King cake recipe to make Mardi Gras at home feel like a New Orleans celebration

The recipe is from New Orleans' famous Dooky Chase Restaurant.

To celebrate Fat Tuesday, "Good Morning America" went to the heart of New Orleans to enlist culinary and cultural expertise for a traditional recipe for Mardi Gras.

The family behind Dooky Chase's Restaurant, one of the most famous black-owned establishments in the Big Easy, spoke to "GMA" about the history and hospitality they have served up over the years and how they are celebrating even amid the pandemic.

Edgar Lawrence "Dooky" Chase III said "this restaurant has been here since 1939" and has stories about guests including Satchel Paige, Muhammad Ali, Martin Luther King, John Lewis and more.

Leah Chase, known as the "queen of Creole," and her husband Edgar "Dooky" Chase Jr. turned the former sandwich shop into a fine dining restaurant, but it became much more -- including a meeting spot for civil rights leaders and a gallery for Black artists.

At a time when "African-American people didn't have a place" Stella Chase-Reese said, her family "created that place because they love people and they loved the community."

The current executive chef, Edgar "Dooky" Chase IV, explained that "this restaurant means everything to our family."

"It's so much history, so much tradition. And it's a place where we always come together," he said. "This is a place where we learned how to show that New Orleans hospitality."

For four generations that hospitality has stayed true to Leah Chase's pioneering vision.

"She brought people here from all over, not only the country, the world," Chase-Reese said. "She would always say, 'pray, work hard and do for others.' So we are a family of prayer and we certainly did pray that all would go well because we didn't want her legacy just to stop."

The family rallied around that legacy amid the pandemic with a shift to takeout and providing free meals to neighbors in need.

"It has definitely been a time when we had to be flexible, change up how we market, change up how we reach our guests," the chef said. "But what we do want to do is make you feel that same hospitality that you would have gotten before this pandemic as you would get now."

Check out the full recipes below for a classic king cake as well as a bread pudding inspired by the Mardi Gras dessert to try at home.

King Cake

Ingredients
1/4 cup butter
1/2 cup sour cream
2 tablespoons cinnamon
1/3 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoon active dry yeast
1 1/2 cup of milk ( warm 100 to 110 degrees)
2 eggs
6 cups all-purpose flour
brown sugar/cinnamon mixture
1/4 cup cubed butter (softened)
1 tablespoon cinnamon
1/4 cup brown sugar
2 cups powder sugar
1/4 cup milk
1 teaspoon lemon juice

King Cake Bread Pudding

Ingredients
1 loaf of French bread or 5 cups of cubed king cake (sugar and glaze removed)
2 12-ounce cans evaporated milk
1 cup water
6 eggs (beaten)
1 1/2 cups sugar
5 tablespoons vanilla
1 tablespoon cinnamon
1/2 stick of butter (softened)
Glaze
2 cups powdered sugar
1/4 cup milk
1 teaspoon lemon juice

Directions
In a large bowl, break bread and moisten with evaporated milk and water. Pour eggs over mixture and mix well. Add sugar, vanilla and cinnamon. Cut butter into pieces and add to mixture. Bake at 350 degrees for 30-40 minutes.
For the glaze, mix all ingredients in a bowl well until powdered sugar is dissolved.
To make color sugar topping: add 1 cup sugar and 3 drops of food color. In a air tight container add sugar and food color. Shake well until all sugar has changed color. Repeat for each color.