Archive for the ‘New Orleans B&B’ Category

Artists in New Orleans

February 15th, 2011 by Nancy Fournier

When we first moved to New Orleans to run the Sully Mansion

As sample of the art displayed at the Sully Mansion

we hung up the art we had collected and the walls looked incredibly bare.  Of course we had moved from a basic three bedroom house to a 8 guest room B&B with fourteen foot ceilings so of course we had some trouble filling up the wall space.  We realized that there is an incredibly vibrant visual art scene in New Orleans that not enough people knew about.  So slowly we started to meet artists and those whose work we loved and were not showing in a gallery we offered up our walls for them to display their talent.  That was four years and over fifteen artist ago.  We are proud to have sold many pieces of original Louisiana themed art to our guest, introduce them to local talent and have beautiful things to look at all at the same time.  We just got two new pieces by an artist names Stacey Milliken who does wonderful New Orleans street scenes out of glass mosaics.  We hung one in our dining rooms and it make me smile every time I walk in the room.  The art shown is from another artist we have here Shaun Aleman who does funky colorful cutouts of shotgun houses, king cake babies and pelicans.  So many people know about our music and food but they often have no idea that there is a rich and engaging art world in the Crescent City and we are so proud to be a part of it.

New Orleans Musicians are Back in Town!

January 31st, 2011 by Nancy Fournier

Almost every Friday morning as our guests gather around the table the conversation turns to everyone’s plan for the day/weekend and of course this being New Orleans, going to hear music is high on everyone’s list.   We pull out the newspaper and listings in the Offbeat magazine and begin to plot individualized music adventures.  You like Dixieland- well we are probably sending you to Fritzel’s on Bourbon street, populated by European ex-patriot jazz musicians who transport you effortless back to the 1940’s.  You want traditional blues in a nightclub setting, either the Royal Sonesta for Irvin Mayfield’s playhouse or the Ritz Carrolton to hear Jeremy Davenport.  (There is the added bonus of midnight burlesque at Mayfield’s) Up for a little zydeco?  Wish you would have told us the day before because Thursday is Zydeco night at the Rock n Bowl but we are sure to find something else.  Love slide guitar?  Maybe John Mooney is playing at Chickee Wah Wah, anyway you get the idea.  This Friday morning we were absolutely amazed at how many fabulous New Orleans musicians were in town and playing at all the local clubs.  We are six weeks out from Mardi Gras, it is cloudy and in the 50’s so we know it is not spring time and the Festival season, maybe all these talented folks from Kermit Ruffin to Anders Osbourne to Eric Lindell to Shamar Allen decided it was time to come home for a little bit.  We sent one to hear our new favorite Ben Lablatt and the Happy Devils, another to John Boutee and a third to Big Sam’s Funky Nation, once again top quality a little something for everyone’s tastes.  So, if you are fed up with the snow in the east and the blowing wind in the mid-west and the non ending rain on the west coast, come on down, it is hot hot hot and full of music here in New Orleans!

