Local Businesses Participate in Tree Planting Program

November 4, 2017 by Charlie London

Photo above of volunteers planting trees is from SOUL NOLA’s Facebook page.

*

Volunteers planting trees in front of Terranova’s
photo by Tommy Lewis

Both Terranova’s and Cafe Degas participated in the November 4, 2017 tree planting organized and sponsored by the group Sustaining Our Urban Landscape (SOUL) founded by Susannah Burley.   Faubourg St. John neighbors at  2816 Grand Route Saint John, 2934 Grand Route Saint John, and 2832 Ponce de Leon also received free trees.

What is SOUL?

“It’s an acronym for Sustaining Our Urban Landscape, and the idea is to work neighborhood by neighborhood to help residents form a strategic plan to reduce dramatically the amount of stormwater that goes into catch basins and the drainage system,” said Burley, who also holds a master’s degree in landscape architecture from LSU.   Quote from an article by Stephanie Bruno which you can see here:  https://soulnola.org/news/

Everyone knows money doesn’t grow on trees nor does it grow for trees.  If you would like to donate to help put more trees in the neighborhood, please contact Susannah Burley at:  (504) 616-6888 or you can donate to SOUL online at the Trust for Conservation Innovation’s website.   Learn more about donating to SOUL online at:  https://soulnola.org/donate/ or just call Ms. Burley at (504) 616-6888

Cafe Degas participated in SOUL’s November 4, 2017 tree planting
Terranova’s participated in SOUL’s November 4, 2017 tree planting

Photos above of trees by Cafe Degas and Terranova’s are by Charlie London
***
Photos below are from SOUL NOLA’s Facebook page

Jacques Soulas was very happy to receive trees next to Cafe Degas
Volunteers gather at Terranova’s to help plant trees
Lots of opportunities to help during the tree planting. These folks helped by delivering trees. They are pictured next to Cafe Degas

Filed Under: More Great Posts! Tagged With: bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, Cafe Degas, faubourg st john, flood control, free tree, free trees, french restaurant, New Orleans, stormwater reduction, terranova, terranovas, tree, trees

Jan 5: Dinner at Degas

December 1, 2014 by Charlie London

The Feast of the Epiphany, January 5 at Cafe Degas features food from the Faubourg St. John community garden as well as locally sourced food that adheres to the Slow Food mission.

2014jan5dinner
Fritz Esker of the Mid-City Messenger attended December’s FSJNA meeting and reported the following info learned there:

Cafe Degas will host the Feast of the Epiphany Dinner on January 5th to benefit the Faubourg St. John Community Garden.

The dinner starts at 6:30 p.m. and costs $100 per person. Each dish will feature one ingredient from the Ark of Taste, a program created by the Slow Food Foundation to preserve indigenous foods from around the world.

The five-course meal will be prepared by chef Laurent Rochereux of Cafe Degas and Joseph Turley featuring local ingredients, including some grown in the Faubourg St. John Community Garden, located at the corner of North Dupre and St. Philip.

What you can expect:
Specialty Ark ot Taste* cocktail

Louisiana Mirliton* crab soup

FSJ Garden Fresh Salad with a Louisiana Satsuma* vinaigrette

BBQ Gulf Shrimp* & Grits

Boeuf Bourguignon, made with Pineywoods Cattle* beef

Galette du Rois with Creole Cream Cheese* and Louisiana Strawberry* preserves

Limoncello made with Meyers Lemons*

Diners will have their choice of red or white wine with the dinner.

The Slow Food Ark of Taste* is an international list of heritage foods that are at risk of extinction. 

The garden is owned by Parkway Partners, a non-profit dedicated to establishing community gardens. Slow Food New Orleans, an organization whose goal is to provide healthy, environmentally friendly food for all, handles daily operations.

FSJ-community-garden4web

Filed Under: More Great Posts! Tagged With: Cafe Degas, community garden, degas, dinner, faubourg st john, jan 5, slow food

Local Businesses Provide More Than Just Goods

October 23, 2014 by Charlie London

fsj-bastille-2014
The old phrase “use it or lose it” applies especially to neighborhood businesses

Shop at your neighbors’ businesses on Ponce de Leon and Broad. Keep your money working for you right here in Faubourg St. John.
After a long day of shopping locally stop in, say hello to your neighbors and have a drink at…
https://fsjna.org/2011/09/drinks/

LIVING IN A NEIGHBORHOOD—even the swankiest one—with no grocery, coffee shop or other businesses is like wearing a nice new suit of clothes without shoes. It looks great, but you’ve got no place to go. Local shops, preferably within walking distance, are the soul of any community, the place where you bump into your neighbors and get that satisfying sense of belonging.

