With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (2024)

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (12)

The recipe at Dee’s Xquisite Seafood is a three-part harmony of flavor. It plays through tight clusters of Dungeness crab legs, lobster tails, local shrimp and even the potatoes and corn. The tune goes like this: First, it’s boiled to soak up the spice, then it's chargrilled to add a whiff of smoke and fire, and then it's splashed with a heady garlic butter sauce.

Then it flies out the door, often as fast as the Dee’s crew can pack it up.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (13)

This signature style has remained constant. What's changed, dramatically, is the size of the operation and the prospects ahead for founder and creator Demond “Dee” Matthews.

“I'm new to this business. I never thought I'd be a chef, never thought I'd have a role in the restaurant business,” Matthews said. “But now I feel like I found my identity in the food world.”

It started with a recipe, and it was propelled by the support and urging of a tight-knit community of family and friends that still makes it happen every day.

+13

How this nonprofit is ‘Turning Tables’ for Black bartenders, tackling industry racial inequality

Watching bartenders at work, Alana Peck always saw something that called to her. It was how they hosted guests, created an atmosphere, shared …

At this time last year, Dee’s Xquisite Seafood was a street food side gig for Matthews, who was working full time as a mental health tech at University Medical Center. On the weekends, he sold plates on the sidewalk outside of bars on North Claiborne Avenue and by his brother Barry Matthews' barbershop, Xquisite Styles, on Louisa Street.

He was steadily earning a following and had plans in the works to open his own location on St. Bernard Avenue. Then the pandemic hit. Instead of folding, Dee’s Xquisite Seafood soared.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (15)

Working off the street, Dee's was already set up for curbside pickup, which suddenly was the only way many people were getting their seafood fix. The Dee's crew would regularly sell out. Matthews added more people and more equipment, and he’d still sell out. There was a car line of customers stretching block after block.

In September, he opened the restaurant. It was a big step up in capacity, but a street food vibe still pervades. People order at the counter, under murals by New Orleans artist Kentrice Schexnayder. For now, everything is packed for takeout. They can dig in on the spot in the covered patio up front, though most take their plates and pans to go. As they do, they pass a line of people on the sidewalk outside waiting for their turn.

+10

Vaucresson Sausage building new market, restaurant in New Orleans' 7th Ward

Juicy links an integral part of local recipes, restaurant menus, Jazz Fest food lineup

The demand was there, the brand was booming. But harnessing the potential of a street food success for the next step can be a tricky turn. One reason Matthews could do it was the people he found on his side.

“I'm the guy with his name on the door, but I have 14 other Black men working here together and we all grew up together. It's all one team now,” Matthews said.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (17)

Matthews grew up in what was then called the Florida housing project, raised by a single mother in a big family whose care extended to many others in the community.

Friendships made there endured, even after Hurricane Katrina scattered some and interrupted school for others. The same friends now run the restaurant with him.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (18)

“Every last one of our mothers probably changed the other one's Pampers at some point,” Matthews said. “They’re the reason this is happening the way it is. If we weren't here, these are the same guys I'd be cooking with in the backyard.”

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (19)

Dee's is a busy, bustling place. Outside, under an awning built by the staff, multiple boiling pots fire away over roaring gas jets, bubbling up the next batch of shellfish.

Big bins of finished seafood then go to the kitchen, a cramped den of clattering shells, flaring grill flames and one squirt bottle after the next of Dee's garlicky sauce.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (20)

The menu is stripped down and straightforward, with variously sized cartons and pans of mixed seafood, from the single carton to the family-sized "mamba package."

Boiled seafood tossed in sauce is a trend that has been growing in recent years, with the Viet-Cajun template being perhaps the best-known style. Matthews made his own approach, adding the key chargrilling step between the boiling pot and the sauce ladle.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (21)

This gives the shellfish a flame-licked flavor, with a result that merges the appeal of chargrilled oysters and straight up boiled seafood. Open a carton and an aromatic wave of butter, garlic, herbs and cheese gushes up. The butter sauce gets into the crab and shrimp and crawfish as you pull its meat from the shells. It also mixes in with the boiled corn and potatoes and dense, dark smoked sausage links that come with it all.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (22)

Crawfish is a newer addition to the menu as its season revs up. The mudbugs don't go over the grill — they're boiled, bagged with sides and sluiced with sauce — but Matthews isn't ruling out a future twist to chargrill them too, maybe in wire baskets over the flames.