Eating in New Orleans

January 21st, 2011 by Nancy Fournier

We love to eat and that does not make us unusual residents in New Orleans, maybe in Paris and San Francisco does going out to eat make up such a large part of one’s social activity.  There are definitely a zillion restaurants in New York City but I think that is because everyone’s kitchen is so small.  Here dining whether it is classical Creole with white table cloths or elbows propped up on oilcloth munching a fully dressed oyster po-boy food consumes a great deal of time, attention and delight.  Most of our guests come for the music and the food and we love talking to them about both.  In fact we have our own four page list of favorite places to eat we provide our guests when they arrive.  Our website lists our most favorites all within walking distance of our inn.  We take pride in our list, revising it every few months (they disappear – guest take them when they leave which is the sincerest form of flattery) and I take as much enjoyment adding a new found treasure as I do taking off one which may have a great reputation  but we just don’t find the food special enough or the staff attentive enough to make it on our list.  Changing the list meets my need as a frustrated food critic, and we try to have a good sample for those who are headed up to Tulane, down to the Quarter or strolling the streets of Uptown.  Now don’t misunderstand me, the demands of inn keeping and the fact that it does get pricey to eat out all the time, we do not get to sample all the choices nearly often enough- but there is one place which is on short top twenty fabulous places we went to last night after all the guests were taken care of and all the chores were done.  The lines were not as long as we sometime find them and the choices were abundant and seasonal.  After hemming and hawing and a long discussion with the server and a few samples I settled on the malt mocha chip and Guy had the salty caramel.  I cannot be convinced that an ice cream parlor does not belong on a list of great places to eat!  The Creole Creamery is in an old drug store a half a mile up the road from the Sully Mansion Bed and Breakfast and the 1950’ neon McKenzie’s sign still hangs out front.  With selections like Creole Cream Cheese, Steen’s Molasses Cookie, Mexican Hot Chocolate and Salty Smoked Chocolate Almond, the ice cream is rich, inventive and flavorful.  They have seasonal specials like blood orange sorbet and in the summer they are well known for both their dill and cinnamon ice cream.  Old, young, rich, not so rich, black, white, the place is always mobbed with customers peering intently over the counter to make their choices and they can savor their ice cream inside or on benches on the street.  If you cannot decide they have four and six scoop samplers and for the really gluttonous among us you can order the Tchoupitoulus with eight scoops and four toppings.  If you finish it all (by yourself) they take your picture and put it up on their hall of fame.

Yes there is a place for blacken redfish and bar b que shrimp and stuffed mirlton but between the bread pudding and beignets rich delicious ice cream stands on its own and I know just the right place to get it!

Romantic New Orleans

October 23rd, 2010 by Nancy Fournier

New Orleans is one of the more romantic cities in the world; the way the light falls on the intricate architecture, the canopy of century old trees, the smell of jasmine and sweet olive in the air.   It is a town of sensual experiences from the food to sound of a distant tuba and the irresistible urge to tap your feet coupled with a host of visual delights around every corner.  We host so many couples newly in love, steadfastly after all those years in love and everything in between.  We have had six proposals for marriage (all accepted) take place at the Sully Mansion and have hosted a number of weddings.  One this beautiful Saturday afternoon with blue skies and gentle wind off the Mississippi we are waiting for a bride to be and her mother to look at the inn for possible hosting of their late summer wedding.  This morning around our breakfast table a young women who has stayed with us four years ago when she moved down to New Orleans to work for Teach For America sat with her fiancé (who she met here) her parents and his parents.  The parents have met for the first time this weekend and as they spend the weekend tasting wedding cakes, sampling menus and music for the big day they bask in the reflected glow of this young couple starting a new branch of their now joined family tree.  One can’t help but feel that love is grand and romance is alive in New Orleans

A Community of Guests

October 17th, 2010 by Nancy Fournier

Every morning around the inn’s dining room table through breakfast conversations our guests create their own temporary community of commonalities and shared interests.  Usually there are places visited or occupations shared in common, or there are clusters of anniversary or birthdays being celebrated.  We have had mornings with wedding anniversaries ranging from one to forty-six years all around the table. Once we had all eight couples around the table celebrating their anniversary weekend!   It’s October in New Orleans so our table has been full most mornings and we watched over the last few day a shared community that be formed that was a first for us, based on parental and spousal concern with medical issues.  There is a daughter starting graduate school with mobility issues and another newly transplanted to the city with an abnormal pap smear and a wife needing specialized surgery and a son recovering from a coma. As innkeepers we knew little bits of these personal histories as we checked guests in and asked the purpose of their stay. Yet over the course of three morning meals we listened to the respectful sharing of worries and hopes for our guests’ loved ones and watched strangers become a close impromptu family.  We felt humbled to be a part of such personal movements. There are a million reasons why we love being innkeepers, many of them have to do with our enjoyment of hosting and sharing our remarkable city with others, but at the core we run an inn because we  like people and remain intrigued and moved by their life experiences.  These last few days we witnessed the sharing of the finest of human emotions, hope, perseverance and love all around our table and no desk job can give you that type of satisfaction.  We wish health and speedy recoveries to all.