These neighborhood hang outs don’t need to be fancy or charming. Sometimes their idiosyncratic character is the best expression of your neighborhood’s true personality. A funky, messy junk shop run by a lovable eccentric can be more welcoming than a charming-as-can-be tea shoppe or nostalgically-correct soda fountain. A laundromat with comfy benches out front can become a kind of town square that attracts people.

In many small towns, an ice cream shop is the hot spot for teenagers, while other folks in the community wander down to the gas station to drink pop and tell stories. In a lot of African-American neighborhoods, the barber shop and beauty parlor are the social hubs. These places may not sound like your idea of an exciting time but, to the people who live there, such businesses are as important as sidewalk cafes are to Parisians.

IN OXFORD, MISSISSIPPI, MANY FOLKS CREDIT A BOOKSTORE WITH HELPING HEAL THE CITY’S PRIDE after a vicious anti-civil rights riot erupted in the 1960s. Square Books, right on the courthouse square, restored many people’s faith that this was a caring, civilized community. It also helped revive the sagging downtown.

“What tends to get lost in the argument over the future of independent stores is that the dangers posed to them by superstores and on-line sellers don’t just threaten some quaint form of distributing goods,” writes author Rob Gurwitt about Square Books in Mother Jones magazine. “They imperil the fabric of our community life. Real-life stores—their place on the street, the people they draw in, the presence they cast in the community at large—help define their neighborhoods.”

It’s no secret that local businesses almost everywhere are under siege from mega-malls and big box retailers. Everyone who cares even a little about their neighborhood should make a commitment to patronize local businesses, even when bread or duct tape or CDs can be had cheaper by driving to a national chain store. Vote with your pocketbook to keep your community vital. Indeed, you might even find yourself ahead economically with the money saved on gasoline and unnecessary purchases you would never have made if you hadn’t gone into the big box. And, you’ll be way ahead in terms of community spirit and social enjoyment.

THANKFULLY, SMALL NEIGHBORHOOD STORES ARE BEGINNING TO FIGHT BACK WITH BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICTS. This is a well-proven model where local merchants work together to spruce up commercial streets by adding nice landscaping, fixing up the storefronts, improving the lighting and other amenities. They also cooperate on advertising campaigns, special neighborhood events, shared parking facilities, and other improvements.

Many merchants are banding together in an even bigger way by joining Independent Business Alliances, which draw public attention to the numerous benefits of locally owned businesses (how often do Wal-Mart and Home Depot buy uniforms for the local little league team or sponsor an art fair?) and by lobbying political officials and the media to take note of unfair economic tactics wielded by big retailers. The first IBA began in Boulder, Colorado in 1997 and within two years involved 150 local businesses. There are now IBAs in more than 20 communities—stretching from Corvallis, Oregon, to Greenville, South Carolina— and a national group, the American Independent Business Alliance, based in Missoula, Montana.

IN HARTLAND, A VILLAGE IN THE DEVON COUNTRYSIDE OF ENGLAND, a community school took over management of the Happy Pear green grocer and market when it was about to close. It offers students a wonderful lesson in business management and sustainable economics. And, local townspeople won’t have to drive many kilometers for fresh and organic food. This is just one example of a growing number of community initiatives to preserve and promote essential local shops. In another English village, Maiden Bradley in Wiltshire, 60 percent of residents pledged between five and five-hundred pounds ( $10-1000) to save and refurbish their general store (village shop in the British parlance), with townspeople doing most of the work. It is now community-owned with any profits going back to village itself.

IN THE SEATTLE SUBURB OF LAKE FOREST PARK, RESIDENTS RALLIED AROUND A UNIQUE, REDEVELOPED MALL that was envisioned as a community center as much as a retail outlet. Third Place Commons features a superb bookstore as well as a food court featuring local restauranteurs and a stage for nightly music and performances. It has become such a beloved local hangout that regular customers formed Friends of Third Place Commons, a non-profit group to help keep the place thriving.

