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Emily Dorio
If Nashville’s traditional steakhouse is your serious, staid uncle, then Bourbon Steak is the opposite—young, dashing, and always up for a party.
Set on the 34th floor of the gleaming new JW Marriott Nashville hotel, this handsome space delivers a drop-dead incredible view, as well as a dining experience unlike anything Music City has seen before.
It comes from Michael Mina, a powerhouse chef and restaurateur who has opened more than 40 restaurants around the world.
His mission?
“I’ve always said, I want to build a four-star restaurant for food and service—but I want it to be a party,” he says. “Yes, there’s steak on the menu. But it’s just a really great dining experience, period.”
Based in San Francisco, Mina was introduced to Nashville by singer-songwriter Michelle Branch—the two once cohosted an online cooking show together.
When the development and hospitality group Turnberry floated the idea of a Nashville restaurant to Mina, he says, “They’d hardly gotten the words out and I said, ‘I’m in.’”
In the works for nearly two years, the restaurant opened in September.
The most striking feature is that view. Mina insisted on opening up part of the space to the elements, allowing for an indoor-outdoor terrace—in warm weather you’re standing, breathless, at the world’s edge. On cold days, the windows are shuttered, but the view is no less spectacular, especially around sunset.
Because Bourbon Steak exists in multiple other cities, the concept is tight. Styled by famed interior designer Adam Tihany, the room is full of plush accents, mod lighting, and soft curves, and offers multiple styles of seating, from the bar to the comfortable lounge to the formal dining room. The service is consistent wherever you sit—everyone working the room seems to anticipate your needs and desires, and then graciously gets you what you need. It’s a trademark at all of Mina’s concepts.
And yet, this Bourbon Steak feels so very Nashville. Predators’ jerseys might be seated next to tuxedos and gowns. It’s the kind of space that suits our city’s unspoken requirement of feeling truly comfortable in a high-end atmosphere—whether that’s sitting at the bar with a burger, or feasting on rib eyes and shellfish platters in the dining room. Come in your boots or your Louboutins.
WHAT TO ORDER:
Shellfish platter, $85
Foie Gras donut, $26
“Instant” bacon, $16
Joyce Farms’ heritage brick chicken, $34
Tomahawk ribeye, $175
Potato gratin, $13
Overseen by executive chef Michael Lishchynsky, the menu is about half full of items you’ll find only at this location, including a foie gras donut, which is literally a flat slice of foie set atop a savory pastry with poached pears and a maple syrup drizzle. It’s outrageously over-the-top—but that’s why you’re here, right? It’s no small commitment to eat at any steakhouse these days. Why not celebrate?
Start with a drink, from either the “traditional” or “rebellious” side of the cocktail menu—under one, the Clover Club is classic with gin, vermouth, and lemon juice; on the other, its Japanese whisky, Lillet Blanc, and lemon matcha. The wine list pulls together standout producers from California (Scribe, Matthiasson) to Burgundy (go big with a 2015 vintage Domaine de la Romanée-Conti).
Your drinks arrive with a flight of French fries and dipping sauces.
As Lishchynsky says, “Yes, we’re in this luxurious space and that’s beautiful. But a simple, down home French fry is a very welcoming and warming way to get the experience started.”
From there, it’s a parade of steakhouse standouts. A shellfish platter of shrimp, lobster tail, and cast-iron broiled oysters. “Instant” bacon arrives under a cloche that’s lifted to reveal smoke-y pork belly and shaved Brussels sprouts. The wedge salad is a standout: an orb of snappy lettuce dressed in bacon, blue cheese, and buttermilk. It’s topped with crunchy pork rinds, too.
Some dishes are finished tableside, which provides that old-school flair, updated for the Instagram era. A Tomahawk rib eye is sliced ringside, and there’s a decadent Maine lobster pot pie, the crust of which is cracked open, emitting a tuft of fragrant steam.
If you gauge a restaurant by its chicken, the Joyce Farms’ heritage brick version, with its simple marinade and crisp skin, will keep you coming back. Alongside comes a short row of silky, liquid mushroom agnolotti. There are ginger, scallion, and black beans in play with the broiled filet of Bucksnort trout. And, for the pastrami-spiced beef short rib, Lishchynsky cures large, bone-in short ribs for three days, then slow cooks them for nine hours. That dish, he says, is his personal favorite.
The sides all by themselves are a meal: Delicately creamy, truffle-flecked mac and cheese; multi-layered potato gratin laced with gouda cream; fried cauliflower tossed with chiles and raisins. But there’s dessert, too. Mud pie made with Valrhona dark chocolate or Michael’s intricately layered banana tarte tatin—you can’t go wrong.
If you think you’ll need a nightcap, don’t venture far. The space, the view, the servers who have your back every step of the way—like any good party, it’s hard to let the night end.
JW Marriott, 201 8th Ave S, 34th floor, 629-208-8440; michaelmina.net