The Best American Restaurants This Year Are Wine Bars
By the Editors of Wine Enthusiast with Food Editor Nils Bernstein
There have always been wine bars with great food and restaurants with great wine, but lately, our favorite places seem to be a hybrid of the two. We’re seeing Michelin-star-level fine dining in walk-in counter-seating environments, and casual neighborhood restaurants with glass and bottle lists that rival the world’s best but in playful settings.
These 50 establishments—the New American Wine Bar—range wildly in terms of concept and atmosphere, but they’re all places that put wine and food on equal footing. The wines are adventurous, of course, for those with discovery in mind (many will be pouring from more unlisted open bottles than many proper restaurants offer by the glass) and the food often inventive— expect the likes of Nashville hot quail, rabbit larb and sardine bánh mì.
Whether you experience them as a fun wine-bar hang or as destination dining is entirely up to you.
California
Great Lakes
Mid-Atlantic
Midwest
Mountain
New York State
Northeast
Northwest & Pacific
Southeast
South
Southwest
Texas
California
Bar Crenn
San Francisco, California
Sure, you should book a table at Atelier Crenn if budget and availability allow, but dim and sexy Bar Crenn offers various bespoke or à la carte experiences with food from Chef Dominique Crenn alongside wines from the restaurant’s deep cellar as well as inspired cider and beer lists.
Bar Le Côte
Los Olivos, California
Bar Le Côte modestly bills itself as a “seafood tavern” but it’s one of the best places to drink and eat in the Santa Ynez Valley, if not the state. Beef tartare comes with fried oysters, and its take on “Julia Child’s Seafood Chowder” puts any other attempts to shame. Don’t miss happy hour, with 50% off all sparkling bottles and caviar at cost.
Esters
Santa Monica, California
All of L.A.’s Rustic Canyon Family group of restaurants have terrific wine programs, and at this wine shop and bar, bottles take center stage (in fact, the retail selection lines the walls). Still, come hungry: The mix-n-match boards have vegetable and seafood options in addition to meat and cheese, the salads are local (and gorgeous) and there are a few hearty entrées, like lamb with white beans, chermoula and pickled onion.
Juliet
Los Angeles, California
Choose from nearly 50 wines by the glass—available per ounce, half glass, glass or carafe—and a food menu of Parisian-inspired seafood and vegetable dishes. The French influence extends to the remarkably deep bottle list, which has over 300 Champagne selections alone.
Light Sleeper
San Francisco, California
This seductive spot combines Parisian wine bar and Japanese listening bar (kissaten) vibes, with nods to France and Japan on the menu as well. Try raw Hokkaido scallop with hickory nut and jalapeño and celery-root brûlée with walnut butter, miso and mornay sauce. The wine list steers far more into whites and sparkling than reds, perfect to keep the party moving.
Le Fantastique
San Francisco, California
This seductive spot combines Parisian wine bar and Japanese listening bar (kissaten) vibes, with nods to France and Japan on the menu as well. Try raw Hokkaido scallop with hickory nut and jalapeño and celery-root brûlée with walnut butter, miso and mornay sauce. The wine list steers far more into whites and sparkling than reds, perfect to keep the party moving.
San Diego, California
Wine bar Little Thief—named for the device that pulls wine samples from barrels—takes a different approach to food, giving the kitchen to a full-time “restaurant in residence.” This summer heralds the arrival of Elliott and Kelly Townsend’s Long Story Short, an itinerant restaurant concept of ultra-seasonal food sourced from a nearby farm.
Melanie
Los Angeles, California
Beverage Director Austin Ferrier usually has around three dozen bottles open at all times at Melanie, where discovery is the name of the game. The terrific food is less discovery-driven, only because dishes like the double burger with onion jam and chipotle aioli, and the crab and scallop fettuccini with lobster stock and Thai basil have such devout followings.
OTOTO
Los Angeles, California
The best sake bar in the city (if not the entire West Coast), Ototo is also a terrific restaurant. You can easily make a meal of its small plates, from soft-shell shrimp with house furikake and sansho, to spring onion tempura with truffled creme fraiche and yuzu shichimi, to menchi katsu, beef-and-pork croquettes with sauce gribiche and hot mustard.
