The Resy Hit List: Where In New Orleans You’ll Want to Eat in Oct. 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.
Not to Miss In New Orleans This Month
- Courtyard Magic: The opening of Patula was a boon to the French Quarter, a neighborhood that can never have enough enchanting courtyards in which to dine and drink. It helps that local chef Rob Tabone is behind the food offerings here, after time spent working for Donald Link’s restaurant group BRG, Bywater barbecue spot The Joint, and manning his own pop-up out of Marigny bar Anna’s. This courtyard is all about biodynamic wines, classic cocktails, and sophisticated snacks: boquerones, Moroccan meatballs, mushroom toast, and cassoulet among them. Book your table now during what might be the best time for outdoor dining in New Orleans.
- Witches’ Brew: Birdy’s Behind the Bower, beacon of trendy dining on Magazine Street, consistently hosts some of the best themed pairing dinners in town. Halloween is no exception, so before you hit Frenchmen Street to ogle costumes and catch live music, enjoy a four-course meal with an emphasis on spooky, extravagant cocktails. For instance, the Devil’s Ichor, made with rum, oleo saccharum, lime, velvet falernum, and dry ice. Book your seat for the dinner now and start planning your costume. And of course, you can find plenty more on Resy’s Events page.
- Haitian Fusion: We love it when two powerhouse chefs collab, melding genres and expanding our notion of fusion. Fritai’s Charly Pierre is one of the best at sharing the stage with friends to create something altogether new, which is what diners can surely anticipate on October 13. “Top Chef” alum Pierre is hosting chef Shan Samantray of buzzy modern Indian restaurant LUFU NOLA for a five-course dinner with cocktail pairings by Chassidy Walker, the last in his Chef’s Tasting dinner series. Haitian + Indian: What could be better?
New to the Hit List (Oct. 2025)
Etoile, Hungry Eyes, Nighthawk Napoletana, Saint Claire.
1. 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.
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. Gabrielle Treme
This Treme-proud restaurant from the Sonnier family perfectly encapsulates New Orleans dining: comforting, worldly, smooth, and inviting. It’s a white-tablecloth restaurant in a small, homey cottage full of regulars who return for Greg Sonnier’s dark roux guinea hen gumbo, barbecue shrimp sweet potato pie, and anything that features duck — it’s the restaurant’s most prized protein and a central part of its claim to fame. Radiating with authenticity, Gabrielle is a place to get a feel for old-school New Orleans away from the hype of the French Quarter, where restaurants so often rely on their name alone. An exceptional cocktail program from daughter Gabie and standout desserts complete its distinction.
4. 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.
5. Pluck Wine Bar & Restaurant Warehouse District
To access the chicest European vibes in the Warehouse District, look no further than this Girod Street wine bar. Fresh off a 2025 Beard Award nod, there’s never been a better time to visit sommelier Skye LaTorre’s baby for sophisticated bites, a meticulously curated wine list, and reasonably-priced cheese and charcuterie. Among the menu surprises are the bacalhau croquetas, tuna crudo with blackberry and salsa macha, and the jambon beurre, all well-coordinated wine-sipping food. The list of options by the glass is extensive and varied, including chilled reds, vintage amaros, and a few cocktails. But the bottles list is where Pluck gets extra adventurous, organized by staff recommendations. Note: it’s a long list — gloriously, satisfyingly long.
6. Saint Claire Algiers
Melissa Martin has been one of New Orleans’ most highly-lauded chefs for the last 10 years, acclaimed for her Beard Award-nominated restaurant, Mosquito Supper Club, and subsequent cookbooks celebrating Louisiana foodways. Her new restaurant, opened in June 2025 in collaboration with Cassie Dymond, is making similar waves. Through two robust a la carte menus, brunch, and dinner, Martin shines a light down the bayou with fanciful takes on Cajun — not necessarily Creole — and French dishes like tuna paillard, rabbit rillettes, and duck confit. Nestled among oak trees on a sprawling historic West Bank property and outfitted with picturesque antiques, it epitomizes the romantic whimsy Martin is known for.
Book now on Tock.
7. Sukeban Uptown/Carrollton
Jacqueline Blanchard helped introduce New Orleans to the majesty of the traditional Japanese izakaya with her 22-seat sushi tavern, opened in 2022. Carefully modeled after the tiny pubs she’s encountered in her extensive Japan travels, the Oak Street restaurant is a casual, minimalist space that focuses on a small number of high-quality, well-executed staples: temaki (hand rolls), traditional sides like Japanese potato salad and ohitashi (spinach in dashi broth with sesame and bonito), and specials like onigiri and sashimi of rare fish. The menu is accompanied by a curated selection of Japanese whisky, shochu, sake, beer, and natural wine, rounding out an expert offering as sleek as the space.
