http://cookbook%20icon

Cookbook Club • Get your library card and unlock exclusive recipes today.

Join!
close

Southern Chefs Are Redefining the Omakase Experience

Chefs in Atlanta, Nashville, and Charlotte give us a backstage pass to one of the South’s most popular restaurant models.

In a restaurant culture that frequently identifies itself through local ingredients, at first glance omakase seems to stand out as an anomaly. Is a concept that relies on regularly imported, fresh product environmentally and financially sustainable?

Spoiler alert: The answer is yes, with caveats. J. Trent Harris, chef of the MICHELIN-starred Mujō in Atlanta, says, “I think there’s a misconception. I’m not chartering a flight specifically for my fish. There are already international flights going back and forth— cargo flights and sometimes domestic flights that have cargo space as well. We would not be able to afford to bring in an entire plane charter—even if it was all the sushi restaurants in Atlanta, it wouldn’t make sense financially.”

Omakse Kase x Noko Media Selects Credit Mick Jacob
Kase X Noko

Chef Junior Vo recently opened Kase x Noko, a 14-seat omakase experience that is one of the most sought-after reservations in Nashville. “If people say they’re getting fish from Japan, a majority of the time, it’s not directly,” he elaborates. “There’s a distributor in the US. Through the years I’ve ordered in many different ways, and the way I’m using right now seems to be the most effective for me and the best quality. Yama Seafood out of New Jersey has been in business for about 50 years, and they have connections to Japan and everywhere in the world, literally, to get the best product.”

Harris points out that while shipping fish from the other side of the planet is “not necessarily the most sustainable practice,” we don’t blink an eye about importing other items, like coffee, olive oil, or produce that doesn’t grow in our climate. Plus, he adds, “sometimes our idea of what’s local can be a little skewed. I think we have to be asking alot of questions about the sustainability of our entire food system, and not just fish that’s coming in from Japan, because we have so many ingredients coming in from all over the world.”

Chef Robin Anthony of Omakase Experience by PrimeFish in Charlotte, North Carolina, points out that thinking of all fish as essentially the same product is also a common misconception. Along the Southern Atlantic coast, he says, “we can’t use local fish because it’s a totally different cuisine.” The exception is North Carolina bluefin tuna, which is often shipped to Japan rather than sold locally because of the higher price it can yield there. But with most other species, water temperature makes a difference; warmer Atlantic Coast waters allow for more parasites to live in the fish and also decreases fat content. Anthony hastens to add that this doesn’t make Atlantic or local seafood lower in quality. “That seafood is great for Southern cuisine. It’s not for sushi. But also the fish from Japan is not as good for Southern food because it has so much fat, it’s too greasy sometimes. The sauce cannot penetrate inside the meat. Different cuisine, different type of fish.”

There are also differences not only in environment but in handling: In Japan, the fish is humanely killed with specific procedures called ike-jime and shinkeijime, which ultimately affect flavor, appearance, and shelf life. In addition, Japan has a system of fishing and farming that has been in place for decades. The Japanese government faced issues of overfishing by passing laws to limit catch quantities, cultivated seaweed forests so wild species could thrive, and incentivized high-quality farming. Anthony says farming sometimes yields superior results: “With wild caught we don’t know what the fish are eating, but for example, at a farm in Gotō Island in the south of Japan, they feed their bluefin with sardine and mackerel. We can taste that flavor.”

Harris agrees. “We feel very good about working with Japanese seafood.

Dish Mujō credit Castellucci Hospitality Group
Mujō

They have very responsibly managed fisheries. I don’t want to give the impression that there aren’t great American fishermen out there who really care about what they’re doing. It’s just the logistics of it here. The whole system is different than it is in Japan. It’s very hard for an individual to get us the product that’s suitable for the type of cuisine we’re doing.”

Anthony says shipping has benefits as well, because fish used for omakase is aged. And seafood from Japan is often less expensive, for at least two reasons. “The government supports them a lot,” Anthony says. “And there’s the spirit of ikigai. Ikigai means you’re never satisfied.” Japanese fish farmers employing this mindset work hard to become experts in their specific area and are constantly in pursuit of higher quality and lower cost.

Even so, Anthony acknowledges, his omakase experience isn’t the money maker among his concepts. “We are successful because of [PrimeFish] that does volume.”

This is an area where Kase x Noko is doing things a little differently. The price point on Vo’s omakase menu is $75, as opposed to Omakase Experience by PrimeFish’s $325 and Mujō’s $245.

To do this, Vo balances high quality with approachability and affordability. “I focus on tuna and spend a little more on that versus another fish that isn’t so popular. I’m also big on sushi rice and seaweed.” Then he prioritizes reducing waste: “Parts we can’t serve as the nigiri will get a second life in hand rolls or tuna tartare on toast.”

All three chefs agree that they’d like to see some changes in the industry. Vo worries that with the popularity of omakase, some concepts are focused on the spectacle more than the quality of the fish and the guest experience. Anthony says he’d like to see chefs offer one or two courses representing local seafood where it makes sense. Last summer he used spiny lobster from Florida instead of Japan, and this summer he wants to use rock shrimp from the Carolina coast.

