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A white bowl of a large filet of skin-on Gulf fish, surrounded by corn maque choux and clams and topped with micro-greens.
Gulf catch special from Vestal in Lafayette, Louisiana.
Vestal

16 Restaurants Worth a Drive Out of New Orleans

Some of the best restaurants in the Gulf South are within a two hour road trip of New Orleans

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Gulf catch special from Vestal in Lafayette, Louisiana.
| Vestal

How far would you drive for a good meal? And not just a meal, but an experience, whether it be authentic Cajun cuisine dished along the bayou, a fine dining feast with river views or a funky pub set in an old bicycle shop on Main Street USA. Make a day of it, stop along the way, hatch a mini-road trip. Most of these spots are less than a two-hour drive from New Orleans, some as close as across the lake. They are all worth the trip.

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Suire's Grocery & Restaurant

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Friday’s lunch special at Suire’s Grocery & Restaurant in rural Kaplan, Louisiana is always the same: an irresistible stew of local turtle meat simmered for hours in a dark reddish-brown gravy, shiny with the gleam of a well-polished family heirloom. The family-owned spot in Vermillion Parish is famous for plate lunch and staples, long a must stop for families heading west along the coast, the place to stock coolers with food for their hunting and fishing camps. The Suirre’s are geniuses at rustic, Cajun cooking, smothering, simmering frying and baking hearty platters guaranteed to satisfy.

Laura's Two

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Laura Williams Broussard’s signature brown gravy has been simmered by three different generations, ladled over meat and threes since 1968. For years folks from all over Acadiana lined up to taste Laura’s gravy. Now her granddaughter Madonna Broussard is doing her proud at Laura’s II which she opened more than two decades ago on University Avenue. A magnet for students from the nearby college as well as regulars and workers from the neighborhood, Laura’s II is known for oversized baked stuffed turkey wings, smothered okra, and some of the best rice and gravy in the universe.

Vestal Restaurant

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At Vestal, much of chef Sullivan Zant’s stellar menu sizzles on the 14-foot fireplace central to the restaurant. But first, try some pristine raw seafood, like Gulf oysters or tuna crudo with ponzu and smoked chili. Next, try a grilled wedge and charred baby carrots or save your appetite for the wagyu or 16-ounce ribeye from Southern Farms, perfectly caramelized by fire.

Gulf catch from Vestal. 
Vestal

Scratch Farm Kitchen

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Farm-to-table and Southern-style meat and three lunches usually don’t intersect. Which is exactly why Scratch Farm Kitchen in Lafayette deserves a visit. Owners Jamie Vickery and Kelsey Leger source from Louisiana and Mississippi farmers and offer vegan, vegetarian, and meat options. Everything is either made, cured, fermented, or raised by them or folks they know. Their meat and three is a protein which might be jerked chicken salad, pulled mojo pork, or a veggie patty, and sides like pickled beets, hash potatoes, grits, or grilled broccoli. Then there are the soups, bowls, burgers, and specials — this place is a gem through and through.

Kajun Twist & Grill

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Kajun Twist & Grill in Lockport, and the original Kajun Twist in Galliano up the bayou, dish rib-sticking Cajun fare in mammoth portions. The restaurants are owned and run by Anthony Goldsmith, who learned to cook from his great-grandmother Alzina Toups, who famously ran her own small restaurant experience by reservation only in Galliano. Cajun Twist offers huge portions of fresh seafood, fried chicken, enormous burgers, frizzled onion rings, fish chips, gumbo, and po’ boys, all guaranteed to satisfy even the heartiest appetite.

