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CuisineSandwiches
Executive ChefJoanne Domilise
LocationNew Orleans, United States
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining

Domilise's Po-Boys on Annunciation Street has held its place in Uptown New Orleans long enough to become a reference point for the po-boy tradition itself. A 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand and a 4.6 Google rating across 1,575 reviews confirm what the neighbourhood has known for decades. Hours run Tuesday through Saturday, with the longest service on Fridays and Saturdays until 7 pm.

Domilise’s Po-Boys restaurant in New Orleans, United States
About

A Corner Shop That Defines a Tradition

Annunciation Street in Uptown New Orleans does not announce itself the way the French Quarter does. The neighbourhood moves at a quieter register: residential blocks, corner stores, the particular light that comes off the river in the late morning. It is in this context that Domilise's Po-Boys sits, a small, unhurried shop that has become one of the clearest expressions of what the po-boy format means in this city. The physical environment is the point. There is nothing in the room competing for attention, no concept layered over the food. What you get is the sandwich, the counter, and the accumulated weight of a place that has been doing the same thing long enough to have outlasted most of the arguments about how to do it correctly.

The po-boy is a New Orleans institution with a history that runs back to the 1920s, when long-bread sandwiches were sold to striking streetcar workers. Over the following century, the format evolved and fractured: some operators moved toward dressed, overloaded constructions aimed at tourists; others pared back to a tighter, more local register. Domilise's belongs firmly to the latter category, occupying the Uptown end of a tradition that has always been more working lunch than restaurant experience. The 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition places it in the company of New Orleans spots that deliver clear quality at an accessible price point, a category that includes some of the city's most argued-over addresses.

Where Domilise's Sits in the New Orleans Sandwich Conversation

New Orleans has a small but serious group of sandwich operators whose work gets measured against each other and against the city's own historical standard. Central Grocery Company anchors the muffuletta end of the spectrum. Cochon Butcher represents a newer, charcuterie-forward interpretation. Turkey and the Wolf operates with deliberate irreverence toward the category's conventions. Domilise's does something different from all of them: it stays close to the original format, making the case through consistency rather than innovation.

Opinionated About Dining, which runs one of the more data-intensive cheap eats rankings in North America, listed Domilise's at #494 in its 2024 Cheap Eats ranking and placed it in the Recommended tier in 2023. These are not the numbers of a place coasting on reputation. The Google rating of 4.6 across 1,575 reviews reflects sustained performance over a large and varied sample, not a narrow enthusiast base. For comparison, the Michelin Bib Gourmand is awarded specifically where quality exceeds what the price point would lead you to expect, which is precisely the claim Domilise's makes every service.

Joanne Domilise has been the name attached to this shop long enough that the two have become inseparable in local restaurant conversation. In a city where Cajun technique is codified across starred houses like Emeril's and contemporary dining pushes forward at places like Re Santi e Leoni, the relevance of an Uptown po-boy counter comes from a different kind of authority: the authority of long practice on a narrow brief. The editorial angle here is not transformation or evolution. It is the discipline of staying close to something that works.

The Craft Behind the Counter

Po-boys are deceptively demanding. The bread has to be right, which in New Orleans means a specific kind of French loaf with a crisp crust and a soft, yielding interior that can absorb dressings without disintegrating. The protein, whether fried shrimp, roast beef, oysters, or sausage, has to be cooked to order in a volume that keeps the line moving without letting quality drop. The dressing, the lettuce, the tomato, the pickles: each element has a standard version and any deviation registers immediately to someone who has eaten the same sandwich many times. Domilise's operates in this demanding, low-margin space and has done so long enough to have calibrated its production to something close to repeatable precision.

This kind of focused execution sits at the opposite end of the format spectrum from the tasting menus and elaborate kitchen projects that define other levels of serious dining. Le Bernardin in New York City, Alinea in Chicago, The French Laundry in Napa: those are projects of accumulation and transformation. A po-boy counter like Domilise's is a project of reduction, of getting to the minimum number of variables and controlling each one. The Michelin guide's Bib Gourmand category exists precisely to recognize that both kinds of seriousness deserve attention. The same logic applies when you compare across the sandwich category nationally: Alidoro in New York City and Pane Bianco in Phoenix operate in different regional traditions but share with Domilise's the same fundamental commitment to ingredient discipline inside a constrained format.

Planning a Visit

Domilise's operates Tuesday through Saturday, with Monday hours running 11 am to 3 pm, Tuesday through Wednesday also 11 am to 3 pm, Thursday extending to 5 pm, and Friday and Saturday running the longest at 11 am to 7 pm. The shop is closed on Sunday. These are not flexible hours: service ends when it ends, and the kitchen closes on time. Planning around the Thursday-to-Saturday window gives the most room to arrive without rushing. The Uptown location at 5240 Annunciation Street is residential rather than central, which means the foot traffic is local rather than tourist-heavy on most days, and the atmosphere at the counter reflects that.

For anyone building a longer New Orleans itinerary, Domilise's fits within a broader Uptown eating circuit that runs distinct from the French Quarter and Warehouse District restaurant clusters. Our full New Orleans restaurants guide maps the city's dining spread across neighbourhoods and price tiers. For additional planning, the New Orleans hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city's premium offer. Elsewhere in the American sandwich conversation, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Providence in Los Angeles represent the higher-end California dining context against which New Orleans informal eating often gets compared, though the comparison tends to obscure more than it reveals.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I order at Domilise's Po-Boys?
The menu centres on po-boys in the New Orleans tradition, with the full range of classic options including fried shrimp and roast beef among the most discussed. The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition and the Opinionated About Dining Cheap Eats ranking both point to the core sandwich program rather than any peripheral items. Arriving during peak service hours and ordering from the standard menu is the approach most consistent with the shop's reputation.
What is the standout thing about Domilise's Po-Boys?
The combination of Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2025, a 4.6 Google rating across more than 1,500 reviews, and a consistent presence on Opinionated About Dining's North America Cheap Eats list represents an unusually broad confirmation of quality for a neighbourhood sandwich counter. The standout is less any single element than the sustained standard across a long operating history in a format that rewards consistency above novelty.

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