Cochon Butcher
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Cochon Butcher on Tchoupitoulas Street is New Orleans' most decorated casual charcuterie counter, holding a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand and consecutive Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats rankings. Under chef Stephen Stryjewski, it operates as a sandwich shop and butcher hybrid where house-cured meats drive a menu that sits firmly in the city's serious-food-at-counter-prices tradition. Open seven days, 11am to 10pm.

Counter Culture: Where New Orleans Takes Its Charcuterie Seriously
Tchoupitoulas Street, a long industrial corridor threading through the Warehouse District, is not where most visitors expect to find one of the more awarded sandwich counters in North America. Yet the building that houses Cochon Butcher — spare, utilitarian, with the faint cool of refrigerated air meeting the street — is exactly the kind of address that New Orleans has always used for its most sincere food. No front-of-house theatre, no reservation system, no dress code calculus. Just a butcher case running the length of a wall, cured meats packed in behind glass, and a menu structured around what can be done when a kitchen takes pork as seriously as a Burgundy cellar takes its barrels.
The city's casual dining tradition has always carried more weight than the white-tablecloth version suggests. From the po-boy counters along Magazine Street, like Domilise's Po-Boys, to the muffuletta institution of Central Grocery Company, New Orleans has long understood that the leading argument for a city's food culture is not its tasting menus but its sandwiches. Cochon Butcher sits in that lineage, though it pushes the charcuterie component considerably further than most of its peers.
The Bib Gourmand Bracket and What It Actually Means
Michelin awarded Cochon Butcher a Bib Gourmand in 2025, the guide's designation for high-quality cooking at prices below its starred threshold. That recognition places it in a specific competitive tier: venues where the cooking discipline matches or exceeds the cost. In the same year, Opinionated About Dining ranked it 210th on its Cheap Eats in North America list, a continuation of previous years' appearances including a 164th-place ranking in 2024 and a recommended listing in 2023. The OAD Cheap Eats list draws from a pool of critic submissions and carries significant weight in food-serious circles precisely because it resists volume and sentiment in favour of editorial consensus among frequent eaters. A 4.8 rating across 2,095 Google reviews adds a separate, high-volume signal: this is not a venue sustained by press cycles or algorithm placement.
Framing the awards matters here. At the price point Cochon Butcher operates, Bib Gourmand recognition does not typically follow venues with a loose approach to sourcing or preparation. The designation implies kitchen consistency and a commitment to ingredient quality that most sandwich operations at equivalent cost do not sustain. Chef Stephen Stryjewski, who also leads the full-service Cochon restaurant, brings a culinary framework to the counter that reflects his James Beard Award background , credentials earned in a city where the competition for serious recognition runs through names like Emeril's and Re Santi e Leoni.
Drinks at the Counter: Wine and Beer in a Charcuterie Context
The editorial angle that separates a serious charcuterie counter from a deli is frequently the drinks program, and Cochon Butcher operates with that distinction in mind. Charcuterie as a format has a natural pairing logic: the salt, fat, and acid of cured meats respond well to wines with backbone and restrained fruit, particularly from the Rhône, Alsace, and the natural wine producers that have become standard reference points in American casual-fine drinking over the past decade. Whether Cochon Butcher's specific list reaches those depths is a question of visit rather than record, but the broader pattern holds: venues holding Bib Gourmand recognition in American cities have largely moved toward curated, short wine lists that earn their keep rather than function as an afterthought. Beer remains the dominant pairing register at counter formats, and New Orleans' proximity to Louisiana craft brewing gives the drinks component a regional character that complements the kitchen's sourcing philosophy.
This positions Cochon Butcher differently from sandwich-focused comparisons like Pane Bianco in Phoenix or Alidoro in New York City, both of which operate in the premium sandwich tier but without the embedded butcher-and-charcuterie framework that gives this address its structural identity. The charcuterie case is not decoration: it is the spine of the operation, and the drinks program, however informal, exists to serve it.
