How to Make Delicious (and Healthy) Pecan Treats

5_53_largePecans are versatile ingredients in the kitchen, and their high levels of vitamins and minerals make for a wholesome addition to any meal. Since they’re also high in protein and healthy fats, they make for an excellent base to build vegetarian snacks, entrees and desserts on. Chow down on these treats any time of the day to get a burst of energy that will keep you going strong through work or play!

Dark Chocolate Pecan Avocado Muffins

Muffins are a great whole-grain way to start the day, and quick to make the night before for those grueling early mornings. This recipe combines these powers with pecans, avocado and dark chocolate to make for a high-antioxidant treat in the morning. Continue reading How to Make Delicious (and Healthy) Pecan Treats

Don’t Do These 5 Things When Hosting A New Year’s Party

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It’s the most celebratory time of the season! What could be a more perfect way to ring in a new year than at your home surrounded by friends and loved ones? If you’re hosting your own New Year’s party and want to make it an occasion to remember, just follow these simple rules to avoid common mishaps and enjoy the fireworks without stress!

Don’t Start at the Last Minute

Look, I get it. I’m a perfectionist. Everything has to be just right. If perfection is your goal it helps to get a game plan together at least a week before the main event. Pre-prepare any party snacks that can stand a day or two in the fridge, get a rough head count from your attendees to keep the bar stocked and make a schedule for the day ahead of time so you’re not still running around while your guests are trickling in. Building in time for a shower and quick clothes change, for example, can be a lifesaver for a host (and your guests). Continue reading Don’t Do These 5 Things When Hosting A New Year’s Party

We Buy Pecans

WBP1It is a gentle reminder that pecan season is here when you begin to see the “We Buy Pecans” signs grace the front of many local businesses here in the Deep South. Typically the signs appear in front of small town feed stores, convenient shops or lumber yards. And typically it is the same businesses year-after-year who do the buying. Local residents get accustomed to bringing their daily pick to these locations, have their bag or bucket weighed and paid, cash, on the spot for a few hours’ worth of pecan picking. Continue reading We Buy Pecans

Prepare Your Holiday Meal in Record Time

Whether it’s the golden-brown turkey of Thanksgiving or the lovingly shaped latkes of Hanukah, the end of the year brings a feast that will draw the whole family together. However, getting the components of a meal together can be an ordeal, one that’s compounded by the hustle and bustle of the holiday season. Don’t waste time sweating in the kitchen when you could be making memories with your loved ones. Follow these simple rules to get your holiday meal on the table in a snap and enjoy the free time under the mistletoe with your favorite dinner guests. Continue reading Prepare Your Holiday Meal in Record Time

Top 10 Unique Corporate Gifts to Bring the Holiday Cheer to Colleagues and Clients

Looking to send the holiday cheer to your business fellows, but don’t want to blend in with the crowd? Never fear: there are a wealth of unique corporate gifts out there to delight the recipients and make your brand “stick” in their mind. Read on to find ten examples of these thoughtful business gifts.

1. Desktop Water Fountain — The soothing trickle of flowing water will bring peace and harmony to anyone’s desk, from an overworked manager to high-level executive.
2. Engraved Newton’s Cradle — This elegant and timeless desk toy will remind your client of your brand during every idle phone call or mid-afternoon break.
3. Stainless Stress Balls — Work in a high-pressure industry? Your colleague will appreciate the ability to release a little stress with these ergonomic hand relaxers. Continue reading Top 10 Unique Corporate Gifts to Bring the Holiday Cheer to Colleagues and Clients

Take Charge of Your Holiday Shopping List

Christmas is around the corner, but many of us are feeling the pressure to get that perfect gift for everyone on our list. It can be easy to overspend and overshop this time of the year — level out the stress by taking these easy tips to make your holiday shopping a snap.