As business took off, Matthews left his hospital job. He also reluctantly gave up his volunteer position helping coach football at his alma mater, George Washington Carver High School.

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (23)

He hopes to get back to coaching eventually, when the restaurant simmers down a bit. But then, he also thinks a second Dee’s location could be next, perhaps as soon as this summer. And he has a product line of bottled garlic butter sauce he's selling now.

“It’s growing so fast, going from hospital scrubs to chef’s coat,” he said.

Dee’s Xquisite Seafood

1401 St. Bernard Ave., (504) 388-8368

1:30 p.m. to 9 p.m.,Wednesday to Sunday

+6

At Cafe Reconcile, a new chef, modern soul food and a mission that resonates deep

Café Reconcile has red beans and rice on Mondays and seafood on Fridays. It has regulars who visit weekly. Sometimes the restaurant is slow, s…

+10

On Saturday, D.J. Johnson walked out of his new bookstore and coffee shop Baldwin & Co., greeted friends and well wishers arrayed in front…

+8

New on Freret Street, Business Bar blends restaurant and remote office, adds booze

As the day progressed at Business Bar, tables alternately filled with Mason jars of iced coffee and breakfast sandwiches, then eye-catching co…

With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (27)

Love New Orleans food? Pull up a seat at the table. Join Where NOLA Eats, the hub for food and dining coverage in New Orleans.

Follow Where NOLA Eats on Instagram at @wherenolaeats, join the Where NOLA Eats Facebook group and subscribe to the free Where NOLA Eats biweekly newsletter here.

Email Ian McNulty at imcnulty@theadvocate.com.

More information

+5

Ian McNulty: Around New Orleans, Friday seafood and renewed faith in each other

Entering year two of the pandemic, many of the things we love about New Orleans life are again being postponed, pushed back or thrown into doubt.

+18

At new Kenner restaurant Big EZ Seafood, Viet-Cajun seafood and Mardi Gras float art

From a small seafood market in Gretna, Big EZ Seafood made a name with garlic butter-coated crawfish. In Kenner, its latest location is out to…

New Orleans chef Kristen Essig to lead Louisiana-style restaurant in Washington, D.C.

Longtime New Orleans chef Kristen Essig has a new position leading the kitchen at a forthcoming Louisiana-inspired restaurant in Washington, D.C.

+2

Chef Rebecca Wilcomb departs Gianna, downtown Italian restaurant she helped create

Chef Rebecca Wilcomb has stepped down from her position at Gianna and left the downtown Italian restaurant's parent company, the Link Restaura…

+9

With covered patio, bottomless mimosas, Birdy’s adds brunch to Magazine Street complex

Tents cover the long, landscaped patio in the Framework building. Now, all the restaurants that share this outdoor space are under the same umbrella.

+12

Dunbar’s Creole Cuisine gets a reality TV revamp, and new hope to survive pandemic

The gumbo goes back at Dunbar’s Creole Cuisine. The urgent question now for the family here is how to carry it forward.

+3

Ian McNulty: Getting back to a crawfish boil with pandemic lessons on time and gratitude

As more people get vaccinated, it’s common to hear that life is getting back to normal. Hogwash, I say. Those of us who pursue life in Louisia…

+2

Oak Street to get another restaurant for Viet-Cajun crawfish, inspired by 'savage eating'

A New Orleans restaurateur best known for her Vietnamese flavors is headed to Oak Street, though this next project takes a different direction.

+9

Ian McNulty: This crawfish starts with garlic butter, adds cultural pride, makes statement

Crawfish is a Louisiana staple that seems endlessly open for customization. Gather any number of people around a boiling pot and you can have …

Ian McNulty

  • Author email
With garlic butter and brotherhood, Dee's Xquisite Seafood soars on St. Bernard Avenue (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rob Wisoky

Last Updated:

Views: 5692

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rob Wisoky

Birthday: 1994-09-30

Address: 5789 Michel Vista, West Domenic, OR 80464-9452

Phone: +97313824072371

Job: Education Orchestrator

Hobby: Lockpicking, Crocheting, Baton twirling, Video gaming, Jogging, Whittling, Model building

Introduction: My name is Rob Wisoky, I am a smiling, helpful, encouraging, zealous, energetic, faithful, fantastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.