Salt & Vine
Like a breath of fresh air, the modern, white-with-pops-of-yellow space of Salt & Vine seems to have helped usher new life into a once neglected area along Charlotte Avenue. Owner Mattie Jackson and general manager Hannah Schneider worked together to conceptualize the open design, welcoming experience, and dynamite food and beverage programs. Jackson’s wine list is an ever-changing joy of discovery, as the young expert (she’s a certified sommelier and has worked harvest in Napa) seeks out unique varietals and labels to put in front of her customers. (Bottles are available for sale at the neighboring Bottle Shop.)Meanwhile, consulting chef Molly Martin takes inspiration from Middle Eastern flavors to craft dishes that excel and enhance the wines, without overpowering them—so, spiced lamb meatballs and crispy Brussels sprouts become thoughtful partners to the list itself. All of this is wrapped up with casual, attentive service and delivered in a bright, cheerful space that begs to be lingered in. 4001 Charlotte Ave, 615-800-8517; saltandvinenashville.com
Fin & Pearl
When restaurateur Tom Morales opens a restaurant, you can be sure to find its seats filled almost instantaneously. His fans arrive en masse for what has become a signature style—there’s typically a rollicking bar scene, a lengthy menu full of options to appease all types of diners, and an army of service staff working the floor. His latest, Fin & Pearl, delivers on all counts, with added perks like contributing a much-needed seafood-focused menu to the city’s mix, and the having a goal to become a zero-waste establishment.Morales describes it as a fish house, but his culinary team, led by executive chef Matt Farley, has crafted something more ambitious: a menu that pushes diners into new territory, with options like a smoked-and-cured plate, charred octopus, and whole-roasted fish. Yes, there are more predictable selections (a stand-out chowder; cornmeal-crusted fried fish; calamari) and even a section of land-based proteins—but that only adds to the appeal for the masses. 211 12th Ave S, 615-577-6688; finandpearl.com
Barcelona
Today’s trend of small, shared plates is rooted in the Spanish food culture of tapas: savory bites to accompany glasses of wine. Opened in Edgehill Village, Barcelona Wine Bar draws on that culture, serving classic and inspired dishes in a savvy, laidback setting. One of nine such bars across six states, Barcelona defies the chain stereotype. Executive chef and Tennessee native Andy Hayes has the freedom to imbue a great portion of the menu with his own creativity, using locally sourced ingredients (i.e., meats from Porter Road Butchers and produce from Greener Roots).The tapas roster is vast, changing, and irresistible, beckoning many returns. Among the traditional plates of ham-Manchego croquettas, spiced beef empanadas, and potato tortilla, you’ll find Hayes’ twists. He plates Georgia shrimp, seared on the plancha, with red cabbage braised in pork broth. He glazes fried Brussels sprouts in a reduction of sherry. He serves crispy pig ears over a salad of fennel, endive, and kale. The Barcelona folks make it fun and easy to explore the world of Spanish and South American wines, which are available by the glass, taste, bottle, or in custom flights. 1200 Villa Pl, 615-327-0600; barcelonawinebar.com
Etc.
