Clancy’s
.png)

A Michelin Plate-recognised Creole kitchen operating out of Uptown New Orleans, Clancy's holds a 4.7 Google rating across more than 700 reviews and a 2024 Opinionated About Dining ranking among North America's top casual restaurants. Under chef Brian Larson, it occupies the steady, unfussy end of the city's Creole dining spectrum — the kind of neighbourhood room that earns repeat visits rather than one-off pilgrimages.

The Room Before the Food
Uptown New Orleans has a particular register of neighbourhood restaurant that exists almost nowhere else in the American South. The dining rooms are not spare or curated in the contemporary sense; they carry decades of patina — wood panelling worn soft, ceiling fans turning slowly, the background hum of a room where half the tables know each other. Clancy's, at 6100 Annunciation Street, operates inside that tradition without self-consciousness. The address sits in a residential stretch of Uptown that doesn't route tourist traffic past its door, which means the room fills with the kind of crowd that comes specifically, not incidentally.
That quality of deliberate attendance matters in a city where Creole cooking can veer between heritage performance and genuine kitchen craft. Clancy's positions itself at the craft end — a Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 and a ranking of #304 in Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list for 2024, following a Recommended designation in 2023, confirm an upward critical trajectory for a restaurant that has never needed a publicist to fill its tables.
Where Clancy's Sits in New Orleans' Creole Hierarchy
New Orleans Creole dining covers an enormous range. At one end sit the grand-dining institutions , places like Commander's Palace and Brennan's, where the ceremony of service is as much the product as the food, and where the price reflects both. At the other end sit the po'boy counters and red-bean Mondays of neighbourhood lunch culture. Clancy's occupies a different tier entirely: the serious neighbourhood room that delivers technically grounded Creole cooking without the occasion pricing or the white-glove theatrics.
That middle register is, in many ways, the most demanding position to hold. It requires a kitchen consistent enough to justify repeat visits from a local base that knows the cuisine deeply, and original enough to earn critical attention beyond the immediate neighbourhood. A 4.7 Google rating across 712 reviews suggests the local base is satisfied on both counts. The OAD ranking situates it in a national peer set of casual rooms that take cooking seriously , a different competitive frame than the tourist-facing grand institutions, and arguably a more honest one for what the restaurant actually is.
For context on how Clancy's fits within the broader American fine-dining ecosystem: the gap between a Michelin Plate and the multi-star rooms that anchor national food conversations , places like Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, or The French Laundry in Napa , is significant in format and price. But the Plate designation signals that Michelin's inspectors found cooking worth recommending, which in the casual-restaurant tier carries real weight. It places Clancy's in a different conversation than Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, or Providence in Los Angeles , those are destination-format rooms built around elaborate tasting structures. Clancy's is a neighbourhood restaurant that happens to cook well enough to attract national critical notice.
Brian Larson and the Logic of Creole Continuity
Chef Brian Larson's role at Clancy's fits a pattern common to the better Uptown rooms: a kitchen leader whose training runs through the city's own culinary tradition rather than arriving from outside it. New Orleans Creole cooking has its own internal pedagogy , a set of techniques, flavour relationships, and local product knowledge that doesn't translate well from other culinary contexts and doesn't need to. The kitchens that do it well tend to be led by cooks who absorbed that language early and have spent time refining rather than reinterpreting it.
That approach differs from the model at nationally prominent destination restaurants. At places like Blue Hill at Stone Barns, Addison in San Diego, or The Inn at Little Washington, the kitchen's identity is built around a distinctive interpretive vision, often expressed through a tasting-menu format that controls every variable of the experience. Clancy's doesn't operate that way. The cooking here answers to the logic of the cuisine and the expectations of a neighbourhood clientele , which, in New Orleans, means the bar is set by people who eat Creole food constantly and notice when it isn't right.
That internal standard of accountability is worth understanding before you book. This is not a room where a visiting diner calibrated to progressive American tasting menus , the format of Emeril's or the conceptual ambition of Albi in Washington, D.C. , will find the kind of experimentation they're used to. What they will find is cooking that knows exactly what it's trying to do.
Planning Your Visit
Clancy's runs a Tuesday-through-Saturday schedule, with dinner service Wednesday through Saturday from 5 to 10 pm and lunch on Thursday and Friday from 11:30 am to 2 pm. The room is closed Sunday and Monday. That schedule points to a kitchen that paces itself deliberately , no seven-day grind, no Sunday brunch crowd. Dinner is the primary mode, and the Thursday-Friday lunch service offers a lower-pressure way into the room if evenings are difficult to arrange.
The Annunciation Street address puts it firmly in Uptown New Orleans rather than the French Quarter or the tourist-dense stretches of Magazine Street. Visitors staying in the Quarter should allow travel time accordingly; the neighbourhood character rewards the trip. For those planning a broader Uptown or Metairie itinerary, see our full Metairie restaurants guide, as well as guides to Metairie hotels, Metairie bars, Metairie wineries, and Metairie experiences.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Clancy's good for families?
- It works for families who are comfortable in a traditional New Orleans neighbourhood restaurant setting, though the dinner-only format most nights and the Uptown location make it a more deliberate choice than a casual drop-in.
- What's the overall feel of Clancy's?
- If you are drawn to serious neighbourhood cooking without occasion-restaurant pricing, Clancy's fits that need directly. The Michelin Plate and OAD ranking confirm the kitchen delivers beyond what the unpretentious room suggests. If you are expecting the grand-dining atmosphere of the city's institution-tier Creole rooms, this is a different experience , quieter, more local, and more focused on what's on the plate than on ceremony.
- What do people recommend at Clancy's?
- Order through the Creole menu with confidence in the kitchen's command of the tradition. Chef Brian Larson's record and the restaurant's sustained critical recognition , Michelin Plate in 2025, OAD Top 304 Casual in North America in 2024 , point to a kitchen that handles the core of the cuisine well. The 4.7 rating across 712 Google reviews reinforces that the regulars, who know New Orleans food, keep returning.
Comparison Snapshot
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clancy’s | Creole | Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #… | This venue | |
| Le Bernardin | French, Seafood | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | French, Seafood, $$$$ |
| Atomix | Modern Korean, Korean | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Modern Korean, Korean, $$$$ |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star | Progressive American, Contemporary, $$$$ |
| Alinea | Progressive American, Creative | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Progressive American, Creative, $$$$ |
| Masa | Sushi, Japanese | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Sushi, Japanese, $$$$ |
Need a table?
Our members enjoy priority alerts and concierge-led booking support for the world's most difficult tables.
Get Exclusive Access