Rice is the grain of Louisiana — served with gumbo, étouffée, jambalaya, red beans, dirty rice, every smothered dish, every sauce piquante. But the history of rice in Louisiana is inseparable from the history of slavery. Judith Carney's *Black Rice: The African Origins of Rice Cultivation in the Americas* (2001) documented what the rice industry had obscured for centuries: that rice cultivation in the colonial Americas was built on the agricultural expertise of enslaved West Africans — specifically people from the Rice Coast of Upper Guinea (modern Senegal, Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Liberia), who were deliberately targeted by slave traders because they possessed the knowledge of how to cultivate *Oryza glaberrima* (African rice) and later *Oryza sativa* (Asian rice) in tidal and inland swamp environments.
The significance of Carney's work to the Provenance Louisiana extraction: every dish in the database that says "served over rice" carries the weight of this history. The rice on the plate is not a neutral starch. It is the product of stolen agricultural knowledge, maintained through generations of enslaved labour, and central to the economy that built Louisiana's colonial wealth. The technique of growing rice in Louisiana — the levee system, the tidal flow management, the specific planting and harvesting methods — was African knowledge applied to American land by African people who had no choice in the matter.
1) Long-grain white rice is the Louisiana standard. Not jasmine, not basmati, not short-grain, not brown. The long grain cooks to separate, fluffy grains that absorb sauce without becoming sticky. This preference has practical origins: long-grain rice was the variety best suited to the Gulf Coast growing conditions and the variety that enslaved rice cultivators knew how to grow. 2) The rice is always steamed — not boiled, not pilaf-style, not risotto-stirred. Bring to a boil in measured water (1:1.5 or 1:2 depending on the rice), cover tightly, reduce to lowest heat, 18-20 minutes, rest 5 minutes off heat. Do not stir during cooking. Do not lift the lid. 3) Rice in Louisiana is the base, not the side. It sits on the plate first; everything else goes over it. The rice's role is to receive — to absorb the gumbo broth, the étouffée sauce, the red bean gravy, the smothered pork gravy. A plate of Louisiana food without rice is incomplete.
Judith A. Carney — Black Rice; Jessica B. Harris — High on the Hog; Michael Twitty — The Cooking Gene