Open Daily · Mon–Fri 7 AM – 6 PM · Sat 7–4 · Sun 8–3
Boulangerie Artisanale · New Orleans

Maison Bertrand
Frenchmen Street

Handmade croissants, sourdough breads, and French pastries — baked before sunrise every morning since 2014. Made entirely from scratch, the traditional way.

Ce Matin — This Morning

Croissant au Beurre
72-hr laminated dough
$4.50
Pain de Campagne
Country sourdough, whole wheat
$11
Tarte aux Citrons
Lemon curd, Italian meringue
$6.50
Café au Lait
Chicory blend, steamed whole milk
$4.50
📍 2214 Frenchmen Street
New Orleans, LA 70116
📞 +1 (504) 555-0372
✉️ bonjour@maisonbertrand.com
Special Orders & Catering
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The Croissant They Couldn't Find in New Orleans

How two bakers from Lyon brought a piece of France to Frenchmen Street — and why they still start at 4 AM every morning

By Camille & Rémi Bertrand · Maison Bertrand, Est. 2014

When Camille and Rémi Bertrand arrived in New Orleans in 2013, they were immediately captivated — the music drifting out of Frenchmen Street, the unhurried pace, the way the city absorbed people into itself. What they could not find, anywhere, was the croissant they had grown up eating in Lyon.

Not a reasonable approximation. Not something that looked the part. The real thing: shattering layers, a honeycomb interior, a deep buttery smell that fills a bakehouse at five in the morning and doesn't leave you for hours. They spent six months searching. They found good coffee. They found remarkable po'boys. They did not find that croissant.

"We were not trying to open a French restaurant in America. We were trying to make the food we missed — and share it with people who had never tasted it."

In 2014 they rented a small space on Frenchmen Street, installed a Bongard deck oven, and began the three-day lamination process that produces a proper croissant. Camille had trained at the Ferrandi School of Culinary Arts in Paris. Rémi had apprenticed under a master boulanger in Bordeaux. Together they had the technical vocabulary. What they needed was the time to execute it — and the discipline to never cut corners.

Eleven years later, the oven has not stopped. The croissant process still starts three days before the croissant reaches the counter. The baguettes still contain four ingredients: stone-milled flour from a Louisiana heritage mill, filtered water, Gulf Coast sea salt, and their sourdough starter — now eleven years old itself. Rémi mills flour three times a week on a stone mill in the bakehouse. Nothing is frozen. Nothing is par-baked. Everything is made where it is sold, on the day it is sold.

New Orleans has been generous in return. Maison Bertrand has become part of the neighborhood's morning rhythm — the place you stop before jazz practice, before work, before the city fully wakes up. That, they say, is the point.

Questions & Answers

What time do you open — and when do things sell out?
We open at 7 AM daily. Croissants and baguettes typically sell out by 11 AM on weekends and noon on weekdays. Bread loaves are often gone by 2 PM. We recommend arriving early or calling ahead to reserve specific items.
Do you take special orders and catering?
Yes — we accept special orders for parties, weddings, corporate events, and private gatherings. Custom cakes, bread baskets, pastry platters, and catering packages are available with at least 72 hours advance notice. Contact us at bonjour@maisonbertrand.com for pricing and availability.
Do you offer wholesale accounts?
We supply baguettes, sourdough loaves, and pastries to a small number of restaurant and café partners in the Greater New Orleans area. If you are a food service operator interested in a wholesale account, please email wholesale@maisonbertrand.com.
Do you have gluten-free options?
We have a small selection of naturally gluten-free items — including our flourless chocolate cake and certain macarons. However, our kitchen handles wheat flour throughout the day and we cannot guarantee a gluten-free environment. Guests with celiac disease should exercise caution and speak with staff before ordering.

Le Journal All posts →

Mar 4
2025
Why Croissant Dough Takes Three Days
What happens at each stage of the lamination process — and why every shortcut produces something that is not a croissant.
Feb 18
2025
Why We Mill Our Own Flour
Freshly milled grain smells different, behaves differently, and produces bread that tastes alive in a way that warehouse flour simply does not.
Feb 2
2025
The Baguette and the Law
France has an actual government decree defining what a proper baguette is. We follow it in Louisiana — here is why.

Commandez
chez nous.

Special orders, wholesale inquiries, catering, and general questions — we respond within one business day.

Maison Bertrand LLC
2214 Frenchmen Street
New Orleans, LA 70116
+1 (504) 555-0372
bonjour@maisonbertrand.com