Oyster po’ boy on a plate with lettuce, tomato, pickles, and mayonnaise
Oyster po’ boy from Kajun Twist and Grill.
Kajun Twist & Grill

Cher Amie's

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In Cut Off, Louisiana, Donna Harris oversees the kitchen at Cher Amie’s, a 60-seat family-run eatery that serves Cajun specialties and a lot more. Harris created all the recipes on the menu and stretches beyond the usual boundaries with globally-accented dishes like bang bang shrimp, crawfish queso, and healthy options including blackened mahi with grilled vegetables and seared tuna salad. The softshell crab pasta and softshell au gratin are real crowdpleasers, as is the shrimp lovers' platter with bacon shrimp, coconut shrimp, stuffed shrimp, fried, and grilled shrimp served with rice and hushpuppies.

Mosca's

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There are a handful of excellent reasons to cross the (thankfully widened) Huey P. Long Bridge to the West Bank. At the top of the list is Mosca’s, an esteemed family-run Creole Italian roadhouse that sits along a dark stretch of Highway 90 West. Opened for business in 1946, the restaurant’s storied history includes ties to the late Carlos Marcello, a New Orleans crime boss who also happened to be the landlord and a regular — can’t fault his taste in food. The unchanged menu includes garlic-infused specialties like barbecued shrimp, baked oysters, and of course the Chicken a la Grande, roasted with tons of fresh garlic, herbs, and white wine. Sounds simple right? You try making it at home. Mosca’s is always better.

Plates of oysters Mosca, shrimp Mosca, spaghetti Bordelaise, and chicken a la grand
Oysters Mosca, shrimp Mosca, spaghetti Bordelaise, and chicken a la grande.
Mosca’s

Tchefuncte's Restaurant

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Tchefuncte’s in Madisonville, the swank restaurant atop the Anchor, is an inviting waterfront bar and grill steps from the river’s edge. Culinary director Michael Gottlieb and chef Dan Dienemann’s sultry American menu ticks all the boxes, from locally foraged seasonal mushrooms to dry-aged beef sold by the inch and Gulf tuna au poivre; to creative starters like barbecue shrimp with savory sage biscuit. Think elegant date night.

Three pieces of sweet potato ravioli with brown butter, pistachio, and sage on a white plate
Sweet potato ravioli with brown butter, pistachio, and sage.
Tchefuncte’s Restaurant.

All aboard for Lola, the New Louisiana restaurant in a train depot setting that is really worth the trip. Chefs Keith and Nealy Frentz have been upping the culinary bar in Covington for more than a decade, creating game-changing fare at this stylish downtown eatery. At lunch, tuck into homespun baked goods and from-scratch platters (tip: get the chicken salad). For dinner, served Friday and Saturday only, expect a white tablecloth setting with the likes of sweet tea roasted duck breast adorned with dirty popcorn rice, collards, and savory pot likker.

Del Porto Ristorante

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Take one bite of the tagliatelle with locally foraged mushrooms and truffled mushroom jus, and it’s crystal clear why Del Porto chef/owners David and Torre Solazzo are three-time James Beard semifinalists for Best Chef in the South. Sophisticated, flavorful, and gorgeously composed contemporary Italian plates will please to no end, while the yellowfin crudo and seafood risotto are swoon-worthy. They just opened the Greyhound gastro pub, a promising follow-up.

Hambone

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Set in an inviting 1940s cottage just steps from the lakefront in old Mandeville, Hambone’s menu delivers Smith’s spin on Gulf South comfort foods including an irresistible dark gumbo swimming with gulf shrimp, ham hocks, and collards, topped with pickled okra potato salad. Lunch specialties are pure comfort — especially the tomato and chicken-fried steak sandwiches. Brunch, served Saturday and Sunday, is a joy.

Country fried steak with garlic confit grits, country gravy, sunny egg, herbs
Country fried steak with garlic confit grits, country gravy, sunny egg, herbs.
Hambone

Sal & Judy's

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Yes, Mosca’s tends to get all the glory when it comes to old-school, Creole Italian outside New Orleans. But Sal & Judy’s has its own hyper-loyal following, thanks to half a century of hard work and charm by founder Sal Impastato. Located in a remote area north of the lake about an hour outside of New Orleans, this festive spot is beloved for its sauces, but also the baked oysters, crab claws, stuffed artichokes, and spaghetti and oysters, all shareable and all well-priced for the portions.