And Harris wants to see the US develop stronger logistics and learn Japanese handling practices to meet the increasing demand for omakase. “I would hope that creates more of a market and a niche for American fishermen to provide some of the seafood domestically we’d like to be able to work with,” he says. “That’s how we make larger systemic changes—there has to be demand for it.

Interior Kasa x Noko Credit Mick Jacob
Primefish
In the Field

Your Uncut Guide to Austin Omakases

Over the past several years, omakases have taken over Austin about as fast as the luxury lofts rising to meet the rest of the skyline.

From the Magazine

Our 2026 Summer Issue is Here!

Our editor’s letter in our 2026 Summer Issue of The Local Palate teases cooking techniques for the hotter months from chefs around the South.

Radar

7 Southern Restaurants Opening in 2026 to Keep on Your Radar

Nothing says new year like new Southern restaurants opening, and we are sharing seven you need to keep an eye on.

Cookbook Review: South Carolina Cocktails

South Carolina cocktails cook book cover image courtesy of Cider Mill Press Book Publishers)
Image courtesy of Cider Mill Press Book Publishers

I had the good fortune to live on Hilton Head Island for a period of time after graduating college. To say I spent breezy, beachy evenings sipping something boozy would be an understatement. Painkillers from Coast in SeaPines, Transfusions while on the Harbor Town golfcourse, and smokey margs from Starbird were my jam.

So, when I got my hands on South Carolina Cocktails, I was met with a warming familiarity and exciting awe of the state’s vast cocktail scene. Before diving into the drinks, author Stephanie Burt (host of the incredible podcast The Southern Fork), gives us a historical foundation for why certain spirits and elixirs are so relevant to the state today. With Barbados’ Caribbean sugar rush in the mid-1600s, planters were looking for the next best place that had solid wood supplies. They set up shop in Charleston and left their touch on almost every facet of the city, the most notable touch being rum. While Charleston still maintains the state’s most robust cocktail scene, I would argue that this book proves the surrounding regions are not far behind.

With the helpful background knowledge, Burt captures drinks that make up each region of the state—the Lowcountry, Midlands, Pee Dee and Grand Strand, and Upstate–and the restaurants and bars that make up these areas. Chef, mixologist, and distillery profiles are sprinkled throughout, from Ann Marshall and Scott Blackwell of High Wire Distilling Co. in Charleston to The Rabbit Hole in The Village of West Greenville.

No type of drinker is left out. If you don’t typically put a Breville Smoking Gun to use or concoct your own rose petal syrup, don’t be intimidated. The book is chock full of simple drinks, like the Spaghtettini from Leon’s Oyster Shop, or The Payday from Fat Harold’s Beach Club. And when you feel like showing off, Burt’s simple instructions provide the gentle push out of your comfort zone. 

Whether you’re a South Carolina native, grew up vacationing there with family, or have the privilege of calling it your second home like I do, this collection of drink recipes will only deepen your appreciation of the Palmetto State, one sip at a time. 

 “Red Wedding” Cocktail

I’m a Kentucky native, so surprise! I gravitated towards the bourbon-forward beverages. Despite its dominating presence in the Bluegrass, the brown water has a rich influence in South Carolina, which Burt’s historical context backs up. 

Planning ahead is necessary for this “Red Wedding” from Edmund’s Oast in Charleston. I followed the proper steps for the hibiscus ice cubes on a Friday afternoon, and they were ready for a small cocktail gathering I threw the following evening. I couldn’t locate Amaro Averna at my local spirits store, so I decided to opt out, as it only called for a half ounce. 

The beverage proved to be earthy, herbal, then eventually, pretty sweet. If sharing with any bourbon-wary guests like I was, strongly advise them to let the cubes melt for a bit. I will note that some stickiness from the sugar prompted some uninvited guests (mosquitos) onto the patio as we imbibed. 

All in all, they were a hit with my crew and added welcomed pizazz to our early-summer Saturday. Those non-bourbon drinkers even threw the hibiscus cubes in with some vodka and were delighted with the outcome.

recipe heading-plus-icon

    ingredients
  • Orange peel
  • ½ oz Amaro Averna
  • 3 hibiscus ice cubes (see recipe)
  • 2 oz Maker’s Mark

  • for the hibiscus ice cubes:
  • 2 cups demerara sugar
  • 1½ cups dried hibiscus
  • ½ cup loose-leaf black tea
  • 1 (12 oz) bottle of ginger beer
  • A small bunch of thyme
  • 6 cups hot water

  • glassware:
  • Rocks glass
steps

Make the hibiscus ice cubes:

  1. In a container, combine 2 cups demerara sugar, 1½ cups dried hibiscus, ½ cup loose-leaf black tea, 1 (12 oz) bottle of ginger beer, and a small bunch of thyme and top with 6 cups hot water.
  2. Stir until the sugar is dissolved.
  3. Let the tea steep overnight in the refrigerator, then strain out the solids.
  4. Add the liquid to silicone ice molds and freeze, for approximately 4 to 6 hours, until solid.

