couldn't stand the thought of them eating cold, processed food. there were no restaurants. >> yeah, nothing in houma was open, no power, no water. >> reporter: so if they wanted food they came to you. >> came to the women of louisiana, yeah. >> reporter: and that's the thing, it's not just angel, not by a long shot. >> good morning, we're turnin' and burnin'. t >> turnin' and burnin'. >> reporter: while we were there, seemed every 15 minutes, someone else showed up with a side dish, a scene that repeats daily here in houma and across louisiana. >> it's good? >> it's good! >> okay. >> reporter: on this facebook group, we found thousands ofe women and men helping the linemen in every parish affected by the storm. they've been preparing meals, offering rooms, even doing laundry. >> it's like checking your chickens and you got an egg. >> reporter: angel tells the men to leave their dirty clothes on the porch and has them fluffed and folded by morning. >> thank you very much. >> you're welcome. >> reporter: for linemen like jarrad cawley of winter garden,