RIP, Paul Prudhomme: TV chef popularized Cajun and Creole cuisine, invented turducken

If it weren't for Chef Paul Prudhomme, we wouldn't have turducken, and Cajun/Creole cuisine would not have become the global sensation it is today. When the charismatic television chef popularized blackened redfish, it became such an obsession the species nearly went extinct.

Chef Paul

Chef Paul


Prudhomme died today, at 75. His restaurant, K-Paul's Louisiana Kitchen, confirmed the news to CNN, and said he died after a "brief illness," the nature of which was not further specified.

If you read only one obituary, make it his hometown paper: The New Orleans Times-Picayune. If you're not old enough to remember when he was a fixture on public television, here's a primer on why Chef Paul was so awesome.

At its peak in the 1980s, Prudhomme's profile cast a shadow even over such culinary legends as Julia Child and James Beard, and there was no restaurant-world precedent for the celebrity he enjoyed. The portly chef starred in several cooking shows and home videos, was a regular on local and national TV, appeared on magazine covers and became a best-selling cookbook author a decade before chefs such as Emeril Lagasse, his heir at Commander's Palace, ushered in the age of the celebrity chef. His first of eight books, 1984's "Chef Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana Kitchen, " is still widely considered a classic.

"I think that Paul Prudhomme has had the greatest influence on American cooking, in cultivating the public interest in American food, of anybody I know," said New York Times food critic Craig Claiborne in a 1988 interview. Claiborne was from the South, too– born in Mississippi.

"He created this great interest in Cajun and Creole cooking. People said, 'There must be more to Southern cooking,' and he opened up the floodgates to the whole field of Southern cooking.'"

From Variety:

Known by many as Chef Paul, Prudhomme garnered renown for his skills in creole cuisine, which he helped popularize during his career. He also gained notoriety for introducing the turducken to the world.

His cooking career has led him to being featured in numerous TV series and he was feted with food industry awards including Restaurateur of the Year.

Prudhomme also hosted five national cooking shows on PBS, produced locally by WYES-TV, and authored nine cookbooks through his years.