Quote:
Originally Posted by stavinChain
Very good advice from Old Horn Dog, except I think the St Charles street car line will be pretty fucked up this summer by construction. I haven't followed it closely since it doesn't affect me, but I think I heard that, part of the way, riders will have to get off the streetcar and ride a bus. Something to look in to...
New Orleans cultural, culinary treasures in the Quarter that have been overrun but tourists, but are still the real deal:
- Beignets and cafe au lait at Cafe Du Monde.
- Muffaletta sandwich at Central Grocery
- anything at the Napoleon House - decent food with great old-world ambiance
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Oh jeez yes about the Streetcar: I heard there was construction. Ugh. You can always take the Canal St. one--it's actually climate-controlled & not AS MANY tourists ride it; esp. early mornings it's actually people going to work (like me). It's so slow though it's better if you don't have to be anywhere fast, esp. in the evenings, if you ride it. Still, it's fun & an easy ways to go a few miles w/o walking & seeing interesting & pretty stuff.
... annnnnd that's how the fight started (j/k): Cafe du Monde is fine, really, but if you want FEWER tourists my favorite is the "other" traditional NOLA coffee & beignet stand, Morning Call. It has a 24/7 location in City Park. If you take a bicycle-cab up Esplanade to see the street, then visit NOMA if they have a good exhibit, you can then go to Morning Call, which is around the back of NOMA in City Park. Sit outside & be accosted by a large, fat, male duck who own the place & want to know where "his" beignet is. It's also fun to watch him walk in the main door & have the help chase him out every 30 secs. Cafe Beignet on Royal is also very good. I find both as good as Cafe du Monde & equally charming, plus so often you can't even get to Cafe du Monde due to the line.
Quote:
Originally Posted by wildwing
Muriel's has a jazz brunch on Sunday to die for.
On Frenchman St there is the Blue Nile and Snug Harbor. Very busy places and you should take a cab.
G W Fins for fish. Reservations required on weekends and Fridays.
Acme Oyster House for Creole and Cajun. No reservations and always a line but very good.
Google French Quarter, Boutique Hotels to stay in something different.
Harrah's Casino is nice but the buffet sucks.
Riverwalk is nice for shopping.
Let me know what else you would find interesting like the Aquarium or the Imax next door.
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... annnnnd that's how the fight started--I would always send people to Deanie's rather than Acme or Drago's. I think Deanie's does best of the three what I call the "Seafood Triumvirate" of very similarly-menued-NOLA restaurants. Plus, the red potatoes in crawfish-boil make me happy. They're all essentially Jacques Imo's w/char-grilled oysters & aren't as good as Jacques Imo's w/their other creole dishes but still perfectly fine. Acme is the oldest of the three, Drago's invented char-grilled, but Deanie's is the best for execution of the same food as the other two.
God Muriel's... YUMMMMM. I ranked it high for a reason. Shawna, you know of course that w/thousands of restaurants you actually have to search for BAD food in NOLA right? It's like Paris: there's no point in paying a crap-ton of money @ an expensive trendy hip place when you've got so many neighborhood places that are awesome. So I usually steer people away from the ones which get listed on "expensive places you have to go" like Commander's Palace or Galatoire's & send people to Jacques Imo's or Mosca's. You should go to Central Grocery for a mufaletta, but I'd avoid Mother's on Poydras if I were you: they started believing their own press awhile back, it's all tourists now w/a line out the door by 11:30 every day & it's overpriced. I'm not saying it wasn't good--it was good--but who-the-fudge needs to pay $18 for a damn po-boy? You do that & you BECOME the po-boy just b/c you wanted lunch...
Hey I thought I heard G W Fins CLOSED?!?! I ate there ONCE. It was fantastic...