Sully loves the Saints

September 12th, 2010 by Nancy Fournier

Just another week in New Orleans- national press covering
the Saints opening game, guests from Minnesota all decked out in Viking horns
and purple hair at breakfast and gumbo pots fired up for mid week tailgating
all at ten in the morning.  We rode our
bikes down to the Superdome to see Champions Square, just outside the dome, a
wide plaza ringed by NOLA restaurants, with these six story high banners of
prolific New Orleans athletes.  It was
such a festive atmosphere, everyone in black and gold, fleur de lis press on tattoos
and feathered boas everywhere (except for those pesky Minnesota guys in breast
plates and blond braids! I am soo glad we don’t have to dress up like
Vikings)  We have never been football
fans until we moved to New Orleans and suddenly Guy just had to have a white
Saints shirt for the opener (the black one he bought last year would not do)
and we have a huge TWO DAT banner adorning our porch and cannot think of
anything else we should be doing when the Saints are playing.    The
city got to shine for a national audience,  what a relief to finally have cameras here for
some reason other than a disaster or the anniversary of a disaster, and once
again we showed the country what everyone here already knows, if you want to
have fun and be around a ton of other friendly people who want to have fun,
hear great music eat incredible food and cheer for a national champion, ain’t
no place like New Orleans.Who Dat, When the Saints go marching in...New Orleans Saints Superbowl ChampionsWho Dat, When the Saints go marching in...New Orleans Saints Superbowl Champions

Katrina Remembrance

August 28th, 2010 by Nancy Fournier

We have been inundated all week with pictures of Katrina’s
wrath.  To live here and confront so many
graphic reminders covered in the newspaper, documentaries on the television,
oral histories on the radio, portraits of destruction in the art galleries and
dirges in the music clubs, it has been a long week.  There are more moist eyes, hollow stomachs,
catches in the throat and searing aches this week than usual.  The last few days the air has been full of remembrances
from people deciding to evacuate and the folly of what they took with them
thinking they would gone a week, not the months and sometimes years until they
could return home.  Those who stayed have
tales of horror and bravery which still seem unfathomable.

We purchased the Sully Mansion four months after Katrina and
came to inspect the property on my birthday, November 5 2005.  The city had been partially re-opened a scant
two weeks before we came.  We will never
forget what the city looked like on that ironically sunny weekend.  Television coverage never prepares you for
wholesale destruction.  Block upon block
of toppled homes, a layer of mud film on every surface and crevice, cars in their
sides, boats upended on sidewalks and the formerly lush city brown and fetid,
no birds, no sounds.  From that nuclear
looking weekend to today we were struck by the determination and zealousness of
New Orleanians to reclaim their home. 
Back then there were little purple yard signs claiming WE’RE HOME on the
lawns of those who had returned.  They
were our new urban flower.

We have lived through a New Orleans with no street signs or
doctors, no streetcars or water pressure, unplanned reunions in grocery stores
of friends unaware the other had returned, the tears in gift shop from women
who had lost everything- the marching bands so reduced in number that first
Mardi Gras, the aching sadness of Jazz Fest 2006 as each musician paid homage
to what was lost, the slippery feeling we would just never get traction to get
things moving again.  Still small steps,
some political gains with levee boards and assessors, block by block
rebuilding, mothers less frightful to let their children attend college here, a
growth of farmers markets, young people from across the country flocking here
to make a difference, new leadership, less tolerance for corruption and
apathy.  And throughout these five years
have been our guests, first just journalist and those coming to tie up loose
ends and move away, followed by the curious and those who love the city and
wanted to help by spending tourist dollars and for the last two years the new
and returning visitors who fall under the city’s spell.

We have lived in five different American cities and know nowhere
else would have people pulled together so tightly and worked so hard to reclaim
their hometown.  Is it all we dream it
could be?  Absolutely not, old habits of provincialness,
laziness and graft are still with us.  
Is our trajectory right? 
Absolutely, with new leadership and pride the city is on an upward
path.  Are we recovered?  Not yet there much work to do before everyone
can come home to a city they deserve and there is still six weeks left of
hurricane season and the great unknown of the long term impact of the BP spill
to determine.  Bu there is nowhere else
in America we would want to be.