You could call this restaurant Etch’s suburban little sister, and you’d be correct—insofar as it presents a smaller, more intimate dining space in Green Hills, compared to the open, minimal vibe of the SoBro establishment. But make no mistake: Chef Deb Paquette has created a different experience and set of menus for diners at Etc. Hallmarks of her cuisine, like the broad and bold use of the global palate in sculptural presentations, are well in evidence. Nowhere else in the city will you find a salad of beets made into sandwiches spread with sambal-spiked chevre. Or grilled octopus in a swirl of smoked lima-bean puree and caper-kale pesto. Or tomato-masala-napped lamb loin sidled by confit-ginger Portobello mushroom, and coconut-potato croquettes. Further, pastry chef Megan Williams’ desserts are gorgeous constructions that complement Paquette’s work. (Don’t miss her buttermilk panna cotta with key-lime curd, torched meringues, graham crumble, and vanilla-lime whip.)It adds up to cozy, yet adventuresome, dining in a part of town otherwise known for its dearth of chef-driven cuisine. Judging by the crowds (yes, reservations are essential) the neighborhood is embracing the differences. 3790 Bedford Ave, 615-988-0332; etc.restaurant
Jeff Ruby’s Steakhouse
Posh. Opulent. Swanky. The Cincinnati-based steakhouse, Jeff Ruby’s, fills the lower level of downtown’s UBS building in high, Art-Deco fashion that’s personalized for Nashville. The ambience taps in to the decadent spirit of the Roaring Twenties, and the glitz of “NashVegas. x93 The food follows suit. You’ll be dazzled by the grand chandeliers and red Alaskan king crab legs on icy display at the raw bar. Perfectly cooked, cracked, chilled, and served with Dijon sauce, they are a supremely satisfying indulgence. Specialty rolls from the sushi bar are just as lavish, foremost The Godfather, where rare seared slices of filet mignon enwrap tempura lobster, asparagus, and avocado.The steaks here rule. Raised and selected especially for Ruby’s establishments, all come with the USDA Prime seal. For depth of beefy flavor, the Cowboy Steak, a 22-ounce dry-aged bone-in ribeye, can’t be beat. The same cut is used for the Music City Jewel, encrusted in chili rub and crowned with roasted cippolini onions and shishito peppers. Paramount to the Jeff Ruby’s experience is polished artful service, a style of which harkens to another time and carries seamlessly throughout the meal. You leave feeling like you’ve spent time pampered in the lap of luxury. 300 4th Ave N, 615-434-4300; jeffruby.com
Urban Cowboy
This neighborly public house in Lockeland Springs has a kind of Wild West-meets-Route 66-meets-It City aesthetic that makes it one of the most exciting and unusual gathering spots in town. It is the creation of Lyon Porter and Jersey Banks, owners of the adjacent Urban Cowboy B&B. Inside the bar and dining hall, exposed brick walls and a beamed ceiling give it a rustic saloon feel. And there are artful, campy design elements: hammered metal stars, Navaho style blankets, bleached cow skulls, a vintage cigarette machine. A roll-up garage door opens to the courtyard, where you pull up a chair around the campfire and hang out with friends.A retro van, outfitted with a kitchen, is permanently parked on the grounds. The centerpiece, though, is the wood-fired cook station, over which a team of talented chefs has free rein. Inspired by the gaucho-style, open-range cuisine of Argentine chef Francis Mallman, the guys—Tom Bayless, Colby Landiss, and Matthew Mosshart—are firing up the likes of charred stuffed onions, lemon-smoked chicken, and deeply smoked all-beef Cowboy Chili. It’s terrific fare, especially when paired with Urban Cowboy cocktails, heady quaffs as fashioned by mixologists Matt Izaquire and Brice Hoffman. 103 N 16th St, 347-840-0525; urbancowboybnb.com
Nicky’s Coal Fired
After Caroline and Tony Galzin, there was hope they would stay in town and reappear somewhere. The fact that they stayed in The Nations makes it even better for fans of West Nashville’s nascent culinary boom.The pasta dishes are thoughtful, elevated, and, most importantly, well-prepared enough that they could find their way onto menus at high-ranking Italian joints on both coasts. They don’t mess up daily fish and steak offerings, either, using great cuts and cooking them to perfection in the purgatory of the signature coal oven.We mention those plates first because this is more like atomic energy where the sum is greater than the parts. People will always look to the pizza first, and that’s fine, because they are really good, with dough that puffs and blisters within seconds, yielding tasty, thin pies. That’s just to remind everyone to look beyond the pizza to really appreciate Galzin’s deft touch. 5026 Centennial Blvd, 615-678-4289; nickysnashville.com
