
"Fish Camp" Fantastic
Delicious Delacroix

Delicious Delacroix
Latest Writing
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Ships at Chemin à la Mer
May 27, 2026
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Real New York Pizza
May 24, 2026
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Best of the lot.
May 19, 2026
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
The West End Throwback
May 16, 2026

A trip to Solvang, California
May 12, 2026
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
If I do say so myself.
April 10, 2026

Latest Writing
Restaurant news, food culture, and dispatches from New Orleans.

2,900+ Reviews
Every neighborhood, every cuisine, every price point in greater New Orleans.

650+ Recipes
Creole classics, French-influenced dishes, and seafood from New Orleans kitchens.
Tom's Recommendations
Gretna
The most ambitious Vietnamese restaurant in the area, Hoa Hong 9 (it means "Nine Roses") not only cooks every Vietnamese dish you ever heard of, but also a full Chinese menu, too. That adds up to almost 300 dishes, including many found in no other local restaurants. A major renovation since the hurricane makes it the most welcoming of all the Vietnamese places, and a good place for the uninitiated to begin their discovery of this exciting cuisine. Prices are almost laughably low.
Lacombe
It doesn't matter much who you are. It's going to be tough getting a table at Sal and Judy's on moment's notice. That's even if you know Sal. ¶ Everybody knows Sal. Sal is one of the nicest guys in the restaurant business. He comes across as an Italian immigrant who hasn't quite figured things out, letting his customers fill him in. In reality, Sal is one of the most savvy restaurateurs around. Nobody except Paul Prudhomme or Emeril can match his success in marketing his sauces, salad dressings, seasonings, and olive oil, which are everywhere in New Orleans supermarkets. (They're successful largely because they really duplicate the flavors served in the restaurant.) ¶ Meanwhile, the food in house is worth a trip across the lake and the trouble of making a reservation well in advance.
Warehouse District & Center City
The original idea here was to offer the feeling of being in the Louisiana wetlands, and to cook what one might catch there. Specifically, you are reminded of the fishing camp in the real town of Grand Isle--one of the several ends of the earth on the Louisiana Gulf Coast. That have evolved over the years into a menu much like you'd find in a good, funky New Orleans neighborhood place, but served in a squeaky-clean, hotel-restaurant kind of way.
Food Almanac — June 6
D Day Museum. Crawfish. Rabbit. Coca Cola. Tagine. Welsh Rarebit
Read Today's Almanac
On the Air
Join Tom Fitzmorris weekdays from 2–4 PM on 990 AM WGSO — 32 years of recipes, restaurant news, and New Orleans food culture.
Learn MoreFollow Along
Photos, restaurant visits, market finds, and the food life of New Orleans — on Instagram.
Follow on Instagram
Membership
Become a Five Star member and unlock the full Food Almanac, vintage print magazines (1977–1995), premium articles, and your exclusive Ciao Number.
Become a Member