The Resy Hit List: Where In New Orleans You’ll Want to Eat in June 2025
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There’s no question we hear more often: Where should I go eat? And while we at Resy know it’s an honor to be the friend who everyone asks for restaurant advice, we also know it’s a complicated task. That’s where the Resy Hit List comes in.
Consider it your essential resource for dining in New Orleans: a monthly-updated guide to the restaurants that you won’t want to miss — tonight or any night.
Things In New Orleans Not to Miss This Month
- Grandest Krewe: Nola’s ritziest food festival, the New Orleans Wine & Food Experience, returns June 11 – 15 for its 33rd year, featuring seminars, dinners, wine tastings, and excursions. The list of participating restaurants is extensive — with top spots like Boucherie, Brasa, and Restaurant R’evolution alongside newcomers like Le Moyne and Rizzuto’s Prime. Wine dinners are the highlight, with events ranging from a collab with Ramey Cellars at R’evolution, a five-course spread at Nathanial Zimet’s Boucherie, and Copper Cane Wine & Provisions at Lakeview favorite Junior’s on Harrison. More to be announced here.
- Guest Chefs Welcome: Palm & Pine, situated on the edge of the French Quarter and the cutting edge of inventive New Orleans cuisine, kicks off a six-part collaborative guest chef series in June. Welcoming the likes of Cafe Reconcile chef Martha Wiggins and Mister Mao chef Sophina Uong, the series launches with local chef David Barbeau on June 5 and continues throughout the summer.
New to the Hit List (June 2025)
Bayona, High Hat Cafe, Honey’s, Plume Algiers.
1. Zasu Mid-City
Dining at this Mid-City restaurant feels like scoring an invite to an exclusive supper club. The quaint sliver of a space on Carrollton Avenue is James Beard Award-winning chef Sue Zemanick’s first solo restaurant, a long-awaited step for the chef who helped make Gautreau’s Restaurant a local icon. Here, Zemanick combines Gulf Coast ingredients with techniques from her Slovak heritage in dishes like ever-changing pierogies, grilled baby octopus, ora king salmon with mustard spaetzle and charred cabbage, and citrus-poached Gulf shrimp with red and gold beets. Its succinct menu reads deceptively simple, but Zasu is a powerhouse, serving meticulous but approachable food in a relaxed setting.
2. Dooky Chase Tremé
Still arguably the defining restaurant of New Orleans, in spirit, cuisine, and history. Over seven decades, the late Leah Chase built an iconic gathering place for the city, nourishing with spectacular renditions of Creole classics like shrimp Clemenceau, crawfish etouffee, and gumbo z’herbes. Today, the next generation upholds Chase’s legacy with the same attention to detail and emphasis on warm hospitality, along with a renewed dedication to fine dining and maintaining the iconic restaurant’s relevance today.
3. Vyoone’s Warehouse District
Vyoone Segue Lewis’s Warehouse District restaurant has been wooing couples, endearing out-of-towners, and anchoring celebrations for large groups with its French-Creole fare and warm ambiance since 2018. The menu serves up the kind of gratifying dishes that could come straight out of a French home cook’s kitchen: excellent French onion soup, head-on New Orleans barbecue shrimp, rich escargot with bone marrow, and delicate duck l’orange with mushroom bread pudding. Visit during the spring season and find out if the soft-shell crab maque choux awaits on the other side of the marvelous white string-lit outdoor hallway.
4. Saint-Germain Bywater
Saint-Germain is the little engine that could – a scrappy enterprise dreamed up by three friends with minimal investment, a small budget, and wildly ambitious goals. It has emerged as one of the very best restaurants in town, recognized nationally for a 10-course tasting menu that physically moves diners throughout its eclectic, romantic Bywater space. Chefs Trey Smith and Blake Aguillard channel modern Parisian bistros while infusing every course with remarkable creativity, using ingredients like white asparagus, guineafowl, lima beans, and geoduck. It is world-class dining in a kitschy, relaxed atmosphere. If the tasting menu is too much of a commitment (and splurge), the wine garden is worth visiting Thursday through Monday nights.
5. Bayona French Quarter
Regina Keever and Susan Spicer’s 35-year-old restaurant claims one of the best courtyards in the French Quarter, and really, all of New Orleans: It’s fairy-tale beautiful with an air of romance and an edge of magic. It’s a refined dinner spot with service to match, and a go-to for many loyal regulars. The French-global menu might surprise you, as winged and ground game are specialties here — the crispy smoked quail, duck breast, and braised rabbit are top of mind, while the scallops, garlic flan, and fennel-pepper-crusted lamb loin also count as favorites. An old world sensibility weaves its way through the atmosphere, wine list, and attention lavished on diners, securing it as one of New Orleans’s best special occasion spots.
6. High Hat Cafe Uptown
Deep South-inspired, this casual Uptown restaurant has become a Freret Street staple, serving a clever mix of New Orleans-specific specialties like barbecue shrimp, gumbo, and po’boys, plus broader Southern staples like pimento cheese, stewed okra, and fried catfish. Its neighborly, meat-and-three feel stands out in the city’s increasingly modern dining scene, offering expertly-crafted food with a lack of pretense that feels special. Familiar daily specials — red beans on Monday, fried chicken on Tuesday, and shrimp Creole on Friday — are all standouts in a sea of nostalgic comfort food.