 

Make the cocktail:

  1. In a rocks glass, muddle the orange peel with the Averna.
  2. Add the hibiscus ice cubes, top with the bourbon, and give the cocktail a small stir. 

Cookbook Club

Cookbook Review: For the Love of Chocolate

Phillip Ashley Rix, a Memphis chocolatier, channels Willy Wonka in his debut cookbook “For the Love of Chocolate.”

Cookbook Club

Cookbook Review: Tapas España

Tapas España, releasing in March 2026, explores the rich history of Spanish tapas shaped by global ingredients.

Cookbook Club

Cookbook Review: The Weekday Vegetarians Get Simple

Jenny Rosenstrach’s cookbook, ‘The Weekday Vegetarians Get Simple’, offers recipes manageable on weeknights suitable for the entire family.

Sarasota’s Coastal Dining Scene is Worth Lingering Over

This is whereGulf-Coast bounty meets chef-driven creativity. Along Florida’s Gulf Coast, Sarasota offers an effortlessly upscale dining experience where every reservation feels worth lingering over. Here, fresh flavors, global inspiration and easy elegance come together, inviting you to slow down and turn every meal into a moment.

Outdoor Seating Sarasota Florida
Sarasota, Florida
Tides to Tables

In Sarasota, seafood is more than a staple—it’s a way of life. From tide-to-table scallops to fresh-caught grouper served with a view, the region’s coastal offerings shine. Dockside restaurants and tiki bars celebrate the Gulf, whether you’re indulging in a lobster roll on a breezy patio or enjoying live music alongside spear-caught fish. Every bite reflects a local connection to the sea—and an invitation to linger just a little longer.

Global Flavors, Coastal Rhythm

Beyond its shores, Sarasota’s culinary scene expands with globally inspired fare. Korean barbecue meets interactive dining, Indian spices bring bold heat, and Caribbean influences add a tropical twist. Italian kitchens turn out handmade pastas and wood-fired specialties, while contemporary American menus highlight seasonal, locally sourced ingredients. Whether dining in a polished setting or a casual bistro, meals here are refined without feeling formal.

Fresh Takes & Everyday Indulgences

From art museum cafés to rooftop garden restaurants, Sarasota embraces fresh, thoughtful dining at every turn. Weekend brunches invite you to settle in with everything from crab Benedict to scratch-made waffles, while bakeries and dessert spots tempt with flaky croissants and melt-in-your-mouth Key lime pie.

A Scene on the Rise

Sarasota’s culinary landscape continues to evolve, welcoming new fine-dining establishments that further elevate the experience. From cozy cocktail lounges to high-end seafood and steakhouse concepts, the area is adding layers of sophistication without losing its coastal charm.

Steak Sarasota Florida
Sarasota, Florida


Dining Out

New Restaurants in Florida

Discover a vegan gastropub, neighborhood tapas bar, and an elevated take on the all-veggie diet at these 10 new restaurants in Florida.

On the Road

9 New Florida Restaurants to Check Out

In the Local Palate’s New Restaurants Issue, local contributor Lauren Titus gives an overview of new restaurants in Florida, from bakeries to cocktail lounges.

In the Field

Where to Find Artisanal Cheese in the Gulf Coast

Dayspring Dairy shares their process for crafting artisan sheep milk cheese and a curated list of cheese selections for the Gulf Coast.

5 New Southern Restaurants to Check Out This Spring

A

A new season of restaurant openings is in full swing as the weather continues to heat up, and dining out with good company is top of mind. Scattered throughout the South, delicious and innovative places have opened their doors, allowing guests to experience one-of-a-kind menus and intimate settings, and to make new connections over handcrafted dishes from renowned chefs. New openings are popping up from New Orleans to Naples, Florida, and up through the Carolinas to Washington, DC. We chose five new Southern restaurants you’ll want to keep on your radar this spring.

Kenji Kazoku

Old Metairie, Louisiana

Kenji Kazoku opened back in April, and since then, has given Old Metairie a taste of their signature approach, completed with dry-aged Japanese fish, sushi dishes, and a family-style experience. The moody interior offers an intimate setting with an elegant Japanese-inspired design. The restaurant is the newest addition from former Louisiana State University football player Malachi Dupre and chef Matthew Nguyen. After previously opening Kenji Omakase in New Orleans, the pair took Nguyen’s knife work and Japanese technique to Kenji’s newest sister restaurant. They pride themselves on the restaurant’s accessible, relaxed setting. 

Kenji Kazoku Interior
Kenji Kazoku

Fortuna Cucina Italiana

Wilmington, North Carolina

After opening its doors in May, Fortuna Cucina Italiana in Wilmington, North Carolina, continues to pride itself on its organic approach, craftsmanship, and respect for ingredients. This contemporary Italian restaurant offers guests a cozy, welcoming dining experience personally crafted by acclaimed restaurateur Giorgios Bakatsias, with a kitchen led by executive chef and partner Chris Lewnes. You’ll notice both authenticity and intention in every bite. 