Resources: “Square Books”:www.squarebooks.com “American Independent Business Alliance”:amiba.net “Friends of Third Place Commons”:www.thirdplacecommons.org

Filed Under: Featured, HISTORY, Living Well Tagged With: 1000 figs, bayou breakfast, bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, best place to shop in new orleans, buy local, Cafe Degas, canseco's, Fair Grinds, faubourg st john, half shell, local business, lolas, neighborhood stores, New Orleans, pal's, santa fe, swirl, terranova, terranovas, use it or lose it

Bastille Day Celebration

June 30, 2013 by Charlie London

toussaint-photobyToryTaylor-2013july13

Allen Toussaint at the 2013 Bastille Day Celebration in Faubourg St. John. photo by Tory Taylor.

Bastille Day Celebration
in Faubourg St. John.
photos below by Laura London

click on any thumbnail for a better view


bastille2013poster1
Norbert Slama and Raphael Bas (Manouche Musette) will perform from 5 – 7 and Johnny J and the Hitmen from 7 – 9. Cynthia Scott will sing the Marseillaise at 5:30. Ukulele Jake will perform at the Bastille Day Celebration too!

Come on out from 5 pm to 9 pm on Saturday, July 13th and enjoy the Bastille Day Celebration in Faubourg St. John. Generously brought to you by the Faubourg St. John Merchants Association.

(3100 block of Ponce de Leon just off Esplanade)

Please join us for the annual Faubourg St. John Merchants Association Block Party on Ponce de Leon Street between Esplanade and North Lopez.

 

Saturday, July 13, 2013 | 5 PM – 9 PM | Le Marseillaise will be sung by Cynthia Scott

 

Come dance in the street at our annual Bal Populaire! | Local merchants will sell food and beverages on the street. | Art market with local artists | Children’s activities and fun for the whole family! | This event is sponsored by the Faubourg St John Merchants:

Cafe Degas | Fair Grinds Coffee Shop | Faubourg St. John Neighborhood Association | Maple Street Book Stores | Nonna Mia | Pal’s Lounge | Santa Fe Restaurant | Swirl Wines

In addition to a cool art market and great kids’ table there will be plenty of food, drink and dancing in the street at the Bastille Day Celebration in the 3100 block of Ponce de Leon on Saturday, July 13th from 5 pm until 9 pm. Plan to join the fun! It’s free!


*******************************************************************

Norbert Slama and Raphael Bas will perform at the Bastille Day Celebration in Faubourg St. John on Saturday, July 13, 2013. More soon!

Johnny J will perform at the Bastille Day Celebration in Faubourg St. John on Saturday, July 13, 2013.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 3100 ponce de leon, art, band, bastille, bastille day, bayou, bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, block, block party, bookstore, business district, Cafe Degas, canseco's, celebration, city, creole, day, esplanade, faubourg, faubourg st john, french, grocery, jacob, jacob windstein, jake, kids, liuzza's, maple street bookstores, market, merchants, music, neighborhood, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood, nonna mia, pal's, party, ponce de leon, rock, rock-n-roll, roll, swirl, terranovas, ukulele, ukulele jake

News from Cafe Degas

June 12, 2013 by Charlie London

Faubourg St. John Neighborhood Association 3rd Annual Porch Crawl
Saturday, June 15
This event is getting bigger and better every year!  A whole lot of fun.  This year they will also have food!  Get your tickets online at:  www.FSJNA.org or at Terranova’s Supermarket or Swirl Wines

Faubourg St. John Merchants will present Bastille Day Street Fete
Our annual Street festival will take place this year on Saturday, July 13th.  We will have live music, food and drinks from local merchants for sale , an art market and children’s activities.  Dancing in the street is a must!  It all takes place behind the Café on Ponce de Leon and Esplanade Avenue from 5 pm to 9 pm.  Save the date!

Wednesday Night Prix Fixe $32 

Every Wednesday night, you can enjoy a  three course meal for only $32! 

You can choose your appetizer and entree from our specials for the evening  and any dessert!

Add a bottle of wine from our wine specials for 20% off each bottle!
Now this makes Wednesday nights a lot more exciting! 

Jacques Soulas New Work Ariodante Gallery
535 Julia Street | New Orleans
Jacques’s paintings will be on exhibit at this gallery until the end of June!

Up to
$15
Value
 

Cafe Degas invites you to

Buy one entree and receive a second entree of lesser or equal value free!

Up to $15 value.

Not good with any other offer.  Limit three coupons per table.

One coupon per couple.

