A round plate with a blue and green palm frond decal topped with a Trinbagonian double and a selection of sauces.
Queen Trini Lisa.
Randy Schmidt/Queen Trini Lisa

Where to Eat Lunch in New Orleans

22 must-try midday meals in America’s finest lunch town

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Queen Trini Lisa.
| Randy Schmidt/Queen Trini Lisa

It’s been said that New Orleans is America’s finest lunch town, and it’s no wonder, really — restaurants here take the midday meal seriously. A great number of lunch hubs have opened in New Orleans over the past decade — especially sandwich shops — but the city is still home to many classic midday spots for a more leisurely meal. Here, a swanky, booze-filled Friday lunch remains an institution, but it's just as appealing to saddle up to a counter or bar for a shrimp po' boy, muffuletta, or banh mi.

These essential lunch spots are places worth visiting whether from out of town or local — they include great options for everything from business meetings to midday meet-ups with pals, celebratory meals to damn good sandwiches.

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Domilise's Po-Boys

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Domilise's is a po' boy institution dating back to 1918, and what many consider the classic po' boy operation in New Orleans. It's an incredibly delicious hole-in-the-wall experience, where you can't go wrong with a fried shrimp or oyster, dressed.

St. James Cheese Company

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This cheese shop has dominated the casual lunch game since opening in 2007 with a menu of sandwiches featuring cheeses from French brie (on a baguette with ham) to Rogue River's Smokey Blue (with thin sliced roast beef), not to mention a Ploughman's Lunch of cheeses, paté, chutney, a green salad, and bread. Both locations also offer some of the best entree salads in town.

St. James’s ham and brie
St. James Cheese Company

Queen Trini Lisa

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The island soul food restaurant from chef Lisa Nelson has solidified its essential status in New Orleans, particularly for a light but satisfying lunch in a pretty, mellow setting. The colorful corner restaurant Trinbagonian specialties like a coco fried fish sandwich, oxtail soup, curry chicken, and Caribbean-style spinach all standouts. Delicious doubles served with three tangy, fresh sauces are Nelson’s specialties.

The High Hat Cafe

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Relaxed, bright, and friendly, High Hat offers a taste of Louisiana cuisine in a relaxed Uptown setting. Daily lunch specials, po’ boys, and favorites like rich, dark gumbo; fried catfish with cornbread and greens; and pimento mac and cheese rule the day, but the menu also holds some surprises and the bar serves excellent cocktails.

Pascal's Manale

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This birthplace of New Orleans-style barbecue shrimp, Pascal’s Manale opened in 1913. Today, it’s a lunchtime destination for its friendly oyster bar, laid-back attitude, and old-school atmosphere.

Casamento's Restaurant

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At the narrow, bustling Casamento’s, oyster-shuckers have been holding court since 1919, when this family-owned oyster classic opened. Besides raw oysters, Casamento’s is best known for its oyster loaf (like a fried oyster po’ boy, but on toasted, thick, white sandwich bread); and its Creole style gumbo, lighter in color and flavor and filled with tomatoes and okra. NOTE: Casamento’s closes annually from Memorial Day through September, as tradition dictates.

Casamento’s

La Petite Grocery

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Justin Devillier’s Magazine Street gem is built for business lunches. From its elegant storefront to its cozy, dimly lit dining room, La Petite Grocery is a charmer. Don’t miss the turtle Bolognese or blue crab beignets, which were some of the first to pop up on fine dining menus in the city and are now a common small plate.

Toups Meatery

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If meat is what you're after, head to this casual Cajun eatery in Mid City from chef Isaac Toups, where the chef's lunch (boudin, burger, and a beer) is a feast and the house signatures, like confit chicken thigh and the double cut pork chop with dirty rice, are not to be overlooked. The patio makes for a pleasant lunch setting.

Toups’s chef’s lunch (boudin, burger, and a beer)
Toups Meatery

Parkway Bakery & Tavern

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This Bayou St. John po' boy staple is a favorite among locals and tourists in the know. The fried shrimp is a classic, but it's the Thanksgiving po' boy that has locals lining up around the block in November. Bonus: Excellent Reuben and gumbo.

Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Commander's Palace

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This Garden District beauty made famous by renowned restaurateur Ella Brennan has been known for its twenty-five cent lunch martinis since introducing the promotion in the 1990s. For food, chef Meg Bickford offers an affordable three-course prix-fixe special for $48 (or two courses for half that), featuring the restaurant’s most famous dishes: turtle soup, lacquered quail, and bread pudding soufflé. The courtyard is always a nice daytime setting.

Commander’s Palace restaurant on Washington Avenue, a long, shotgun-style building with wood shingles painted in robin egg’s blue with white trim and lined with a blue and white striped awning. Shutterstock

Liuzza's by the Track

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This horse tracks-adjacent neighborhood bar got its start in 1936, later evolving into a quintessential lunch restaurant and the unofficial gathering place for Jazz Fest. It’s best known for the garlic oyster po’ boy and barbecue shrimp po’ boy, both offering slight twists on the classics.

Cafe Reconcile

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Cafe Reconcile serves up the some of the very best versions of Louisiana comfort food for lunch in New Orleans, like red beans and rice with smoked sausage, fried chicken, or fried catfish; smothered turkey necks; and shrimp po’ boys. Daily specials are a highlight, like the paneed pork loin on Tuesday and the white beans with shrimp on Thursday. The welcoming, art-filled setting in Central City also doubles as a highly-regarded job training program for teens and young adults, led by the incomparable Martha Wiggins.

Dooky Chase Restaurant

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The buffet at this Treme landmark is legendary and one of the best ways to experience the late Leah Chase’s iconic restaurant. Try it all at once — gumbo, fried chicken, fried catfish, greens, lima beans — or order from the menu, which also includes salads, po’ boys, shrimp Clemenceau, and stuffed shrimp.

Stein's Market and Deli

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A majority of Stein’s customers know their order before they go in, lest they get skipped over in line. There’s not much seating at this sandwich icon — a few more tables are outside on Magazine — but most people grab and go anyways, eager to savor a Rachel, Reuben, and any of the other fantastic sandwiches in the privacy of their own home (or car).

Stein’s storefront on magazine street with large windows next to a door.
Stein’s
Brasted/Eater NOLA

Coco Hut Carribean Restaurant

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Situated just off Broad Street on Bayou Road restaurant is this 7th Ward institution, serving heaping plates of Jamaican comfort food at reasonable prices. The jerk chicken is glorious, unsurprisingly, as is the goat and snapper; all come in platters for less than $15. Daily specials and a handful of tables out front make this a popular neighborhood lunch destination.

Turkey And The Wolf

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This nationally acclaimed sandwich spot in the LGD might be New Orleans’s best lunch destination to open in the past decade. Distinctive eats like hogshead cheese tacos, a fried bologna sandwich, specials, and perhaps best of all, the collard green melt — slow-cooked collards, Swiss cheese, coleslaw, and cherry pepper dressing served hot on rye — make this an essential lunch visit for locals and tourists alike. Just be prepared for a line, and try the Mountain Dew-tinged frozen margarita if it’s that kind of day.

Lilly's Cafe

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This LGD staple is where numerous locals go to get their lunchtime pho fill. Many consider the broth here to be the best in town, but the menu is also home to numerous Vietnamese classics that won't break the bank.

Galatoire's

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This Bourbon Street landmark is famous for its Friday lunch, where the drinks are strong and the menu is bursting with classics — oysters Rockefeller, eggs Sardou, Galatoire Goute, pompano with crabmeat. Show up early to snag a table (and bring a jacket, gentlemen).

Inside a crowded main floor dining room at Galatoire’s for Friday lunch in 2015. Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Head to this Susan Spicer classic in the Quarter for a leisurely Saturday lunch on the intimate back patio, when themed, four-course prix fixe menus — wine pairings included — are a relatively good deal. The regular lunch menu is also available Thursday through Saturday.

Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Li'l Dizzy's Cafe

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Stepping into Li’l Dizzy’s at lunchtime is likely to brighten your day, when you’re met with a bustling dining room, friendly owners, and happy customers. Choose from fried catfish and chicken, gumbo and red beans, and po’ boys, all high quality and affordable.

A brown takeout container holds two large pieces of fried chicken next to a styrofoam container of collard greens. Clair Lorell/Eater NOLA

Cochon Butcher

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It's hard to go wrong at this Cochon annex, where Link Group shows off its incredible charcuterie skills and even more incredible sandwiches. The muffuletta is one of the best in town, but it's hard to go wrong with anything from a Cubano to a serving of boudin.

