Nashville Fine Dining Recs?
#1
Posted 26 January 2007 - 08:07 PM
I'm looking for a great restaurant in Nashville at which to celebrate my wife's Birthday with a group of 6-8. We live in Napa Valley, CA and love great food, and admittedly have gotten a little spoiled. We'd like something very high-quality, great wine list, but not too quiet or stuffy.
We've heard good things about Watermark and The Mad Platter.
Any insights?
Thanks in advance -
Mike
#2
Posted 26 January 2007 - 11:53 PM
Restaurants in Nashville
Capitol Grille would be my recommendation ...
reviews of Watermark
Mad Platter reviews
Edited by Gifted Gourmet, 27 January 2007 - 12:02 AM.
#3
Posted 27 January 2007 - 10:00 AM
This has some links for fine dining in Nashville:
Restaurants in Nashville
Capitol Grille would be my recommendation ...
reviews of Watermark
Mad Platter reviews
Thanks Melissa. Separately, we're having a reception at the Hermitage for a wedding that we're in town for, so we may get to eat at The Capitol Grille anyway.
Thanks for the advice.
#4
Posted 27 January 2007 - 10:01 AM
#5
Posted 27 January 2007 - 04:06 PM
Has anyone eaten at the Wild Boar?
I do not think they are still open.
There have been a lot of changes in the Nashville dining scene over the past year or so. A co-worker fr/ there recommended a place and I promptly forgot the name but will ask when I see him again next week.
the best cat ever.
#6
Posted 27 January 2007 - 04:39 PM
#7
Posted 27 January 2007 - 11:50 PM
Thanks - I'll check out Tayste!
M
#8
Posted 31 January 2007 - 06:48 PM
Capitol grille and watermark are good but both fall into the stuffy category in my eyes. For a taste of local spots hit www.nashvilleoriginals.com but my suggestion would be tayst restaurant and wine bar. Good wine list, creative quality food, fun atmosphere.
not that you're biased or anything! lol.
i believe radius10 is another place that's supposed to be kinda stuffy like watermark. i haven't gone to either. heck, i still haven't been to mirror...and that's been open for a few years.
#9
Posted 31 January 2007 - 07:44 PM
Capitol grille and watermark are good but both fall into the stuffy category in my eyes. For a taste of local spots hit www.nashvilleoriginals.com but my suggestion would be tayst restaurant and wine bar. Good wine list, creative quality food, fun atmosphere.
not that you're biased or anything! lol.
i believe radius10 is another place that's supposed to be kinda stuffy like watermark. i haven't gone to either. heck, i still haven't been to mirror...and that's been open for a few years.
Shameless self promotion isn't bad is it?
Radius 10 is good but definately not stuffy in the super fine dining way , they are more on the bar side of things. I've heard good reviews on food and mixed on service.
#10
Posted 31 January 2007 - 08:18 PM
i'm all for self-promotion - i'll probably do a little if/when i get my 45 page dining guide to nashville moved from a word doc to a website.
#11
Posted 01 February 2007 - 05:47 PM
i'm just messing with you.
i'm all for self-promotion - i'll probably do a little if/when i get my 45 page dining guide to nashville moved from a word doc to a website.
I am all about advancing the nashville dining scene and getting some respect for the good restaurants in this town. Let me know if I can help
#12
Posted 01 February 2007 - 07:36 PM
First let me say that I enjoyed the food and thought that they are doing some interesting things. I had the filet with collards and pork bellies and white beans and thought it was an interesting contrast between the south of France and south of the Mason Dixon. There was a touch too much vinegar but I otherwise enjoyed the context of this dish.
I was saddened to see that the restaurant was not doing a brisk business on a Thursday night and hope that perhaps the weather had something to do with it.
My sense is that Nashville is a chain restaurant town, unfortunately, and restaurants like Radius 10 have a difficult time attracting a clientele.
Perhaps I'm wrong but I also am basing this on the lack of discussion about Nashville restaurants relative to Atlanta and North Carolina on this board.
Comments from others.....
#13
Posted 01 February 2007 - 11:11 PM
i want to say i have seen some articles in the local papers (the rage, the scene and the tennessean) over the last year or so discussing the changing eating tendencies of nashville. there's certainly been a change in the restaurant landscape over the last year or two. are there a lot of chains in the area? sure, but we're not unique in that regard.
