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FeaturesApril 21, 2002

INDIANOLA, Miss. -- Silver-haired ladies gather in a storeroom at The Crown on weekdays to chat and play cards, while local businessmen feast on their favorite catfish dishes. Both groups can remember a time when the antique shop and restaurant in this Mississippi Delta town, where catfish is king, was their little secret...

By Timothy R. Brown, The Associated Press

INDIANOLA, Miss. -- Silver-haired ladies gather in a storeroom at The Crown on weekdays to chat and play cards, while local businessmen feast on their favorite catfish dishes.

Both groups can remember a time when the antique shop and restaurant in this Mississippi Delta town, where catfish is king, was their little secret.

Outsiders were always welcome, but few came.

Tourists had no reason to travel to the heart of one of the country's poorest regions to eat lunch at a modest light-brown brick building on the banks of Indian Bayou.

If they did make their way to this town of 12,000 it was because it's the birthplace of blues musician B.B. King.

It took an unusual request some 16 years ago to help put the business on the map.

"A catfish farmer was having a wedding for his daughter and he wanted everything catfish, so that presented a real challenge for my mother," says Jennifer Schaumburg, the daughter of owners Evelyn and Tony Roughton.

"We came up with some wonderful recipes, and one of them was catfish pate," Schaumburg says. "The catfish farmer loved it. We started taking it to different retail shows and people were loving it and buying it."

Unintentional secret

Since the 1986 catfish wedding, The Crown has lost its local attraction status.

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"It was a very well-kept secret," says Hugh Warren, executive vice president of Indianola-based Catfish Farmers of America and a faithful customer of The Crown for almost 20 years. "It wasn't intentional. Indianola is just a small town."

The restaurant that prepares the droopy mouthed, whiskered fish every possible way but the traditional one -- battered in meal and pan fried -- now boasts regional culinary lovers as well as tourists.

Schaumburg, whose parents founded the restaurant, says he's known people to travel from Memphis, Tenn., about 120 miles to the north, and Jackson, 90 miles south, just to eat lunch.

For blues pilgrims out to sample the rich heritage of the Delta, trying a catfish dish is a must and The Crown couldn't be in a better spot.

Most U.S. catfish are raised in Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas and Louisiana. In this state alone, there are about 111,000 acres of catfish ponds.

Warren, who grew up in the Delta, says the thing that makes the restaurant special is "there's so much passion and enjoyment in what they're doing."

"They can't believe how well they're doing," he says. "This is an American success story, and this time it happens to be catfish."

The Crown has the ambiance of an English tea room with antique tables, chairs and accessories on one side -- where customers dine -- and bookshelves full of collectibles and stuffed animals on the other side.

A round desert table separates the small brightly colored open storeroom where the card games are played.

The restaurant years ago began offering a 70-item catalog for those who can't make the Delta trip.

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