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Frady's One Stop Food Store

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Off-beat decor, longtime characters, and classic New Orleans eats define this Bywater corner spot. Known for po’ boys, muffulettas, and daily lunch plates like red beans and rice, jambalaya and catfish, and more, it’s a longtime essential for a mid-day meal. No seating inside, but the sidewalk tables make for great people-watching.

William A. Morgan/Shutterstock

Domilise's Po-Boys

Domilise's is a po' boy institution dating back to 1918, and what many consider the classic po' boy operation in New Orleans. It's an incredibly delicious hole-in-the-wall experience, where you can't go wrong with a fried shrimp or oyster, dressed.

St. James Cheese Company

This cheese shop has dominated the casual lunch game since opening in 2007 with a menu of sandwiches featuring cheeses from French brie (on a baguette with ham) to Rogue River's Smokey Blue (with thin sliced roast beef), not to mention a Ploughman's Lunch of cheeses, paté, chutney, a green salad, and bread. Both locations also offer some of the best entree salads in town.

St. James’s ham and brie
St. James Cheese Company

Queen Trini Lisa

The island soul food restaurant from chef Lisa Nelson has solidified its essential status in New Orleans, particularly for a light but satisfying lunch in a pretty, mellow setting. The colorful corner restaurant Trinbagonian specialties like a coco fried fish sandwich, oxtail soup, curry chicken, and Caribbean-style spinach all standouts. Delicious doubles served with three tangy, fresh sauces are Nelson’s specialties.

The High Hat Cafe

Relaxed, bright, and friendly, High Hat offers a taste of Louisiana cuisine in a relaxed Uptown setting. Daily lunch specials, po’ boys, and favorites like rich, dark gumbo; fried catfish with cornbread and greens; and pimento mac and cheese rule the day, but the menu also holds some surprises and the bar serves excellent cocktails.

Pascal's Manale

This birthplace of New Orleans-style barbecue shrimp, Pascal’s Manale opened in 1913. Today, it’s a lunchtime destination for its friendly oyster bar, laid-back attitude, and old-school atmosphere.

Casamento's Restaurant

At the narrow, bustling Casamento’s, oyster-shuckers have been holding court since 1919, when this family-owned oyster classic opened. Besides raw oysters, Casamento’s is best known for its oyster loaf (like a fried oyster po’ boy, but on toasted, thick, white sandwich bread); and its Creole style gumbo, lighter in color and flavor and filled with tomatoes and okra. NOTE: Casamento’s closes annually from Memorial Day through September, as tradition dictates.

Casamento’s

La Petite Grocery

Justin Devillier’s Magazine Street gem is built for business lunches. From its elegant storefront to its cozy, dimly lit dining room, La Petite Grocery is a charmer. Don’t miss the turtle Bolognese or blue crab beignets, which were some of the first to pop up on fine dining menus in the city and are now a common small plate.

Toups Meatery

If meat is what you're after, head to this casual Cajun eatery in Mid City from chef Isaac Toups, where the chef's lunch (boudin, burger, and a beer) is a feast and the house signatures, like confit chicken thigh and the double cut pork chop with dirty rice, are not to be overlooked. The patio makes for a pleasant lunch setting.

Toups’s chef’s lunch (boudin, burger, and a beer)
Toups Meatery

Parkway Bakery & Tavern

This Bayou St. John po' boy staple is a favorite among locals and tourists in the know. The fried shrimp is a classic, but it's the Thanksgiving po' boy that has locals lining up around the block in November. Bonus: Excellent Reuben and gumbo.

Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Commander's Palace

This Garden District beauty made famous by renowned restaurateur Ella Brennan has been known for its twenty-five cent lunch martinis since introducing the promotion in the 1990s. For food, chef Meg Bickford offers an affordable three-course prix-fixe special for $48 (or two courses for half that), featuring the restaurant’s most famous dishes: turtle soup, lacquered quail, and bread pudding soufflé. The courtyard is always a nice daytime setting.

