Gerald Gruenig: A Chat With A Familiar Face in Acadiana
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Foodies of Lafayette tells the stories behind Acadiana’s restaurants, chefs, food traditions, and community.
Gerald Gruenig has the kind of personality you notice from across the room, but the story behind it runs deeper than social clips and zydeco nights. We talk with Gerald about growing up in Gentilly, New Orleans, with a full-blown po-boy shop under his bedroom, and how that front-row seat to plate lunches, regulars, and neighborhood life shaped the way he moves through Louisiana today. If you care about the Lafayette food scene, local restaurants, and the people who keep community culture alive, you’ll feel right at home here.
From there, we get real about what it means to miss New Orleans while also seeing how it’s changed since Hurricane Katrina. Gerald shares memories of displacement, returning to a wrecked restaurant, and the kind of culture shock that rewires a teenager’s priorities. We also dig into the quieter signs of belonging: greetings on the streetcar, the warmth of Lafayette, and why raising kids in a place that feels connected can matter as much as any big career plan.
Then the conversation turns to the moment that stopped everything: Gerald’s Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosis, treatment, and remission. He doesn’t just share the timeline, he shares the emotional whiplash of being “the fun guy” while feeling broken inside, and the humbling experience of realizing how many people were praying for him. We also talk about faith, Catholic community, and how gratitude can become a daily practice instead of a slogan.
We close on the legacy question: what happens to a family-owned po-boy shop when the next generation is torn between love for the business and the reality of how grueling restaurants are. Gerald breaks down why food costs more now and why supporting small business means understanding the true cost of labor, ingredients, and survival. If this hits you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who loves Louisiana food culture, and leave a review so more people can find these stories.
The podcast was made possible through partnerships with Rouses Supermarket, Logic Refrigeration HVAC, Ounce of Hope, Cajun Table, Vermilionville, Soul Haus Kitchen, Chris Logan Media, and Sunday Soda Fountain – proving that when a community rallies around celebrating local food culture, amazing things happen. Subscribe now to join this delicious adventure and become part of the movement that's transforming Lafayette's food scene one bite at a time!
https://sundayssodafountain.com/
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https://www.soulhauskitchen337.com/
learn more: https://foodiesoflafayette.com