NotUrsula
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2002
- Messages
- 20,080
there were legs on my shrimp ! nuff said ! ewwwww
Um, why wouldn't there be? Shrimp cooked in the shell have legs.
I liked the grilled shrimp *concept*, but at Ohana they tended to badly overcook them; all too often they were downright rubbery. A properly grilled shrimp has to be grilled with the shell still on, or it will not cook evenly, especially when grilled over an open flame rather than coals. I'm hoping that they are having better luck wth sauteed shrimp.
What strikes me about the new menu is that it seems to have a decided New Orleans bent. I haven't tried the new menu yet, but what has been described sounds very like the typical "barbequed shrimp" recipe from New Orleans, with the addition of ginger and sweet chili sauce to make it a bit more asian and take down the "bite" of the garlic a little bit. ("Barbequed shrimp" is never grilled, btw; it is a saute dish, and it is considered de rigueur in Louisiana to use french bread to sop up every last drop of the sauce it is cooked in. Horribly fattening, but incredibly yummy.)
Bread pudding is also very traditional in New Orleans, probably the most traditional restaurant dessert you will find other than Bananas Foster -- which WDW ironically decided to combine with the bread pudding by using a variation on it for the sauce, rather than the whiskey sauce you normally find with bread pudding. New Orleanians do not often make scalloped potatoes, as rice is much more popular with most folks, but au gratin dishes in general are found frequently in New Orleans -- usually containing some seafood or another -- the French influence coming up again.
Technically, in at least PART of Polynesia, French influence is very correct, but New Orleans "French" is probably not the variation you would find. Maybe they just think that a slightly Creole twist will prove popular, as it has at DL's Blue Bayou.