Please present this coupon to your server before you are presented your check.

Cafe Degas  |  3127 Esplanade Avenue   |  504-945-5635
Offer Expires: December, 201
Featured Recipe
Quiche Degas
  INGREDIENTS
8 inch pie shell
3 eggs
1 1/2 cup heavy cream
1/2 tsp nutmeg
Salt Pepper to taste
1 cup broccoli florets
3/4 cup grated Swiss cheese
1/2 cup diced onion
tbsp.  olive oil
Preheat oven to 350
Sautee diced onions in olive oil until lightly brown
Blanch broccoli until al dente and drain
Bake  pie shell for 10 minutes then remove from oven.
Mix eggs, cream , nutmeg, S & P.
Add broccoli, onions and  cheese and pour into pie shell.  Place carefully onto a cookie sheet and bake for 25 – 30 minutes or until golden brown.
Let the pie sit at room temperature for about 30-45 minutes before serving.

soulas-jaques

Jacques Soulas | New Work in Oil |
June 1st through the 30th

Opening Reception | June 1, 2013 | 6-9pm

Ariodante Gallery | 535 Julia Street |New Orleans
(504) 524-3233
http://www.ariodantegallery.com

 
Jacques Soulas
Home: 504 324-6529

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: bastille day, Cafe Degas, Porch Crawl

Neighbor Shows Art

May 30, 2013 by Charlie London

soulas-jaques

Jacques Soulas | New Work in Oil |
June 1st through the 30th

Opening Reception | June 1, 2013 | 6-9pm

Ariodante Gallery | 535 Julia Street |New Orleans
(504) 524-3233
http://www.ariodantegallery.com



Jacques Soulas
Home: 504 324-6529
Cell: 504 810-8237
visit my art gallery on the web:
www.jacquessoulas.com

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: ariodante, art, bayou, bayou st john, best neighborhood in New Orleans, Cafe Degas, faubourg st john, jacques, jacques soulas, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood, soulas

It’s Magicly Delicious!

March 16, 2013 by Charlie London

stpats1

St. Patrick’s Day is this Sunday. Start celebrating the day right by enjoying a great brunch at one of the great restaurants right here in Faubourg St. John! Forget that cereal, go get a real breakfast at a real restaurant in Faubourg St. John. It’s magicly delicious!

Breakfast sandwiches like this and full breakfast meals are prepared daily at Canseco’s. Get there early for the best selection! Canseco’s opens at 7 a.m.
Everyday, one can buy a variety of quick breakfast options that are ready to go at Canseco’s Market. Pictured here is the ham, egg and cheese biscuit but grits, eggs and sausage are also available in full meals that are hot and pre-packaged ready to go.

And, at Fair Grinds there is all manner of fair trade coffee with a variety of ready to eat muffins waiting to be heated up for you.

But, the pièce de résistance for breakfast in Faubourg St. John is only available on Sundays. Both Cafe Degas and Santa Fe restaurants offer a Sunday brunch that should not be missed.

This meal, featuring home made biscuits, meat from Terranova’s all wonderfully prepared is only available from Santa Fe and only on Sundays!

Sunday brunch served 11am-3pm at
Santa Fe Restaurant at 3201 Esplanade.


Grillades and Grits consisting of veal cutlets with creole gravy, peppers, tomatoes, organic stone ground grits is just one of the many top quality offerings for Sunday brunch at Cafe Degas.
Click on the photo for a menu!

Sunday brunch at Cafe Degas
served 10:30am – 3:00pm at 3127 Esplanade.

Filed Under: More Great Posts! Tagged With: bayou, bayou st john, best, best neighborhood in New Orleans, breakfast, brunch, Cafe Degas, eclectic, faubourg st john, neighborhood, New Orleans, new orleans best neighborhood, santa fe

Breakfast Anyone?

December 2, 2012 by Charlie London

Some neighbors have lamented that there isn’t a business dedicated to serving breakfast in Faubourg St. John. However, there are breakfast options available on a daily basis and on Sunday two options for brunch that should not be missed.

Breakfast sandwiches like this and full breakfast meals are prepared daily at Canseco’s. Get there early for the best selection! Canseco’s opens at 7 a.m.
Everyday, one can buy a variety of quick breakfast options that are ready to go at Canseco’s Market. Pictured here is the ham, egg and cheese biscuit but grits, eggs and sausage are also available in full meals that are hot and pre-packaged ready to go.

