(CNN) — New Orleans is a city that shares a storied multigenerational love of food, family and community that transcends spur-of-the-moment trends.
Blending Creole and Cajun traditions with contemporary French, Italian, Caribbean and soul food, the Crescent City is a true melting pot.
It's also the birthplace of the muffaletta, the po'boy, gumbo, jambalaya and étouffée.
A place where tourists can be found waiting in lines for beignets at all hours. And where Mondays are reserved for red beans and rice, and the simple bell pepper, onion and celery are upheld as the Holy Trinity of all delicious things.
The come-as-you-are attitude is a rare, charming specialty of this coastal byway that continues to romance travelers and lure new residents every day.
Four chefs -- Leah Chase, Emeril Lagasse, Donald Link and Nina Compton -- sat down for an intimate CNN family meal to talk about their deep ties to New Orleans and its tight-knit culinary community. (Watch their chat in the video above).
Dooky Chase's Restaurant
What began as a humble sandwich and lottery corner shop transformed into the local fixture of organization for the civil rights movement.
After owners Leah Chase and her husband, Dooky, took over his father's Treme storefront, Dooky Chase's became one of the first African-American owned fine dining restaurants in America.
It was among the few meeting places that allowed mixed races during the Jim Crow era, serving as a longtime institution for social justice reform.
Beyond the legacy that has drawn visits from Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama and a long list of high-level celebrities, this is where you'll find some of the best Creole food in NOLA, earning Leah Chase the moniker: Queen of Creole Cuisine.
Leah Chase felt it was her duty to make Dooky Chase's more than just a restaurant, but a meeting place for people like the Freedom Riders of the 1960s to cultivate ideas over fried chicken.
Emeril's New Orleans
For first timers to New Orleans, a stop at the eponymous flagship location of the father of "New New Orleans" cuisine is a must.
You won't find "Mr. Bam" working in the kitchen (give a wave to chef de cuisine Douglas Braselman), but the boundary-pushing flavors that define famed restaurateur Emeril Lagasse's cooking style are always on the menu.
Try dishes like andouille-crusted Gulf drum with local vegetables or crawfish-stuffed top neck clams and top your meal off with Emeril's banana cream pie.
Can't make it to the Big Easy? Lagasse has seven restaurants outside of New Orleans in Las Vegas, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania and Miramar Beach, Florida.
Herbsaint
Eighteen years and two James Beard Awards later, chef-owner Donald Link's rustic French-Southern flagship concept is still going strong.
Seasonally driven with the freshest locally sourced ingredients, Herbsaint was among the pioneers of NOLA's modern farm-to-table movement.
Expect elegant catch-of-the-day dishes with a decidedly Cajun-Creole spin, like Muscovy duck leg confit with dirty rice and citrus gastrique or Louisiana shrimp and fish ceviche with cucumbers and pepitas.
While you're in town, check out Link's other top-notch spots: Cochon, Cochon Butcher, Pêche Seafood Grill and La Boulangerie.
Compère Lapin
Not all local traditions start at the source. Born and raised between St. Lucia and London, chef Nina Compton is still getting her feet wet as a recent New Orleans transplant.
Yet the former "Top Chef" contestant is shaking things up as one of the most exciting new faces in the New Orleans food scene.
Drawing from her Caribbean roots and fine dining background, she seamlessly merges tropical flavors with classic Creole for an entirely inventive category that stands on its own and earned her the 2018 James Beard Award for best chef in the South.
As a young, black female, the pressure to succeed could have toppled Nina Compton, but instead this "Top Chef" runner-up has put Caribbean cuisine on the map.
Cochon
Until Chef Paul Prudhomme elevated and popularized the cuisine in the 1970s, Cajun foods were considered country cooking.
As a native of western Louisiana's Cajun Country, chef-owner Donald Link continues to push the conversation about the bounty of the bayou using white tablecloth techniques for dishes like fried alligator with chili garlic mayonnaise, pork cheek sauce piquant with hominy grit cake and catfish courtbouillon.
For something a little more casual, stop into Link's sister spot, Cochon Butcher: a sandwich and butchery featuring a killer muffaletta that will send you straight into a food coma.
Emeril's Delmonico
Celebrating its 20th anniversary this year, celebrity chef Emeril Lagasse's Creole steakhouse has a long and layered legacy as it's the restoration of a century-old establishment dating back to 1895.
A classic fine dining steakhouse with local leanings, you can order a New York strip, dry-aged ribeye, fried green tomatoes, collard greens and turtle soup all under one roof.
The restaurant is so popular that Lagasse expanded the concept to Las Vegas, plus a similar chophouse in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
Pêche Seafood Restaurant
NOLA is all about the seafood, and here you'll find some of the freshest in town.
Another instant hit from The Link Group restaurant empire, chef Ryan Prewitt culls the bounty of local seafood and transforms it into sophisticated Southern-inspired dishes, rightfully earning him a James Beard Foundation Award for best chef in the South in 2014.
Meril
Named after Emeril Lagasse's daughter, Meril is the latest addition to his arsenal of concepts.
Tapping into his favorite collection of recipes, chef de cuisine Will Avelar serves up a mishmash of dishes merging local and international flavors like jumbo Gulf shrimp with coconut milk, lime and cilantro, muffaletta flatbread and King Cake tres leches.
Carly Fisher is an award-winning journalist and author whose work has been featured in publications like GQ, CNN, Fodors Travel, Bon Appetit, Food & Wine, Brides, Saveur, Edible and NBC. She lives and works in Brooklyn, where she is currently working on her first book through The Countryman Press due 2019.
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