New Orleans' Finest Tables
25 restaurants rankedThe Top Ten
Emeril's
The only two-star restaurant in the American South, Emeril's underwent a transformation in 2023 that turned a beloved New Orleans institution into something genuinely extraordinary. Chef E.J. Lagasse — just 22 when he earned two stars, the youngest chef to do so in the region — runs a tasting menu operation out of the original Warehouse District space his father opened in 1990. The glass-walled kitchen is the theatrical heart of the room; watching the brigade work while sipping a pre-dinner cocktail at the bar is one of the best free shows in New Orleans. Three tasting menu formats (Classic at $165, Seasonal at $155, Vegetarian at $140) give this table unusual accessibility for a two-star. Reserve weeks, ideally months, in advance.
Commander's Palace
No restaurant in New Orleans carries more cultural weight than this turquoise Victorian institution on Washington Avenue. Seven James Beard Awards. A pipeline of chefs — Paul Prudhomme, Emeril Lagasse, Paul Bertoli — who went on to define American cooking. And still, improbably, one of the most joyful dining rooms on the planet. Chef Meg Bickford's contemporary Creole menu maintains the standards while finding genuine invention within them. The Jazz Brunch is a New Orleans rite of passage. The turtle soup finished tableside with sherry is a ceremony. Reserve well in advance, particularly for weekend brunch.
Saint-Germain
Chefs Blake Aguillard and Trey Smith created something genuinely singular when they opened this twelve-seat tasting room on St. Claude Avenue. There are no waiters taking orders here, no choices to make — just ten courses that unfold like a private dinner at the chefs' own table. The seasonal menu shifts constantly, shaped by what arrives from Louisiana farms and Gulf waters that week. The intimacy is total: you know everyone at the table by the end of the night, including the kitchen. A Michelin star came swiftly and was not a surprise to anyone who had dined there. For proposals, anniversaries, or any occasion that demands absolute memorability.
Zasu
Chef Sue Zemanick — James Beard Award winner, a chef of the kind that makes other chefs nervous — finally has a restaurant entirely her own at 127 N Carrollton in Mid-City. The name Zasu means "once again" in Slovak, an homage to her heritage and a statement of culinary intent: dishes cooked with the precision of someone who has been thinking about them for years. The menu is tightly edited, seafood-forward, and fiercely seasonal. The warm green-and-wood dining room of a converted Mid-City cottage makes this feel like the best dinner party you've ever attended. Michelin found it immediately and gave it a star.
Restaurant August
John Besh's flagship occupies an 1830s merchant house whose bones — exposed brick, soaring ceilings, French doors giving onto Tchoupitoulas Street — would carry almost any cooking. The contemporary Creole cuisine doesn't rely on architecture for cover. The six-course chef's tasting ($185, wine pairing from $110) showcases Louisiana ingredients through classical French technique: blue crab, Gulf shrimp, local duck, farm vegetables. The private dining rooms are the best in the city for deal-closing dinners; the main room has enough theatre for special occasions. Reserve Thursday through Saturday well in advance.
Galatoire's
Do not let the Bourbon Street address fool you. Step past the door of this 1905 institution and you enter a room that has been virtually unchanged for over a century — mirrors, ceiling fans, white-linen tables, tuxedoed waiters who have worked here for decades. The Friday lunch at Galatoire's is one of the great New Orleans rituals: the city's legal, political, and business communities convene over crab Maison and trout meunière and Sazerac cocktails that start at noon and sometimes end well into evening. James Beard called it the outstanding restaurant in America. They were not wrong.
Bayona
Susan Spicer opened Bayona in a 1769 Creole cottage in 1990 and has never needed to move, never needed to rebrand, never needed to chase a trend. The cooking — contemporary, technically confident, with strong Mediterranean and Southern underpinnings — speaks for itself. The courtyard, draped with more plants than a Roman side street and lit by candlelight on warm evenings, is as romantic a setting as New Orleans offers at any price point. The duck liver paté, the fennel-crusted lamb loin, the rotating fish preparation: all benchmarks. A first date here is an investment in a relationship.
Antoine's
Antoine's was serving French-Creole cuisine in the French Quarter before the Civil War, before the Louisiana Purchase was a generation old. It invented Oysters Rockefeller in 1899 and the recipe has never been published — the green herb sauce remains a house secret, protected and continuous. The restaurant has fifteen dining rooms of varying grandeur; the Rex Room, filled with Mardi Gras regalia, is particularly spectacular. This is not the most innovative cooking in New Orleans, but it is among the most essential. Some restaurants become more than restaurants. Antoine's is a place to eat and a place to understand a city.
