MEET THE MAN WHO TAUGHT SHREVEPORT TO EAT CRAWFISH…
Let’s
say that you are the Louisiana Restaurant Association in 1979. You are
the governing body that ostensibly represents dining establishments in a
state revered around the world for the exceptional quality of its
cuisine.
The
year 1979 will turn out to be a fateful one for Louisiana cuisine. Paul
and Kay Prudhomme opened K-Paul’s, one of history’s great gumbo joints,
in 1979. A 23-year-old named Emeril Lagasse assumed control of the
kitchen at Commander’s Palace. An hour’s drive due west, John Folse
celebrated the first anniversary of Lafitte’s Landing, a restaurant that
would go on to fill the pages of countless travel maga- zines and
produce several category-defining cookbooks.
Amid
all of this excitement, you – the Louisiana Restaurant Association
members – announce a new, annual award recognizing Louisiana's
Restaurateur of the Year. Surely, you must realize that the first
recipient of this honor will occupy a special place in the history of
your organization.
And
yet, when you etch that first name into Louisiana’s gastronomic record,
the name that you select is that of lifelong Shreveporter Abe Ritman.
The award is handed out during the annual LRA convention in New Orleans,
where at least a few celebrants must have turned to their tablemates to
ask, “Who the hell is Abe Ritman?" Ritman was born in Shreveport
on July 11, 1928, to Meyer and Sarah. Meyer ran a dry goods store.
Sarah, active in the Agudath Achim Synagogue and its Hadassah, died when
Abe was a teen.
He
graduated from C.E. Byrd in 1945 and went to work for Harry Diebner and
Siegfried Grossman at Derby Liquor, a squat, yellow brick building at
1614 Market St. (This address is presently occupied by a biker bar
called Coyote’s.) By 1951, Ritman owned the place.
And
what a place for a 23-year-old newlywed to own. Abe's Derby Liquor was a
package liquor store that also allowed on-premises consumption. A
single pinball machine served as entertainment. By the mid-’50s,
classified ads began to appear seeking kitchen help, indicating that
Abe's food counter was growing.
Here's how Abe told it to Bob Griffin in 1983:
"R.S.
Allday, who owned a brickyard in Atlanta and was a good friend and
customer of mine, had an office across the street. One rainy day, he
came in with five pounds of shrimp. He said, 'Abe, it's raining too hard
to go home. Would you cook these for me?' I had a little hot plate, so I
boiled the shrimp for him, and we all – neighbors, customers and so
forth – sat down and ate with him.
“The next Friday, we did it again. We invited a few more people, bought a chunk of cheese, some pickles and some French bread. That went on
for about 30 days. So, we decided that we were gonna get some crawfish
for a change. I had never seen a crawfish before in my life. The first
order I ever placed was for 1,700 pounds. It was really something, that
many crawfish. So, we had to invite a lot of people to help us eat
them.”
"He just fell
into the restaurant business," Abe's partner and widow, Janet Ritman,
told me during a phone call from her home in Florida. "We never intended
to open a restaurant at all."
The
night that Abe’s Derby – not the liquor store, but the seafood
restaurant that it spawned at 1900 Market St. – opened in 1960,
Shreveport’s Highland neighborhood was in an uproar. Curbside parking
was packed, bumper-to-bumper, for several blocks in any direction of the
new restaurant, which everyone just called “Abe’s.” It would eventually
be renamed Abe’s Sea and Sirloin.
Janet welcomed customers at the entrance. Abe walked the floor in a short-sleeved dress shirt, cracking jokes with each table.
“He
was kind of a shy guy,” Janet told me. “But, when he was in the
restaurant, he was totally different. He was in his element.”
He
taught free classes on raising, cleaning, cooking and eating crawfish
at his restaurant several times each year. During an International
Science Fair held on the campus of Centenary College, Ritman used a
loudspeaker to lead 600 competitors – many of whom were visiting the
U.S. for the first time – through the process of peeling and eating
crawfish.
