LULU dine | wine

What customers are saying about us

"The food was perfect.."

"Oh Lulu, my sweet Lulu, five stars for you, darlin.."


"A 'foodie' adventure! Delicious, rich, and sumptuous.."


"This is a true hidden gem of Charlotte.."


"Excellent, friendly staff, top-notch food, impeccable decor.."


"..delicous, intricate, and authentic.."


"Refined French cuisine without the attitude.."

Examiner - French cuisine at its finest

by Examiner - June 1, 2011 - www.examiner.com

Vous aimez la cuisine francaise authentique?

Lulu's dine/wine is an unassuming old house nestled nicely on Central in the trendy Plaza Midwood neighborhood. Upon first glance you notice the darling garden patio located sidewalk side in front of the quaint little house. Weather permitting, you should certainly do your dining and wining here, as the ambiance is like that of a secret garden!

There is a full bar in the front of the restaurant, as well as a cozy lounge bar tucked in the back. Naturally there is a wine list with a variety of fabulous French vino. Or if you are here for brunch, don't forget the mimosa!

BlackBook Magazine

by BlackBook Magazine - May 9, 2011 - www.blackbookmag.com

Leave it to a Frenchman to transform a small house into a buzzing bistro. Bar situated at entry next to the grand dining room. Candlelit tables clad in white linen. Diners range from bankers to neighborhood loyals. Go native with the escargot app, followed by the hearty beef stew, Daube Marseillaise as an entrée. French women don't get fat, so splurge on the Crème brûlée. Ultra petit bar/lounge in back of house and outside patio with bustling asphalt view. Bon Appétit.

Charlotte Magazine - Lulu on the Green is Open

by Charlotte Magazine - April 27, 2011 - www.charlottemagazine.com

The owner of the Plaza Midwood favorite, Lulu dine|wine, opened a new restaurant last week. Lulu on the Green is located in a small stone kiosk on the new greenway on Kings Drive, just across from Mama Ricotta's and Meskerem. Open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., the new restaurant offers snacks like bagels and coffee for morning walkers on the green as well as tasty options for al fresco lunch dining including hummus, sandwiches, quiche, soup, and fresh fruit. And while options like a croque-monsieur and pan bagnat may seem fancy, Lulu on the Green is about as casual as it comes. You order at the counter, everything is $7.50 or under, and seating is all outside—something you'd want to do anyway on this gorgeous stretch of greenway with great skyline views.

Restaurant Traffic - Brunch Wars ... LULU weighs in

by Restaurant Traffic - www.charlotterestauranttraffic.com

Fabrice knows how to run a shop. This quaint little house on Central Ave in Plaza Midwood has been a go to in the neighborhood for years. Quality food and service keeps things fresh and signature items keeps people coming back.

The Croque Madame never disappoints. The grits, to their credit, are much more low country fantastic than French traditional, with pimento cheese if you like. Fabrice never stops working the room and checking on customers. He just finished the private room with a dedicated bar that is a great semi-private setting.

Don’t just go for brunch though. He keeps the menu fresh and seasonal. The specials are inventive and consistent.

360Charlotte.com

by 360Charlotte - www.360charlotte.com

Come find out why the Charlotte Observer said, “Lulu’s got everything a restaurant freak could want,” and recently awarded Lulu with The Best Bistro Award. Situated inside a charming 1920’s style bungalow in the trendy Plaza-Midwood district, just minutes from Uptown Charlotte, our bistro transports you to a world where service is delivered with causal elegance and the menu highlights the best of each season with local, small farm ingredients.

Come visit the Plaza-Midwood district, just minutes from Uptown Charlotte to enjoy our chef-driven menu of what can only be labled as "comfort foods painted with a Dali-esque sense of humor", soak in the sun on our porch and be prepared to enjoy a dining experience in Charlotte you will not forget.

New summer menus have begun!! These menus are our most extensive menu change, keeping only a few of the "very favorites" and expanding each one to give our customers even more reasons to come back and explore.

EventSeekr - Friendly Neighborhood Bistro

by Eventseekr - www.eventseekr.com

Set in an old house, LuLu offers a relaxed, but still food-oriented atmosphere for its patrons. It is small enough to be managed by its two owners, one of whom is an authentic Frenchman. The food is also influenced by European flavors and combinations, and ranges from simple sandwiches to complex and filling entrees. If you're looking for bistro cuisine in a cozy setting, this is the place for you.

Charlotte Uptown Information

by Charlotte Uptown Info - www.charlotteuptown.info

Relatively new on the Plaza Midwood scene, LuLu is a real bistro, that is, not a place that attaches the word bistro to the name but is really a chef-driven restaurant. This is a small neighborhood joint offering good comfort food at a modest price, considering the quality of ingredients. It attracts a steady, loyal -- and nonfinicky -- local crowd for dependable lunches and dinners.

