Episodios

  • How Joey’s Became Lafayette’s Go-To Market For Dinner, Catering, And Comfort Food
    Apr 8 2026

    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 m
  • Inside Nash’s: Scratch Italian Cooking In A 1908 Louisiana Home
    Apr 1 2026

    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 Vereca 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 m
  • How A Sicilian Family Built Lafayette’s First Pizza Tradition
    Mar 25 2026

    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 m
  • Poupart’s: A Lafayette Bakery Legacy
    Mar 18 2026

    A great bakery doesn’t just sell pastries. It keeps a city’s memories warm, one loaf at a time. We’re sitting down at Sunday Soda Fountain with Patrick Poupart, the next-generation baker behind Poupart’s Bakery in Lafayette, Louisiana, to dig into how a true French bakery took root here and why people still drive in from out of town with an ice chest to stock up.

    Patrick shares the family story that starts in France with serious craft training through the Compagnons du Devoir and leads to Poupart’s opening its doors in 1965. We talk about what it means to grow up above the shop, learn the work young, and come back from baking school in France with a deeper love for fermentation and bread. If you’re curious about sourdough starter culture, baguettes, and why “bread is alive,” this conversation gets specific in a way food lovers will appreciate.

    We also get practical: Poupart’s American king cake versus French king cake, what makes French pastries different, and how the bakery has grown into sandwiches, soups, freezer meals, and full-scale catering for massive events. Along the way, Patrick explains a mindset we want more of in the Lafayette food community: sharing knowledge, helping other chefs, and choosing collaboration over competition.

    If you care about local businesses, Cajun and Creole food culture, and the craft behind French baking in Louisiana, hit play. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify, or YouTube, share this with a friend who loves king cake, and leave a review telling us your go-to Poupart’s order.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with 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 m
  • From Insurance To Café Sydney Mae: Community, Cuisine, And Comebacks
    Mar 11 2026

    What if your second act became your town’s heartbeat? We sit down with Café Sydney Mae’s David Puckett to trace a late-career leap from insurance to the line, and how that jump—grounded in family, faith, and fierce hospitality—turned a 100-year-old Breaux Bridge building into a community hub for food, music, and art. David shares the moment his daughter needed a kidney and he became her donor, the decades he and Cheryl have poured into LOPA’s lifesaving mission, and why the restaurant hosts an annual night that brings donor families, recipients, and clinicians to the same table.

    We dig into the nuts and bolts behind the warmth: the mentorship of industry legend Charlie Goodson, the people-first culture that keeps regulars close, and the operational discipline that makes generosity sustainable. In the kitchen, CIA-trained Chef Kim Newsham leads a team that balances consistency with creativity—think an ever-evolving Touch Wellington, a sous vide pork chop that melts under a hot sear, and specials that let technique sing without losing the soul of Acadiana. Along the walls, local artist Tony Bernard’s originals anchor the room with color and story.

    When the pandemic hit, the café pivoted in 24 hours, flipping to takeout, hauling tables to the sidewalk, and inviting a fiddler to open with Amazing Grace as church bells rang—an unplanned duet that captured a neighborhood’s heartbeat. You’ll also hear the unlikely origin of the 9:47 a.m. brunch, and how the Guest Chef Series turns home cooks into leaders for a night while raising over $70,000 for local causes by scaling recipes, costing menus, and pairing music with mission.

    If you’re hungry for a masterclass in hospitality, resilient operations, and community building—told with heart and grounded in real numbers—this conversation delivers. Subscribe, share with a friend who’s dreaming of a second act, and leave a review with the lesson you’ll bring to your own work.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with 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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    40 m
  • From Roofing To Boudin: How Karchener’s Built A Cajun Powerhouse
    Mar 4 2026

    The smell of fried ribs hits first, then the line of boudin links, and finally the feeling that you’ve stepped into a modern Cajun country store where everything just works. We sat down with Doug Miller to unpack how Karchener’s grew from a bold bet in Scott, Louisiana into a thriving, multi-location market without sacrificing flavor, warmth, or control. The story winds through roofing crews in August heat, an oilfield scare, and a roadside realization: if you meet people where traffic stalls and serve food that tastes like home, they’ll keep coming back.

    Doug shares how a handshake beneath an oak tree with Willie and Ginger set the foundation for a perfect split of strengths—food craft on one side, construction and business systems on the other. That partnership powers a consistent experience across stores, anchored by centralized production in Scott and a curated retail approach that favors 200+ Cajun staples over a short, static list. Think boudin by the ton, fried ribs moving by the hundreds of pounds, stuffed pork chops and tenderloins, soups, sides, and locally made essentials that turn a quick stop into a full meal plan. The Lafayette location became a masterclass in scaling: start lean, listen hard, layer in shelves and coolers, and standardize what works.