And, at Fair Grinds there is all manner of fair trade coffee with a variety of ready to eat muffins waiting to be heated up for you.

But, the pièce de résistance for breakfast in Faubourg St. John is only available on Sundays. Both Cafe Degas and Santa Fe restaurants offer a Sunday brunch that should not be missed.

This meal, featuring home made biscuits, meat from Terranova’s all wonderfully prepared is only available from Santa Fe and only on Sundays!

Sunday brunch served 11am-3pm at
Santa Fe Restaurant at 3201 Esplanade.


Grillades and Grits consisting of veal cutlets with creole gravy, peppers, tomatoes, organic stone ground grits is just one of the many top quality offerings for Sunday brunch at Cafe Degas.
Click on the photo for a menu!

Sunday brunch at Cafe Degas
served 10:30am – 3:00pm at 3127 Esplanade.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: breakfast, Cafe Degas, canseco's, esplanade, Fair Grinds, ponce de leon, restaurants, santa fe

Photography Exhibit at Cafe Degas

August 22, 2012 by Charlie London

Faubourg St. John neighbor Eliot Kamenitz will be featured in a show of photographs at Cafe Degas beginning October 17th.

“At Random” will feature photos taken during his 40 years (and still counting) as a photographer.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: art show, bayou, bayou st john, best, Cafe Degas, eliot, faubourg, faubourg st john, kamenitz, neighborhood, New Orleans, photo, photography, picture, times picayune

1st District Fundraiser Draws Capacity Crowd

August 21, 2012 by Charlie London

It was a full house for the August 21, 2012 fundraiser at Cafe Degas for the benefit of the New Orleans Police Department’s 1st District

Through the generosity of Glazer’s, the Faubourg St. John Neighborhood Association and Cafe Degas, thousands were raised to help the 1st District obtain much-needed supplies.

Click on any photo for the full view.

Click on any photo for the full view.

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 1st District, 5 star, apertif, bayou, bayou st john, best, best restaurant in new orleans, bistro, cafe, Cafe Degas, caviar, chef, chocolate decadence, cocktails, creative, cuisine, degas, delightful, dining, dinner, donation, drinks, european, european-style cafe, faubourg, faubourg st john, fine, first district, five star, france, french, french menu, frommer, garlic, laurent, lemon icebox pie, lentils, louisiana, mid-city, mushrooms, New Orleans, nopd, parkview, rochereux, romantic, salmon, tickets, top rated, travel guide, treme, truffle, upscale, vacation, vegetarian, vichyssoise, zagat

Exclusive Dinner August 21st

July 23, 2012 by Charlie London

What: Dinner and Cocktails at Café Degas

Why: To benefit the First District N.O.P.D.

When: Tuesday August 21, 2012

Please arrive at 6:30 pm. Dinner will be begin at 7 pm

Where: Café Degas, 3127 Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans

Please join your friends and neighbors to support our underfunded First District Police Department. Café Degas is hosting the event which is sponsored by FSJNA and Glazer’s. Chef Laurent Rochereux is preparing a special four course meal which is being complemented by cocktail pairings provided by Glazer’s.

Vegetarian and non-alcoholic options are available upon request.

How can tickets be purchased?
Tickets may be purchased at Café Degas by calling 504.945.5635 or by calling FSJNA at 504.373.6697
Ticket price is $100 per person

St. Germain “Dinner et Cocktails”
To Benefit First District NOPD

Café Degas
Tuesday Evening, August 21, 2012

All courses paired with a unique St. Germain Cocktail

Welcome Aperitif

A selection of Artisan Cheeses and Fresh Fruit

Classic Vichyssoise with Italian Truffle Oil

House Cured Salmon Gravlax with Bowfin Caviar

Over Organic Baby Arugula, Maravilla Ranch fresh organic Mississippi mission Figs & French Lentils, served with a French Garlic Vinaigrette

Roasted Maple Leaf Farm Duckling with fresh Organic Mississippi Peach glaze

Pan Sautéed Butternut Squash and Mississippi Farmed Organic Shiitake Mushrooms

Dessert Choices:

Degas Traditional Floating Island

Degas Frozen Lemon Icebox Pie

Chocolate Decadence

Contact [email protected] for more information.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ABOUT CAFE DEGAS

