New
Orleans Restaurants By Uma Dongre
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While in New
Orleans, dine as locals do. Which means, knowing your Cajun from Creole, Roux
from Remoulade and Beignet from.you get the drift. The very multi-cultural influences
that make New Orleans cooking delectable can also make it a lot more confusing.
Across the centuries, New Orleans has
borrowed from French, Spanish, English, Mexican, African and American influences
to emerge tastier each time. But you don't have to learn all these languages to
place your order!
If you don't want
to gag on a plateful of tongue-twisters, carry our easy alphabetical cheat-sheet
while dining out at New Orleans:
Andouille
(ann- doo- wee) are lean pork sausages spiced with garlic.
Beignet
(ben-Yay) are square donuts sprinkled with powdered sugar.
Cajun
once referred to French-speaking people who moved in from Britain, but
today it has come to represent a delicious way of cooking seafood, which lends
it a blackened crust and richer flavor.
Café au Lait
(café -oh- lay) is, quite simply, chicory coffee with milk.
Creole
cooking combines French and Spanish and African influences with lip-smacking
effect!
Etouffee (ay-two-fay) is prepared with crawfish
or shrimp cooked over a slow fire.
Jambalaya is a spicy
rice dish with meat and vegetables.
Remoulade (rem-ou-lard)
is a sauce usually served with seafood.
Roux (roo) is a
flour-and-oil mixture that adds body to Cajun food.
You're
now ready to start your culinary journey of New Orleans. As the Cajuns would put
it, "Laissez les bon temps rouler" (Let the good times roll!)
Start
at the entrance to the French Quarter at the Ritz
Carlton New Orleans (Canal Street). Here you can enjoy a 5 Star caliber dinner
or a bowl of gumbo champagne or Bloody Mary made to order. Give in to a chard
of chocolate from the chocolate cart or a cigar from the walk-in humidor.
Hotel
Maison DeVille and the Audubon Cottages (Rue Toulouse) offers one of the most
romantic locations to dine in North America. The hotel is home to The Bistro,
adjudged one of the best restaurants in America by Zagat. The Bistro serves French
Creole cuisine and lets you choose from the city's most extensive wine list. The
historic Audubon cottages set the perfect mood with their laid-back private courtyards
and rare antiques. No wonder Playwright Tennessee Williams picked a room here
to complete "A Streetcar named Desire". So did James Audubon, who painted much
of the famed "Birds of America" series during his stay here.
Monteleone
(Royal Street) has been home to the world's most colorful characters including
Tennessee Williams, William Faulkner and Truman Capote. It offers incredible fine
dining options nearby with the famous Arnaud's just outside the door.
Sample
the Cajun and Creole delights at Protocol, the onsite Restaurant at Hotel
Ambassador (Tchoupitoulas) or stoke up your appetite with the lip-smacking
seafood at La Chatelaine or the Red Fish Grill ( Chateau
Sonesta , Iberville Street)
Iberville
Suites , adjudged New Orleans' finest French Quarter hotel offers a host of
options for fine dining (Victor's Restaurant), casual dining with live weekend
entertainment (French Quarter Bar), traditional afternoon tea (Lobby Lounge) and
the cigar-friendly lounge with a unique liquor selection (Library Lounge).
Nestled
between the business of downtown and the French Quarter, the Pelham
Hotel (Common Street) marks the original plantation of Jean Baptist Lemoyne
De Bienville, founder of New Orleans. Their savory Bayou-inspired restaurant Maxwell's
is THE place to enjoy an authentic Cajun-style Omelet, Northern Pacific style
Omelets, Gumbo Soup Du Jour or Maxwell's signature Crab Cakes.
Pay
a tribute to the America's longest-running streetcar line as you tuck in at the
Holiday Streetcar restaurant ( Holiday
Inn Superdome , Loyola Ave). The restaurant serving incredible American and
Creole cuisine is a full-scale replica of the New Orleans streetcar and features
some of the original streetcar artwork.
Feast
your eyes and your taste buds at the Top of the Dome Steakhouse ( Hyatt
Regency , Poydras Plaza). As New Orleans' only revolving restaurant it offers
amazing panoramic views of the Crescent City. Whitney on Poydras Street offers
intimate dining at The Vault, its private dining room at the onsite restaurant
56 Degrees.
Built in 1857, Magnolia
Mansion (Prytania Street) serves as an elegant gateway to the Garden District
- with its massive oaks, magnolia-scented courtyards, double-galleried balconies
and a rejuvenating complimentary breakfast with coffee, juice, fresh fruit, bagels,
cereal and pastries.
If you love to
be indulged by celebrity chefs, head for The
Garden District Hotel (St. Charles Avenue) where discerning locals love to
dine. Enjoy a leisurely Sunday Brunch at Lulu's, though weekdays are equally exciting.
Chef Corbin Evans has worked with the nation's hottest restaurants including Bayona,
Mr.B's, Jack's Firehouse in Philadelphia, TomCat Bakery in New York City and Jacques
Cagna in Paris.
The award-winning Intercontinental
New Orleans on the historic St. Charles Ave streetcar line upholds the Sunday
Brunch tradition with the Ver dan a Restaurant. Enjoy a heady brew at the Streetcar
Coffee Shop, onsite at the Intercontinental.
In the midst of New Orleans' raucous
Bourbon Street revelry, Royal
Sonesta offers a tranquil reprieve with The Beque's Restaurant overlooking
a secluded tropical courtyard.
There's
simply no better way to sum up the New Orleans experience. Loud and exuberant
on the outside, warm and intimate on the inside. Live it to believe it!