Bar in New Orleans, United States
Surrey's Café & Juice Bar
100ptsSolid local brunch, skip the French Quarter.

About Surrey's Café & Juice Bar
Surrey's Café & Juice Bar on Magazine Street is the locals' brunch call in the Lower Garden District: food-first, no reservations, and priced for repeat visits. The juice program is a genuine draw, not a gimmick. Show up before 9 AM on weekends or expect a wait. Skip it if you need cocktails or large-group logistics.
The Verdict
If you are weighing up a serious brunch stop on Magazine Street against the more tourist-facing options further into the French Quarter, Surrey's Café & Juice Bar is the locals-first answer. This is a neighborhood café in the Lower Garden District that earns its reputation on food quality rather than atmosphere marketing. For an explorer who wants to eat where New Orleans actually eats on a weekend morning, Surrey's is worth the wait.
What to Expect
Surrey's sits at 1418 Magazine St, which puts it on one of New Orleans's most walkable and restaurant-dense corridors. The café format means short menus, tight spaces, and queues that move. The juice bar component is not an afterthought: fresh-pressed juices and smoothies are a genuine draw alongside the kitchen output. This is not a cocktail-forward venue, so if you are chasing the New Orleans bar experience, the food-and-juice focus here is a different proposition from the craft cocktail rooms on the Pearl New Orleans bar circuit.
The food is the reason to come. Surrey's has built a following on a small, well-executed roster of breakfast and brunch dishes that lean Southern with Latin inflections, a combination that plays to New Orleans's cross-cultural kitchen tradition. Portions are generous relative to the price point, which keeps this firmly in the accessible-spend bracket compared to the white-tablecloth brunch options uptown.
Booking logistics are low-friction. Surrey's does not take reservations in the conventional sense, which means you show up, you queue if it is busy, and you get seated when space opens. Weekend mornings are the peak window, so arriving before 9 AM or after 1 PM reduces wait time. Weekday visits are considerably calmer. Because booking difficulty is low, this is not a venue you need to plan around weeks in advance, but you do need to budget time if you arrive at peak hour on a Saturday.
The crowd skews local and neighborhood-regular. This is not a tourist trap, which is part of the appeal for anyone exploring New Orleans beyond the Quarter. The room is small and the pace is quick, which makes it better suited to pairs or small groups than large parties. Service is casual and efficient rather than polished.
For context within the broader New Orleans dining scene, Surrey's occupies a different tier and function from the city's celebrated cocktail bars. If your New Orleans trip is bar-first, explore Jewel of the South, Cure, or Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29 for drinks programming. Surrey's is the morning anchor before those evenings out. You can find the full picture in our full New Orleans restaurants guide, our full New Orleans bars guide, and our full New Orleans experiences guide.
How It Compares
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is the food good at Surrey's Café & Juice Bar? Yes, and that is the primary reason to visit. The kitchen turns out Southern-inflected brunch plates with consistent execution that has earned Surrey's a loyal local following over the years. It is not a tasting-menu experience, but for the price point and format, the food quality is higher than most casual brunch spots in the city. If you want a James Beard-level dining event, look elsewhere. If you want to eat well on Magazine Street without overpaying, Surrey's delivers.
- What's the crowd like at Surrey's Café & Juice Bar? Primarily local and neighborhood-regular. You will find residents of the Lower Garden District and uptown New Orleans, not the Bourbon Street crowd. The atmosphere is relaxed and unpretentious, which suits the price point. On weekends the room fills quickly, but the turnover is fast.
- Is Surrey's Café & Juice Bar good for a date? It works for a casual, low-key morning date where good food matters more than ambiance or service theater. The room is small and the vibe is neighborly rather than romantic. For a more considered date setting in New Orleans, a dinner reservation at a Garden District restaurant with a longer format would serve better. Surrey's is right for a relaxed, food-first pairing.
- Does Surrey's Café & Juice Bar have happy hour deals? Hours and pricing details are not confirmed in our current data. Check directly before visiting, as café-format venues on Magazine Street often operate daytime-only schedules that do not include a conventional happy hour. For happy hour programming in New Orleans, Cure is a better starting point.
- Is Surrey's Café & Juice Bar good for groups? Small groups of two to four work well here. The room is compact and the format is not built for large-party coordination. If you are moving a group of six or more through New Orleans, a reservation-friendly restaurant with more square footage will reduce friction. For group-friendly bar outings, see our full New Orleans bars guide.
- What's the signature drink at Surrey's Café & Juice Bar? The juice bar is a genuine feature, not branding. Fresh-pressed juices and smoothies are among the draws alongside the food. Specific menu items are not confirmed in our current data, but the juice program is a real differentiator from the average New Orleans brunch spot, most of which are coffee-and-cocktail focused.
- Does Surrey's Café & Juice Bar have outdoor seating? Outdoor seating details are not confirmed in our current data. The Magazine Street location is walkable and the neighborhood is pleasant, but verify directly before planning an outdoor visit, particularly in summer when New Orleans heat and humidity make open-air seating a meaningful consideration.