Brennan's
Brennan's on Royal Street is where Bananas Foster was invented in 1951 — tableside-flambéed rum-and-banana dessert that became a city signature. In 2026, the restaurant celebrates its 80th year and remains the most theatrical breakfast in America: oysters and champagne at 9am in a pink-shuttered French Quarter mansion is not a cliché but a commitment. The Eggs Hussarde and Eggs Sardou are dishes the restaurant owns; the Creole dinner service is equally accomplished. For celebrations requiring genuine grandeur, Brennan's private dining rooms are among the most elegant in the city.
Herbsaint
Donald Link's flagship, named for the anise-flavoured spirit that was New Orleans' absinthe substitute after Prohibition, has been the benchmark for intelligent, ingredient-driven cooking in the CBD since 2000. The menu reads Southern French — duck leg confit, seasonal pasta, Gulf fish — but tastes like something more personal than a category. Chef de Cuisine Tyler Spreen maintains the rigour without the formality. The bar counter at Herbsaint is one of the city's great solo dining positions: a glass of Languedoc rosé, a plate of spaghetti with fried poached egg, and New Orleans doing what New Orleans does outside the window.
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The Dining Culture
New Orleans has the most distinctive food culture in North America, possibly in the Western hemisphere. The city's cuisine — a century-long synthesis of French, Spanish, West African, Native American, and Caribbean influences — did not emerge from a chef's ambition but from the logic of a place: its climate, its ingredients, its waterways, its people. Creole cooking is the cuisine of the city and its Creole families. Cajun cooking comes from the prairies and bayous to the west. Both traditions have given rise to fine dining establishments that bear no resemblance to their origins, and neighbourhood institutions that have changed barely at all in a hundred years. This is a city where both are equally valid.
The dining week in New Orleans runs differently from most cities. Friday lunch at Galatoire's is an institution. Sunday Jazz Brunch at Commander's Palace or Arnaud's is essential. Reservation demand peaks Thursday through Saturday; weeknights offer surprisingly excellent availability at even the most sought-after tables. The late-dining culture means kitchens take last orders at 10pm or later — this is not a city that eats at 6pm.
Best Neighbourhoods
The French Quarter is home to the oldest establishments — Antoine's, Galatoire's, Arnaud's, Brennan's, Bayona — and offers the most atmospheric dining in the city. The Warehouse District clusters the most ambitious contemporary restaurants: Emeril's, Restaurant August, Herbsaint, and the nascent gallery-district scene. The Garden District, anchored by Commander's Palace on Washington Avenue, offers the most elegant residential dining. Mid-City (Zasu, Toups' Meatery) is where the city's next generation operates. The Bywater and Ninth Ward neighbourhoods (Saint-Germain, Meauxbar) have become the city's creative culinary frontier.
Reservations Strategy
New Orleans operates on a more relaxed reservation culture than New York or San Francisco, but the city's top tables — Emeril's, Saint-Germain, Commander's Palace, Zasu — require advance booking. Emeril's tasting menu seats should be booked four to six weeks out. Saint-Germain's twelve-seat operation fills from its Tock page; check for cancellations if you cannot book far ahead. Commander's Palace Jazz Brunch requires booking at minimum two weeks in advance, and often more during Mardi Gras, Jazz Fest, or Saints home games. Many French Quarter institutions — Galatoire's, Antoine's — do not take reservations for downstairs tables, which is actually the preferred seating; arrive at opening for the best chance. Upstairs or private room bookings at these establishments are available in advance.
Practical Notes
Dress codes in New Orleans are taken seriously at the upper tier of restaurants — Commander's Palace enforces smart casual at minimum; jackets are recommended but not required at most fine dining establishments. The exception is Galatoire's on Friday lunch, where dressing up is part of the theatre. Tipping at 18-20% is standard; at tasting menu restaurants, the service charge is often included. Parking in the French Quarter is limited; most visitors and residents use rideshare for dinner reservations. The walk from the CBD to the French Quarter is pleasant in the evening and takes fifteen minutes. Mardi Gras (February-March), Jazz Fest (late April to early May), and the Essence Festival (early July) drive significant demand for reservations and hotel rooms; plan accordingly. The heat and humidity from June through September is significant; outdoor seating at courtyards like Bayona's is most pleasant October through May.