New Orleans (CNN) — You'll definitely be called "baby" and "sweetie" in New Orleans. And chances are, you'll love it.
You may find yourself eavesdropping on a Catholic priest and a hotel banquet manager talking Saints football in a dimly lit craft cocktail bar on Freret Street. A guy named Montel may propose to you on Esplanade Avenue.
And while you may not leave the Big Easy betrothed, baby, you're pretty much guaranteed to feel embraced by this city. You may even fall in love.
"That's when I realized how special it was. I had to leave. I had to come back. I had to actually be an adult. I had to date the city, in a sense," Ball said. "I was courted by it. We went out, we ate together, and I actually realized, 'you are really special.'"
While the French Quarter is clearly a must, these ideas will take you to neighborhoods beyond the city's oldest section:
Second line parades
CNN's Family Meal documentary traces the stories of four chefs -- Leah Chase, Emeril Lagasse, Donald Link and Nina Compton -- in the extraordinary city of New Orleans.
He comes from a very large family. (His grandmother, Albertine Pichon Faciane, was survived by nearly a dozen children, 56 grandchildren and 69 great-grandchildren when she passed away in 1982).
For Garnett, the second line tradition of parading in the streets is an essential element of the culture he grew up in.
"Some people think second line bands are just for Mardi Gras. We use second line bands here in New Orleans for everything. You know, funerals, birthday parties, some people use it for divorce," Garnett said. "Any type of celebration. I think from where I have been, we're the only city that does that."
The bands are brass bands and along with the parade's leaders and organizers, they make up the main or first line. The friends and revelers trailing behind are the second line. The tradition is rooted in African-American culture and grew out of more somber jazz funerals.
A night out on Oak Street
"I like this restaurant Uptown on Oak Street, Jacques-Imo's. A good night out would be to go to Jacques-Imo's for dinner and then go next door to Maple Leaf and see whoever's playing. It doesn't matter who's playing. It'll be dope," Royal said.
Royal knows his stuff. He started playing the saxophone at 7 years old (his mom told him girls like it) and studied at the Berklee College of Music in Boston.
Garden District with a cocktail-to-go
Chris Hannah, the head bartender at the French 75 bar at Arnaud's, suggests a great Garden District tour.
Channon Hodge/CNN
When a James Beard Award-winning bartender suggests a daytime cocktail jaunt, roll with it.
Hannah left Arnaud's in October of 2018. He opened Jewel of the South, a restaurant partnership with Nick Detrich and John Stubbs, in the French Quarter in March. Phil Whitmarsh is the chef.
Hannah has lived in New Orleans for 15 years, and has often drawn maps for guests to get them to the Garden District via the historic streetcar's St. Charles line. He recommends getting off at Jackson Avenue.
"I specifically suggest that if guests are willing to have a cocktail-to-go -- which you should, it's part of the fun, free way of life here in New Orleans -- is to get a Bloody Mary at Igor's," Hannah said.
Igor's is a 24-hour dive bar, complete with laundromat. From there, Bloody Mary in hand, start zigzagging the numbered streets, soaking up all the stately Garden District homes.
It's definitely a daytime tour, because the impressive 19th-century cemetery closes at 3 p.m. Elaborate above-ground tombs are the norm here because much of the city sits below sea level.
Mardi Gras Indians
At the House of Dance & Feathers, visitors to New Orleans can learn about the Mardi Gras Indians, a tradition with African-American roots.
In addition to the lavish suits, the museum also showcases items related to jazz funerals, social aid and pleasure clubs, Skull and Bone gangs and Baby Dolls -- all New Orleans traditions.
Ronald W. Lewis is part of many of these traditions. Lewis, who has lived in the Lower Ninth Ward of New Orleans all his life, used to march with the Ninth Ward Choctaw Hunters.
"What I work hard at with my little museum is to make it a people's place, where the welcome mat is here. I want the world to know that what we do, under all the adversity is a love and passion for culture and maintaining that culture," Lewis said.
Crawfish and good company
Spring is typically crawfish season in Louisiana.
Chris Graythen/Getty Images North America
CNN Travel spoke to Brennan several months before her death about her hometown's food and beverage essentials.
"Drinks, oh my God, you gotta have a favorite bar, have a favorite cocktail. Mine's an old-fashioned. I want it at about six o'clock. I'm saying, 'where is it?' if it hasn't come by that time," Brennan said.
But in the spring, when crawfish are typically in season, a more casual experience is in order.
"You get a big table out in your backyard, or if it's cold, inside the kitchen, and you put the newspaper all over the table. Then you take the crawfish as they're boiled, strain them, and put them in piles on the table," she said.
"You can sit there and eat crawfish for hours and have a great conversation."
Ball, of Tank and the Bangas, suggests getting out onto the water with the locals.
"On the lake, you're going to go get you some crawfish, you're going to get you a gallon of daiquiri and some potatoes and some shrimp and corn, and y'all gonna sit on a lake and talk about stuff," she said.
Clearly, conversation is the key ingredient.
Studio BE
Studio BE houses "Ephemeral Eternal," a one-man show by Brandan "Bmike" Odums.
Brandan "Bmike" Odums
"I suggest people check [Studio BE] out as a means to get a sense of what it really means to be young, to be black, to be political, to be contemporary in this city," Lee said.
The first project, Project BE, gained national attention in 2013 as well as the attention of the housing authorities that shut it down. That led to a second collaborative street art project at a housing complex on the West Bank that became the three-month-long Exhibit BE.
The series' final installment at Studio BE is Odums' one-man show, "Ephemeral Eternal," housed in a 35,000-square-foot warehouse in the Bywater neighborhood. It opened in 2015 and it's expected to close in May 2019.
Odums hopes people recognize the power of art and that "we engage in these conversations about social justice, about identity, about just the role that we play on this planet next to each other," he said.
The most important thing
Tarriona "Tank" Ball (center), of Tank and the Bangas: "New Orleans is just like your grandma."
Gus Bennett
The people. That's what it comes down to in New Orleans.
She's right. Conditions are perfect for conversation: great food, a couple of drinks, a special setting, a welcoming atmosphere.
"New Orleans is just like your grandma. You come home, she's always got a hot plate of food for you," said "Tank" Ball. "And she's gonna invite you to her table to sit down and talk about what's ever on your mind."
Bon appetit, baby.
This story was first published in February 2018. It was updated in 2019.
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