From Bienville to Bourbon Street to bounce. 300 moments that make New Orleans unique.

WHAT HAPPENED Zatarain’s 1718 ~ 2018 factory moved from Valmont Street to Gretna 300 in 1963. TRICENTENNIAL THE HISTORIC NEWORLEANS COLLECTION Zatarain’s may be known today for its rice mixes and seafood boil, but in 1889, Emile A. Zatarain had a hit with his root beer.

Zatarain owned a grocery store in Uptown New Orleans in 1886 where he started selling his root ZATARAIN’S beer. The demand was so great that Zatarain even- tually quit the grocery, formed a company and built a factory at 926 Valmont St. to produce the root beer and spices. Eventually he began making root beer concentrate that he sold to restaurants and stores Emile Zatarain died in where it was used to make root beer. Zatarain’s still 1959. makes the concentrate as well as the second product Zatarain made — Creole . In the 1920s, Zatarain’s sons took over the business, adding items like and olive salad to its product line. The family sold the company in 1963 to James Grinstead ZATARAIN’S Viavant, founder of Avondale Shipyards. Viavant moved the factory to a new plant with modern equipment in Gretna. After Viavant sold the

The original Zatarain factory and company in 1984, it went through a series of owners and takeovers until the interior of the building at it was sold to current owner McCormick in 2003 for $180 million. The 926 Valmont St. Emile Zatarain

ZATARAIN’S company now has more than 200 “New Orleans-style” products made originally sold his root beer extract and other products under in the Gretna factory that have nationwide brand recognition. The com- the ‘Pa-poose’ label. pany opened a new facility in Gretna in 2015.