Photo courtesy of Pomelo

The Hit ListNew Orleans

The Resy Hit List: Where In New Orleans You’ll Want to Eat in March 2026

Updated:

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.

Four Things Not to Miss In New Orleans This Month

  • Meatless March: Whether you’re observing Lent or just appreciate the art of perfectly fried fish, there’s nowhere better to observe meatless Fridays than New Orleans. Gabrielle and Gris-Gris are both offering Friday fried fish specials all month, but you’ll find plenty of menu staples available to enjoy all week long as well: Dooky Chase’s famed fried catfish pops up on the menu often; the grown-up fish sticks at Pêche are a customer favorite; Good Catch serves a beautiful crispy catfish with spicy mango relish, and the perfectly composed fried shrimp po’ boy at Saint John is available everyday. For the white linen tablecloth experience, hit Clancy’s for fried Gulf fish topped with jumbo lump crabmeat or visit the Quarter for an iconic Friday lunch at Galatoire’s with your choice of fried fish.
  • Bring on the Mudbugs: Crawfish season is finally in full swing after a fairly slow start, converging with the 40-day Lenten season for a perfect window to sample local mudbugs. Try crawfish dishes at local seafood spots like the crawfish and andouille corn maque choux at Chapter IV, crawfish queso at Besame, crawfish etouffee at Coterie, crawfish beignets at Vyoone’s, and crawfish croquettes at Pêche.
  • Feel the Rhythm: Mardi Gras may be behind us, but March also brings the first of the Spring festivals in New Orleans to keep the good times rolling. Most notable is the Congo Square Rhythms Festivals, March 28 and 29, which showcase the music, food, and dance that’s made New Orleans famous worldwide. Catch Jamaican hot spot 14 Parishes at the festival, or make your dinner reservations at nearby restaurants like 14 Parishes on Oak, Vyoone’s, Besame, 3rd Block Depot, Fives Bar, Palm & Pine, and MaMou.
  • Passover Eats: Passover is early this year, with the first seder taking place Wednesday, April 1. To celebrate one of the most significant Jewish holidays, look to two of New Orleans’ top destinations for Jewish food: Saba and Smoke & Honey. Both offer nourishing matzo ball soup — at Saba, it’s made with duck confit, carrot, and dill; and Smoke & Honey’s version features one glorious, giant matzo ball along with chicken and carrot. Both places should also have Passover specials on the menu from April 1 through April 9, with Saba typically offering a “seder plate” meal of Sephardic charoset, beet-cured eggs, tabbouleh, bitter greens, and lamb ribs.

New to the Hit List (March 2026)
1000 Figs, Pizza Delicious, Pomelo, Yakuza House.

1. Emeril's Warehouse District

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Photo courtesy of Emeril’s

This 35-year-old Lagasse flagship is kicking off 2026 with a ton of clout: It was the only restaurant in the first Michelin guide to the South to be awarded two stars. How did it reach such new heights after all these years? Lagasse’s son E.J. took over the kitchen in 2023, leading a total reimagining of longtime staple dishes: oyster stew, trout amandine, salmon cheesecake, barbecue shrimp, and banana cream pie, to name a few. These versions are so bold, delicate, and intricate that they are nearly unrecognizable from their inspiration — the oyster stew, for example, is frothy with anise-tinged Herbsaint cream, bursting with bright green herb oil, dotted with nutty honshimeji mushrooms, and topped with crisped foie gras. The intimate 12-table restaurant offers a six-course tasting menu for $225; unsurprisingly, reservations are a must.

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Photo courtesy of Emeril’s

2. SEIJI's OMAKASE by LITTLE TOKYO Metairie

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This back-room sushi bar combines the chef-curated elegance of Japanese omakase with a joyful, accessible meal that’s worth every penny — and actually leaves you full. Chef Seiji Nakano himself is central to the experience, which can be either four ($85) or seven ($140) courses, typically consisting of an appetizer, soup, dessert, and of course, multiple pieces of sushi and nigiri, perhaps featuring uni, Japanese snapper, fatty tuna, Hokkaido scallop, cod, amberjack, and eel. Nakano lights up the 17-seat space with warmth and finesse, and along with his generous portions, personifies New Orleans dining. It gets our vote for the top omakase in the area.

