Before the UL-vs-NT I had fun perusing through and taking pictures of all the ULLigators cooking and having fun. Real close to the Krewe-de-Chew, I ran across a full blown "Cochon De Lait" (a pig roast) in progress.
A Cochon-De-Lait" can occur in many ways, but I remember fondly one from my youth where we used a time tested method of hand rotating a very small pig over a fire comprised mostly of pecan wood and dry sugarcane stalks over a hole lined with aluminum foil. After we were finished we threw the trash in the hole and covered it up. Someday an archeologist will dig it up and declare us prehistoric.
Those memories rushed to the fore at Cajun Basin when on my picture taking rounds, I came across the S-Club tent in the day long throws of a bona fide Cochon De Lait. While it wasn't the kind I remember from my youth, it was the kind you tend to see lately, a pig roast with an above ground devise with a motorized pig rotator. The self rotator allows you the luxury of standing away from the fire and tends to give you more time to socialize. From my old memories being so close to the fire for so long, the cook used to end up looking like the “other” other white meat.
Besides the Cochon De Lait it was exciting to meet a person I have come across many times in my research, Mike McDonald of UL football fame (late 60's and early 70's) he once had a 99 yard kickoff return in a game against Roger Staubach, and was a member of the Ragin Cajuns through what can only be considered some of their winningest years.
They offered for me to come back and taste some of the fruits of their day long labor but time did not allow. My goal was to hit all the tailgating spots in Cajun Basin, and even though the Cajuns lost and I never did make all the rounds it was still a day to remember.