
Richard Hughes and his wife, Jeanne Stinnett Hughes, moved from New York to New Orleans in 1989, and one year later opened the Pelican Club Restaurant and Bar. Born in New Orleans and raised in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Richard began his cooking career at home and continued at several New Orleans area restaurants. His first apprenticeship was with Chris Kerageorgiou at La Provence in Lacomb, Louisiana; then he moved on to saucier under chef Gerard Thabius at Winston’s, to night chef at The Sazerac, and then to chef at Dante by the River. In 1983 Chef Hughes was recruited as an executive chef to open Memphis Restaurant in New York which soon became regarded as a leader among Manhattan’s Creole-Cajun eateries.
Stylish place with a sophisticated Creole menu, 3 dining rooms, a bar & weekend piano music.
Hours
| Thursday | 5–9 PM |
| Friday | 5–9:30 PM |
| Saturday | 5–9:30 PM |
| Sunday | 5–9 PM |
| Monday | Closed |
| Tuesday | Closed |
| Wednesday | 5–9 PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 312 Exchange Pl, New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 523-1504
Website: http://www.pelicanclub.com/
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Reservations: opentable.com
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Pelican Club – New Orleans
The Pelican Club Restaurant and Bar | New Orleans LA – Facebook
The Pelican Club (@thepelicanclubnola) – Instagram
Reviews
I started with a Caesar salad and had the Gulf fish topped with crabmeat and hollandaise, served with green beans and fried potatoes — perfectly cooked and full of flavor. My son-in-law ordered the crispy flounder and loved it, and his scallops over artichoke leaves were beautifully presented and very tasty.
We shared several desserts around the table, and every one was amazing. The pricing was fair, and the overall experience was well worth it. We’ll definitely be back.
For dessert, we had the Creme Brule, Coconut Pie and Bourbon Pecan Pie. The Pecan Pie was very good. The Cream Brulle was, in my sons opinion, perfect. But the absolute mastery was the Coconut Pie. Unquestionably the best I ever have had, including, as sacrilegious as this may sound, my grandmothers.
It was a bit loud, but I think that may have been more the 6 businessmen who were at the table next to our, more than the normal.
Yes, it was an expensive meal, but every bite was an experience well worth it. We will be back, sooner rather than later.
The highlight of our first trip to New Orleans, we’d made the reservation for our final night to celebrate a family member’s 30th.
Amidst torrential rain we turned up 10 minutes early for a 7pm booking. The reception was at best lukewarm and we were bundled against a wall in the front bar area to wait with other guests for our table to be ready. We were taken through one back dining room into another, larger space where one large group were seated along one side. They were obviously out to have a good time (Friday night, New Orleans – what else?) but the noise levels were frankly ridiculous and our group of 4 were literally having to shout at each other to be heard.
Our server was professional and sympathetic, and mentioned that several other parties had complained to him, but wasn’t able to explain why the large cordoned-off area at the end of the room wasn’t being used by the party party.
The food was very good – absolutely no complaints there – and our server did his very best (although one of his colleagues seemed to be trying to out-shout the party at times).
One final gripe – one loo for the whole restaurant (another was out of order) meant that at times a queue stretched back three or four deep into our dining area.
The aim here is not to be a killjoy and I hope the party thoroughly enjoyed themselves but poor management ruined the evening for us.
The food was served very quickly, especially for how busy the restaurant was for dinner.
The goat cheese salad and the spring rolls were both surprisingly great. The duck was a little on the dry side but still had great flavor.
The chocolate cake is, no joke, probably the best dessert in the city. We would (and already did) go back just for the dessert.