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12 stellar special-occasion restaurants in New Orleans

A photo of Red logo
by Beth D'Addono
Updated 18 December 2023

New Orleanians mark time by food seasons, not calendar flips. The hottest months belong to frozen daiquiris and technicolor snoballs. Spring brings families and friends together over spicy spreads of boiled crawfish. Carnival season is all about sweet and savory king cakes. In other words, in a city that puts food at the center of its life—and not just the center of the table—eating and drinking is always a special occasion.

When it comes to celebrating a birthday, graduation, or just feeling alive in the Big Easy, the stage is set with buckets of seafood, cocktails in James Beard Award-winning bars, and grand dining rooms that have hosted generations of milestone events.

Read on for a guide to the 12 best restaurants to book across New Orleans to get the party started.

A photo of Arnaud's restaurant
4.6
4.6 (7150)
$50 and over
Creole
French Quarter
About the restaurant

With gracious attitudes and pitch-perfect timing, the staff at Arnaud’s is as happy about your special occasion as you are. Celebrate with tasty Creole plates and an effervescent French 75 cocktail. Not to mention an exquisite view: Arnaud’s beveled glass windows overlook charming Rue Bienville. Add a swinging jazz brunch on weekends, and toasting an occasion at this French Quarter classic is a no-brainer. In addition to the main restaurant, there’s a more relaxed sibling spot, Arnaud’s Jazz Bistro (set next to Arnaud’s main dining room) and a smaller annex called the French 75 bar for drinks.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined 5 days ago
Exceptional service. Staff very knowledgeable and polite. Makes the banana foster at your table.
A photo of Brennan's restaurant
4.6
4.6 (11079)
$31 to $50
Creole
French Quarter
About the restaurant

This storied restaurant has anchored Creole dining on Royal Street since 1946 and is a go-to for birthdays or anniversaries. No festive meal here is complete without the bananas Foster, a flaming bowl of bananas, butter, and rum invented by founder Owen Brennan in the early 1950s. The cinnamon-scented show is the perfect ending to breakfast at Brennan’s, where the highlights are Creole-accented egg dishes. Stop by the courtyard every Friday at 5 pm sharp, when the staff sabers a bottle of Champagne (call ahead to make sure the courtyard is not reserved for a private event).


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined 6 days ago
Food was excellent service was lacking almost to the point we wanted pay our bill and leave.
A photo of Yo Nashi restaurant
4.8
4.8 (433)
$50 and over
Japanese
Central Business District
About the restaurant

Yo Nashi isn’t just omakase in New Orleans—it’s New Orleans omakase. Which means that Japanese techniques and styles collide with in-season New Orleans ingredients for an occasion-worthy eight- to 10-course omakase dinner. The menu changes regularly, but past dishes have included caviar and cream with sake gelée and bluefin tuna tartare with black garlic vinaigrette and mango. The omakase concept is relatively new for New Orleans diners, making Yo Nashi a unique celebration spot to book.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined 5 days ago
This is a well done omakase, it isn't like any Omakase I've ever had in Japan since the chefs seem to work off a set menu and everyone gets the same dishes. Japanese/Okinawa omakases are far more intimate with the chef curating to you specifically. That being said the food was very well prepared, presented and paired. It truly was a great meal of the highest quality. The venue is on the small side, but that is not for an omakase due to the chefs usually only preparing food for very few people at a time in a very intimate setting. That being said, they did sit us right beside another couple when there clearly was space for us to be further apart, this was an anniversary dinner and I would have loved to have had a little more separation between us and other diners. The ambience was again just as you would expect, soothing music and the staff was very careful to avoid any of the noise occurrences of normal restaurant dining (clanging plates, etc). Value, this is a bit eye of the beholder, but I feel like the quality and preparation of the dishes was exquisite, I simply wanted more personal preparation. Seeing everyone get the same food in the same order is not omakase, it's simply a set menu being very well executed. That's where my head is at, I paid $350 for an omakase and I didn't get the true omakase experience. I got exquisite food, presentation, service and ambience but I didn't get the personalized omakase experience. I highly recommend this location however for znyone wanting a small intimate dining experience, just curve tour idea of traditional omakase to a more modern US version of it. It's still amazing food and you won't be disappointed.
A photo of Antoine's restaurant
4.3
4.3 (10823)
$31 to $50
Creole
French Quarter
About the restaurant

Antoine’s has managed to survive and thrive since 1860. The storied restaurant has outlived the Great Depression, two World Wars, Prohibition, and a pandemic. Through it all, a celebration at Antoine’s mattered. The kitchen cranks out some of the city’s most famous dishes, such as oysters Rockefeller and eggs Sardou. While dinner is a given here, there’s also a special jazz brunch. The grand restaurant can seat over 700 people at one time in several rooms that one could get lost in. During Prohibition, a door in the ladies’ room led to a secret chamber where a coffee cup full of booze was the reward. Finding the way back—well, that was another story.


