

9
Chef Nathan RIchard
W
hen chef Nathan Richard scans the meat
case at Rouses in Thibodaux where he
teaches at the John Folse Culinary School,
or in New Orleans, where he lives and works, he sees the
bigger picture. Pork chops are part of a loin roast on the
upper back of a grain-fed pig. He can imagine the rib
structure that holds them in place and the fatback a bit
higher on the hog. He can look at Rouses pork section
and knows the best way to cook any part of a pig.
After talking with Chef Nathan for a while about pigs,
pork and possibilities, you start to see his well-developed
superpower. While most cooks see the world of pork
from a pan perspective, Richard sees the same pig with
Cajun-influenced butcher-vision.
The common cuts — what are known as the “primals” in
meat-cutting circles — are just the beginning.
Richard’s special way of seeing things becomes obvious
as the Thibodaux native talks about his cooking, his
approach and the way that he learned about food.
Years before he took his first kitchen job peeling potatoes
and shrimp at Commander’s Palace to get through
college, Richard learned about Louisiana cooking
traditions in more practical ways. “My dad was the chef
of the family, and I learned a lot from him,” he said. “I
was young and wanted to hunt, but my parents didn’t,
and they weren’t going to pay to get the deer processed.
It was expensive, so I bought myself a meat grinder and
learned how to break deer down myself.”
Richard’s full-animal education continued thanks to a
penchant for whole-hog cookery he learned from his
grandfather in nearby Raceland.
“Cooking whole hogs was a celebration in my family,”
he said. “So when I was about 18, we decided to try one
out at Lake Verret. We went and got a pig from the
stockyard and tried it
out.Wethought
we had a clue, but not really,”
he laughed. “We had some beer and a fire. We figured we could
make something happen.”
Before hitting restaurant kitchens as his life’s work, he embarked
on an early career as a firefighter and paramedic — studying Fire
Science Technology at Delgado Community College. After being
trained as a first responder and arson investigator — no, really —
Richard became a captain of theThibodaux Fire Department at age
21. Over time, his professional interests shifted to restaurant work.
His 5-year stint at Commander’s under Executive Chef Tory
McPhail led to a tour of renowned kitchens across the South,
most notably in South Carolina. In Charleston, Richard worked
with renowned chefs Sean Brock, Mike Lata, and Frank Lee (at
McCrady’s, FIG and High Cotton, respectively). He also studied
charcuterie in France and Italy. Returning home to Louisiana,
he opened the Lafayette location of Donald Link and Steven
Stryjewski’s Cochon and did stints at White Oak Plantation and
John Folse’s Revolution as a full-time butcher.
But take one look at the menu board at Richard’s latest gig —
Kingfish — and you’ll see the dedication to making the most of the
whole animal, whether it’s from the barnyard or the bayou.
“We buy whole animals and work our way through it with hourly
specials.We’ll get a pig and make head cheese and offer it as ‘Offal of
the Hour.’When it’s gone, it’s gone.Then we’ll make pork backbone
stew and offer
that
as a special. And when it’s gone, it’s
gone.Wedo
the same thing with seafood. Catfish head stew, grouper heads and
collars. It’s a sign of respect to use the whole animal.”
He also teaches what he preaches to culinary students atThibodaux’s
Nicholls State University, where he leads whole-animal butchery
classes at the Culinary Institute. The next generation of restaurant
chefs get to learn the craft of breaking down and appreciating the
whole animal.
“It’s my job as a chef to educate, tell people what it’s
about,” he said. “With the class, I start out on
the first day with a whole alligator, and we
use every bit of it.”