Find more info here.
7. Porgy’s Mid-City
Opened at the end of 2023, this is not just the city’s most ambitious seafood market, meant to serve as a dedicated space for bycatch. It’s also a casual neighborhood restaurant, where a pair of talented chefs are serving New Orleans favorites with a sustainable twist. In addition to seafood gumbo, po’ boys, crudos, and boiled shellfish, customers can choose any fish in the case – maybe tilefish, sheepshead, porgy, or almaco jack — to have grilled, blackened, fried, or on a sandwich. The hope is that people will try something new, learn something new, and then seek it out. Fresh off a James Beard Award nomination, it’s a great time to visit.
8. Pêche Downtown
After 15 years as a mainstay of Donald Link’s restaurant empire, Pêche still radiates warmth and graceful energy from the moment you walk in. The oyster bar off the entrance remains a good sign of what’s to come: fresh Gulf seafood prepared in elegant but approachable ways — the kind of food you could eat weekly and never be disappointed. Current chef Nicole Cabrera Mills infuses ever more global flavors into dishes that still wouldn’t be out of place at a lavish cookout, like catfish with pickled greens in a chile broth; jumbo shrimp with purple rice; and fried oysters with pickled papaya and kimchi. That dynamism keeps us as interested as we ever were.
9. Plume Algiers Algiers
Informed by years of research, months of travel across the Indian subcontinent, and a deep reverence for the cuisine, Tyler Stuart and Merritt Coscia opened Plume Algiers after years of pop-ups, in large part due to demand from their Algiers Point neighbors. That’s just the kind of relationship the couple has with their customers — close, appreciative, and thoughtful. Try dishes not found on typical Indian restaurant menus in the U.S. — like Bengali-style fried fish, Indo-Chinese stir-fried rice dumplings, Kashmiri lamb meatballs, and appam — in a quaint, homey setting that you’ll want to return to regularly.
10. Acamaya Bywater
Seven months in, all of New Orleans is still talking about the debut solo restaurant from chef Ana Castro and her sister Lydia. Is it the sisters’ focus on mariscos, which provides a twist to our citywide fixation on all things seafood? Or maybe it’s Castro’s unfussy approach to cooking, which lets the Mesoamerican products that helped shape Mexico City cuisine shine – ingredients like huitlacoche, chapulines, and chiltepin, all defined in a helpful menu glossary. They are deployed in traditional dishes like shrimp aguachile, seafood coctel, and a crab sope, and in less expected preparations, which is where Castro’s talent really shines — charred octopus with walnut salsa negra; chochoyotes with local crab, chanterelle, and corn; and the arroz negro. This last is the shining star, a career-defining dish that combines the chew of huitlacoche, brightened by lemon zest, with plump mussels and squid — a creamy, earthy textural masterwork that will stun you into happy silence.
Read more about Acamaya here.
11. Miss Shirley’s French Quarter
This Magazine Street Chinese restaurant has a devout fan base that’s ever eager to line up for a table at — or before — 5 p.m., so plan your visit accordingly. (Pro tip: weeknights.) Shirley and Tang Lee, the original proprietors of Royal China in Metairie, have reasonably made Orleans Parish grateful for their move into the city. The menu of delicate dim sum; comforting soups; slick noodle dishes, and fiery Cantonese specialties is large but focused compared to Royal China, making every option a winner. The refreshed space has touches both modern and familiar, with comforting navy and gold highlights, glowing Chinese lanterns, and nostalgic fish tanks – a bonus for the many families with kids who dine there.
No reservations. More info here.
12. Honey’s Marigny
This all-day cafe is the epitome of cool, and so much more than the coffee shop it started as. It’s the kind of place young romantics dream of being regulars — a stop for espresso, pastries, egg-bagel sandwiches, and friendly banter in the mornings, with a strikingly different setting in the evenings. When the sun sets, it becomes a wine bar with an expert selection of glasses, though the vibe calls for a pet-nat, if featured that week. The owner-chef’s tiny nighttime menu changes every two weeks, always offering a starter featuring farmers market vegetables, a fresh pasta or two, a focaccia sandwich, and a dessert heavy on charm and whimsy.
Find more info here.
13. Fritai Treme
Recent years have brought the Caribbean roots of New Orleans cuisine to the forefront, sparked in part by Nina Compton’s Compere Lapin. Charly Pierre has picked up the torch at Fritai, where a mellow, attractive space gives but hints of the most inviting dinners in town. Pierre energetically explores New Orleans tradition in several dishes, but this is a Haitian restaurant at its core. Start with the crispy snapper collar, vegetable akara, and grilled shrimp pikliz, and try an entree with sos pwa, a deeply savory black bean sauce that you’ll want to drink straight from the cup. Order a setup of the Clairinha, and everyone at the table gets a sweet little punch bowl glass in which to enjoy the refreshing clairin-based cocktail.