Prioritize the Giftees and Make a Budget

Staying in the spirit of the season doesn’t necessarily require everyone on your list be treated like royalty. Look at your overall list and make a realistic budget on what you can afford to spend total. Family and significant others may find themselves at the top of the list, while acquaintances, work colleagues and other loved ones who aren’t in your “inner circle” may be better receiving a batch-made DIY gift or inexpensive token along with a warm card. Continue reading Take Charge of Your Holiday Shopping List

A Community Affair

One of the main reasons our pecan company has flourished over the past few decades is due in large part to our supportive community here in Acadiana and specifically our home town of New Iberia, Louisiana.  We cannot begin to tell you how many of our customers are local and loyal and work as brand ambassadors for our products and services.  We are sincerely humbled when we think of the local oil and gas companies, commercial banks, healthcare professionals, wealth advisors, contractors, engineers, law firms, insurance groups and more who patronize our company year in and year out to provide their clients, customers and employees with gourmet pecan gifts from our company.  And of course we cannot begin to forget the scores of consumers who come to us for their pecan needs to include in every holiday dish imaginable or want the chance to ship a bit of “home” to every corner of this big world we live in.  We are blessed and extremely thankful to our base of local customers. Continue reading A Community Affair

Pecan Prices Continue to Rise

001crp-(2)-smMy family has been in the pecan industry for the past 45 years and never have we seen the escalating pecan prices that we have seen during the last few. Pecan prices are at an historic high. There have many national stories from Forbes to The Wall Street Journal that have covered the bewildering high pecan prices and how this will affect the common consumer. I feel compelled to weigh in and give my perspective since it is my livelihood. Continue reading Pecan Prices Continue to Rise

Being Cold on Cane River

DSC_5363.JPGI have memories of being cold – really cold – on Cane River. A large portion of our orchards in Natchitoches Parish, La., was located on a beautiful stretch of this scenic river, which is actually a lake due to dams built in the early 20th century. It meanders through a part of Louisiana that is graced with historic plantation homes, huge stately oaks, occasional cotton fields and beautiful pecan orchards. Even though we are located here in the Deep South, many in the area consider the Cane River country North Louisiana. (We tend to think of anything above Interstate 10 in Louisiana as North!) Only about 120 miles separate Cane River Country from South Louisiana, but in those few miles the land begins to take a new shape. The dirt turns from black to red, crops go from sugar cane to beans, cotton and pecans, and the temperatures are relatively cooler. It’s almost as if you’ve entered another state.

It is these “cooler” temperatures that I remember most about the harvests on Cane River. My father would rise early with my two brothers and me in tow and throw open the barn doors on another day of pecan gathering. The barn was piled high with burlap sacks of pecans and was extremely cold until the mid-day sun could warm us all. The early morning was spent getting tractors gassed up, pickers to their assigned areas of the orchard, and setting up the picking tables and pecan sorter. It was constant motion that continued until the last pecan was picked for the season in late December.

However, life on a pecan farm in the early winter was not all work and no play. Many mornings we found time for a family duck hunt in old Ben Lake, a rather small 4-acre pond that inevitably found itself filled with hearty green heads on many mornings. Then there were cool morning squirrel hunts – which my father demanded was nothing more than an orchard varmint that just so happened to taste great over rice. We had a huge hay barn on the plantation that served as a virtual playground for active boys, and shooting BB guns was a rite of passage for all of us.

The end of the day was always met with a fire. Because we lived in New Iberia and our farm was located just outside of Natchitoches, my father rented a home that was conveniently located just beside his beloved pecan trees. The house was very modest; however, I remember a great old jukebox left there by the owner and a perfect little fireplace that was a cozy way to spend an evening after a long day in the field. When I think of Cane River in the winter I think of being cold. And when I think of being cold I think of being with my father at the end of the day in front of that fire. And that thought stills warms me today.

My Pecan Story

photoIt always happens. When I tell someone that I own a pecan company, they go into a pecan story. It usually begins with a tree. They go on about the pecan tree in their yard.  They would pick them. They would gather around them. They would cook with them. They would sometimes sell them. The stories are warm, heartfelt, comforting and usually bring them back to their childhood. I see the delight in their eyes, the smile on their face. I can tell they are speaking about something that makes them happy.