"These kids
were from Japan and all over the world, and they'd never seen crawfish,
but Abe wanted them to have a taste of Louisiana," Janet said. "He loved
teaching people how to eat oysters and crawfish; he just loved it."
Every
interview he gave to local media, every crawfish-cooking demonstration
and tableside visit on a Saturday night was a performance. The
restaurant's five dining rooms became the set of the Abe Ritman Show.
As
the popularity of Abe's increased throughout the ‘60s and ‘70s,
Ritman's showmanship manifested itself in new, unusual ways. When a
crawfish gave birth in one of his lobby aquariums in 1978, he took out a
birth announcement in the Shreveport Journal to "report the
arrival of 500 infinitesimal infants … mother and children are
recovering well." He encouraged a long-running prank wherein downtown
Shreveport office workers would bring new hires to the restaurant to
celebrate their first day on the job. Abe would insist on serving the
new staffer his "house specialty," which would turn out to be cow
testicles.
When asked about his penchant for tableside theatrics, Ritman deadpanned to Lois Norder of the Journal, "People think that I'm a funny person, but I am not a funny person. I just look like a funny person."
For
two decades, the restaurant thrived. Janet and Abe's daughter, Ruth,
recounted memories of famous patrons like Terry Bradshaw, Paul Revere
and the Raiders, and the entire University of Oregon Ducks football
team.
"I fed Paul Revere an oyster; I actually placed it in his mouth," Ruth said.
In
1981, 30 years after Abe began boiling shrimp on a hot plate at a
liquor store down the street, Abe and Janet sold Abe’s Sea and Sirloin
for what was reported to be an enormous sum of money. During their time
away from the restaurant, the Ritmans toured “such exotic places as
Switzerland, Israel and Idabel, Okla.” Abe also discovered his love of
acting when he accompanied Janet to an audition at Shreveport Little
Theatre and wound up inadvertently landing the role of Big Julie in
“Guys & Dolls.” But the restaurant’s new ownership screwed things up
majorly, and, after 18 short months, the Ritmans were back as owners.
Following
an eight-year second act, Abe’s Sea and Sirloin closed for good on
Sept. 11, 1990. The building went on to become a nightclub called
Memories and, later, a genuinely weird strip club called The Library.
Janet
recalled that, by 1990, there was so much more competition for
business. Fast food was all the rage, and several more options for Cajun
food had sprung up in Shreveport-Bossier.
"So many restaurants today are chains, and they don't take an interest in you. And we did," Janet said. "We tried really hard."
Not
so much authentic as honest, Abe Ritman had fun with the fact that he
was not a product of southern Louisiana. It's all right there on the
menu, for anyone to see: "Genuine Imitation French Market Doughnuts"
(three for 15 cents in 1961), corned beef po' boys (also available on
rye bread!), and boiled shrimp platters served – as Shreveporters ate
them in 1957, sitting on overturned beer crates at the counter of Abe's
Derby Liquor – with cheese and pickles.
There
is the idea that Louisiana culture originates in New Orleans and
radiates outwards, reaching the outer darkness of Shreveport decades
later in a diluted form. Most folks I've spoken with on the topic of
Shreveport and crawfish seem to believe that northwestern Louisiana
discovered crawfish in the late ’70s by way of hardworking Cajun
restaurateurs like Gerald Savoie. By the late ’70s, Abe Ritman had been
teaching Shreveporters to eat crawfish for 20 years.
For
whatever reason – maybe because he didn’t have the right kind of last
name, or he “looked funny,” or he just didn’t embody an art director’s
image of a Louisiana chef and restaurateur – Ritman’s efforts to spread
the gospel of Cajun cooking have been largely overlooked.
“There’s
no telling how many thousands of out-of-towners this man has taught to
eat crawfish,” Bob Griffin wrote in a 1990 column for the Journal. “And every one of them will remember that they learned how in Shreveport, La.”
Chris
Jay is a freelance writer and Patreon creator who writes a blog about
food and drink in Shreveport called Stuffed & Busted. Follow him at
@stuffedandbusted. He does not understand the birria taco craze.