Eat & Drink

Morton's The Steakhouse

365 Canal St Suite 220, New Orleans, LA 70130, USA 70130

Restaurant Review

Anecdotes & Analysis

The tradition among premium steakhouses to never budge an inch on their prices has died, and not a moment too soon. Summer in New Orleans brings even steakhouse tariffs down. Morton's has restructured its lowball summer offering in an appealing way. For a C-note, they used to give each of two people an appetizer, a salad, a small filet, and a dessert, with a side to split. They've added ten bucks to the price and moved the seafood appetizers onto the steak's plate for a surf-and-turf.

But a more important improvement is that the package now allows you to upgrade the steak. The petit filet is too small to cook properly, and not specified as USDA Prime. I would gladly pay a $16 upcharge to get the sirloin strip, guaranteed Prime and the best steak here. You can also include as many people as you like in this deal, even odd numbers.

Why It's Essential

Morton's is one of the leading chains of high-end steakhouses, a segment of the restaurant industry that has become overgrown in recent years. The USDA Prime steaks, while in the minority of the steaks sold here, give the rest of their menu panache. Morton's steak cookery is the simplest possible: broil, then deposit on a plate, sans sauce or garnish. (Unless you ask for bearnaise, peppercorn cream sauce, or something else.) Simplicity and quality characterize most of the rest of the menu, which includes lobster, crab cakes, big shrimp and scallops, and a few chops. We are forced by the very high prices to look hard at the shrimp, crabmeat, and oysters, all of which come from sources far away, none of them as good as the local product.

Backstory

Morton's is to Chicago what Ruth's Chris is to New Orleans, founded in the Windy City in the late 1970s. Chicago is one of the great steak towns, and the standard was high--higher than now, truth be told. Morton's first came to New Orleans--another great steak city--in the late 1980s. That one--where Landry's in the French Quarter is now--died quietly a few years later. The present restaurant opened in 1999 in Canal Place, taking over a handsome restaurant of the 1980s called Parker's.

Dining Room

Every major city has a Morton's, and they're more or less the same. Once you're inside the door, there's no telling that you're in New Orleans (or New York, or San Francisco, or Phoenix). A recent renovation opened windows into Canal Street--a good move. The dining rooms are masculine, elegant, comfortable, even beautiful. The place is as classy-looking as a fancy European restaurant. The bar--also recently renovated--is posh and comfortable, with an appealing menu with enough small plates to fill a big appetite. A good place for a romantic interlude.

For Best Results

Ask to have your steak cooked "Pittsburgh style"--seared well on the outside, but juicy medium rare in the center. Morton's most distinctive specialty is its hot dessert soufflees, made consistently well. They are among the only ones in town. The wine list is very good, but very expensive.

Bonus Information

Attitude 2
Environment 2
Hipness 0
Local Color 0
Service 1
Value 0
Wine 2