Commander’s Palace restaurant on Washington Avenue, a long, shotgun-style building with wood shingles painted in robin egg’s blue with white trim and lined with a blue and white striped awning. Shutterstock

Liuzza's by the Track

This horse tracks-adjacent neighborhood bar got its start in 1936, later evolving into a quintessential lunch restaurant and the unofficial gathering place for Jazz Fest. It’s best known for the garlic oyster po’ boy and barbecue shrimp po’ boy, both offering slight twists on the classics.

Cafe Reconcile

Cafe Reconcile serves up the some of the very best versions of Louisiana comfort food for lunch in New Orleans, like red beans and rice with smoked sausage, fried chicken, or fried catfish; smothered turkey necks; and shrimp po’ boys. Daily specials are a highlight, like the paneed pork loin on Tuesday and the white beans with shrimp on Thursday. The welcoming, art-filled setting in Central City also doubles as a highly-regarded job training program for teens and young adults, led by the incomparable Martha Wiggins.

Dooky Chase Restaurant

The buffet at this Treme landmark is legendary and one of the best ways to experience the late Leah Chase’s iconic restaurant. Try it all at once — gumbo, fried chicken, fried catfish, greens, lima beans — or order from the menu, which also includes salads, po’ boys, shrimp Clemenceau, and stuffed shrimp.

Stein's Market and Deli

A majority of Stein’s customers know their order before they go in, lest they get skipped over in line. There’s not much seating at this sandwich icon — a few more tables are outside on Magazine — but most people grab and go anyways, eager to savor a Rachel, Reuben, and any of the other fantastic sandwiches in the privacy of their own home (or car).

Stein’s storefront on magazine street with large windows next to a door.
Stein’s
Brasted/Eater NOLA

Coco Hut Carribean Restaurant

Situated just off Broad Street on Bayou Road restaurant is this 7th Ward institution, serving heaping plates of Jamaican comfort food at reasonable prices. The jerk chicken is glorious, unsurprisingly, as is the goat and snapper; all come in platters for less than $15. Daily specials and a handful of tables out front make this a popular neighborhood lunch destination.

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Turkey And The Wolf

This nationally acclaimed sandwich spot in the LGD might be New Orleans’s best lunch destination to open in the past decade. Distinctive eats like hogshead cheese tacos, a fried bologna sandwich, specials, and perhaps best of all, the collard green melt — slow-cooked collards, Swiss cheese, coleslaw, and cherry pepper dressing served hot on rye — make this an essential lunch visit for locals and tourists alike. Just be prepared for a line, and try the Mountain Dew-tinged frozen margarita if it’s that kind of day.

Lilly's Cafe

This LGD staple is where numerous locals go to get their lunchtime pho fill. Many consider the broth here to be the best in town, but the menu is also home to numerous Vietnamese classics that won't break the bank.

Galatoire's

This Bourbon Street landmark is famous for its Friday lunch, where the drinks are strong and the menu is bursting with classics — oysters Rockefeller, eggs Sardou, Galatoire Goute, pompano with crabmeat. Show up early to snag a table (and bring a jacket, gentlemen).

Inside a crowded main floor dining room at Galatoire’s for Friday lunch in 2015. Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Bayona

Head to this Susan Spicer classic in the Quarter for a leisurely Saturday lunch on the intimate back patio, when themed, four-course prix fixe menus — wine pairings included — are a relatively good deal. The regular lunch menu is also available Thursday through Saturday.

Josh Brasted/Eater NOLA

Li'l Dizzy's Cafe

Stepping into Li’l Dizzy’s at lunchtime is likely to brighten your day, when you’re met with a bustling dining room, friendly owners, and happy customers. Choose from fried catfish and chicken, gumbo and red beans, and po’ boys, all high quality and affordable.

A brown takeout container holds two large pieces of fried chicken next to a styrofoam container of collard greens. Clair Lorell/Eater NOLA

Cochon Butcher

It's hard to go wrong at this Cochon annex, where Link Group shows off its incredible charcuterie skills and even more incredible sandwiches. The muffuletta is one of the best in town, but it's hard to go wrong with anything from a Cubano to a serving of boudin.

Eater

Frady's One Stop Food Store

Off-beat decor, longtime characters, and classic New Orleans eats define this Bywater corner spot. Known for po’ boys, muffulettas, and daily lunch plates like red beans and rice, jambalaya and catfish, and more, it’s a longtime essential for a mid-day meal. No seating inside, but the sidewalk tables make for great people-watching.

William A. Morgan/Shutterstock

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