Bastion
What started as a gloriously superficial paean to nachos evolved into something deeper, something we’ve come to expect from Josh Habiger’s imagination. Yes, it was the “adulting x93 bar that we first fell in love with, the stark simplicity of the playful antique mall decor, and those damn nachos. The cocktails were good, too, and the list a relief in its brevity.The restaurant, though, cements the relationship between Habiger and his fans. Interactive, teasing, delicious: It’s a return, with a twist, from what he started at the Catbird Seat.It’s all hidden from the subtle carnival at the bar, like a secret. The small space is just intimate enough, and the food, no matter how bent and inventive, retains enough familiarity to be comforting. If you are willing to suspend your culinary disbelief and like the challenges of a tasting menu, but with a little more control, Bastion is your destination. 434 Houston St, 615-490-8434; bastionnashville.com
Marsh House
It’s a big deal that chef John Besh chose to expand his dining empire to Nashville. It feels even bigger once you enter the Marsh House, inside the Thompson Nashville hotel. The modern space, with a surround of glass looking out to the busy Gulch, is designed in hues of browns and blues, evocative of the Mississippi Delta marshlands. In these serene environs, you are treated to sustainably sourced fish and seafood of that region, as conceived by the New Orleans-based chef, who is long committed to preserving that area’s food ways.Besh has placed executive chef Nathan Duensing at the helm to guide the restaurant’s mission. From a humble bowl of gumbo to an elaborate presentation of crawfish-stuffed flounder with blood-orange hollandaise, it’s done with finesse. Details, such as a complimentary amuse of lemon-champagne gelee with blackberry pearls, or house-made cornbread madeleines with sea salt butter, spark the palate and elevate the experience.
Based on what’s fresh and available, the raw bar changes daily. But you can count on a selection of pristine Gulf oysters, a house specialty. Other offerings can include wild-caught Royal Red shrimp, and Crab ravigote—lush crabmeat cloaked in a lemony aioli that’s laced with horseradish. And the house-made pasta dishes, like squid ink garganelli with shrimp in lemon cream, are swoon-worthy. Thompson Nashville, 401 11th Ave S, 615-262-6001; marshhouserestaurant.com
TKO
In this era of restaurant hospitality groups dominating our dining scene, chef Ryan Bernhardt and his wife, Anne, have taken the culinary road less traveled. They are small, independent, and chef-driven restaurant owners. Their concept fuses Chinese and Southern cuisines, and their business model includes a no-tipping policy and revenue-sharing program with employees. Bold on all fronts, the couple launched TKO—that’s the abbreviation for takeout—in a new office and retail development on the edge of Inglewood.The dining room is spare, yet welcoming, and features an open kitchen. Take your place at the counter to watch Bernhardt and crew work the woks. The bar has a tight roster of offerings that complement the cuisine (yes, that Malvazija, a crisp Slovenian white, is spot-on with orange sweet-sour glazed fried chicken) and cleverly offers cocktails also in half sizes—sometimes, that’s all you want.
Menu selections change with the season and ingredients at hand. Favorite mash-ups include General Tso’s fried catfish in cornmeal crust; peanut-studded, twice-cooked pork ribs with collards; and steamed bun filled with country sausage-sawmill gravy. True, all of it is available for takeout, but it’s much more enjoyable to dine in—Bernhardt and his dedicated staff treat you like family. 4204 Gallatin Pk, 615-915-3102; tkotn.com
Top 5 Fast Casual
Bajo Sexto Taco Lounge