Palmettos On The Bayou

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If it’s a bayou view you crave, it doesn’t get prettier than Palmettos on the tranquil Bayou Bonfouca at the historic site of Roberts Landing. This waterfront restaurant has been dishing Southern charm and hospitality along with a Louisiana-inspired menu since 2002. Enjoy local seafood on the wrap-around deck, where gator sightings are not unusual.

KY's Olde Towne Bicycle Shop

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If you’ve never explored the sweet old town section of Slidell, it’s a real throwback, with locally owned shops and friendly eateries like KY’s Bicycle Shop. Originally a millinery store in the early 1900s, the historic building had a run as a family-owned grocery, then took off as a bike and lawnmower shop in the late 1960s. The welcoming bar and restaurant, with its ceiling scape of two-wheeled transportation, serves a freewheeling American comfort menu of breakfast, fried seafood, burgers, and plate specials.

White Pillars Restaurant and Lounge

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White Pillars is a showstopping space, an old mansion restored to its original 1905 splendor after suffering significant Hurricane Katrina damage. The setting is a beautiful backdrop for James Beard Award-nominated chef Austin Sumrall’s unfussy mix of Cajun, Creole, and new Southern cuisine. Whether he’s serving briny oysters that were in the water just hours ago, having fun with shrimp corn dogs, or reinvigorating eggplant Josephine, an original menu item that layers eggplant with marinara, crabmeat, mozzarella, and hollandaise, Sumrall’s eye for detail and sense of flavor is spot on.

A blue bowl is filled with wild mushroom risotto with Two Brooks Rice basmati, foraged chanterelles and purslane, scallion oil, and whey broth
Wild mushroom risotto with Two Brooks Rice basmati, foraged chanterelles and purslane, scallion oil, and whey broth
White Pillars Restaurant and Lounge

Vestige

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James Beard award nominee Alex Perry works his magic at Vestige, an intimate bistro in downtown Ocean Springs. The menu combines contemporary American cuisine with Japanese influences, delivering a farm and Gulf-to-table experience, with just-caught seafood, wagyu steaks, and museum-quality composed plates of greens and vegetables. The chef’s four-course tasting menu is $70 per person, an experience that would easily be twice the price in the big city. Make your reservation now. And go to the Walter Anderson Museum while you’re there.

Suire's Grocery & Restaurant

Friday’s lunch special at Suire’s Grocery & Restaurant in rural Kaplan, Louisiana is always the same: an irresistible stew of local turtle meat simmered for hours in a dark reddish-brown gravy, shiny with the gleam of a well-polished family heirloom. The family-owned spot in Vermillion Parish is famous for plate lunch and staples, long a must stop for families heading west along the coast, the place to stock coolers with food for their hunting and fishing camps. The Suirre’s are geniuses at rustic, Cajun cooking, smothering, simmering frying and baking hearty platters guaranteed to satisfy.

Laura's Two

Laura Williams Broussard’s signature brown gravy has been simmered by three different generations, ladled over meat and threes since 1968. For years folks from all over Acadiana lined up to taste Laura’s gravy. Now her granddaughter Madonna Broussard is doing her proud at Laura’s II which she opened more than two decades ago on University Avenue. A magnet for students from the nearby college as well as regulars and workers from the neighborhood, Laura’s II is known for oversized baked stuffed turkey wings, smothered okra, and some of the best rice and gravy in the universe.

Vestal Restaurant

At Vestal, much of chef Sullivan Zant’s stellar menu sizzles on the 14-foot fireplace central to the restaurant. But first, try some pristine raw seafood, like Gulf oysters or tuna crudo with ponzu and smoked chili. Next, try a grilled wedge and charred baby carrots or save your appetite for the wagyu or 16-ounce ribeye from Southern Farms, perfectly caramelized by fire.