8. Beggars Banquet Lower Garden District
After two years, this Lower Garden District restaurant has quietly built a reputation as one of the neighborhood’s strongest. It’s from the New Jersey-born Dilonno family, who run the restaurant with a combination of friendly charm and brusque humor, to the delight of diners. The food, however, is pure elegance, mixing seafood uncommon to New Orleans menus like calamari, scallops, and swordfish with global flavors. It also has one of the most sophisticated cocktail menus in town, which suits its stunning interior: design-heavy but tasteful, it’s full of soothing purple, exposed brick, brass fixtures, and ’70s-inspired murals and antiques. It’s especially great for brunch, when pear toast, tuna crudo, and shrimp panzanella salad make appearances.
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
New Orleans — and people well beyond — can’t stop 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. Étoile Garden District
The huge list of regional suppliers that accompanies the seven-course prix fixe menu is the first sign that this isn’t your average self-proclaimed farm-to-table restaurant. On a typical night it will climb above 30, encompassing frog legs from Bayou Gauche, La.; wagyu beef from Wiggins, Miss.; and balsamic vinegar from Dripping Springs, Texas. Dining at Étoile feels like being invited to your fanciest friend’s home, where they’ve hired a private chef to prepare dinner and give detailed explanations of each course. It’s a homecoming for acclaimed Birmingham chef (and New Orleans native) Chris Dupont, who changed Birmingham’s culinary scene indelibly with his restaurant Cafe Dupont, and whose food is worth the splurge.
12. Addis NOLA Treme
There is much to take in upon entering this beautiful Ethiopian restaurant on Bayou Road, a corridor that existed before the city was called New Orleans and was later known as its Black Wall Street. The stunning eight-seat bar is near a small tiled coffee ceremony stage devoted to the ritual of coffee roasting. You’ll see throne-like seats and half-moon booths partially enclosed by drapes and thatch-covered roofs, and basket-weave pendant lights that help highlight the warm, rich-colored art that adorns the walls. It’s all part of the exuberant atmosphere that accompanies a traditional menu of sambusas, kitfo, jollof, stews, and more, with no shortage of vegan and vegetarian options.
13. 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.
Book now on Tock.
14. ROSEDALE Lakeview
This Mid-City tavern is the rare opportunity to experience the down-home, everyday side of a Beard award-winning chef best known for her fine-dining cuisine. In 2016, Bayona chef Susan Spicer, with help from executive chef Allison Birdsall, created this funky, off-the-beaten-path restaurant that shines through familiarity, not nuance — and it’s been a locals’ favorite ever since. The menu is deceptively simple but succinct for a reason, with every dish serving a purpose: the pimiento cheese sandwich evokes nostalgia, the taramasalata is an ode to global influences, the mushroom and butternut salad is nourishing, and the shrimp Creole is born of Louisiana pride. A sprawling patio and family-friendly feel make this a frequent destination for nearby New Orleanians.
15. Nighthawk Napoletana West Bank
Modern and fresh, Adrian Chelette’s West Bank pizzeria is a boon to the neighborhood and New Orleans’s pizza scene as a whole. Chelette has been slinging some of the best Neapolitan-style pizza in the city for years, at the now-closed Ancora and more recently at Margot’s. With his first solo restaurant, Chelette has found a happy mix of canonical, especially in the style of New Haven, and inventive, like a sausage pie with charred poblano cream and taleggio; one with Calabrian chile paste and ‘njuda; and one with mascarpone and speck. Meatballs, arancini, and salads are expert accompaniments to the succinct menu, while red-and-white checkered tablecloths and spritzes set a charming tone.
Find more info here.
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. Hungry Eyes East Riverside
Hungry Eyes is a breath of unpretentious fresh air, brazenly eye-popping with the unfussy goal of having fun while dining and drinking. Among the collection of snacks (of the Drinking, Indecisive, Larger, and Side Snack variety), the steak tartare, artichokes on the half-shell, halibut crudo, grilled cabbage, and curry stand out with their unexpected flavors and presentation. An important part of embracing the ’80s theme here, marked by a recurring geometrical aesthetic, neon lighting, and eclectic memorabilia, is enjoying a throwback appletini or Cosmopolitan poured straight from the tap. Alternatively, the wine selection is outstanding, and the large, lush patio — with touches that make it resemble an Airstream trailer — makes for a perfect sipping setting.
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. Besame – New Orleans Arts District
It’s no secret that downtown dining can be a crapshoot in any city. This magnetic tapas restaurant, in close proximity to theaters and music venues in the heart of the CBD, is an unexpected bright spot off Canal Street. Billed under a catch-all Latin American umbrella, the cuisine encompasses Mexico, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Argentina, Venezuela, and more, with several countries represented by their approach to ceviche. As such, brightness is the theme here, carried through dishes like tuna aguachile, watermelon salad, and shrimp mofongo; and in tropical, herbaceous cocktails featuring mezcal, pisco, and rum. It’s a sweet little reprieve amid the bustle, with a sophisticated international energy thanks to its closeness to the HI New Orleans Hostel.
20. 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.