CuisineSenegalese Creole tasting
Price$$$$
Neighbourhoodcarrollton-riverbend

Signature dishes: Okra and crab soup, Gulf fish with jollof rice

Must order: There is no choice; the tasting menu rotates with the season. The jollof course is the anchor.

Tip: Tickets sell out within days of release. Sign up for the newsletter for booking-window alerts.

Location

Address: 937 Leonidas St, New Orleans, LA 70118

More restaurants in New Orleans

Bayona ★ 4.5

Modern American$$$french-quarter

Bayona in New Orleans is Susan Spicer's 1990 Creole cottage on Dauphine Street, a courtyard fine-dining room with the smoked duck PB&J that has anchored her menu for 35 years.

Signature: Smoked duck PB&J, Pepper-jelly glazed shrimp

Order: The smoked duck breast PB&J, the menu's longest-running dish.

Tip: Lunch is the better-value seating; book the back courtyard if the weather is kind that afternoon.

Coquette ★ 4.5

Modern Southern$$$garden-district

Coquette in New Orleans is the Magazine and Washington corner restaurant from Michael Stoltzfus, a 2008 modern-Southern room with rotating tasting menus and a long Louisiana wine list.

Signature: Tasting menu, Charcuterie board

Order: Whatever the Blind Faith tasting menu is running that week. Trust the kitchen.

Tip: Sit upstairs for the corner-window view; downstairs runs faster and louder.

Lilette ★ 4.5

French bistro$$$uptown

Lilette in New Orleans is John Harris's 2001 Uptown bistro on Magazine Street, named for the Mauri family matriarch he lived with in France and serving bouillabaisse and duck confit.

Signature: Bouillabaisse, Hanger steak

Order: The bouillabaisse, on the menu since opening. Order a glass of Cassis blanc with it.

Tip: Lunch service is the most relaxed; the dining room is dim and pretty in the evening.

Shaya ★ 4.5

Modern Israeli$$$uptown

Shaya in New Orleans is the Magazine Street modern Israeli room that won James Beard Best New Restaurant in 2016, now under BRG Hospitality with its wood-fired pita oven still anchoring service.

Signature: Wood-fired pita, Lamb shawarma

Order: The wood-fired pita with hummus. Then the lamb shawarma.

Tip: Founder Alon Shaya now runs Saba up the road at 5757 Magazine; both rooms are worth a visit.

Saba ★ 4.6

Modern Israeli$$$uptown

Saba in New Orleans is Alon Shaya's 2018 Magazine Street follow-up to Shaya, a modern Israeli room at Nashville Avenue with the whipped feta and whole roasted cauliflower he made famous.

Signature: Lutenitsa with whipped feta, Whole-roasted cauliflower

Order: The whole roasted cauliflower with whipped feta. Then the lamb ragu hummus.

Tip: Brunch on Sundays runs the shakshuka and matzo ball brioche French toast; book a fortnight ahead.

N7 ★ 4.5

French Japanese bistro$$$bywater

N7 in New Orleans is the Bywater French wine bar behind an unmarked fence on Montegut Street from Aaron Walker and Yuki Yamaguchi, with French bistro plates and a Japanese accent.

Signature: Tinned-fish plate, Steak frites with Bordelaise

Order: The tinned-fish board with bread, then steak frites with Bordelaise.

Tip: Reservations are tight; the garden seating opens at 17:00 and walk-ins land best on weeknights.

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