From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (2024)

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From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (1)

Plus IconMardi Gras king cake. Todd Taulman/Adobe.

Whether you call it Mardi Gras, Fat Tuesday or Carnival, one thing’s for certain: It’s party time. If you can’t get out to NOLA (as literally no one in Louisiana probably actually calls it), that doesn’t mean you can’t celebrate Mardi Gras at home with some festive foods, good friends and spirited co*cktails.

Related storyYes, You Should Celebrate Mardi Gras With Kids — Here's How

But first, you’ll need a traditional Fat Tuesday menu. King cake is a must, and as an ode to the Mardi Gras tradition of going hog-wild with fatty foods before Lent, scarfing down some fried chicken has become something of a tradition. But what about gumbo, jambalaya and po’boys? They eat those too, though that’s because it’s Tuesday and that’s what people in The Big Easy eat. There really are no rules, though NOLA.com’s Ann Maloney, in her article on hosting a Mardi Gras party, suggests indulging in some dishes that invoke the spirit of Nawlins (which they probably also don’t say unless it’s just their accent). And don’t forget about big-batch foods that feed a crowd if you invited all the neighbors.

Pro tip: Many of the recipes ahead feature ingredients that might be tough to get your claws on in some areas of the country. If that’s the case, Maloney encourages you to check out CajunGrocer to get your Mardi Gras party started. Now, all you have to do is narrow down which of these recipes you’ll be making for the big day.

A version of this article was originally published February 2019.

  • Oysters Rockefeller

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (4)

    Spinach is wilted in a mixture of garlicky butter and panko breadcrumbs then deglazed with anise liqueur and seasoned with cayenne, Parmesan and parsley before being spooned onto freshly shucked oysters, baked and topped with crispy bacon to create a Louisiana-born oyster appetizer as rich as its namesake.

    Get the recipe from Closet Cooking.

  • A Classic New Orleans co*cktail

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (8)

    The Prohibition was surely good to the home of the Saints. At New Orleans staple Pat O’Brien’s, it inspired the creation of the less-than-humble hurricane. This knock-you-on-your-ass co*cktail is a sweet combo of passion fruit, lime and orange juices spiked with a full 4 ounces of rum per serving.

    If your guests aren’t in a fruity mood, they can imbibe the absinthe-and-bourbon behemoth from The Big Easy, the Sazerac.

    Get the recipe from Mix That Drink.

  • Jambalaya

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (9)

    This jambalaya recipe kicks up the Cajun holy trinity with verdant jalapeños, unctuous garlic and a generous amount of Cajun or Creole seasoning. Add tomatoes, sliced okra, fresh shrimp, bite-size chicken and rounds of smoky andouille sausage for a vivid flavor that reminds you this recipe hails from the Birthplace of Jazz.

    Get the recipe from Gimme Some Oven.

  • Buttermilk Fried Chicken

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (10)

    If Popeye’s isn’t your thing, try this buttermilk fried chicken instead. We recommend upping the hot sauce to one or two tablespoons for a more Louisiana kick. It’s just as tender on the inside and crispy on the outside, but with a more traditional Southern-fried dredge.

    Get the recipe from Jo Cooks.

  • Muffuletta

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (12)

    This quintessential New Orleans sandwich, first created at the city’s Central Grocery Co. in 1906, feeds a crowd. The muffuletta sandwich is loaded with thin slices of fatty (in a good way) mortadella, dry-cured capicola, Genoa salami, provolone and mozzarella and topped with a tangy (and sometimes spicy) pickled vegetable mix called Giardiniera — all sandwiched between two halves of a round boule. You can even make your own NOLA-style bouleat home.

    Get the recipe from Striped Spatula.

  • Po’boy

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (13)

    If the muffuletta is the official sandwich of New Orleans, the po’boy is the official sandwich of the whole state. Slow-cooked roast beef or crispy-fried seafood is piled into a soft-on-the-inside, crusty-on-the-outside New Orleans-style French roll with the usual sandwich-fixing suspects and drizzled with creamy horseradish-infused rémoulade sauce.

    Try an easy fried shrimp po’boy if you’re short on time or a fried oyster po’boy for a slightly briny taste of the coast in your own home. Or get creative with this nontraditional blackened shrimp po’boy with avocado-mango slaw.

    Get the recipe from Half Baked Harvest.

  • Gumbo

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (15)

    Starting with a deep-hued roux made with bacon fat, this long-cook seafood gumbo with shrimp, lump crabmeat and andouille packs on the flavor with a mix of traditional veggies, rich beef broth and Worcestershire for umami, sassafras-powered filé powder and a kick of Cajun seasoning and Tabasco.

    Get the recipe from Self Proclaimed Foodie.

  • Crawfish Boil

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (16)

    Mardi Gras season is also crawfish season, and a good old-fashioned crawfish boil will feed a crowd with 40 pounds ofboiled Cajun-seasoned crawfish, 20 pounds of potatoes, 20 ears of corn and two whole bulbs of garlic. And it’s easy to cut this recipe (or multiply it) to feed whatever size crowd you have.

    Get the recipe from Steamy Kitchen.

  • New Orleans-Style Barbecue Shrimp

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (17)

    Barbecue might be more associated with their neighboring state of Texas, but New Orleans-style barbecue shrimp‘s “barbecue” sauce is uniquely NOLA. A butter-Worcestershire sauce base is seasoned with garlic, Creole spices, oregano, paprika, cayenne and tons of lemon to complement the seafood.

    Get the recipe from Spicy Southern Kitchen.

  • Crawfish Étouffée

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (18)

    Crawfish étouffée‘s fierce flavor is the perfect down-home-style way to enjoy these tiny cousins of the lobster. Serve it over rice so your guests can easily devour every last bit, from the star ingredient to the heavily spiced tomato-based gravy it’s swimming in.

    Get the recipe from Self Proclaimed Foodie.

  • Classic Bananas Foster

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (20)

    Bananas Foster is the ultimate study in sweet contrast: spicy, sultry, ooey-gooey rum-caramel sauced bananas vs. the innocent sweetness of vanilla ice cream melting over an impressively flambéed dessert.

    Get the recipe from A Couple Cooks.

  • Bananas Foster Pudding

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (21)

    This bananas Foster pudding is the perfect substitute for the classic if you’re hosting a larger party, but don’t let its potluck appearance fool you. Vanilla wafers soak up the scorched rum, becoming pleasantly toothsome before being topped with a sweet, cinnamon-spiced mix of spiked bananas, lush homemade custard and a layer of crisp vanilla wafers for that classic vanilla pudding look.

    Get the recipe from Spicy Southern Kitchen.

  • Pecan Pralines

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (22)

    Rich and creamy with the occasional crunch of the classic Southern pecan, it’s the buttermilk that takes these pecan pralines, a staple of sweet Louisiana snacking, from simply indulgent to decadent.

    Get the recipe from Mom on Timeout.

  • King Cake

    From King Cake to Gumbo, the Mardi Gras Recipes You Need to Try (23)

    King cake is a sweet, briochelike ring, braided and baked until it’s golden-brown, then spread with yellow, green and purple icing and sprinkled with sugar in the same colors.

    Get the recipe from Tori Avey.

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