The Rose
San Diego, California
This wine bar and bottle shop (only $10 corkage for bottles bought retail) is one of the cheeriest spots on our list, making its list of little-seen producers and varieties thrilling rather than intimidating. Pair with a strawberry-feta-pistachio salad, or grilled lamb with spiced yogurt and onion-date vinaigrette.
Charred Cabbage with Beet Tahini and Sumac
From Corner Office, Taos, New Mexico
This beautiful and deceptively simple dish offers layer upon layer of flavor. Serve it as an appetizer, side dish or light lunch.
Spinster Sisters
Santa Rosa, California
This longtime Sonoma-area favorite doesn’t present as a wine bar, but its convivial vibe, creative smaller plates and terrific revolving selection of local and global bottles often makes it feel like one. It’s the rare place that keeps getting better on both the food and wine fronts.
San Francisco, California
Owners and Master Sommeliers Rebecca Fineman and Chris Gaither completed their dream team with the addition of Chicago Chef David Aviles last year. Wines are evenly split between benchmark producers and small up-and-comers, with playful food like potato and celeriac pavé with coconut spaetzle and tom kha broth, heirloom squash with black garlic and white mole, and fried chicken and grits decadently dolloped with paddlefish roe.
Valley
Sonoma, California
This combination bottle shop, wine bar and restaurant is a wine industry insiders’ favorite in downtown Sonoma. It’s not uncommon to see tables sharing wines they either bought or brought, over communal dishes like chicken with achiote, sour orange and cabbage, cod and clams, and its locally famous crispy rice with scallion-ginger sauce.
Voodoo Vin
Los Angeles, California
Natalie and Michael Hekmat’s wine haven started as a bottle shop, morphed into a wine bar, and then—with the addition of former Rustic Canyon Chef Travis Hayden—could now be confidently called a restaurant. Over 400 bottles are on offer, with unpretentious dishes like scallops and turnips in beurre blanc and a peach panzanella with mimolette cheese.
Great Lakes
avec
Chicago, Illinois
When it opened 20 years ago, avec quickly morphed from a forward-thinking wine bar into a destination restaurant—a pioneer of the kinds of places we’re celebrating in this issue. Now with a second location, it’s still firing on all cylinders, celebrating Mediterranean wine and food in all its ever-changing forms.
Chicago, Illinois
A new beverage director, new chef de cuisine and new managing partner means a lot of fresh new energy at this popular West Loop wine bar. Look for dishes like Nashville hot quail and pork with persimmon and bulgur, and a wine list that’s transitioning to highlight underrepresented regions and varieties.
Mid-Atlantic
a.kitchen + bar
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Go for the full restaurant experience at a.kitchen or the wine bar vibe at the walk-in-only a.bar; at either place you’ll find the extensive and entertaining bottle list and a glass list in constant flux. And unlike most wine bars, its craft cocktail program is also worth popping in for—it’s one of Philadelphia’s best.
Celladora
Richmond, Virginia
Reserve one of this bottle shop’s four tables, whether for the daytime snack menu (think flounder ceviche and cumin okra), dinner service or Sunday brunch. Any retail bottle can be enjoyed at your table for just $15 corkage, and owner Megan Lee Hopkins is usually there to offer smart pairings.
Pop Fizz Bar
Washington, D.C.
The newest from prolific D.C. sommelier and restaurateur Brent Kroll is his most fun yet. All sparkling all the time (including sake, cider and much more), Detroit-style pizza, a fried section (because fried food and sparkling is always the right pairing), caviar practically at cost, and rotating seasonal dishes. What’s not to love?
Reveler’s Hour
Washington, D.C.
Co-owner and Beverage Director Bill Jensen also runs a Reveler’s Hour wine shop and weekly wine podcast in addition to his rotating wine list at the restaurant, which is often curated in collaboration with industry luminaries. Food is centered around snacks, salads and house made pastas, like bucatini with lamb sausage, carrot, pistachio and chives.
