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Craps
Play Lagniappe Craps - Get Something Extra!
| by Larry Edell, published on Friday,
January 10 2003 |
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My wife Andrea and I were having brunch in one of
those wonderful garden restaurants in the French Quarter of New Orleans.
We were with our friends Al and Teri, and had played craps with them
last night in one of the floating casinos in Lake Pontchartrain, just
North of here. Al and Teri live in Kenner, near the Lake, and, besides
craps, they are also interested in a really weird kind of plant called
an epiphyllum, or “Epi.”
“An epi,” Teri was saying as the waiter brought our crawfish etouffee,
“is a kind of a jungle cactus, and is very easy to propagate. It can
slither up trees, feel at home in a hanging pot, or make a beautiful
indoor house plant as well.”
“And the flowers are gorgeous!” my wife Andrea remarked, smiling, “You
have such wonderful flowers!”
Al stopped eating and licked his lips. “No one makes crawfish like New
Orleans restaurants! Yes, we like the flowers too, but we really like
the epi plant itself better. The flower is just a lagniappe!”
He pronounced it LAN-YAP. I am very articulate when I’m eating so I said
“Huh?”
Teri looked up at the wisteria vines above our table. “A lagniappe is
what we call something extra, a bonus, like those sweet smelling flowers
overhead, or a baby’s smile, or seeing a deer when you walk in the
woods. Everyone likes a lagniappe, it’s like getting something extra,
something you weren’t expecting but received anyway.”
I always thought Teri should have been a writer, so still eating, I
said, “Oh.”
Now my lovely wife Andrea piped up. “Kind of like craps, huh?”
I said, “Oh?”
“Yes, remember last night when we were playing and Alan made a $10 pass
line bet and the point was six? He wanted to place double odds behind,
or $20, and he would have won $34 ($24 plus $10), but the dealer said he
could place $25 odds and win $40 ($30 plus $10)? Then you said to ask
the friendly dealer if he could add $30 odds instead and the dealer said
OK? So when the six hit, Alan won $45 ($35 plus $10) instead of the
original $34 - $11 extra?”
“Yes, it’s called pushing the house,” I said.
“Nope,” Teri said smiling, “Lagniappe craps,”and it rhymed the way she
said it, lan-YAP-craps.
“Yes!” Alan was excited! “Lagniappe craps! Since the riverboats only
offer 2X odds, we can ask if we can play lagniappe craps, and get
something extra! So, if the point was 5 or 9 and I had $10 on the pass
line, normally I could only add $20 odds. At 3:2 odds I would get back
$30 plus $10 for a total of $40. But if I asked the dealer if I could
play lagniappe craps by adding $30 odds instead of $20 I would get back
$45 plus $10 or $55! That extra $15 is my lagniappe!”
I took another bite of the etouffee. “You’re right this crawfish tastes
great! And Lagniappe craps sounds great! Let’s see, on a four or ten
point with a $10 passline bet you can normally add $20 odds but if the
dealer OK’s $30 we’ll win a total of $70 instead of $50, that’s $20
more! It’s always nice to get something extra - a Lagniappe!”
The waiter came back to take some of our dishes away and just then, a
large bright, green beetle fell down on our table from the wisteria
branches above us.
Andrea gasped!
“Oh, don’t worry, ” I said, “That’s just a lagniappe!”
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