After tasting chef Kaelin Ulrich Trilling’s well-crafted tacos, we knew immediately that the tiny space inside the Country Music Hall of Fame, where Bajo Sexto originated, could not contain the talent. Originally from Oaxaca and the son of a star chef and culinary educator in Mexico, Trilling cut his teeth at restaurants in Texas before chef Jonathan Waxman scooped him up and dropped him in Nashville. Now, with the Bajo Sexto Taco Lounge, set on Charlotte Avenue, the young chef has spread his wings, offering a host of stellar and authentic dishes, from moles and ceviches to grasshoppers and worms (a delicacy, we swear).Dinnertime now offers table service, so, while this falls under the fast-casual category, we’re telling you it’s worth visiting anytime. Don’t be turned off by the lack of parking—the margaritas alone are worth a walk. 5303 Charlotte Ave, 615-678-1049; bajosextotacolounge.com
Top 5 Fast Casual
The Grilled Cheeserie Melt Shop
Rejoice! The food truck that has been melting the hearts of Music City since 2010 has a storefront in Hillsboro Village. Within the cheerful eatery, Crystal De Luna-Bogan and husband Joseph deliver all of the upscale comfort you’ve come to love from their truck. Now with a large kitchen, they offer more soups, salads, tots, and grilled-cheesy goodness. Plus, a milkshake bar! After you’ve had a hot-off-the-griddle spinach-artichoke-gruyere sandwich with some crispy seasoned tots, indulge in a double-Dutch chocolate malt, swirled with Jackalope stout ganache. 2003 Belcourt Ave, 615-203-0351; grilledcheeserie.comTop 5 Fast Casual
Funk Seoul Brother
BJ Lofback arrived on the food-truck circuit six years ago, piloting Riff’s and purveying his global-inspired fare. Over time, he trained his focus on Korean and Japanese street foods—and his riffs on them, like massive sushi burritos, Korean barbecued beef tacos, and ponzu-kale poke bowls. And Funk Seoul Brother was born. Last year, Lofback found a permanent home for FSB, transforming GoGo Sushi in Midtown. The place is fast and fun, decorated in vibrant colors and pop-culture imagery. While the truck still roams the city, the shop is a constant for the addictive likes of spicy tuna nachos and kimchi crack rice. 2057 Scarritt Pl, 615-891-7690; funkseoultruck.comTop 5 Fast Casual
Little Mosko’s Muncheonette & Bake Shop
There’s big talent in Little Mosko’s kitchen, where chef Lauren Moskovitz and her partner, chef Alex Grainger, make scrumptious breakfast and lunch dishes. More than an homage to the Muncheonette started by her parents in the late ’70s, the eatery showcases Moskovitz’s masterful gluten-free baking and Grainger’s crazy-good sandwiches. We’re fans of his Italian beef and giardinera, his avocado toast with chili flakes and fried egg, and anything with his Bolognese sauce. Moskovitz’s confections are some of the best in the city. Try her kitchen-sink cookies or her version of the Little Debbie oatmeal cream pie. And her lemon-ricotta Pancakes are ethereal. 41 Peabody St, 615-727-8555; littlemoskos.comTop 5 Fast Casual
Vui’s Kitchen
Kien Giang, Miss Saigon, VN Pho and Deli: these stalwarts of Vietnamese cuisine have long been established on Charlotte Pike. In opening her fast-casual eatery in Berry Hill, Vui Hunt has broadened the scope, adding her distinct voice to that delicious chorus. In so doing, she’s made the dishes of her homeland more accessible. With her focus on fresh and healthy—Hunt is behind the popular I Love Juice Bar shops—she presents a concise menu, adaptable to an array of diets and tastes. Shrimp summer rolls brim with fresh mint and chives. Lemongrass tofu is luscious, whether tucked in a Banh Mi or added to Vui’s salad. A noodle bowl of veggies and grilled pork belly delivers guilt-free soul satisfaction. 2832 Bransford Ave, 615-241-8847; vuiskitchen.comTop 5 Like New
Le Sel
Known for excellence in conceptualization, execution, and service, Strategic Hospitality, owned by brothers Benjamin and Max Goldberg, went through a hiccup shortly after opening the ambitious Le Sel when their original chef departed. After a brief interim, chef Brian Rea took over last summer and helped right the ship, coaxing a more casual elegance into the menu. Now, it feels more like the accessible and familiar bistro that it was inspired to be. From starters, like a cheese-laden onion soup gratinée and foie gras pâté, to plats du jour that might include baked oysters or a seafood crepe, the dishes are approachable, yet refined. With Rea in the kitchen, there is plenty about Le Sel that is worth discovering anew. 1922 Adelicia Ave, 615-490-8550; leselnashville.comTop 5 Like New
1808 Grille