Quick Spaghetti Bolognese
From Birdie’s, Austin, Texas by chef-owner Tracy Malechek
Real-deal bolognese sauce takes hours to make, but this recipe achieves comparable richness and complexity in under 45 minutes.
Middleburg, Virginia
Owner Jarad Slipp is both a veteran of fine dining and a Master Sommelier, giving wine and food equal billing at Tremolo Bar. The dishes, all listed as “snacks,” easily combine to make a leisurely meal, and every wine on the bottle list—yes, every one—is available by the glass or half bottle.
Midwest
Bar Brava
Minneapolis, Minnesota
By partnering with chefs doing long-term pop-ups in the space (the most recent was Vietnamese food from Khue’s Kitchen), Bar Brava is a two-inone experience. People coming for small-production wines that are otherwise hard to find in the city (if not country) get food from chefs who don’t otherwise have a brick-and-mortar showcase. Win-win!
Kansas City, Missouri
Leslie and Nick Goellner’s Antler Room is proof that a brief but well-curated wine and food menu in a warm hospitable environment is all you need to be a neighborhood favorite. (It helps that Nick has been thrice nominated for the “Best Chef: Midwest” James Beard Foundation Award). The refined menu of creative global small plates and pastas supports an expansive wine list that offers everything from an Ozark Traminette to Austrian Zweigelt.
Strange Town
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
At Strange Town, small-production wine and vermouth meets a vegan menu that includes ingredients grown and foraged by Chef and Co-owner Mia LeTendre. Celeriac steak recently came with Virginia water leaf, split toothwort, winter rocket and violet greens, delicious with a brambly Blaufränkisch from Serbia’s Maurer Oszkár.
Mountain
Bodovino
Boise, Idaho
During the pandemic, longtime Boise wine staple Bodovino partnered with local favorite Happy Fish Sushi and a new model for wine-bar pleasure was born. Is it a sushi bar with 144 wines by the glass, or your favorite wine bar that happens to have fantastic sushi instead of cheese and charcuterie? Either way, it’s heaven.
Sunday Vinyl
Denver, Colorado
This party-themed arm of the Frasca Hospitality Group is arguably its most fun. It’s a chance for Lead Sommelier Clara Klein to showcase more experimental wines and underrepresented regions, and the food works as either small plates (duck liver gougères, misocharred cabbage with crispy chicken skin) or a proper dinner (king salmon with leek fondue). Check Spotify for hundreds of its public playlists.
NEW YORK STATE
Claud
New York, New York
Simply stated, it’s one of NYC’s best new restaurants. But wine is at its heart and walk-ins are welcome, leading to revelatory moments like casually sitting at the bar with a full-bodied Cantina Giardino “T’ara Rà” Campania and realizing it’s magic with the halibut with cockles and green garlic.
The Four Horsemen
Brooklyn, New York
Long a destination for its deep cellar of some of the wine world’s most coveted producers (especially from France), The Four Horsemen is finally getting recognition for Chef Nick Curtola’s food. As a rule, both balance elegance with strong personality, like fried chicken with black maitake mushrooms and Marsala alongside Philippe Pacalet’s “Aux Chaignots” Nuits-Saint-Georges.
Brooklyn, New York
This neighborhood wine bar has evolved into one of Clinton Hill’s favorite restaurants. Spanish wine is a focus, while food straddles ultra-modern (raw hiramasa with green garbanzo and magnolia) with creative comfort (pork ribs with fermented greens).
Wildair
New York, New York
In many ways, Wildair (and its tasting menu-driven sister restaurant Contra) pioneered the modern wine bar-restaurant hybrid and is still among NYC’s best. Some visit for the food that continues to influence chefs nationally while others stop in for a glass they aren’t likely to find elsewhere—and staff who are equally versed in both.
Tartare et Caviar
From Juliet, Los Angeles, California
It’s hard to beat a hand-cut tartare of the freshest fish gilded with caviar. It’s a perfect example of casual luxury.