Rye Bunny

Washington DC

After closing Tail Up Goat in DC last year, husband-and-wife duo Jill Tyler and Jon Sybert filled the space with Rye Bunny, offering a casual counter service experience with a fine dining twist. The new restaurant opened in April as it sought to set a new standard for elevated counter-service. The menu, curated by Tyler and Sybert, features hyper-seasonal dishes that change on a weekly basis to showcase different ingredients to guests. Apart from the evolving dinner menu, the restaurant also offers a hefty drink list, featuring cocktails, beers, wines, and zero-proof drinks for its mocktail-loving guests.

Fennel studded Focaccia Image courtesy of Scott Suchman
Fennel studded Focaccia, Image courtesy of Scott Suchman

Heyday Cookshop

Naples, Florida

Florida chef Kayla Pfeiffer opened Heyday Bookshop back in April after premiering on Guy Fieri’s Flavortown Food Fight and securing her spot as a semifinalist in the 2025 James Beard nominations for Best Emerging Chef. The concept features rotating chef residencies and a hi-fi bar as it looks to take on a more “cultural clubhouse” vibe. Heyday is located in Naples, Florida, where the current chef in residence is Jorge Luis Pabon. Guests have the option to experience Pabon’s tasting menu being offered for a limited time, and includes a multi-course tasting menu curated by chef Pabon with wine and vermouth pairings by Alexis White. This is a rotating event with each chef in residence. 

Safta’s Table

New Orleans

It’s no secret that The Local Palate loves an all-day café, and as of March 9, Safta’s Table has joined the list. Claiming their status as an all-day Mediterranean café, this New Orleans restaurant offers an inviting indoor eating space, filled with calming colors and chic diner vibes as guests enjoy breakfast, lunch, brunch, and dinner options. James Beard award-winning chef and partner Alon Shaya opened the restaurant alongside restaurateur Emily Shaya. The red-and-yellow-tiled café offers an assortment of beverages, ranging from coffees to pick you up and cocktails and wine to wind you down. And, for those who don’t feel like dining in, grab-and-go items are available along with to-go meals for the entire group.

Saftas Table Interior Image courtesy of Christian Harder
Safta’s Table Interior, Image courtesy of Christian Harder
Radar

7 Southern Restaurants Opening in 2026 to Keep on Your Radar

Nothing says new year like new Southern restaurants opening, and we are sharing seven […]

Radar

Nashville’s Hottest New Openings

These past few months have seen a wave of new openings in Nashville that […]

Radar

Our 10 Favorite Tasting Menus Across the South

Why try one dish when you can try them all? These Southern tasting menus […]

Sip Through Summer With This Refreshing Zero-Proof Drink

Ethan Coonce image courtesy of Jessie Kriech Higdon
Ethan Coonce, Image courtesy of Jessie Kriech Higdon

For Ethan Coonce, bar manager of Decade in Louisville, Kentucky, nonalcoholic cocktails are the next wave of beverage culture. “NA and low-ABV stuff is where my mind is,” he says. “I actually don’t drink except for work. When I go out, I’m ordering NA cocktails.”

Coonce prefers to work with ingre- dients that are naturally nonalcoholic rather than use an alcohol substitute. “I want to make sure that the NA cocktail is being looked at with the same kind of care that an alcoholic cocktail would be,” he says. The qualities he typically needs to account for are bitterness and astringency, which he achieves in a number of ways— infusing sugar with various flavors, for example, like candied citrus peel or even spruce buds.

For The Mauve, he was inspired by a number of things: First of all, the color, which he achieves by combining blue- berries and hibiscus tea. Then he pulls flavor inspiration from a milky, fruity Korean soda called Milkis. “I tried to re-create that idea, but trying to think about adding depth of flavor,” he says, “so I decided to use yogurt because it has that tang and gives it a richer fla- vor.” He tops it with a high-quality soda water like Topo Chico or Mountain Valley for a final touch.

The Mauve heading-plus-icon

yields

Makes 18 cocktails

    ingredients
  • 3⁄4 cup (7 ounces) lemon juice
  • 1 1⁄4 cups (10 ounces) hibiscus tea syrup (recipe follows)
  • 3 cups (24 ounces) citrus simple syrup (recipe follows) or simple syrup
  • 2 pints blueberries
  • 2 scant cups Greek yogurt Sparkling water for topping

  • hibiscus tea syrup
  • Makes about 3 cups

  • 3⁄4 cup dried hibiscus flowers
  • 2 1⁄2 cups sugar

  • citrus simple syrup
  • Makes 4 to 5 cups

  • 10 lemons
  • 3 1⁄2 cups sugar

  • special equipment
  • Channel Peeler
steps
  1. Combine all ingredients in blender and blend until well incorporated.
  2. Strain through a mesh filter.
  3. To a cocktail tin filled with ice, add 3 1⁄2 ounces and shake, then strain over rocks and top with a splash of sparkling water.

make the hibiscus tea syrup:

Bring 2 1⁄2 cups water to a boil and add flowers. Let steep for 5 minutes, then strain. Add sugar and heat until dissolved.