A personnel change at one of Nashville’s most solid hotel dining rooms has resulted in a thorough menu revamp. Chef Kerri Roach, who arrived via Seattle, brings a whole new and elevated sensibility to this charmer. Roach’s refined style shows up in dishes like a neatly wrapped package of Swiss chard folded around fontina cheese and truffle, or in an indulgent fennel gratin. She also employs some of her favorite flavors of the Pacific Northwest, with a simple and lovely cold-smoked scallop topped with caviar. The dining room might see changes, and the wine list continues to evolve. But, with Roach at the helm, 1808 is worth revisiting now. Hutton Hotel, 1808 West End Ave, 615-340-0012; 1808grille.comTop 5 Like New
Treehouse
This playful, East-Nashville gem, tucked just far enough off of the Five Points melee, could have marshaled on in semi-obscurity. The namesake space out back was novelty enough that groups would still come, but not so much that it stayed on anyone’s radar very long.That changed when Jason Zygmont took control of the kitchen. The plates became more beautiful, but the flavors behind the artistry warranted deep longing. He pushes envelopes to stay current, but not so much that you scratch your head. The fruit component of a lamb dish might be a “blueberry-lemon-thyme jam x93 that makes you look up, if just for a second, and say, “Of course, x93 except you would never have thought to do that. Thankfully, chef Zygmont did, and he’s created one of the best destinations in town. 1011 Clearview Ave, 615-454-4201; treehousenashville.com
Top 5 Like New
Little Octopus
The city’s dining center of gravity has shifted over the years and now seems to reside firmly in the Gulch—a plethora of openings, from out-of-town chefs to local independents, have found a home there. Restaurateurs Brad and Sarah Gavigan knew what they were doing when they planted their roving dinner party Otaku Ramen on Division Street; the transition of Little Octopus, from its home in the East Nashville POP space to a prime location near the corners of 11th and 12th Avenues South, seems to have re-aligned and -invigorated the concept.The interior is chic and stunning, giving a locale worthy of chef Daniel Herget’s dishes. The standout burger, the bright and tangy ceviche, and the popular lunch bowls seem to have a new sheen in this sexy, Southern California-inspired room. Perhaps, it’s the reflection in the gold-mirrored window or the stunning, Instagram-worthy massive octopus mural, watching over the back dining room. Now, it’s right in the center of the action, just where it belongs. 505 12th Ave S, 615-454-3946; littleoctopusnashville.com
Top 5 Like New
Martin’s Bar-B-Que Joint
It’s surprising, yet fitting, that Pat Martin opened his flagship joint the same year he celebrated ten years of business. The pit master concedes that it took that long to achieve the vision—and it’s one heckuva flagship. Housed in a former music venue, his SoBro hang appeals to tourists and Nashvillians alike. The expansive space holds levels for dining inside or in the alfresco beer garden; areas for playing darts, ping-pong, or shuffleboard; and nooks for simply relaxing with a cold beer, wine, whiskey, or a signature cocktail. Another boon: It’s given Martin increased room for his heritage whole-hog pit cookery, ensuring even more of his luscious pulled pork sandwiches, redneck tacos, and pit-master combos. 410 4th Ave S, 615-288-0880; martinsbbqjoint.com
>>> Best Restaurants Readers Poll Results
If 2016 taught us anything about Nashville's ever-evolving dining scene, it's that the bar has been set infinitely higher than ever before. Nashvillians now have great expectations when they seek out new dining experiences, whether it's with an inventive and thoughtful chef cooking in a kitchen hidden beside a bar (while also manning the old-school turntable) or a grilled-cheese joint that produces mind-melting sandwiches and shakes.
Though Nashville has welcomed almost 100 new restaurants since 2014, we looked at the restaurants that opened between January 2016 and January 2017 and selected a very tight number to include on this year's list. As you'll see, only ten full-service spots get our nod for 'best”; we also call out the tops in a growing segment of the field called 'fast-casual.” To round out the list, we couldn't resist taking a closer look at a few restaurants that, after a move, a misstep, or a disappearing chef (another growing trend in town), have regrouped to create 'like-new” dining experiences. So, consider this the 20 restaurants you need to trybecause these are the ones proving that there's no better time to be eating out in Nashville!