The Warehouse District Context
The Warehouse District has shifted considerably over the past two decades, moving from post-industrial vacancy toward a mixed arts-and-hospitality corridor that now includes galleries, hotels, and a range of dining formats. Cochon Butcher's address on Tchoupitoulas Street places it slightly removed from the denser restaurant blocks, which has historically given it a local-frequency quality that tourist-circuit venues tend to lose. The crowd at the counter skews toward regulars and industry, the kind of self-selecting audience that OAD rankings tend to track. That consistency of patronage is part of what sustains the 4.8 rating across over 2,000 reviews , a volume that, at this price tier, represents repeat visits as much as first-time discovery.
For visitors building a New Orleans itinerary, the Turkey and the Wolf comparison will come up: another James Beard-recognised sandwich address in the city that occupies a similarly serious position in the casual tier. The two venues represent different expressions of the same civic commitment to treating the sandwich as a genuine culinary format rather than a default. Cochon Butcher's distinction is the butcher component, which gives it a depth of charcuterie reference that sandwich-only operations cannot match.
Planning Your Visit
Cochon Butcher operates seven days a week, 11am to 10pm, which places it among the more accessible venues in the city's serious dining circuit. The 10pm close allows for a late counter meal that works around dinner reservations elsewhere , a practical detail worth noting given how tightly New Orleans restaurants book in peak season, typically October through March and during festival periods. No booking method is listed, suggesting walk-in service consistent with the counter format. The address at 930 Tchoupitoulas St sits in the Warehouse District, manageable on foot from the French Quarter and the CBD, and easily reached by streetcar from the Garden District. For a broader map of where Cochon Butcher sits within New Orleans dining, see our full New Orleans restaurants guide, and for planning accommodation, our New Orleans hotels guide covers the key Warehouse District and CBD options. Those extending their visit into drinks and experiences will find further context in our New Orleans bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
For reference across the wider American fine and casual dining spectrum, venues like Le Bernardin in New York, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Alinea in Chicago, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, and Providence in Los Angeles define the country's tasting-menu ceiling. Cochon Butcher occupies the opposite end of the price register while drawing from the same commitment to sourcing and kitchen discipline that earns those addresses their standing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Cochon Butcher suitable for children?
The counter-service format and casual atmosphere make it a practical option for families. New Orleans' casual dining tier generally runs more child-tolerant than its tasting-menu counterparts, and at Cochon Butcher's price point, a visit does not carry the financial or formality pressure of a tasting-menu format like those at the city's starred addresses. The open hours, running to 10pm daily, give flexibility for earlier evening meals.
What is the overall feel of Cochon Butcher?
The feel is working butcher shop crossed with a serious sandwich counter: functional, unpretentious, and focused. Given its Bib Gourmand recognition and consistent OAD Cheap Eats ranking, it sits at the more deliberate end of the casual spectrum. New Orleans' dining culture rewards this register , the city has always placed practical seriousness over decorative formality, and Cochon Butcher reads as an expression of that civic preference. Expect a counter rather than a dining room, and a crowd that treats the charcuterie case as the main event.
What do people recommend at Cochon Butcher?
Menu centres on house-cured meats and sandwiches driven by the butcher case, which under chef Stephen Stryjewski reflects a kitchen background that has drawn James Beard recognition for the wider Cochon operation. OAD's Cheap Eats rankings and the Bib Gourmand signal consistent quality across the menu rather than a single standout dish. Specific current dishes should be confirmed on arrival, as counter menus at this format respond to curing schedules and seasonal product.
Cuisine Context
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cochon Butcher | Sandwiches | Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #210 (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America Ranked #164 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats in North America in Recommended (2023) | This venue |
| Emeril’s | Cajun | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Cajun |
| Re Santi e Leoni | Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Contemporary, €€€ |
| Bayona | New American | World's 50 Best | New American |
| Commander’s Palace | Creole | Creole | |
| Pêche Seafood Grill | American Regional - Cajun Seafood | American Regional - Cajun Seafood |
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