 

make the citrus simple syrup:

Use a channel peeler to completely peel lemons, reserving peels and saving lemons for juice. Add sugar and 3 1⁄2 cups water to pot and heat until sugar is completely dissolved. Add lemon peels and bring to a boil, then simmer for 25 minute or until peels are translucent. Strain out peels and discard or reserve to coat with sugar as a garnish. Syrup will keep in refrigerator for up to 2 months.

 

 

At the Table

10 Nonalcoholic Drinks for Dry January

It’s time to embrace our healthful resolutions and take on the Dry January challenge once again.

In the Field

Find Your Top Dry Bar in the South | Listen

Visit a new dry bar or bottle shop across the South and experience a budding nonalcoholic beverage movement with TLP’s top 4 picks.

At the Table

Upgrade Dry January With These 5 Nonalcoholic Drinks

Upgrade dry January with these five nonalcoholic drinks, mixers, and spiritless cocktails from Southern makers.

5 Southern Restaurants Hitting Major Milestones

“Continuing the culinary heritage of Emeril’s is a responsibility I take very seriously, and one I am honored and excited to work on every day.” —E.J. Lagasse

Restaurants come and go. But in the South, some have been thriving for decades, keeping their doors open through hurricanes, recessions, and the pandemic and becoming landmarks in their cities. As they celebrate milestone anniversaries, five restaurants reflect on their history of Southern hospitality.

Herbsaint has fed New Orleanians French-Southern cuisine for more than 25 years. “It seems like a lifetime ago; in restaurant years it was a lifetime ago,” says executive chef Donald Link. “We have had a lot of talent that has come through those doors.” This includes chef de cuisine Tyler Spreen, whom Link credits with adding “exciting new menu items” like the bluefin tuna tartare with housemade togarashi, joining classic dishes like the duck confit and gumbo.

EJ and Emeril Lagasse

On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina slammed into the city. Herbsaint reopened after five weeks of hard work. “The staff and friends that I wanted to stand by and [help] rebuild did the same for me,” he says. “It was a defining moment for a lot of us and especially for me.”

When it comes to standing the test of time, Link says, “there really is no secret. I have always believed in hiring the best people, using the best ingredients, and keeping the food delicious, simple, and consistent.”

Just around the corner is Emeril’s, which recently hit 35 years. The Louisiana restaurant, opened by culinary legend Emeril Lagasse, closed briefly when Katrina hit. Chef Emeril, who helped raise more than $1 million in disaster relief, led the kitchen until his son E.J. took the reins in 2022. “Continuing the culinary heritage of Emeril’s is a responsibility I take very seriously,” says E.J., now co-owner, “and one I am honored and excited to work on every day.”

Artistic plates like John Dory decorated with crawfish and foie gras in an oyster stew grace the menu, along with old favorites like banana cream pie and New Orleans barbecue shrimp (served at The Wine Bar at Emeril’s), which E.J. says has been offered “since my dad opened the restaurant in 1990.” Thirty-five years later, Emeril’s is still making history: the restaurant was awarded two MICHELIN stars in 2025, making E.J. the youngest chef ever to lead a two-star kitchen.

Mary MacKenzie opened Mary Mac’s Tea Room in Atlanta in 1945, and the Southern restaurant still welcomes customers today. “When we reflect on 80 years, words like tradition, authenticity, legacy, warmth, and genuine hospitality come to mind,” says Chad Reynolds, director of operations. “We approach everything by leading with our heart. We cook with a passion—that’s part of who we are.”

At a time when the restaurant scene still largely excluded women, the tearoom was a way for MacKenzie to enter the culinary space. She sold Mary Mac’s in 1962, and ownership has changed hands since, the space growing from one dining room to six. One thing that remains the same: “Our fried chicken has been on the menu for all eight decades,” says Reynolds. Today, Mary Mac’s is the last remaining tearoom in Atlanta, a peek into culinary history.

Martin’s Bar-B-Que Joint opened in 2006 in Nolensville, Tennessee. Pat Martin, owner and pitmaster, is proud of how far they’ve come in the last 20 years, now with 10 locations across the Southeast. “It means a lot to me,” he says. “It’s incredibly humbling and I’m grateful every day that we’re able to keep the art of West Tennessee whole hog alive.” Traditional West Tennessee whole hog, which slow-cooks a pig over live fire, takes up to 24 hours—but pays off big-time on the menu. Martin’s favorite is the pulled pork sandwich topped with Jack’s Creek sauce and slaw—“the way God intended.”

Martin credits his team and the community for the success of Martin’s Bar-B-Que, as well as “true Southern hospitality” that goes beyond smiling at the register. “Our guests can expe- rience that intention and passion in the quality of food we put in front of them,” he says.