#14
Posted 02 February 2007 - 02:16 PM
As far as radius being slow on a thursday, your comment is correct. It is very tough for the creative independants to do well. It probably can be said for most cities but being good is not good enough. There are only two places in that genre of restaurant that are consistantly busy in the whole city. Kind of amazing for a city of 1.2 million that all ten local rest., yes I said ten, that do a quality job are not full or close to it every night.
I don't get it?
#15
Posted 02 February 2007 - 02:49 PM
Don't eat if you are getting on a plane within the next 12 hours. Really. It wasn't a good thing, in that regard. Uggh.
From the SFA Oral History Site...
"Whether you prefer hot or mild, be prepared to wait up to half an hour for your fare because the chicken isn't dropped into the skillet until it's ordered. And it's not for those with a sensitive stomach, Prince's warns. "It's a 24 hour chicken," according to Jeffries. And it sure is addictive."
There's a train everyday, leaving either way...
#16
Posted 02 February 2007 - 04:28 PM
some people made the mistake of going to prince's for lunch and then going back to class afterwards. me? i just went home, where i could rest comfortably until it was time to die. other people would go and get a smoothie or milkshake to try and mitigate the damage. it seems to get a little easier the more you go - but the damage you do to arteries will take days off your life expectancy!
i really feel for you and the other passengers on that plane.
#17
Posted 03 February 2007 - 08:21 AM
Has anyone eaten at the Wild Boar?
I do not think they are still open.
There have been a lot of changes in the Nashville dining scene over the past year or so. A co-worker fr/ there recommended a place and I promptly forgot the name but will ask when I see him again next week.
Matt suggests Flyte. Apparently some of the folks from Capitol Grille are in the kitchen. He said the food is excellent and the wine list is first rate. It is on my list for the next time we are in Nash-vegas.
the best cat ever.
#18
Posted 03 February 2007 - 10:43 PM
i was at rotier's having a cheeseburger on french bread with a chocolate shake when we kicked that field goal. everyone went nuts...good times.
#19
Posted 04 February 2007 - 12:29 PM
i advise anyone going to prince's to just clear their calendar for the rest of the day, and usually the next day as well.
some people made the mistake of going to prince's for lunch and then going back to class afterwards. me? i just went home, where i could rest comfortably until it was time to die. other people would go and get a smoothie or milkshake to try and mitigate the damage. it seems to get a little easier the more you go - but the damage you do to arteries will take days off your life expectancy!
i really feel for you and the other passengers on that plane.
That has to be the funniest post I have read in a long, long time!
Guess we won't be going there for lunch on the last day...
Edited by Mhirby, 04 February 2007 - 12:30 PM.
#20
Posted 04 February 2007 - 12:38 PM
Tayst looks great - a little simpler and straight-forward than some of the other menus, which is exactly what we like: great ingredients prepared simply.
One more question: anyone eaten at the Mad Platter recently?
Thanks -
#21
Posted 04 February 2007 - 02:51 PM
I can, however, recommend the following places, which are "nicer" places:
Germantown Cafe, The Acorn, Cabana, F. Scott's
Depending on how much time you have, you should also consider these, cheaper places for lunch or brunch:
saturday brunch - Monell's
breakfast - pancake pantry
sunday brunch - germantown cafe (see above) or The Loveless Cafe
bbq - Hog Heaven (get a regular pork sandwich and a chicken sandwich with white bbq sauce)
burger - rotier's (cheeseburger on french bread)
i hope you have a nice trip!
#22
Posted 05 February 2007 - 03:43 PM
#23
Posted 06 February 2007 - 08:34 AM
In addition to the seriously good food, the service has always been remarkable. We went for our anniversary and I told them that was the occasion when I made our reservation. When we got there we had the best little corner table and it was decorated with some gilt streamers and hearts (not cheesy at all just subtle and only on the table so no one else would have even noticed). We also went with a friend who is an educated wine drinker and had chosen a lovely Spanish red for our meal. There was about a glass left in the bottle when the server with the bread basket caught it and tipped it over. None of it spilled but they brought us another bottle of the same on the house.
I would highly recommend it.
#24
Posted 09 February 2007 - 10:07 AM
i'm guessing that would be october 13th, when the dawgs go down...again!
i was at rotier's having a cheeseburger on french bread with a chocolate shake when we kicked that field goal. everyone went nuts...good times.
yeah, yeah, yeah....
We let you win every once in a while just to let you have a taste of what you are missing.
I am working on menus for next season and keep coming back to doing a version of Prince's Hot Chicken but do not know how comfortable every one will be sitting in the stadium for several hours after eating. ":^) You are, of course, more than welcome to join us.
HDHD
the best cat ever.