So on this fifth anniversary of Katrina please join us in remembering
all those we have lost, thank all of those who have volunteered to help rebuild
our city and vow that this will be the year you come and experience this great
experiment in living and visit New Orleans.

Back to school

August 21st, 2010 by Nancy Fournier

New Orleans - Uptown: Tulane University - Norman Mayer Memorial

It is that time of year again when freshman from all over
the country start school.  This weekend
was move in weekend at Tulane University. 
This is the fifth year we have been part of the experience and we begin
to see a pattern emerge from the family who are up at six, at the table at
seven and ready to hit campus with their car stuffed to the rafters  by eight a.m. from those who rouse themselves
mid morning and saunter over to campus with the two duffles and a gym bag.  We will leave it to our reader to imagine
which ones are girls and which the boys. 
There is such a crush of emotion for both the parent and child;
apprehension, pride, excitement, and a tinge of sadness.  We have a table full of potential on these
weekends, all these young people starting their journey towards independence
and self discovery.  We know as parents
as well as from keeping in touch with some of these students over the years
that the path is rarely straight or expected. 
If all of us knew then what we know now, no doubt we would avoid many
mis-steps but our lives would surely be less rich and  treasured memories.  Here’s to the beginning of memory making- we
wish the class of 2014 the best.

A Summer Wedding

August 3rd, 2010 by Nancy Fournier

Things do slow down a little bit in the heat of the summer
here in New Orleans, but love is an all season event!  Regardless of the record temperatures and the
pea soup blanket of humidity, couples still exchange vows in the Crescent City
in the summer.  We were fortunate enough
to host another wedding reception  at the
Sully Mansion this past weekend for 120 guests (mainly a local crowd so they
were used to the beads of sweat forming within seconds of leaving the air conditioning.  We put up a tent which shaded our side yard
and allowed for expanded seating.  The
heat put absolutely no damper on the enjoyment of all as they snacked on gulf shrimp
(yes folks they are back) mini muffalettas, crsnowball manawfish monica king cake and of
course wedding cake.  There was a brass
band on the porch and my personal favorite- snowballs were served mid way through
the party which revived everyone’s spirit. 
No matter the weather- we know how to throw a party !

This Old House

July 17th, 2010 by Nancy Fournier

One of the great pleasures of operating a Bed and Breakfast in an old home is to be a part of the living history of the building.  The Sully Mansion was built in a private home in 1890 and as New Orleans is a city which treasures its past it has not been too difficult to discover the broad outlines of the  house’s past.  We have been aided in our inquiry by our neighbor who is the great great niece of the original family who commissioned the house to be built by Thomas Sully. We knew that the home functioned as rooming house in the late 1930’s when the remaining unmarried daughter took in boarders (hence the retro mailboxes by our front door).  What we did not know until last week was these rooms were turned into small apartments in the late 1950’s.

Enter Charalotte Stubbs from Frisco Texas who brought her mother Lucy Cox and her daughter for a surprise stay with us.  Lucy , her husband and Charalotte Lucy Cox at the Sully Mansion, her old apartment housedad lived in what is now the Royal Room when it was a studio apartment in the early 1960s.  What a wonderful afternoon we had reliving memories, trying to place where the stove was (by the dressing room linen closet in turns out!)  Charalotte recalled drawing on the flowered wallpaper while her dad feigned sleep.  Lucy told us about the charming Spanish gentleman who lived down the hall and had a thing for the women who lived around back who he eventually married!  It was just fascinating trying to imagine how the house looked back then and I was so humbled to think of all the stories which have taken place between our walls!  Guy and I have touched every inch of this property as we restore, repair and preserve this beautiful building and it becomes a richer journey when we get to meet the faces and learn a little of the lives who make up the past of the Sully Mansion.

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