Martins Bar B Que Joint Pulled Pork Sandwich Courtesty Andrew Thomas Lee
Martin’s Bar-B-Que Joint, Image courtesy of Andrew Thomas Lee

In Meridian, Mississippi, one restaurant has outlasted all the rest: Weidmann’s, established in 1870. “I think that the success of Weidmann’s is due to the legacy of those who have gone before us and kept the doors open through the tough times,” says owner Charles Frazier, who is one of those people. He purchased the restaurant shortly after it closed in 2010, renovating it and reintroducing affordable, classic dishes. Today, menu standouts are the Redfish 1870, served over a bed of Hoppin’ John, and the boudin-stuffed pork chop.

The restaurant, which recently hit 155 years, was planning to celebrate its sesquicentennial when Covid arrived. But Weidmann’s bounced back, and today serves their small community and those passing through—a tradition that harks back to the 1930s when Meridian was a rail hub. “Many frequent travelers on the train would walk the two blocks to Weidmann’s, get some [black bottom] pie, and get back on the train for the remainder of the journey,” says Frazier.

Shrimp Grits Mary Macs Tea Room

The journey continues for these Southern institutions as they celebrate decades of service. Here’s to many more.

5 Menu Items to Order When Visiting

Herbsaint’s Muscovy Duck Leg Confit
This tender duck leg is plated over dirty rice and greens in a citrus sauce.

Emeril’s Banana Cream Pie 
Save room for this classic topped with basil and chocolate shavings.

Mary Mac’s Tea Room’s Fried Chicken
The recipe for this golden fried chicken hasn’t changed in 80 years.

Martin’s Bar- B-Que Joint’s Pulled Pork 
Dig into a pulled pork shoulder sandwich loaded with slaw.

Weidmann’s World Famous Black Bottom Pie 
Each slice is filled with custard, but the best part is the eponymous chocolate crust.

On the Road

New Orleans

From Bourbon Street to bánh mì, there’s a lot to love about the Crescent […]

In the Field

Emeril Lagasse’s Educational Garden-to-Kitchen Program

Chef Emeril Lagasse can get any kid to eat at one of his many […]

On the Road

Atlanta

In today’s Atlanta, someone could give you a great recommendation for delicious global food […]

Good Food, Good People, Good Times in Little Rock

Cocktails Little Rock Arkansas Photo Courtesy of Little Rock Convention & Visitors Bureau
Cocktails

Inside the neighborhoods, traditions, and kitchens that make Little Rock worth the trip. In Little Rock, food is more than a meal. It’s a reflection of who we are, a city built on flavor, family, and community, where every plate tells a story. From Arkansas staples passed down through generations to global kitchens that reflect the diversity of the people who call this city home, Little Rock’s food culture is as rich and layered as the community behind it. Come hungry and come curious, because Little Rock delivers on all of it.

Little Rock’s dining scene brings a world of flavor to the table. You’ll find local gems serving Southern classics, neighborhood spots dishing out modern American favorites, and internationally inspired kitchens offering flavors from traditions across the world. Whether you are craving familiar comfort foods or looking to explore something new, the city celebrates cuisines that honor both heritage and innovation. Every craving has a home here, and every meal feels personal.

Farm-to-table restaurants highlight the richness of Arkansas-grown ingredients, crafting menus rooted in seasonality, sustainability, and Southern hospitality. Throughout the city, food trucks add even more personality to the scene, offering handheld specialties, creative fusion, and unexpected bites at markets, breweries, festivals, and neighborhood parks.

The neighborhoods are a big part of what makes eating in Little Rock so rewarding. The River Market District is the city’s most lively gathering place, full of local vendors, seasonal produce, and energy that makes it easy to spend a whole morning there. SoMa, the Heights, and Hillcrest have their own personality and locally owned spots that reflect the n culinary map that stretches across the whole city and rewards communities around them. West Little Rock and Southwest round out a culinary map that stretches across the whole city and rewards anyone willing to wander.

Together, these flavors create a dining experience that feels both welcoming and adventurous. Little Rock blends global tastes with local personality, offering a food scene full of warmth, diversity, and discovery. It’s a city where every appetite finds something to love.

The Standard Little Rock Arkansas Photo Courtesy of Little Rock Convention & Visitors Bureau
The Standard
On the Road

Little Rock

Little Rock has become a huge culinary scene for the state. Make sure to reserve a day to try a few spots you will always remember.

Dining Out

8 Noteworthy Arkansas Restaurants | Listen

Whether you’re craving delicious Italian staples or classic Bar-B-Q pork, Arkansas has a unique display of restaurants to choose from.

On the Road

Eat Your Way from Little Rock to New Orleans | Listen

A 7-hour, food-fueled trip from Little Rock to New Orleans has no shortage of great stops along the way. Just make sure to drive hungry.