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3. Patula French Quarter

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If the French Quarter is known for courtyard dining, this addition to the neighborhood elevates that reputation. Classically New Orleans but enhanced with lavish greenery and romantic fountains, Patula is the coolest new spot in town to dine and drink alfresco. It’s all thanks to Rob Tabone, a chef whose resume includes the Link Restaurant Group and BRG Hospitality, but who fully came into his own with his pop-up Wood Duck. That food — highly seasonal with flavors from Italy, Spain, and France — has carried over to a succinct menu of dishes like poached shrimp, mushroom toast, Moroccan-spiced meatballs, and a Parisian ham sandwich that you’ll think about for weeks. An impressive menu of naturally-leaning wines, indulgent martinis, and digestif-based spritzes are right on trend.

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4. Dooky Chase Tremé

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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.

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5. Étoile Garden District

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Photo courtesy of Étoile

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.

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Photo courtesy of Étoile

6. Saint Claire Algiers

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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. Saint-Germain Bywater

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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.

Book now on Tock.

8. Paladar 511 Faubourg Marigny

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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.

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9. Fives Bar French Quarter

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Situated right off Jackson Square in the heart of the Quarter, this new-school-meets-old-school cocktail bar is one of the coolest spots to open in New Orleans in recent years. It’s no wonder, really, given that it’s from the same folks behind the LGD’s Hotel Saint Vincent and its various dining and drinking outposts. It specializes in oysters on the half-shell and other fancy drinking food like caviar, beef tartare, shrimp cocktail, and lobster rolls, but cocktails are the focus. A small but mighty bar puts out global classics, New Orleans-born cocktails, and original creations like a bananas Foster coconut milk punch. Oysters (from the Gulf, East Coast, and Canada) are a splurge, but a happy hour Monday through Thursday helps.

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10. Palm & Pine French Quarter

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Photo courtesy of Palm & Pine

How does an unpresuming sliver of a restaurant establish itself as one of the best in the French Quarter after just a handful of years? By being fresh, bold, and consistent, in this case. The food served here is unlike anywhere else in New Orleans, drawing on a blend of influences from South Asia, the American South, and Central and South America for a menu full of bright flavors. While it changes often, a few staples that represent the menu well: the Corner Store Crudo, with its Pineapple Big Shot nựớc chm and shrimp chips; the corn babies served with Kentucky soy butter; and the chicken fried quail with roux black eyed peas and dill pickle persillade. The desserts are some of the best in town.

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Photo courtesy of Palm & Pine

11. Saba Uptown

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Chef Alon Shaya has been celebrated for years for his worldly, wood-fired Mediterranean cuisine. And things are as good as ever on this busy Uptown stretch of Magazine Street, where you can enjoy delicate puffs of blistered pita alongside elegant salatim (the ikra with smoked trout roe is a must), elaborate hummus dishes (like the blue crab and spicy lamb ragu versions), and roasted and grilled produce and meats sourced from small local farms. It’s all served in an airy, light-filled space with clean lines and modern accents or on the lushly landscaped sidewalk patio where people-watching abounds. The cocktails are inspired, fusing textures (like a fluffy sour), fragrant spices (like baharat), and zesty fruit (like caramelized orange). Weekend brunch is bustling, so book early and often.

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12. Pêche Downtown

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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. 

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13. Lufu Nola Central Business District, Downtown New Orleans

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Lufu’s trio of talented young chefs thrive at their debut restaurant in the CBD, livening up the downtown neighborhood with bright cuisine and stylish decor. It is one of a small collection of recent restaurants to bring contemporary, regional Indian food to the city in a way that has helped redefine local diners’ view of it — nope, no butter chicken on the menu here. Instead, Sachin Darade, Aman Kota, and Sarthak Samantray have created an exciting menu of naanwiches, chaat, fiery pani puri, dosas, tandoori, and biryani, all elevated in presentation and ingredients. It is simply some of the most compelling Indian food in the city, served alongside colorful and inventive cocktails in a space that reflects its owners youthful, fun personalities. Their recently-opened, second restaurant in the French Quarter is also on Resy.

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14. Pizza Delicious Bywater

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Steps from the Mississippi River in New Orleans’ funkiest food neighborhood, this Bywater pizza joint draws thin-crust pizza fans for giant pies, crunchy Caesar salads, and daily pasta specials that never cease to amaze. Pizza D is a cheery, bustling spot serving New York-style pies to long lines that move at a swift pace. Special slices and whole pies change daily and get interesting — take the rosemary potato, a white pie with red onion and spicy bechamel; or the vegan vodka sauce with creamy sunflower seed tomato sauce, sundried tomatoes, and baby spinach. An excellent wine list and side patio that overlaps with the festive backyard of Bratz Y’all (which is often accompanied by live music) make it an equally good date night spot and family-friendly destination.

