NOLA Story
Transcription
NOLA Story
F4| THE LONDON FREE PRESS • SATURDAY, MAY 30, 2009 COVERSTORY The Associated Press Under the gaze of a Mardi Gras mask, patrons enjoy a meal on the sidewalk at Patout’s Restaurant in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Photos by RALPH LEMBCKE Special to Sun Media Billy Murphy is one of the city’s many licensed tour guides. The Hotel Monteleone is famous for many things: ghost sightings, as a movie set and as a French Quarter watering hole. The Hotel Monteleone offers a great place to relax after a day of sightseeing. When the heat is on Spring, summer and fall are great times to visit NOLA to maximize your tourist dollar. While hurricane season officially lasts from May to October, August and September are the months most likely to be affected by this weather phenomenon. To maximize your enjoyment of this southern city during hotter months: • Use lots of sun screen • Have all travellers in your party wear hats • Be extra aware of hydration needs; drink lots of water • Plan afternoon excursions to indoor, air conditioned venues, like museums or the aquarium •Plan walks around the French Quarter, Garden District and cemeteries for cooler morning or evening hours This Garden District home was the setting for some scenes in the movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. Beautiful homes are centre of attention BIG EASY FROM PAGE F1 Tour companies, with licensed guides, abound, offering ghost tours, cemetery tours, plantation tours, river tours, swamp tours, French Quarter tours, steam boat tours, vampire tours and Garden District tours. You can tour on foot, by boat, carriage, limo or bus. Our favourites were the walking tours, as they are the least expensive, and you get an upclose perspective on all aspects of this fascinating place. Some of the city’s most beautiful homes and lush vegetation are the centre of attention during a Garden District tour. A native New Orleansian, Billy Murphy works for Historic New Orleans Tours. A former actor and college professor, Murphy weaves humour and history as he leads groups around this amazing set of homes. For instance, as a cousin of Anne Rice, he is happy to trade bits of trivia regarding his favourite author while showing off the houses that she’s occupied in the Garden District. Murphy is definitely a name dropper, showing us Trent Reznor’s (of Nine Inch Nails) house (now owned by John Goodman), the house where scenes from Benjamin Button were filmed, Nicholas Cage’s home, the famous Commander’s Palace restaurant, where J. Edgar Hoover was known to enjoy drinking gin fizzes, and Archie Manning’s house, complete with the yard where Eli and Peyton learned to play football. Walk through the French Quarter with tour guide and former chef George Thomas and experience the city’s history through your tastebuds. You’ll learn the difference between Cajun and Creole food and get to taste offerings from several restaurants, including muffalettas at the Napolean House — more on this later. Part of the mystique of NOLA is its cemeteries. Historic Tours provides a quality experience here, too. Greg Osborne shows off sections of the French Quarter and its architecture, including slave quarters, St. Louis Cemetery Number One (just off Rampart Street), the burial site of Voodoo Queen Marie Laveau and the Voodoo Temple, complete with an explanation of this important part of the city’s culture by Priestess Miriam. If touring sounds like hungry work, try one of the French Quarter’s most popular places for casual dining, Acme Oyster House. The near-constant lineup at the door moves quickly but, more importantly, tells you what a great place for local cuisine this place is. Grilled oysters (rich bites of local flavour), Cajun crawfish, and etouffee are a few of the array of fresh seafood choices here. Across the way is Felix’s and the raw oysters can’t be beat, especially if you’re too hungry to wait in line at Acme. The Napoleon House is home to a delectable, large creation called the muffaletta, New Orleans’ second most famous sandwich (after shrimp and oyster po’ boys, which are seafood subs gone wild). This place was built as a Tipping In New Orleans, many people make their living depending on the kindness of strangers, but visitors to the city may be unfamiliar with local tipping customs. The Associated Press A driver waits for a fare on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans. home for that notorious French ruler while he was in exile, but later became an Italian grocery store and is now a sidewalk eatery with just one of the city’s amazing patios, complete with palm trees and pond. Away from the Quarter, the River Shack Tavern lives up to acclaim earned from its debut on Guy Fiere’s Food Network show called Diners, Drive-ins and Dives. The po’ boys, alligator sausage and fried green tomatoes are excellent, and go down well with the local beer – Abita. Enjoy them all while perched atop one of this restaurant’s unique bar stools, with legs crafted to resemble human legs in clothed in fun ways. In Jackson Square, Cafe Du Monde is internationally famous for local favourites chicory coffee and beignets. Breakfast for two runs you around five bucks and can be topped off with a short climb up the stairs of the city’s old retaining wall for a panoramic view of the Mississippi River and New Orleans Harbour — hosting huge container ships and riverboat paddlers. Staying in the French Quarter, at somewhere like the Hotel Monteleone — famous for its lush roof-top pool, carousel bar, ghost sightings and its appearance in a movie with Ashley Judd called Double Jeopardy — is a lot of fun but also demands the traveller be tolerant of late night noise and walking wet streets early each morning. Sometime after the quarter quiets down in the small hours of the night and businesses start taking deliveries at 6 or 6:30 a.m., all the streets are washed down to cleanse them of the previous night’s revelry. So when out on a morning walk, beware the soggy sidewalks, but a walk around the Quarter is a thing of beauty and will ensure this city is enmeshed in your heart. Bellmen — generally $1 a bag Waiters — 15% - 20% of bill Oyster shuckers — Just as you would drop a few bucks in the sushi chef's direction, don't forget to tip your oyster shuckers if you find yourself bellied up to an oyster bar. Bartenders — generally $1 per drink Musicians — If the club does not have a cover charge, look for a tip jar near the stage. Send the band home with a couple of dollars each. Street musicians — If you stick around for a song, or take a picture of the band, drop a couple of bucks in their tip bucket. Street performers — Mimes, magicians, dancers, live statues — if you stay for the show and especially if you take a picture. It's customary to throw them a couple of dollars. Tour Guides — If you are on a large group tour (20 or more people) $3 from each person is a good tip. If it is a personal tour, say you and the family, $15 - $20 is good. Taxi — generally 15% of fare. (Information courtesy of New Orleans Tourism Marketing Corp.) If you go: www.neworleansonline.com www.tourneworleans.com www.noculinarytours.com www.hotelmonteleone.com