Gulf catch from Vestal. 
Vestal

Scratch Farm Kitchen

Farm-to-table and Southern-style meat and three lunches usually don’t intersect. Which is exactly why Scratch Farm Kitchen in Lafayette deserves a visit. Owners Jamie Vickery and Kelsey Leger source from Louisiana and Mississippi farmers and offer vegan, vegetarian, and meat options. Everything is either made, cured, fermented, or raised by them or folks they know. Their meat and three is a protein which might be jerked chicken salad, pulled mojo pork, or a veggie patty, and sides like pickled beets, hash potatoes, grits, or grilled broccoli. Then there are the soups, bowls, burgers, and specials — this place is a gem through and through.

Kajun Twist & Grill

Kajun Twist & Grill in Lockport, and the original Kajun Twist in Galliano up the bayou, dish rib-sticking Cajun fare in mammoth portions. The restaurants are owned and run by Anthony Goldsmith, who learned to cook from his great-grandmother Alzina Toups, who famously ran her own small restaurant experience by reservation only in Galliano. Cajun Twist offers huge portions of fresh seafood, fried chicken, enormous burgers, frizzled onion rings, fish chips, gumbo, and po’ boys, all guaranteed to satisfy even the heartiest appetite.

Oyster po’ boy on a plate with lettuce, tomato, pickles, and mayonnaise
Oyster po’ boy from Kajun Twist and Grill.
Kajun Twist & Grill

Cher Amie's

In Cut Off, Louisiana, Donna Harris oversees the kitchen at Cher Amie’s, a 60-seat family-run eatery that serves Cajun specialties and a lot more. Harris created all the recipes on the menu and stretches beyond the usual boundaries with globally-accented dishes like bang bang shrimp, crawfish queso, and healthy options including blackened mahi with grilled vegetables and seared tuna salad. The softshell crab pasta and softshell au gratin are real crowdpleasers, as is the shrimp lovers' platter with bacon shrimp, coconut shrimp, stuffed shrimp, fried, and grilled shrimp served with rice and hushpuppies.

Mosca's

There are a handful of excellent reasons to cross the (thankfully widened) Huey P. Long Bridge to the West Bank. At the top of the list is Mosca’s, an esteemed family-run Creole Italian roadhouse that sits along a dark stretch of Highway 90 West. Opened for business in 1946, the restaurant’s storied history includes ties to the late Carlos Marcello, a New Orleans crime boss who also happened to be the landlord and a regular — can’t fault his taste in food. The unchanged menu includes garlic-infused specialties like barbecued shrimp, baked oysters, and of course the Chicken a la Grande, roasted with tons of fresh garlic, herbs, and white wine. Sounds simple right? You try making it at home. Mosca’s is always better.

Plates of oysters Mosca, shrimp Mosca, spaghetti Bordelaise, and chicken a la grand
Oysters Mosca, shrimp Mosca, spaghetti Bordelaise, and chicken a la grande.
Mosca’s

Tchefuncte's Restaurant

Tchefuncte’s in Madisonville, the swank restaurant atop the Anchor, is an inviting waterfront bar and grill steps from the river’s edge. Culinary director Michael Gottlieb and chef Dan Dienemann’s sultry American menu ticks all the boxes, from locally foraged seasonal mushrooms to dry-aged beef sold by the inch and Gulf tuna au poivre; to creative starters like barbecue shrimp with savory sage biscuit. Think elegant date night.

Three pieces of sweet potato ravioli with brown butter, pistachio, and sage on a white plate
Sweet potato ravioli with brown butter, pistachio, and sage.
Tchefuncte’s Restaurant.

Lola

All aboard for Lola, the New Louisiana restaurant in a train depot setting that is really worth the trip. Chefs Keith and Nealy Frentz have been upping the culinary bar in Covington for more than a decade, creating game-changing fare at this stylish downtown eatery. At lunch, tuck into homespun baked goods and from-scratch platters (tip: get the chicken salad). For dinner, served Friday and Saturday only, expect a white tablecloth setting with the likes of sweet tea roasted duck breast adorned with dirty popcorn rice, collards, and savory pot likker.