Creative Loafing - It's a LuLu

by Creative Loafing - February 22, 2006 - www.clclt.com

If the name Lulu rings a bell, it's probably because you're thinking of a deli/wine market of the same name, a favorite spot in SouthEnd, which closed a few years ago. The new Lulu is located in a small old house on Central Avenue in Plaza-Midwood. Owners Fabrice DiNonno and Chef Marc Jacksina opened this bistro-styled eatery several weeks ago. They named their first business enterprise after a combination of their firstborn childrens' names: Lucy DiNonno and Lucas Jacksina.

The location has already proved fruitful, although not totally unexpected. Plaza-Midwood is a fiercely loyal neighborhood and perhaps the last stronghold of creative individualism in the city. The price per square foot in Plaza-Midwood is lower than, say, Dilworth, giving entrepreneurs the chance to make things work financially without been dunned by an insatiable landlord. Lulu pushes the boundary line of Plaza-Midwood's shopping district a bit further down Central, which hopefully means more entrepreneurs will follow.

What I enjoy about Plaza-Midwood is the mix of people: from dinks to retired people, pierced punks to professionals. Folks here are out and about, living an urban lifestyle, as opposed to those sequestered by 485. The neighborhood has an eclectic, accepting face. Jacksina, who once manned the kitchen at the forgettable Kaffé Frappé in Myers Park, said he had wanted to be in this kind of creative neighborhood from the beginning. Both Jacksina, from upstate New York, and DiNonno, a native of France, worked in New York before moving to Charlotte.

The front of Lulu is aptly managed by DiNonno as he makes the rounds in the dining room. If you enjoy having an eye-catching Frenchman recite the ingredients of a dish in an accent dripping with Gallic intonation, Lulu is your place. (Um, could you say celery again?)

Lulu opens into a small bar area from which the friendly and inclusive dining areas unfold. Tables are topped with crisp white linens and crisper butcher paper. The front room overlooks the street-side patio, but Plaza-Midwood, for all its charms, still does not have enough pedestrian traffic necessary for sidewalk dining. This is fenced front-yard dining. At lunch, the aroma of gruyere (from the French onion soup) may greet you.

One very minor complaint: Lulu's sign looks suspiciously like the font-style and logo of another restaurant in town. I know imitation is a form of flattery, but Charlotte has a group of amazingly innovative graphic designers with original ideas.

Lulu's menu is typical of a bistro -- a real bistro, that is, not a place that attaches the word bistro to the name but is really a chef-driven restaurant. This is a small neighborhood joint offering good comfort food at a modest price, considering the quality of ingredients. It attracts a steady, loyal -- and nonfinicky -- local crowd for dependable lunches and dinners. Charlotte needs these small, humble places and could probably stand to have 20 more scattered around town.

While Jacksina is the executive chef, the chef is Thomas Martin. The kitchen is crammed into a tiny space, as is typically true of kitchens in old houses. Soon, the restaurant will get a new stove, but for now all the food is produced on a two-burner and a flat-top stove.

You can order from a deceptively simple, warmly appealing menu all day. Sandwiches, large plates and small plates appear side by side. Lulu focuses on earthy bourgeois cuisine served in ample portions. On the roster is lavender roasted half chicken stuffed with Brie; steak (filet) and fries; pork chop on ratatouille; Maine lobster salad sandwich on brioche; Angus burger on challah; steamed mussels; and an artisanal cheese plate. The brief wine list offers many varieties by the glass.

The superb sausage and red pepper sandwich comes on a crusty baguette slathered with creamy goat cheese filled with D'Artagnan's wonderfully spicy lamb sausage, and as catalyst for a satisfying sandwich, there's a spoonful of unexpected sweetness from the pepperonata.

Jacksina serves his snails in challah, kind of like the old soup in a bread bowl. This doesn't work. The snails are tender as a baby's breath; the challah is dense. Also on the questionable side was the heavy garlic on the salad accompanying the entrées. Don't get me wrong, I love garlic, but this garlic was not garlic-fragrant, it was garlic-maximus.

If the aggressive menu diversity of most new restaurants says anything, it's that more is less. This is true here. The breast of duck is fine, although more fat could be removed. The barbecue pulled duck topping is excellent; however, add to this red onion marmalade, a cabernet jus and a hefty portion of double starch sweet potato risotto, and the duck is eclipsed. The better entrée is the more subdued and balanced rack of lamb with Israeli couscous spiked with pistachios, tomatoes and olives.