Joe Yonan and His Mother’s Potato Salad Recipe

Growing up as the youngest of eight, Joe Yonan remembers his mom’s cooking for how sensible it was. Because they lived in West Texas and his mother was originally from Indiana, he calls her food a “classic Midwest approach with popular Texas ingredients.” There was a Texas salad that called for a head of lettuce, a can of beans, a bag of Fritos, a block of cheddar cheese, and a bottle of Catalina French dressing. “She was raising all these kids so it was largely about efficiency,” he says. “She had a tight repertoire.”

handwritten photo of Joe Yonan Mother's Potato Salad recipe

Having spent nearly 20 years as the food and dining editor of The Washington Post, Yonan became interested in his mother’s recipes when he started writing about food professionally. His eldest sister, Teri (there’s a 25-year difference between them), taught him most of what he knows about Southern cooking and helped him uncover some of their family favorites. “She sent me some things of our mom’s, and a lot of them were pages ripped out of cookbooks with her notes on them,” he says. The dish he remembered most, though, was his mom’s potato salad—the potatoes were always just the right texture and he loved that there was an added crunch of cucumber.

“[Teri] has my mother’s original copy of the Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook with the gingham cover that’s tattered and the binding is in pieces,” he recalls. Teri found the potato salad recipe and wrote it out for him, complete with an inscription—he’s held onto and cooked from it for decades.

Yonan has developed countless of his own recipes for both the newspaper and his many cookbooks (his latest, Mastering the Art of Plant-Based Cooking, came out in 2024), an exacting job that requires precise measurements. He appreciates that this recipe calls for exactly one cup of chopped celery but stays looser with six potatoes and one cucumber. What he loves most? “There’s no quantity for the mayonnaise. I’m a mayonnaise lover but even for me, I’m like, whoa,” he says with a laugh. “How much is the right amount of mayonnaise?”

More than most, Yonan knows the power of a recipe that transcends the page. “It still surprises me when someone tells me that one of my recipes has become a staple for them,” he says. For him, the magic here is the page itself, thanks to his sister’s handwriting: the perfect crisp lines of the recipe, followed by what he calls her “astonishingly beautiful” cursive script and signature sign-off at the bottom: Love you madly. It keeps him tethered to both his mother and to Teri. “That’s still how she ends every conversation,” he says.

Get the Recipe

Joe Yonan Potato Salad Recipe
Adapted from Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook

Mother's Potato Salad heading-plus-icon

yields

Serves 8

    ingredients
  • 6 potatoes, cooked in jackets (4 cups cubed)
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 3 hard-cooked eggs, sliced 1 cup chopped celery
  • 1 cucumber, diced
  • 11⁄2 teaspoons salt
  • 1⁄4 teaspoon paprika
  • 1⁄4 cup French dressing (Yonan
  • recommends Catalina)
  • Mayonnaise
steps
  1. Combine ingredients except dressings. Chill and marinate in French dressing, 4 to 6 hours. Just before serving, add mayonnaise and mix carefully. If desired, add 1 teaspoon celery seed or 1 cup grated carrot.
Roots

How Nicola Blaque Is Redefining Jerk Chicken in the South

The Local Palate sits down with Nicola Blaque to discuss how her Jamaican heritage […]

At the Table

This Spanish Custard Family Recipe Dates Back Five Generations

This Tampa restaurant has been in Andrea Gonzmart Williams’s family for 120 years, with […]

Cookbook Club

Atlanta Chef Shares Her Pie Recipe That Spans Four Generations

Atlanta chef Erika Council’s legacy can be found in stacks of recipes she keeps […]

Nashville’s Hottest New Openings

Fine dining is back, Nashville. These past few months have seen a wave of new restaurants (and a few updates), many of which have landed here from other cities and are aiming to raise the stakes (and steaks). It’s not all flashy and new—this year marks 25 years for restaurants like Park Café and Margot Café and Bar (get in before they close their doors on June 5), while other concepts are getting a refresh.

Bad Idea recently welcomed a new menu thanks to consulting chef David Breeden, who came up in the world of Thomas Keller—the new range of wine-friendly dishes fully supports owner Alex Burch’s always-impressive wine program, while also adding a bit of whimsy. Look for chicken “BcNuggets” dolloped with crème fraîche, a caviar-loaded parfait, and a standout strip steak with its potato and comte blini. Present Tense moved to a new location in the heart of Wedgewood-Houston and into a fully realized izakaya and vinyl bar with an omakase, plus Japanese-bistro-inspired dishes and a smart sake program. Meanwhile, chef Julio Hernandez of Maiz de la Vida recently revamped his Clarksville Pike tortilla shop into Fonda Fina, a 12-seat dine-in space serving classics like quesabirria and flautas and the team behind Peninsula opened a new bar concept, Charmers, in Germantown’s Neuhoff District (go, immediately, for the burger).  

There’s also more coming, including Sally’s Stay Awhile from Strategic Hospitality with chef Andy Little at the helm, plus Chicago concepts Momotaro, Middleman, and Alta Vita all arriving in Wedgewood-Houston this summer. 

From dry-aged steaks and pristine seafood towers to Spanish tapas and one not-hotel hotel restaurant, these are the openings we’re most excited about this spring.  

