Tribute to Buster HolmesDate: Tue, 1 Mar 94 09:27:02 -0600From: elendil@mintir.new-orleans.la.us Subject: Buster Holmes dead at 89
To: "New Orleans Mailing List"
I guess it's appropriate in a way that Buster Holmes died on a Monday. Monday
is red beans and rice day in New Orleans, and that is the dish that Chef Buster
was most famous for. Buster Holmes' Bar and Restaurant, which was located on
the corner of Orleans and Burgundy in the Quarter was a classic creole/soul food
place--turnip greens, pork chops, roast garlic chicken, and of course red beans
and rice.
Most lunch counters in New Orleans still serve red beans and rice on Mondays.
This tradition goes back a long way. Red beans take a long time to prepare,
so many families ate them on Monday so that mom could start them on Sunday and
do them right. The smell of red beans cooking would completely permeate
neighborhoods. Our instant-food culture has changed this in terms of home
cooking habits, but we New Orleanians still love our red beans.
Buster Holmes' Bar and Restaurant wasn't anything to brag about. Like many
New Orleans restaurants, little money was spent on atmosphere. It's one of
those places, like the Hummingbird, Clover Grill, etc., whose looks (hopefully)
would scare off tourists, leaving the place for the locals. One thing Buster
Holmes' had going for it was that it was a soul food place that wasn't located
in or next to a housing project. This gave it a larger following among white
folks than other places as good or better. We would go to Buster Holmes' for
lunch back while attending UNO, then walk down to Angelo Brocato's (back in the
days when it was located on Ursuline Street) for cannolis and lemon ice. My
favorite was red beans and rice with a pork chop.
Chef Buster retired in the early '80s ('81, I think). He sold his name and the
name of the restaurant to a company that tried to start a chain of fast-food
restaurants based on his red beans. I don't know the full history of why that
venture failed, but it did give Al Copeland of Popeye's the inspiration to add
red beans and rice to the menu at Popeye's. If you're travelling on the Earhart
Expressway from Metairie to Uptown and you smell red beans cooking as you head
towards New Orleans, you're not imagining things. The Copeland Enterprises
main commisary is located off of Earhart, and that's where they prepare all of
the red beans for the Popeye's in the metro area. The sensation is akin to
passing a coffee plant or a bread bakery.
There are several places to get good red beans in New Orleans. Even the
Picadilly Cafeteria chain does good red beans. Some places that immediately
come to mind as Monday special places are the Commerce Restaurant (Camp and
Baronne in the CBD), Mother's (Poydras and Tchopitoulas), Ye Olde College Inn
(S. Carrollton near Earhart), and the new Mr. Ed's in Bucktown. Of course,
you can always pick up an order of red beans and rice at Popeye's any day of
the week. It may be a fast-food chain, but red beans are one of those dishes
that do well when made in quantity, so Popeye's version is quite good. A
two piece dinner with red beans is one of the best lunches in New Orleans.
I'm working at home today, so I think I'll put a pot of red beans on the stove
today. It's not Monday, but I can't think of a better way to honor Chef Buster.
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