Top review
Charbryvip
Dined 1 day ago
Great place to dine. The food was amazing. We will definitely return for another visit.
A photo of Shaya restaurant
4.9
4.9 (4917)
$31 to $50
Israeli
Uptown
About the restaurant

Sleek, monochromatic Shaya was made for big nights out. Step into the uptown blue-tiled space, where the smell of wood smoke offers a preview of what’s to come. Pillows of pita bread, slow-cooked lamb, spiced hanger steak, and gulf shrimp kebabs are baked to perfection in a wood-burning oven. The menu draws from Tel Aviv’s ultra-original food scene, a blend of culinary influences from North Africa, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, Turkey, and Greece. With all that going for it, it’s no surprise the celebration-worthy spot earned a James Beard Award for Best New Restaurant in 2016.


Top review
ReedK
Dined 3 days ago
A great mix of small plates. Our server was prompt and polite
A photo of Lola's restaurant
4.5
4.5 (714)
$30 and under
Spanish
Mid-City / City Park
About the restaurant

This intimate neighborhood Spanish tapas restaurant on Esplanade Avenue might just be the perfect date night or anniversary spot. The dining room is full of two-tops big enough to hold a large pan of paella to share, but small enough to have a quiet conversation. The menu’s greatest hits include tender strips of grilled calamari, garlicky mushrooms, and fideuas (an angel hair pasta-based paella). Save room for housemade almond nougat ice cream; it comes in a large parfait glass and is big enough for two.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined 1 day ago
Unique atmosphere and great food. Everyone should try it.
A photo of Café Sbisa restaurant
4.7
4.7 (1396)
$30 and under
Cajun
French Quarter
About the restaurant

Chef and co-owner Alfred Singleton shines at this historic restaurant, which traces its origins to 1899. Café Sbisa is one of the oldest French Quarter restaurants and known for turning Gulf seafood into one spectacular gumbo, made with court bouillon (broth) from co-owner Craig Napoli’s seafood business. Toast to a special occasion in the main dining room; for a more intimate affair, the restaurant offers private dining on its two upper floors.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined today
Everything was great m. From the greeting, to the servers, to the food and drinks. Great experience all around. The redfish is to die for. Chefs kiss.
A photo of Restaurant R'evolution restaurant
4.8
4.8 (7116)
$50 and over
Creole / Cajun / Southern
French Quarter
About the restaurant

This posh French Quarter restaurant comes from celebrity chef and Louisiana native John Folse and partner Rick Tramonto. Restaurant R’evolution was made for special occasions, thanks to an extra-elegant setting (crystal chandeliers, red velvet seats) and remixed Cajun and Creole classics. The menu exudes pure decadence, with options like caviar, foie gras, and splurgy special-occasion cognacs. If there’s one dish everyone orders, it’s the Death by Gumbo, a silky liquid poured over a stuffed quail tableside.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined 1 day ago
We had a wonderful time celebrating a big event. We took over the wine room, which is a private room. The staff was great, the food excellent and closing the doors gave us the privacy to have a wonderful time.
A photo of La Petite Grocery restaurant
4.8
4.8 (5709)
$31 to $50
French
Garden District
About the restaurant

Chef and owner Justin Devillier, whose expertise landed him a 2016 James Beard Award: Best Chef South, takes traditional New Orleans cuisine to the next level at this charming Cajun spot. From blue crab beignets to shellfish stew with collards, Devillier’s riffs on Southern flavors are spot on. The chef and his team can also create a specific menu experience just for your party, depending on what you’re celebrating. As for its name, the Creole-style cottage started its journey as the Central Tea, Coffee, and Butter Depot in the late 1800s, and the genuine hospitality is still alive and kicking.


Top review
OpenTable Dinervip
Dined today
The food and service were amazing! Especially the crab beignets, glazed pork belly and the alligator bolognese!!
A photo of The Grill Room restaurant
4.7
4.7 (1515)
$50 and over
Unspecified
Central Business District
About the restaurant

Classy and sophisticated, the Grill Room promises a very splashy special occasion-meal. Its glitzy setting—wall-length, hand-painted murals, mirrored ceilings, and one dazzling chandelier—is fit for a grand proposal. Expect an impressive spread of modern Louisiana dishes presented with an artistic eye. Executive chef Vlad Kogan and chef de cuisine Alex Kuzin design an always-changing menu of dishes like wild mushroom steak and fried South Carolina quail, and, if it’s offered, the strawberry pavlova with basil panna cotta is a must. If you’re not here to pop the question, consider coming for the popular lunch special—a luxe take on the meat and three.


Top review
OpenTable Diner
Dined 1 day ago
The entire staff went out if their way to wait on us. Impeccable service and delicious brunch.
A photo of The Rib Room at the Omni Royal Orleans restaurant
4.3
4.3 (1793)
$50 and over
Steakhouse
French Quarter
About the restaurant

New Orleanians have celebrated anniversaries and birthdays at the Rib Room for more than 60 years. The restaurant earned a 2023 New Orleans Wine & Food Experience award for its wagyu dish served on fried rice cake with Cajun caviar and torched bearnaise, and it continues to consistently outdo itself. Chef Ronald Proano goes way beyond king cuts of prime rib and dazzles with local seafood like the crab salad with heirloom tomatoes and burrata. Before or after, keep the celebration going with a drink at Touché bar next door.


Top review
SonjaKvip
Dined 7 days ago
My husband and I had a nice breakfast on Mother's Day. Everything was delicious.
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