Back to French Quarter Fest Tour: Sites near the Stages

Buster Holmes’ Bar and Restaurant

721 Burgundy Street
New Orleans LA 70116
Location Status: Same structure, different use
Curated by
The Ponderosa Stomp Foundation

New Orleans’ undisputed king of red beans and rice, Clarence “Buster” Holmes, operated an iconic soul-food restaurant here for decades, which featured plenty of music along with the beans, garlic chicken, and turnip greens on the menu.

As an informal clubhouse for musicians, particularly those associated with Preservation Hall, Holmes’ place served as a magnet for second-line parades and impromptu performances, as well as a comfort zone where players could socialize before and after performances. Regulars included legends such as George “Kid Sheik” Cola, Alcide “Slow Drag” Pavageau, Matthew “Fats” Houston, Harold Dejan, and — really — the whole of the city’s downtown traditional jazz scene.

The cigar-chomping and gregarious Holmes originally opened his restaurant at another French Quarter location in 1944, before moving in 1960 to this humble, two-room space, which featured a bar and lunch counter.

During segregation, Buster’s served as an important communal dining spot for people of all races, classes, and origins — a place where white locals (including upper-class professionals) and tourists from around the world sat cheek to jowl with the city’s Black residents, united in hunger for Holmes’ homegrown delights.

Celebrities such as Vincent Price and Woody Allen frequented Buster’s, as did red bean aficionado Louis Armstrong. Paul and Linda McCartney dined here while recording Wings’ album Venus and Mars at Allen Toussaint’s Sea-Saint Studio in 1975.

Holmes often gave away food or sold it at cut-rate prices to those in need. “’Course I feed ’em when they come in here and tell me they’re hungry,” Holmes told The Times-Picayune in 1979. “God’s been good to me, and I’m just returnin’ the favor.”

“It was not just a place to eat,” recalled musician and journalist Tom Sancton, author of the memoir Song for My Fathers. “Buster was someone that welcomed everyone. He brought together people of all walks of life … through music and food.”

Holmes became an ambassador of New Orleans cuisine, traveling around the world to showcase his cooking and often accompanying New Orleans musicians on their overseas tours. He also cooked and sold red beans and rice at the first New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival in 1970 at Congo Square, and for a few years thereafter. And in 1980 he self-published a cookbook of his recipes that is still available.

By the early 1980s, with Holmes in his golden years, the Burgundy Street restaurant closed, although a Buster Holmes outlet operated for many years at the riverfront Jax Brewery shopping complex on Decatur Street. Attempts to franchise the original concept at other locations didn’t pan out.

Holmes died in on Feb. 28, 1994, appropriately enough on a Monday, the customary day of the week in New Orleans to cook and consume red beans and rice. He received a traditional jazz funeral sendoff featuring the Algiers Brass Band and numerous other musicians.

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