Lost and Found

East Nashville needed a neighborhood hang like Lost and Found. The funky outdoor space is anchored by wine bar Birdie’s, cocktail bar Fortunate Sun, and Pizza Lolo, plus a handful of food trucks—grab a beverage, order a bite, and hang out on the lawn for games, the occasional movie night, wine Wednesdays, and more. The space has already found its fans, with families filling the space on weekends (there’s a 21+ terrace) and small groups gathering on weeknights. Parking is scarce so plan to rideshare.

Exterior Pizza Lolo in Nashville
A Spread at The Chloe in Nashville
A Spread at The Chloe, Image courtesy of Victoria Quirk

The Chloe

This winter’s ice storm slightly derailed opening plans for The Chloe, but after regaining power and feeding people in their community after the storm, the New Orleans-based hotel and restaurant concept opened the doors to its two reimagined historic 1920s cottages. The restaurant is blended into the hotel lobby and outdoor patio, with a bar and dining room inside and ample outdoor seating that overlooks the pool (which recently opened for the season). On the menu, you’ll find Creole-inflected dishes like shrimp ravigote salad and blackened butter-crusted redfish—but the space is more than just a menu. Plan your next coffee meeting in the stylish living room, post up for a few hours of work on the patio, or splurge on a staycation to experience Italian bed linens, Marshall turntables, and snug, hand-woven robes in one of 19 guest rooms.

Prime + Proper

Prime + Proper, a steakhouse concept fresh from Detroit, brings next-level service, plus deco chandeliers, crystalline and pearlescent tones, and marble table tops. Servers work as a team, one for beverages, one for food, and play off one another—everyone’s in on the secret: we’re here to have a good time. The steak and seafood-focused menu hits all the highlights, with char-grilled steaks, chops, and rare cuts, plus seafood towers, chopped salads, and tableside action in the form of Dover sole, fileted in front of you and finished with a long drizzle of butter sauce. If steak isn’t your thing, maybe it’s chicken-fried lobster and ricotta gnocchi with truffles? Either way, it’s the place to indulge.

Zaytinya& Bar Mar

Scallops at Zatinya

Replacing the spots once occupied by Andrew Carmellini’s restaurants inside the W Hotel, José Andrés’ restaurant group has brought his version of Mediterranean flair to town. At Zaytinya, an all-day space, the focus is on the Eastern Mediterranean with Greek, Turkish, and Lebanese dishes stealing the show—the menu is vast with spreads, lots of mezze, salads, mains, and family-style courses. Cut through the noise with the chef’s experience ($95) for a full scope of dishes, from hommus and tzatziki to falafel, kebabs, and lamb chops. (Don’t be shy—ask for more of the freshly baked pita.) At dinner-only Bar Mar, it’s all about seafood with fresh oysters, ceviches, shrimp paella, octopus, plus, for meat-lovers, jamón ibérico, steaks, and roasted chicken. You’ll also find his touch at Butterfly, the rooftop bar, and at Glowbird, the poolside lounge.

Lion’s Share

Chef Robbie Wilson returned to Nashville to open Lion’s Share in Sylvan Park, taking over the space once occupied by McCabe Pub. They gutted and rebuilt the structure leaving a few vestiges of the former building—but that’s where the similarities end. Channeling a British club vibe, the space is more luxe now, filled with rich leathers, taxidermy, vintage furniture, and custom lighting. The open kitchen shows off live-fire action, which shows up on the menu as roasted heirloom carrots, swordfish in curry, and pork belly vindaloo. A bar menu features small bites like crab cakes and a burger, while the cocktail program is all about the ice presentation and the glassware.

Bacco

The Four Seasons has reimagined its dining room into Bacco, a striking Tuscan steakhouse, that aims to be the not-hotel-feeling hotel restaurant. The room is washed in earthy greens, grays, and golds with an open kitchen and dry-aging storage closet on display along one wall. There are nods to Nashville in the fruit tea spritz and live music in the form of a roving saxophone player, but the menu is all Italy: crispy artichokes, bruschettas, braised lamb belly, whipped polenta and an outstanding bucatini granchio with large heaps of lump crab meat tangled up with the light-as-a-feather pasta. The steak program here is one of the best of the new openings, with American wagyu to go along with the angus beef they’re dry-aging in house. Don’t skip the “grapefruit-cello” for a final, settling sip.

A steak being prepared at Bacco

Ocean Prime

Nashville Yards continues to see doors open, including this concept from Ohio restaurateur Cameron Mitchell. It sprawls out over 2,400 square feet with 370 seats, private dining, and two covered terraces. Seafood is the play here, so go big with a “smoking” seafood tower or loaded sushi roll to start, then move into mains like blackened snapper or lobster linguine. You’ll find more steaks here, too, plus a range of fun sides like the black truffle mac and cheese.

On the Road

Nashville

Nashville is a city fueled by music, steered by history, and revved up with […]

First Look

A First Look at Lion’s Share

The opening of Lion’s Share marks the celebrated return of husband-and-wife duo Robbie Wilson […]

Radar

10 Hot Openings for Your Summer Bucket List | Listen

From ivy-covered wine pubs to rooftop Mexican cantinas, these 10 restaurants sit at the […]