A gathering for the culture
Creole
Culture Day
Saturday, October 3, 2026 · Town Hall Park, Grand Coteau.
Countdown to the day
October 3, 2026 · Grand Coteau, Louisiana
One Saturday, the whole culture.
Creole Culture Day is a free, all-day gathering in Grand Coteau that puts Louisiana Creole culture back in the hands of the people who carry it — the language, the lineage, the food, the music, and the land.
The fire starts at 6 in the morning with a live boucherie. The grounds open at 10 and run to 6. Across the day you can trace your family line with genealogists, play bingo in Kouri-Vini, eat black-pot food cooked the old way and served free, shop a curated Creole marketplace, add your hand to a community canvas, and dance to zydeco on a live stage. Creole here is present tense: not a museum piece, not a costume, but a living culture built with, not just remembered.



It started at a table, in French.
It started with one idea: preserve Creole French, our Kouri-Vini, and do it in an authentic way. So we created a space where people who still spoke it could come and talk with others who did. We made art to give everyone something to talk about, and we served old-fashioned, authentic Creole dishes. We called it "Let's Talk, But In French." That is where Creole Culture Day began.
Find your way in.
The day is many gatherings at once.
The Boucherie
The Leonard Jones, Sr. Memorial. A live communal hog butchering, fire at 6 AM — the oldest part of the day.
Ruth Foote Heritage Hub
Trace your family line with genealogists, and record it with Who Yo People.
Creole French & Bingo
Bingo in Kouri-Vini — where the whole day began.
Cooking Demonstrations
Live demos all day, taught in French and Kouri-Vini — how the old dishes are really made, the way our elders cooked them.
Creole Marketplace
Hand-selected Creole food and artisans.
Indigenous Art Station
The community canvas, led by artist Bryant Benoit.
Live Music & Zydeco
Juré to zydeco, on a live stage.
The Film
The Old Way Still Cuts — premieres October 1.
The Chicken Run — the kids chase it down while the whole field watches. Cooking demos all day in English and Kouri-Vini. Free black-pot food — cracklin, boudin, and meats from the black pot, served free from morning on.
Town Hall Park
Grand Coteau, LA
Town Hall Park, 231 Burleigh Ln, Grand Coteau, LA 70541. The heart of the Creole prairie. Free and open to all ages.
Be part of it
Get Involved
Vendors, volunteers, and supporters make the day. Claim a spot for 2026 — or give to keep it free for everyone.