FRENCH RESTAURANT OF THE YEAR – Best of Dining 2010
The masterpiece of proprietor Jacques Soulas, an artist and a restaurateur, and his friend Jerry Edgar, this creative bistro overlooking Fortier Park and romantic Esplanade Avenue is an authentic French jewel. The openness of the dining room, the intimacy of the bar, a live oak tree rising through the floor and a complete wine list adding pleasure to the French menu have guests looking up from their plates of moules et frites, checking the door to see when Hilaire Germain Edgar Degas will arrive. – T.M.- New Orleans Magazine December 2010

***
“Something about Café Degas makes dining there feel as if you’re on vacation. No other restaurant makes it so clear how our food culture is interwoven with France. Time seems to go by more slowly, so you may as well have another glass of wine”.
Tom Fitzmorris, Restaurant Writer, New Orleans City Business

***
“In business for 21 years, Cafe Degas has attained the status of a modern-day-neighborhood
institution. Its regulars have come to prize the place as equal parts romantic and practical,
upscale and comfortable” Gambit Weekly

***
“… Cafe Degas’ temperature-controlled, practically wall-free dining room allows diners to both experience and appreciate the weather during any month of the year …”
Gambit Weekly – 1st Place Best Outdoor Dining

***
“Charming European-style cafe with a delightful feel and creative bistro fare”
Zagat Survey of New Orleans Restaurants

***
The semi outdoors deck has tremendous appeal. The big oaks of Esplanade Avenue and the little park across the street make for a delightful and very New Orleans scene… The food here gets better every time I try it. You want to find out straightaway what the day’s specials are; they’re the best food Cafe Degas has to offer.
Tom Fitzmorris, New Orleans City Business

***
The service is “Impeccable and helpful. The waitstaff make you feel at home and don’t mind letting you in on their favorites”.
Jason McCann, CitySearch.com

***
A pecan tree shoots through a hole in the roof of the porch where we dine. On a windy day, tumbling nuts dance a jig on the tin roof; rain sounds like a concert for drums…. the food woos you…Whether you’re served by David Musson, a limb of the Degas family on his mama’s side, or Jacqueline Guiot, who speaks a curiously understandable French (even if you ne parle pas), the food woos you into a Degas mood. Pate de campagne, duck mousse pate, and creamy vichyssoise emerge from a kitchen the size of a kerchief. Carolanne Griffith-Roberts, Southern Living

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 5 star meal, bayou, bayou st john, Cafe Degas, department, dinner, exclusive, fancy, faubourg, faubourg st john, fsjna, fundraiser, New Orleans, night out, nopd, police

Bastille Day in Faubourg St. John

July 11, 2012 by Charlie London

CLICK HERE to view photos and video from the
2012 Bastille Day Celebration in Faubourg St. John!

bastille2013poster

***

Please join us for the annual Faubourg St. John Merchants Association Block Party on Ponce de Leon Street between Esplanade and North Lopez.

Saturday, July 13, 2013 | 5 PM – 9 PM | Le Marseillaise will be sung by Cynthia Scott

Come dance in the street at our annual Bal Populaire! | Local merchants will sell food and beverages on the street. | Art market with local artists | Children’s activities and fun for the whole family! | This event is sponsored by the Faubourg St John Merchants:

Cafe Degas | Fair Grinds Coffee Shop | Faubourg St. John Neighborhood Association | Maple Street Book Stores | Nonna Mia | Pal’s Lounge | Santa Fe Restaurant | Swirl Wines | Terranova’s Grocery

In addition to a cool art market and great kids’ table there will be plenty of food, drink and dancing in the street at the Bastille Day Celebration in the 3100 block of Ponce de Leon on Saturday, July 13th from 5 pm until 9 pm. Plan to join the fun! It’s free!

Check out the great music lineup below. Come dance with us!

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: 3100 ponce de leon, art, band, bastille, bastille day, bayou, bayou st john, block, bookstore, business district, Cafe Degas, canseco's, city, creole, creole stringbeans, day, esplanade, faubourg, faubourg st john, french, grocery, jacob, jacob windstein, jake, kids, liuzza's, maple street bookstores, market, merchants, music, neighborhood, New Orleans, nonna mia, pal's, party, ponce de leon, rick olivier, rob savoy, rock, rock-n-roll, roll, stringbeans, swirl, terranovas, ukulele, ukulele jake, zazou, zazou city

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Cafe Degas  |  3127 Esplanade Avenue   |  New Orleans, LA   |  504-945-5635