Del Porto Ristorante

Take one bite of the tagliatelle with locally foraged mushrooms and truffled mushroom jus, and it’s crystal clear why Del Porto chef/owners David and Torre Solazzo are three-time James Beard semifinalists for Best Chef in the South. Sophisticated, flavorful, and gorgeously composed contemporary Italian plates will please to no end, while the yellowfin crudo and seafood risotto are swoon-worthy. They just opened the Greyhound gastro pub, a promising follow-up.

Hambone

Set in an inviting 1940s cottage just steps from the lakefront in old Mandeville, Hambone’s menu delivers Smith’s spin on Gulf South comfort foods including an irresistible dark gumbo swimming with gulf shrimp, ham hocks, and collards, topped with pickled okra potato salad. Lunch specialties are pure comfort — especially the tomato and chicken-fried steak sandwiches. Brunch, served Saturday and Sunday, is a joy.

Country fried steak with garlic confit grits, country gravy, sunny egg, herbs
Country fried steak with garlic confit grits, country gravy, sunny egg, herbs.
Hambone

Sal & Judy's

Yes, Mosca’s tends to get all the glory when it comes to old-school, Creole Italian outside New Orleans. But Sal & Judy’s has its own hyper-loyal following, thanks to half a century of hard work and charm by founder Sal Impastato. Located in a remote area north of the lake about an hour outside of New Orleans, this festive spot is beloved for its sauces, but also the baked oysters, crab claws, stuffed artichokes, and spaghetti and oysters, all shareable and all well-priced for the portions.

Palmettos On The Bayou

If it’s a bayou view you crave, it doesn’t get prettier than Palmettos on the tranquil Bayou Bonfouca at the historic site of Roberts Landing. This waterfront restaurant has been dishing Southern charm and hospitality along with a Louisiana-inspired menu since 2002. Enjoy local seafood on the wrap-around deck, where gator sightings are not unusual.

KY's Olde Towne Bicycle Shop

If you’ve never explored the sweet old town section of Slidell, it’s a real throwback, with locally owned shops and friendly eateries like KY’s Bicycle Shop. Originally a millinery store in the early 1900s, the historic building had a run as a family-owned grocery, then took off as a bike and lawnmower shop in the late 1960s. The welcoming bar and restaurant, with its ceiling scape of two-wheeled transportation, serves a freewheeling American comfort menu of breakfast, fried seafood, burgers, and plate specials.

White Pillars Restaurant and Lounge

White Pillars is a showstopping space, an old mansion restored to its original 1905 splendor after suffering significant Hurricane Katrina damage. The setting is a beautiful backdrop for James Beard Award-nominated chef Austin Sumrall’s unfussy mix of Cajun, Creole, and new Southern cuisine. Whether he’s serving briny oysters that were in the water just hours ago, having fun with shrimp corn dogs, or reinvigorating eggplant Josephine, an original menu item that layers eggplant with marinara, crabmeat, mozzarella, and hollandaise, Sumrall’s eye for detail and sense of flavor is spot on.

A blue bowl is filled with wild mushroom risotto with Two Brooks Rice basmati, foraged chanterelles and purslane, scallion oil, and whey broth
Wild mushroom risotto with Two Brooks Rice basmati, foraged chanterelles and purslane, scallion oil, and whey broth
White Pillars Restaurant and Lounge

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Vestige

James Beard award nominee Alex Perry works his magic at Vestige, an intimate bistro in downtown Ocean Springs. The menu combines contemporary American cuisine with Japanese influences, delivering a farm and Gulf-to-table experience, with just-caught seafood, wagyu steaks, and museum-quality composed plates of greens and vegetables. The chef’s four-course tasting menu is $70 per person, an experience that would easily be twice the price in the big city. Make your reservation now. And go to the Walter Anderson Museum while you’re there.

Related Maps