Restaurant in New Orleans, United States
Nina Compton's kitchen earns a return visit.

Nina Compton's New American-Caribbean kitchen holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and consistent Opinionated About Dining placement, making it one of the more justifiable mid-to-upper tier bookings in New Orleans. The Caribbean inflection sets it apart from the city's Creole mainstream. Dinner only from 5:30 pm; easy to book 1–2 weeks ahead. Google 4.6 across 1,431 reviews.
Compere Lapin earns its place on the shortlist for any serious dinner in New Orleans. Nina Compton's New American-Caribbean kitchen at 535 Tchoupitoulas St has held a Michelin Plate since 2025, appeared on La Liste's global ranking in both 2025 (78.5 points) and 2026 (75 points), and has been tracked by Opinionated About Dining for three consecutive years. It's not the most decorated room in the city, but it offers a combination of culinary specificity and neighbourhood rootedness that few places on the Lower Garden District edge of the Warehouse District can match. If you've been once and liked it, there's enough here to reward a return. If you haven't been, this is one of the easier high-quality bookings in New Orleans to justify.
Compere Lapin sits at the Tchoupitoulas corridor that connects the Warehouse District arts quarter to the Lower Garden District, a stretch that's seen sustained restaurant investment over the past decade. The location is deliberate: it draws from a hotel-adjacent crowd (the Old No. 77 Hotel occupies the same building) without becoming a hotel restaurant in the dismissive sense. The kitchen's Caribbean inflection gives it a distinct identity that separates it from the Creole-forward dining that dominates the city's historic centre. That specificity matters if you're trying to eat your way through New Orleans with some range rather than repeat the same flavour profile across multiple nights.
For a returning visitor who already knows the Commander's Palace register, Compere Lapin answers a different question: what does New Orleans taste like when it's looking outward rather than inward? The answer here involves the kind of cooking that sits comfortably alongside Caribbean technique and American seasonal produce, an approach that's won it recognition on both domestic and international rankings.
Current hours run Sunday through Thursday 5:30–9 pm, with Friday and Saturday extending to 10 pm. The later finish on weekends gives you flexibility if you're working around a city itinerary, but the kitchen doesn't have a long post-service window, so plan accordingly. The restaurant holds a Google rating of 4.6 across 1,431 reviews, which signals consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance, and that consistency is what you're buying at this tier. This is a dinner-only operation, so don't factor it into daytime plans.
If you're returning after a first visit, the Caribbean-leaning menu means there's likely rotation in what's on offer depending on the season. Right now, late spring into summer is when the kitchen has the most to work with in terms of produce and the kind of warm-weather dishes that suit the cuisine's register. Go on a Friday or Saturday if you want the fuller evening energy; mid-week is quieter and better suited to conversation.
Reservations: Easy to book by New Orleans standards at this quality level — plan 1–2 weeks ahead for weekdays, 2–3 weeks for weekend slots. Hours: Mon–Thu 5:30–9 pm, Fri–Sat 5:30–10 pm, Sun 5:30–9 pm. Address: 535 Tchoupitoulas St, New Orleans, LA 70130. Cuisine: New American with Caribbean influence. Awards: Michelin Plate (2025), La Liste Leading Restaurants 2025 and 2026, Opinionated About Dining Casual North America ranked #298 (2025). Google Rating: 4.6 (1,431 reviews). Price range: Not published; budget mid-to-upper casual range for New Orleans , expect a full dinner with drinks to run $80–$120 per person based on the venue's positioning and peer comparisons at this tier, though confirm current pricing directly. Dress: Not formally stated; smart casual is safe given the hotel-adjacent setting and Michelin Plate recognition.
See the full comparison section below for how Compere Lapin sits against Bayona, Commander's Palace, and others in the New Orleans field.
If Compere Lapin is your entry point into this tier of New Orleans dining, it's worth knowing how it connects to the wider city. For a full picture of where to eat, drink, and stay, see our full New Orleans restaurants guide, our New Orleans bars guide, and our New Orleans hotels guide. For context on how this level of cooking compares nationally, Le Bernardin in New York, Providence in Los Angeles, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco represent the ceiling of the American fine-casual and tasting-menu category. Compere Lapin operates well below that price point and ambition level, which is precisely what makes it the right call for a high-quality New Orleans dinner without the ceremony.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Compere Lapin | Easy | — | |
| Emeril’s | Unknown | — | |
| Re Santi e Leoni | €€€ | Unknown | — |
| Bayona | Unknown | — | |
| Commander’s Palace | Unknown | — | |
| Pêche Seafood Grill | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Go on a weeknight if your schedule allows — dinner runs until 9 pm Sunday through Thursday, which keeps the pace a little more relaxed than the extended Friday and Saturday service. Chef Nina Compton's New American-Caribbean kitchen has held a Michelin Plate since 2025 and ranked as high as #51 in Opinionated About Dining's North American Gourmet Casual list, so the cooking has a documented track record at this level. Book 1–2 weeks out for weekdays; weekend slots at 535 Tchoupitoulas move faster, closer to 2–3 weeks. If you're weighing it against Bayona or Commander's Palace, Compere Lapin sits in the same quality tier but offers a distinctly different register — Caribbean-inflected and chef-personality-forward rather than rooted in Creole tradition.
Compere Lapin is primarily known for New American - Caribbean in New Orleans.
Compere Lapin is located in New Orleans, at 535 Tchoupitoulas St, New Orleans, LA 70130.
You can reach Compere Lapin via the venue's official channels.
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