So it should be no surprise that working in the pecan industry makes me happy. My company deals primarily with people who are looking to source the very best pecans on the market to make that one comfort dish, special candy or favorite pie. Or I’ll work with a large corporate client who raves about the comments and compliments they receive when they gift pecans to their customers. Either way, we are dealing with happy people and that makes what I do really special.

This is our very first blog post. It has been some years in the making – or rather, I should say, we could hold off no longer. Our brand experts told us, “It’s time.” So I wanted to start with “my pecan story” so our readers will know who they are dealing with here. Our blog name, as you can see, is called “What’s Crackin’?.” I have to give my cousin Ward credit for the title. He is an aspiring singer/songwriter in Nashville, TN and cleverly came up with the name when asked for an idea. He is witty like that. We liked it because it is somewhat of throwback to my intro into the pecan industry (you will hear more about that in bit) and it is not “all pecans” all of the time. What’s Crackin’ may veer off the reservation from time to time. We hope to share with you our small, family company products and services, but also talk about the South, southern hospitality, our heritage, our culture and the events that shape our company. There is no endgame. Really we hope to offer a glance into the life of a small business, our struggles, our triumphs and our love of all things pecans.

However, there is a beginning. And really, for me, it began the year I was born: 1969. Literally. That was the year my father and his brother bought pecan orchards along the historic Cane River in Natchitoches, LA. My Great Uncle Jady Henry planted our orchards. His family owned Louisiana’s famed Melrose Plantation, known nationally for its massive pecan orchards and artist residency. The plantation got its second round of notoriety when one of its own cotton pickers, Clementine Hunter, rose up to become Louisiana’s most famous folk art painter.

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I have no recollection of the first pecan I ever saw or tasted. We (my two brothers and sister) just grew up in pecan orchards. There is not a fall season that goes by that vivid memories of the pecan harvest with my father does not occupy my mind. I can still smell the barn, the musty burlap sacks, diesel fuel for the tractors. I see pecans by the tens of thousands, sacks of pecans pilled to the rafters, hand-pickers lined up to weigh their day’s collection and to be paid. I can still hear the “crunch” of dried, fallen pecan leaves under my boots as we ran between the trees. Crunch, crunch, crunch. You can’t sneak up on anything in a pecan orchard in the fall. I remember cold mornings, pecan crackers slowly cracking each pecan, one by one, mechanically and my father working the phones with buyers from a dusty desk littered with bills, POs and yield records. It was the life on the farm.

When I was only 9 my father started my two brothers and me in a business endeavor that would last until we all left for college. We owned and operated The Nutcrackers in the garage of my parents’ home in New Iberia. The Nutcrackers cracked pecans for people after school and weekends on the fall. It was a legitimate company with duties, responsibilities, customers, bank notes, bills and a board of directors (even if we had our board meetings over peanut butter and jelly sandwiches).

I never really thought I would return home to work in the pecan industry but that is exactly what I did when I decided to leave my professional sports job with the Chicago Bears to return to Louisiana for a chance to be self-employed and grow our company’s opportunities. And I have never had a single regret.

Cane River Pecan Company has become Louisiana’s premier pecan gifting company. From the onset we focused our efforts on becoming a leader in business-to-business gifting services. It was my mother who really solidified our niche. She was the one who knocked on doors all over Southwest Louisiana to showcase our gourmet pecans. She was able to open accounts with a personable touch, a won’t-take-no-for-an-answer attitude and some of the best tasting pecans people had ever had. It was a deadly combination.

Along the way my family has worked in every aspect of the pecan industry. But what we are really proud of is our ability to continue in an industry that is celebrated throughout the South. I am a really proud Southerner and I love that pecans are adored here in the South. More than ever, I am encouraged that the South is enjoying much-deserved recognition and celebration for its food and lifestyle contributions. People around the country, I feel, are just beginning to learn what we have all known for a very long time – just how special our lives are, how close our families are and how seriously we take our food (and drink). I am proud to tell my pecan story and be a part of the movement.

So welcome, all of you pecan lovers. We hope that you will decide to keep up and hear about What’s Crackin’ from time to time.

Cheers,

Jady Regard
CNO
Cane River Pecan Company