were praying for him. We also talk about faith, Catholic community, and how gratitude can become a daily practice instead of a slogan.

    We close on the legacy question: what happens to a family-owned po-boy shop when the next generation is torn between love for the business and the reality of how grueling restaurants are. Gerald breaks down why food costs more now and why supporting small business means understanding the true cost of labor, ingredients, and survival. If this hits you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who loves Louisiana food culture, and leave a review so more people can find these stories.

    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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    55 分
  • How Sunday's Soda Fountain Turned History Into A Modern Hangout
    2026/06/10

    A lot of restaurant stories start with a menu. Ours starts with a building, a chipped tile floor, and a stranger who walks by and says, “That used to be the old soda fountain.” We’re sitting down with Mike and Setareh Delcambre inside Sunday Soda Fountain in downtown Lafayette, Louisiana, and they take us through the real behind-the-scenes journey of bringing historic spaces back to life without sanding off what made them special in the first place.

    We talk about Mike’s early leap into creating 307 Jazz Club, the “trial by fire” moment of suddenly leading a team in his 20s, and how a passion for music and design shaped a venue that drew touring musicians. From there, the story keeps expanding: The Green Room’s sustainability roots, the realities of operating bars and restaurants, and the way real estate investing can become a tool for downtown revitalization when you’re willing to bet on underloved blocks.

    Then we get into what makes Sunday Soda Fountain so unique: the research into soda fountain history, prohibition-era influences, and why counter service, house-made sodas, and a smart alcohol program actually fit together. Mike and Setareh also share the tough operational pivots that changed everything, including the move from quick service to table service and scaling days back to protect the guest experience. If you love adaptive reuse, historic restoration, and the craft of building community-centered places, this conversation is for you.

    Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube, then share this with a friend who loves downtown Lafayette, and leave a review with your favorite thing to order at Sunday.

    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
  • Jan Scott Richard Turns Community Into A Plan
    2026/06/03

    A mayor who still keeps a hand in the restaurant? That combination sounds impossible until you meet Jan Scott Richard, the Mayor of Scott, Louisiana and the owner of Cajan's. Sitting down at Sunday Soda Fountain, we follow the path from growing up in Scott to chasing soccer all the way to Milwaukee and Tallahassee, then returning home with a clearer idea of what a strong community can look like.

    We dig into the real-life mechanics of building a local restaurant in the middle of the Acadiana food scene: taking what worked from a deli background, adapting it to Cajun culture, and protecting traditions like a 1942 chili recipe that lives on through the Original Scott Boudin hot dog. Jan also explains why Cajan's thrives as a Monday through Friday breakfast and lunch spot and how staying present with regular customers keeps the place grounded.

    From there, the conversation turns to local leadership, transparency, and why he believes local politics should be where politics starts and ends. We talk flood history and flood mitigation, including practical drainage work like channel cleaning, culverts, and roadside ditches, plus a standout public-private partnership that helped create a major retention pond and public amenity in record time. We also get into soccer coaching, raising kids who want to lead in their own way, and the behind-the-scenes story of how Boudin Fest grew into a regional attraction after Scott earned the “Boudin Capital of the World” designation.

    If you care about Scott Louisiana, Lafayette culture, Cajun food, small business, community leadership, drainage solutions, or Boudin Fest, this one connects it all. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube, share this with a friend who loves Acadiana, and leave a review telling us what topic you want next.

    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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    41 分
  • The Restaurant That Changed Lafayette: Ep. 2
    2026/05/27

    A 94-year run doesn’t happen by accident, and it definitely doesn’t happen by cutting corners. We’re sitting down at Poor Boy's Riverside Inn in Lafayette with Richard and Lori Hurst to hear what it takes to carry a multi-generation Louisiana restaurant forward while keeping the food, the service, and the standards consistent enough that regulars can taste the difference the second a recipe slips. Along the way, we get the kind of stories you only hear from people who’ve lived it, like training across every role, the old-school days of expanding to multiple locations, and the unforgettable origin of the first lobster tank in Lafayette.

    We also dig into what makes this place feel like home to so many families in Acadiana: scratch-made cooking, a serious seafood program, and menu items with real history behind them. We talk flounder on the bone, Crab Meat Imperial, stuffed redfish, and the philosophy that great drinks deserve as much attention as great food, right down to house-made mixers and a gentle push to put the phones away and actually talk at the table. If you care about Cajun food, Creole influence, and the craft behind “best seafood in Lafayette” searches, this conversation is for you.

    Then it gets real. We unpack how Hurricane Katrina and COVID changed supply chains, pricing, staffing, hours, and the day-to-day stress of keeping the lights on, plus why catering and private events became a key survival pivot. We also talk about social media reviews and the human impact of online negativity, and why we’d rather you tell your server and let us fix it than save it for later behind a keyboard. If you enjoy the show, subscribe, share it with a friend who loves local Louisiana restaurants, and leave a review so more people can find us.

    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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    59 分