Find more info here.

15. Galatoire’s Restaurant French Quarter

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This French Quarter icon draws diners in due to its legendary status, but keeps them coming back for the one-of-a-kind experience and satisfying, classic New Orleans food. Sometimes raucous, sometimes classy — and never stiff — the dining room at Galatoire’s is like one big dinner party, with tables often getting to know one another throughout the course of a meal. It’s the city’s celebratory go-to, a classic for birthdays, anniversaries, engagements, graduations, and the like. The food is simple and indulgent, with favorites including the shrimp remoulade appetizer and the fried soft-shell crab entree. It’s best to take your server’s lead for ordering, and let yourself focus on the merriment.  

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16. The Elysian Bar Marigny

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Tucked behind vintage drapery, arched entryways, and lush plant life sits one of the chicest spots in New Orleans, a designer’s dream. You can’t beat the romantic atmosphere at this hotel bar and restaurant that gets repeatedly named one of the best in the country. The menu is beautiful, too – seasonal, elegant, and fresh, with classics like a nicoise salad and escargots alongside unexpected creations like venison and pumpkin carpaccio and gaujillo cream mussels. The hotel it’s located in, Peter and Paul, is a brilliantly renovated Catholic church, and the wondrous surroundings — a curious mix of dramatic and comforting — make for a truly special dining and drinking experience.

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17. Domilise’s Po-Boy & Bar Uptown

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Everyone in New Orleans has their favorite spot for po’ boys, and (almost) everyone would be right in their personal opinion. But there’s something extra special about Domilise’s. Maybe it’s the small, hand-painted sign that barely identifies the shop on its residential corner, or maybe it’s the old-timey wood counter with just a few seats where diners can order a frosty beer to wash down their sandwich. Maybe it’s the staff, most of whom are related to the original owners, and their friendly but no-nonsense way of moving the line along. But it’s probably the po’ boys themselves, generously dressed and heaping with fresh-fried shrimp and oysters or dripping with tender roast beef on crispy Leidenheimer bread. Our suggestion is to get the half and half seafood sandwich — half shrimp and half oyster — dressed but hold the ketchup.

No reservations. Find more info here.

18. Yakuza House Metairie

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Metairie, and Severn Avenue in particular, is stacked with some of the best global cuisine offerings in the New Orleans area. Consider this five-year-old Japanese restaurant that buzzes with excitement nightly. Eager diners fill the 16-seat sushi bar to explore perfectly composed nigiri, like one with seared scallop, foie gras, shiso butter, and fried leeks; sweet shrimp with a quail egg, yuzu tobiko, and sriracha (served with a fully edible fried shrimp head); and fatty tuna with smoked shoyu and truffle pate. The extensive menu encompasses temaki, sashimi, donburi bowls, noodle dishes, and Japanese sandos, and a 12-course omakase menu ranging between $185-225 is available via reservation. The vast and informative sake menu also helps make for a memorable experience.

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19. 1000 Figs Bayou St. John

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On one of New Orleans’ most dramatically tree-draped thoroughfares is this quaint little Mediterranean restaurant, often too tiny to accommodate its many fans. Check the sidewalk seating out front, however — in addition to a few tables out front, Swirl wine bar next door lets customers order food from the restaurant to enjoy at its outdoor tables with a bottle of wine as well. It’s perfect wine-tasting food: fresh hummus, tzatziki, baba ghanouj, and whipped feta, served with crudite and the fluffiest bread in place of pita. The kale and cabbage salad is another favorite, but the falafels served with zhoug and garlicky toum are a must. For a non-vegan option, the buttermilk-marinated, zesty chicken thighs platter also comes with all the fixins. Stroll to the banks of nearby Bayou St. John with your order and a picnic blanket for a truly idyllic setting.

Find more info here.

20. Pomelo Uptown New Orleans

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Photo courtesy of Pomelo

Chef Aom Srisuk, a Bangkok native who moved to New Orleans in 2018, is on fire. Since opening this tiny gem on Magazine Street Uptown in late 2021, she’s followed with Good Catch Thai Urban Bistro downtown to showcase her talent for extravagant seafood preparations. Her original endeavor remains a local favorite for Bangkok street food, which appears in the form of rotating chef’s specials like pok pok, spicy barbecue unagi, and Thai curry puffs. Bright, chilled dishes like sweet corn and shrimp salad and salmon tsuke are warm-weather favorites to cool off with in the welcoming, chic space that feels so clean and soothing, and specialty tea drinks are a welcome change from the norm.

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Photo courtesy of Pomelo