    We also dig into the people engine behind the food. Doug looks for team members who care, trains for service that feels neighborly, and invests in benefits and clear growth paths. The result shows up at the window and on the plate—smiles, speed, and the same Karchener’s taste no matter which door you walk through. Looking ahead, a new production facility will unlock menu expansion and faster rollouts, while site selection balances interstate visibility with neighborhood demand. And through it all, one principle holds: the Karchener’s experience stays in-store, not on a random grocery shelf.

    Hungry for the full story of boudin, ribs, and a scaling playbook with heart? Hit play, subscribe for more local food deep dives, and tell us where Karchener’s should open next. Your favorite order might shape the next stop.

    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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    38 m
  • From Dishwasher To 17 Restaurants: Nidal Balbisi’s Journey
    Feb 25 2026

    What makes a restaurant unforgettable isn’t the plate, it’s the person who serves it. We sit down with Nidal Balbisi—founder behind Zeus, Agave, Baba Kebab, and more—to unpack how people-first hospitality, relentless presence, and creative fusion built some of Acadiana’s most-loved dining rooms.

    Nidal takes us from Kuwait to LSU, through his first shifts as a dishwasher assistant, and into the front-of-house lessons that shaped everything to come. He explains why a Bud Light tastes better when the server knows your name, how forgiveness grows from genuine connection, and why every role—from dishwasher to manager—has equal weight in the guest experience. His love letter to Lafayette shines through: the culture, the warmth, and the community that turned a career into a calling.

    We explore Agave’s Cajun-Mex philosophy, including a seafood-forward menu, an award-winning burger crowned with house seafood sauce, and the quiet brilliance of “Mama” and kitchen collaborators who anchor the flavors. Then we step into Baba Kebab, where handmade bread, flame, and family recipes yield standouts like the “red velvet” chicken and richly sauced grape leaves. Nidal shares the hard-won story of opening Zeus on Pinhook at 27—borrowing cash for the register, skipping a salary for a year, and setting simple daily targets that transformed a dream into a thriving brand. He also opens up about Trend, his fine-dining venture years ahead of Lafayette’s curve, what he learned from a Michelin-trained chef, and why he chose vision over compromise when the concept drifted toward club culture.

    If you’re a restaurateur, a home cook, or someone who returns to places that feel like family, this conversation will sharpen your sense of what truly matters: consistency, care, and teams that show up. Hear Nidal’s best advice for newcomers, his take on scaling without losing soul, and the gratitude he carries for a community that became home.

    Enjoyed the story? Follow the show, share it with a friend who loves great hospitality, and leave a review so more food lovers can find us.

    The podcast was made possible through partnerships with 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 m
  • How A Family Grocer Built Cajun Classics And Community
    Feb 11 2026

    A lively lounge across from a canning factory turned into a grocery where regulars grabbed bread, eggs, and ketchup after a beer—and that simple pivot launched a 70-year family legacy. We sit down with Blaine and Braden Broussard of Nunu’s to unpack how a third- and fourth-generation team built a beloved Acadiana staple known for bold boudin, cracklins, plate lunches, and the kind of customer care that makes a store feel like home.

    We trace the early days from the Blue Room Lounge to a small-town meat market, where a curious brother-in-law began crafting house recipes and an original seasoning blend long before private labels were common. When big-box competition crept in, the family doubled down on flavor and service, introducing pre-seasoned meats and learning the rhythms of a hot line by selling hundreds of plate lunches out of a tiny gas station kitchen. That scrappy experience paved the way for expansions to Youngsville, Scott, and Maurice, each with modern kitchens, better equipment, and a commitment to consistency without losing the hand of tradition.

    Braden brings fresh energy with monthly limited-run burgers and sausages—think Korean barbecue, hot honey and cream cheese, or fig and brie—while keeping Cajun staples front and center. We talk real numbers on boudin production, the art of getting that perfect casing snap, and why fried chicken and grab-and-go meals have become weekday heroes. Most of all, we highlight the brand’s beating heart: Jeanette’s front-of-house warmth, a culture of knowing customers by name, and vendor appreciation days that give small local makers the shelf space big retailers won’t. It’s a story about taste, family, and building a community-first grocery that grows at the speed of trust.

    Hungry for more stories like this? Follow, subscribe, and leave a review so others can find the show—and tell us what sausage flavor you want to see 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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    32 m