14. Liuzza’s by the Track Mid-City District
Spring in New Orleans calls to mind this classic, thanks to a combination of Jazz Fest (which takes place a stone’s throw away), peak season for nearby Esplanade Avenue’s glorious oaks, and the appearance of soft-shell crab dishes on the menu (perhaps panéed over spaghetti with basil Alfredo). Still, this horsetrack-themed joint is best known for three things: the oyster po’boy, fried and slathered with a garlic butter sauce; the Worcestershire-tinged barbecue shrimp po’boy served in a pistolette; and the Creole gumbo, a dark roux-based version featuring sausage and chicken plus sauteed-to-order shrimp freshly added to each bowl. A bloody Mary is a must.
No reservations. Find more info here.
15. N7 Bywater
Nearly 10 years after opening, N7 remains one of the hottest spots in town. And sure, we know it’s not for everyone — but those in the know are aware that slipping through the unmarked wooden fence on Montegut Street is like being rewarded with a mini-vacation. There, a backyard scene decorated with weathered furnishings and a dazzling blend of string lights, flickering candlelight, and lush plant life sets the scene for a menu that often blends French and Japanese sensibilities, with dishes like frog legs karaage and wagyu tataki, as well as purely Gallic efforts: French onion soup, snails, rabbit crepe, and steak au poivre. The vibe inside is pure French countryside, although the large menu of small production wines and rare spirits is pretty New Orleanian in its way.
16. Paladar 511 Faubourg Marigny
Since its opening in 2015, Paladar has offered something decidedly different: California-style cuisine with an Italian tilt, using Gulf Coast ingredients. Fresh pastas like squid ink spaghetti with shrimp and crab and corn agnolotti are bright and balanced; the pizzas, especially the mushroom, leek, and fontina, and farm egg, bacon, and collard green, pack a flavorful punch; and the desserts are exceptional. Staff navigate the lively, loud warehouse atmosphere with artful grace, framed by the view of a large open kitchen that periodically dances with flames.
17. Bacchanal Bywater
The backyard beckons in this, the home of the funkiest wine party in all New Orleans. Bacchanal can be credited with helping make Bywater a dining destination (though the long-lived Jack Dempsey’s down the street has about a decade headstart). Owners Joaquin Rodas and Adrian Mendez honor Bacchanal’s late founder Chris Rudge in every way, changing little since its opening in 2002 and maintaining its homey spirit. There are several ways to enjoy the near-daily lineup of live music: Grab a bottle of wine and choose cheeses, which the restaurant will plate, and head out back. Order small plates from the back window, like bacon-wrapped dates, papas fritas, mussels, and skirt steak with chimichurri. Or head upstairs for a less crowded setting in the treehouse. All involve good wine, great food, and prime people-watching.
No reservations. More info here.
18. Sneaky Pickle + Bar Brine Bywater
The impossibly cool scene at this combination restaurant in Bywater is layered: there’s the hip clientele and staff, the quirky but serene atmosphere, and the wildly inventive menu that leans on vegetables and vegan-friendly ingredients while offering some of the best meat and fish dishes in town. There’s a rustic feel to items like the white bean dip sprinkled with fiery peanut salsa macha accompanied by misshapen grilled flatbread, or the fat, hand-ripped squid ink noodles with creamy crab and shrimp. Non-vegans stand by vegan dishes here, too — maybe grilled trumpet mushrooms atop cashew cream grits with pistachio chimichurri. But the wagyu bavette steak with blue cheese pistou competes with any steakhouse, and the pan-seared snapper gives the city’s grande dames a run for their money. Cocktails are outstanding.
Find more info here.
19. Queen Trini Lisa Mid-City
Tucked away on a Mid-City neighborhood corner is this family-run restaurant, Lisa Nelson’s cozy hub for the powerful flavors of Trinidad and Tobago. The doubles alone are worth the trip off the beaten path, warranting a monthly or even weekly visit: Savory and comforting, chickpeas are stewed with curry, cumin, and cilantro and top a fluffy, slightly spongy fried flatbread. The dish is brightened by grated cucumber and a trio of sauces: mango chutney, Scotch bonnet sauce, and the cherished tamarind sauce. The curry chicken and fried fish are more standouts, best accompanied by Caribbean spinach and rice and peas. The Queen, as she’s known, reigns over her busy kitchen while her friendly son greets diners at the door.
Find more info here.
20. Mister Mao Uptown
Photo courtesy of Mister Mao
The jungle vibe is strong at this Uptown “tropical roadhouse,” namely because of the dramatic, fabulous flair of owners Sophina Uong and William Greenwell. They injected a once-homey corner building with a trippy, forest-like aesthetic that promotes good cheer. Uong’s food is equally exciting, combining influences from her Cambodian heritage with flavors from India, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, and more. A changing menu of dishes like lechon kawali, pani puri, vegetable bhaji, and garlic noodles get new life here, exploding with flavor (and sometimes heat) and tempered by cocktails made with Malort and aquafaba. Mister Mao is where you go when you want your meal to come with a side of fun.
Photo courtesy of Mister Mao