CuisineSouthern Creole
Price$$
Neighbourhoodbywater

Signature dishes: Praline bacon, Redneck eggs Benedict

Must order: The praline bacon, ordered as a side with the redneck eggs Benedict.

Tip: No reservations. Arrive by 09:00 on weekends or wait an hour for the brunch turn.

Location

Address: 601 Gallier St, New Orleans, LA 70117

More casual dining in New Orleans

Coop's Place ★ 4.3

Cajun Creole$$french-quarter

Coop's Place in New Orleans is the Decatur Street Cajun dive open since 1983, with rabbit and sausage jambalaya, fried chicken and a Chicken Tchoupitoulas that anchors the menu.

Signature: Rabbit and sausage jambalaya, Chicken Tchoupitoulas

Order: The rabbit and sausage jambalaya. Add the Chicken Tchoupitoulas if you have appetite.

Tip: Cash-friendly dive bar atmosphere; the kitchen runs late and pairs with Abita on tap.

Mandina's Restaurant ★ 4.3

Italian Creole$$mid-city

Mandina's in New Orleans is the 1932 Mid-City Italian-Creole corner room on Canal Street, founded by Sicilian immigrant Sebastian Mandina and still serving trout amandine.

Signature: Trout amandine, Crawfish bisque

Order: The trout amandine. Add the spaghetti with red gravy and a side of bread.

Tip: Sit at the bar for the streetcar view; the kitchen runs faster off the bar pickup.

Liuzza's by the Track ★ 4.5

Cajun Creole$$faubourg-st-john

Liuzza's by the Track in New Orleans is the Bayou St John lunch counter near the Fair Grounds that invented the BBQ shrimp po-boy, still the room's anchor dish today.

Signature: BBQ shrimp po-boy, Gumbo

Order: The BBQ shrimp po-boy, invented on this very counter.

Tip: Cash only at peak; check the Jazz Fest schedule, the room turns into a circus on festival weekends.

Mother's Restaurant ★ 4.2

Southern Creole$$central-business-district

Mother's in New Orleans is the 1938 CBD lunch counter at Poydras and Tchoupitoulas, home of the Ferdi Special po-boy with ham, roast beef and debris served from a cafeteria line.

Signature: Ferdi Special po-boy, Red beans and rice

Order: The Ferdi Special po-boy with debris. Add a side of red beans.

Tip: Lines are real; arrive at 11:00 or after 14:00 for the shortest wait.

Casamento's ★ 4.5

Seafood$$uptown

Casamento's in New Orleans is the 1919 Sicilian-American oyster room on Magazine Street, with crackle-crusted fried oysters between thick slabs of pan bread on the original oyster loaf.

Signature: Oyster loaf, Fried oyster plate

Order: The oyster loaf, with the oysters fried crackle-crisp and packed between thick pan bread.

Tip: Closed June through August (oyster R-months rule). Cash-only counter service.

Acme Oyster House ★ 4.2

Seafood$$french-quarter

Acme Oyster House in New Orleans is the 1910 Iberville Street oyster bar between Bourbon and Royal, with char-grilled oysters and a shucker counter rebuilt after the 1924 fire.

Signature: Char-grilled oysters, Oysters on the half shell

Order: A dozen char-grilled oysters with garlic butter and Parmesan.

Tip: Walk-in only and a queue is the norm; aim for 11:00 open or after 21:00 for shortest waits.

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