Dining Out
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Mary Furr
You could be in New Orleans dripping in the humidity or you could
be in Cliff’s Ragin’ Cajun on Brookhurst Avenue in Fountain Valley
sipping ice tea and dipping hush puppies -- corn bread fritters -- in a
spicy homemade sauce.
This bright storefront in Callen’s Corner is alive with taped fiddle and
accordion music, red-checkered vinyl cloths, and fancy masks and posters
from Mardi Gras.
From a menu filled with home-style Southern dishes from owner Cliff
Huffstetler’s mother’s recipes comes a tempting plate of hush puppies,
spicy deep-fried corn bread dumplings. Legend says the name comes from
campfire cooks who tossed bits of fried batter to hush the puppies at
dinner.
Cajun style shrimp ($8.99) is a different preparation of a favorite dish.
The six big, butterflied tail-on shrimp are dipped in a spicy, thin coat,
fried and served with a good dipping sauce and two sides. One selection
was jambalaya, a dish that combines mildly spiced cooked rice with hunks
of marinated beef and bits of tomato and corn. A large serving of potato
salad with lots of celery, onion and cubed potatoes was traditional and
good.
Two crab cakes ($9.89), a skimpy mix of crab meat, onion and bread crumbs
were more like scoops of mixture than formed crab cakes. The side of red
beans and rice -- New Orleans’ best known contribution to regional
cuisine -- combines slowly simmered red kidney beans with bits of ham
served over steamed rice. The dish was so loved by trumpeter Louis
Armstrong that he used to sign his letters, “Red beans and ricely yours”!
A dessert not to miss is the bread pudding ($3.50). It’s a big square of
apple slices, raisins, halved pecans, walnuts and spices served hot with
a small cup of thin, sweet sauce to add.
Vanilla ice cream with whiskey sauce ($2.50) was served without any sauce
-- a surprise but not unexpected as energetic server Phillipe Bautista
was alone and overwhelmed as the lunch crowd increased.
Cliff’s Ragin’ Cajun is owned by Cliff Huffstetler, a former construction
worker who dreamed for years of owning a restaurant based on the food he
loved. He took culinary classes in Arkansas and New Orleans. He fulfilled
his dream, first in 1993 at a small place in a food court of Plaza des
Cafes in Newport Beach, and then with Cliff’s Ragin’ Cajun.
As his Cajun menu says, “Brought yourself on down for some good eatin’.”
You do that, you hear?
MARY FURR is the Independent restaurant critic. If you have comments or
suggestions for her, call (562) 493-5062.
FYI BOX:
CLIFF’S RAGIN’ CAJUN
WHERE: 18609 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley
HOURS: 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily
CALL: 962-6029
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