GQ and Carbone Threw an Exclusive One-Night-Only Dinner Party in New Orleans
StyleChef Mario Carbone treated the Big Easy to his iconic Italian-American fare—along with a few surprises.By Samuel HinePhotography by Krista SchlueterFebruary 9, 2025Save this storySaveSave this storySaveOn Saturday night in New Orleans, chef Mario Carbone was waxing poetic about a muffuletta bread stick. “It’s so Italian-American, but it's New Orleans Italian-American,” he said. Since the original location of the chef’s iconic namesake red sauce boîte opened in Greenwich Village in 2013, a global appetite for spicy rigatoni and gigantic caesar salads prepared tableside (and consumed to Sinatra tunes in a VIP-heavy room) has brought Carbone to Miami, Las Vegas, Dallas, and Hong Kong. But not to New Orleans—at least not until GQ Bowl weekend, when GQ partnered with Vuori to host an exclusive one-night-only Carbone residency at the historic Hotel Peter and Paul.Though chef Mario was working the pass in an unfamiliar kitchen, everything about the evening was quintessential Carbone: There was the stacked dining room, where the likes of Livvy Dunne and Vuori founder and CEO Joe Kudla dined alongside Alix Earle, Anthony Ramos, Duke Riley, Leon Bridges, Benito Skinner, and Emily Adams Bode Aujla; the nostalgic soundtrack, courtesy of DJ Kitty Ca$h, who dialed up the Allen Touissant and Fats Domino; the menu mainstays, like plump beef-and-veal meatballs enrobed in exquisite marinara sauce; and a few surprises, like those olive-and-mortadella-studded muffuletta bread sticks, which the Carbone team sourced in collaboration with local bakery Ayu. Said chef Mario, “On a night like this where where I get to do the food in a city that's not my home, I want to use as many of the local places and food artisans to help with my menu, to give people a little taste of both Carbone, of course, but also the city of New Orleans.”1/44Diego Osorio, Mario Carbone, Eiza Gonzalez2/44Kaytranada3/44Anthony Ramos4/44Elan Kudla, Vuori Founder & CEO Joe Kudla and Livvy Dunne5/44EJ Lagasse and Mario Carbone6/44Duke Riley7/44GQ global editorial director Will Welch and Joe Kudla8/44Kurt Beers and Emily Bode9/44Leon Bridges10/44Braxton Berrios and Alix Earle11/44Benito Skinner and Terry O'Connor12/44Ellie Thumann13/44FLO14/4415/4416/4417/44Karrueche Tran18/44Ellie Thurmann19/44Mario Carbone20/44DJ Kitty Ca$h21/44Rich Kleiman22/4423/44Jim Gray24/4425/44EJ Lagasse26/4427/4428/44Braxton Berrios, Alix Earle, Ashtin Earle29/44GQ's Roxanne Behr, Brett Martin, Samuel Hine, and Kira Henehan30/4431/4432/4433/44Kaytranada34/44Benito Skinner and Terry O'Connor35/4436/44GQ's Samuel Hine and Mario Carbone37/4438/4439/44Joe Kudla and Jim Gray40/4441/4442/4443/44Karrueche Tran44/44Samuel Hine is GQ’s Senior Fashion Writer. Sam joined GQ Style, the erstwhile quarterly fashion and luxury publication, as an editorial assistant in 2016. In 2019, he became a style editor at GQ, and was appointed to his current role in 2022. Alongside Noah Johnson and Rachel Tashjian, Sam hosted ... Read moreSenior Fashion WriterXInstagramRelated Stories for GQGQ BowlRead MoreStyleTake an All-Access Backstage Tour of the 2025 GQ Bowl Fashion ShowBy Matthew RobersonStyleBode Rec. Spring 2025: See All the Runway Looks from GQ BowlBy Samuel HineStyleTouchdown! Inside the GQ Bowl in New Orleans, Where Football Stars and Supermodels Went from the Bode Runway to the Dance FloorBy Samuel HineWatchesThe 2025 GQ Bowl Fashion Show: See the Best Celebrity Watches From the Green CarpetBy Cam Wolf
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On Saturday night in New Orleans, chef Mario Carbone was waxing poetic about a muffuletta bread stick. “It’s so Italian-American, but it's New Orleans Italian-American,” he said. Since the original location of the chef’s iconic namesake red sauce boîte opened in Greenwich Village in 2013, a global appetite for spicy rigatoni and gigantic caesar salads prepared tableside (and consumed to Sinatra tunes in a VIP-heavy room) has brought Carbone to Miami, Las Vegas, Dallas, and Hong Kong. But not to New Orleans—at least not until GQ Bowl weekend, when GQ partnered with Vuori to host an exclusive one-night-only Carbone residency at the historic Hotel Peter and Paul.
Though chef Mario was working the pass in an unfamiliar kitchen, everything about the evening was quintessential Carbone: There was the stacked dining room, where the likes of Livvy Dunne and Vuori founder and CEO Joe Kudla dined alongside Alix Earle, Anthony Ramos, Duke Riley, Leon Bridges, Benito Skinner, and Emily Adams Bode Aujla; the nostalgic soundtrack, courtesy of DJ Kitty Ca$h, who dialed up the Allen Touissant and Fats Domino; the menu mainstays, like plump beef-and-veal meatballs enrobed in exquisite marinara sauce; and a few surprises, like those olive-and-mortadella-studded muffuletta bread sticks, which the Carbone team sourced in collaboration with local bakery Ayu. Said chef Mario, “On a night like this where where I get to do the food in a city that's not my home, I want to use as many of the local places and food artisans to help with my menu, to give people a little taste of both Carbone, of course, but also the city of New Orleans.”