There are restaurants that feed you, and then there are restaurants that become part of you. Herby-K’s, tucked into a modest corner of the Broadmoor neighborhood on Jewella Avenue, falls firmly into the second category. This is the kind of place that locals bring their out-of-town guests to show off what Shreveport is really made of — not the flashiest spot in town, not the newest, but absolutely one of the most genuine dining experiences you will find anywhere in northwest Louisiana.
Herby-K’s has been a Shreveport institution since 1936, and walking through the door feels like stepping into a living scrapbook of the city itself. The walls are covered in photographs, pennants, and memorabilia that span nearly a century of neighborhood history. The booths are worn in the best possible way. The bar hums with conversation between regulars who know each other’s names and orders. It is comfortable in a way that only truly old places can be — nothing is performed here, everything is earned.
Now, about the food. The menu is built around the soul of south Louisiana cooking, and the gumbo is the undisputed star. It arrives dark, rich, and deeply layered — the kind of roux that clearly spent serious time on the stove. Order it with seafood or chicken and sausage, but either way, do not skip it. Pair it with a basket of fresh French bread and you have a bowl that will reset your expectations for what gumbo should taste like.
The shrimp Buster — a fried butterflied shrimp po-boy — has its own devoted following, and rightfully so. The shrimp are crisp, generous, and served on bread that holds up to the task. Fried catfish platters, red beans and rice, and daily specials round out a menu that is entirely unpretentious and completely satisfying. Nothing here is trying too hard, and that confidence is exactly what makes it work.
The drink situation is equally worthy of mention. Cold beer flows freely, and the bar has a relaxed, neighborhood-tavern energy that encourages you to linger long past dessert. On busy evenings, especially weekends, the room fills with a cross-section of Shreveport life — families, couples, longtime friends — all drawn by the same thing: food that tastes like it was made with actual care.
Herby-K’s is not fancy, and it has no interest in becoming so. It is a place rooted in its community, proud of its history, and completely at ease with what it is. If you are visiting Shreveport and you only have one lunch or dinner to spend somewhere that will tell you the truth about this city, make it here. You will leave full, happy, and already planning your return visit.