Explore More in New Orleans
- Our full New Orleans bars guide
- Our full New Orleans restaurants guide
- Our full New Orleans hotels guide
- Our full New Orleans wineries guide
- Our full New Orleans experiences guide
- 2 Phat Vegans — another locals-first spot worth knowing
- Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu — for juice-forward bar thinking in another city
- Julep in Houston , Southern-rooted drinks for your next Gulf Coast stop
- Kumiko in Chicago , precision cocktail bar for the explorer's reference list
Compare Surrey's Café & Juice Bar
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Surrey's Café & Juice Bar | Easy | ||
| Jewel of the South | Unknown | ||
| Beachbum Berry's Latitude 29 | Unknown | ||
| Cure | Unknown | ||
| Cane & Table | Unknown | ||
| The Carousel Bar | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the food good at Surrey's Café & Juice Bar?
Surrey's has a strong local following on Magazine Street, which is a reliable signal in a city with high baseline food standards. It sits on one of New Orleans's most competitive dining corridors, so it earns its repeat customers on merit rather than foot traffic. No Michelin or James Beard recognition is on record, but consistent local patronage on that strip carries weight.
What's the crowd like at Surrey's Café & Juice Bar?
Expect a neighbourhood-heavy crowd rather than a tourist one. Magazine Street draws locals, and Surrey's sits at 1418 Magazine St, well clear of the French Quarter visitor pull. The café format keeps things casual and relatively quick-moving, so the room skews toward regulars grabbing a proper breakfast rather than groups on a sightseeing schedule.
Is Surrey's Café & Juice Bar good for a date?
It works for a low-key daytime date, particularly if you want something relaxed and neighbourhood-feeling rather than formal. The café setting keeps expectations casual, which suits a brunch or lunch date better than a dinner-style occasion. For a more atmospheric evening option in the same city, Jewel of the South on North Rampart is worth considering instead.
Does Surrey's Café & Juice Bar have happy hour deals?
No happy hour information is documented for Surrey's, and given the café and juice bar format, it is not a primary drinks destination. If deals on cocktails are the goal, Cure on Freret Street and Cane & Table in the French Quarter are better-suited options with dedicated bar programs.
Is Surrey's Café & Juice Bar good for groups?
Surrey's café format typically means tighter seating and quicker turnover, which can make larger groups awkward during busy brunch periods on Magazine Street. Parties of two or three will find it easier to manage than groups of six or more. For a group-friendly New Orleans experience with more room, consider a venue with a dedicated private dining setup.
What's the signature drink at Surrey's Café & Juice Bar?
The juice bar element is central to Surrey's identity, setting it apart from the typical New Orleans brunch spot where coffee and cocktails dominate. Specific menu items are not documented in available venue data, so it's worth checking directly before visiting. The juice focus makes it a practical daytime stop, especially if you want something lighter than the city's usual brunch drink offerings.
Does Surrey's Café & Juice Bar have outdoor seating?
Outdoor seating details are not confirmed in the venue record. Magazine Street does have a walkable, open streetscape, but whether Surrey's runs a patio or sidewalk setup is worth verifying before you visit, particularly given New Orleans heat and humidity. Calling ahead or checking current listings is the practical move before planning an outdoor meal.
More bars in New Orleans
- Above The GridAbove The Grid at 317 Baronne St offers a CBD-positioned alternative to the French Quarter late-night circuit. Booking is easy, the address is walkable from most central hotels, and the refined setting rewards a second visit later in the evening. Confirm hours and pricing directly before you go, as venue specifics are limited in current listings.
- Alma CafeAlma Cafe sits in New Orleans' Bywater neighbourhood at 800 Louisa St — easy to get into, locally focused, and a low-friction option if you're already in the area. It's not competing with the city's destination cocktail bars, but that's not the point. Book it as a neighbourhood stop, not a drinks pilgrimage.
- Arnaud's New OrleansArnaud's is one of the French Quarter's most accessible historic dining rooms — easy to book, spacious enough for groups, and grounded in classic Creole cooking rather than current trends. The courtyard is the best reason to visit: request it when you reserve. Not the right call if you're chasing what's new in New Orleans, but a strong choice for occasion dining with genuine architectural weight behind it.
- AtchafalayaAtchafalaya sits in Uptown New Orleans and draws a neighborhood crowd rather than tourists, making it a good call for groups of four or more after Southern Louisiana cooking without the Quarter chaos. Sunday brunch is the session with the strongest reputation. Booking is easy except during festival season, when the whole city tightens up.
- Bar ToniqueBar Tonique on N Rampart is the right call for a date night when you want serious drinks without a reservation system or a scene. Walk-in friendly, locally loved, and unhurried, it rewards repeat visits with a spirits selection that goes well beyond the standard New Orleans tourist fare. Easy to book; hard to leave early.
- Barrel ProofBarrel Proof is the pick on Magazine Street for serious whiskey drinkers who want a no-nonsense room and fair prices. Walk-ins are easy, the back bar is well-stocked, and the low-lit Garden District atmosphere beats anything you'll find in the tourist corridors. Best for solo drinkers or pairs; not the place for large groups or craft cocktail theatre.
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