Northeast
Dear Annie
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Local and seasonal have become maybe even more annoyingly ubiquitous buzzwords than small plates, but Dear Annie understands the way in which these concepts need to dovetail with labor practices and culture. Or just drink the greatest wines with dishes like clams with ginger and gochujang butter or come Monday for pizza night.
Northwest & Pacific
Antica Terra
Dundee, Oregon
Most people trek to Antica Terra winery for a taste of winemaker Maggie Harrison’s ethereal wines and maybe a chance to meet her. Book the “A Very Nice Lunch” experience, however, and be treated to one of the best meals in the Pacific Northwest, with six paired wines. Even the regular tasting, though, comes with snacks from chef Timothy Wastell that would constitute a great meal anywhere else.
Portland, Oregon
Canard is the more casual, wine-focused sibling to Portland fine-dining stalwart Le Pigeon, and it’s been an influential model for a city that’s become one of the country’s best for wine. Try rabbit larb or morel and pea lasagna with a skin-contact Vermentino-Riesling-Roussanne blend from nearby Applegate Valley’s Troon Vineyard and thank us later.
OK Omens
Portland, Oregon
OK Omens calls itself, simply, “a wine-focused restaurant”— though it could just as easily be “a food-focused wine bar.” Its glass list is uncommonly informative (but Riesling freaks should head straight for the bottle list), and there are always unlisted bottles open at the bar. Chef Justin Woodward is one of Portland’s most acclaimed, and here he keeps things surprising but unpretentious.
Surrell
Seattle, Washington
Located in a 1920s Victorian house, there are several experiences on offer in Surrell’s homey confines: a casual wine bar with delicious snacks, a four-course prix fixe menu or an epic 9- to 10 course seasonal tasting menu, all paired with an extensive list of wines exclusively from Washington State producers.
Southeast
Biblio
Charlotte, North Carolina
Dealer’s choice here at Biblio, in the best way: After you select your bottle of wine and main-dish protein (Carolina black sea bass or local maitake mushrooms, for example), Beard Award-nominated Chef Sam Hart customizes the preparation and accompaniments based on the bottle you chose. “The Blind” is a 4-course tasting entirely devised around your bottle of choice. It works brilliantly.
La Bodega by Cúrate
Asheville, North Carolina
The newest entry in Asheville’s Cúrate empire is an all-day restaurant, bakery and market that ultimately is a showcase for Spanish wine. Snack on torreznos (crispy pork belly), razor-clam toast or fried anchovies at the bar or go for the “La Bodega Experience” of Chef Matt Brown’s tasting menu with matching wines.
Savannah, Georgia
Late Air has a lot going on beyond its modest industrial-chic veneer. There’s a dynamic list of small Old World producers rarely seen in the area—even Les Matheny Vin Jaune from Jura by the ounce—and Chef Juan Stevenson’s not-so-small plates always surprise, such as his snap peas with dashi-tahini dressing, Manchego and hazelnuts, or whipped dates with tangy Humboldt Fog cheese.
Lucian Books and Wine
Atlanta, Georgia
The readers among us will find it hard to resist any place with both “books” and “wine” in its name, but Lucian is a destination even if you only read on your phone. Its classic European dishes always have an unexpected twist, like gnudi with a ragu of rabbit, or the spring shower of morels, ramps and English peas with roast duck.
Renzo
Charleston, South Carolina
Of the many spots in the U.S. combining serious wine with serious pizza, Renzo is one of the best. And non-pizza fans will be just as happy with the escarole Caesar, cauliflower in mushroom XO sauce or Korean fried chicken. Follow them (on Instagram @renzochs) for frequent theme nights and winemaker dinners. And don’t miss a nightcap at The Faculty Lounge, its sister bar across the street.
Spicy Preserved Mussels on Toast
From La Bodega by Cúrate, Asheville, North Carolina
A fiery Salsa de Aperitivo infused with hot chili makes these mussel toasts truly sing. Our advice? Make a bunch and throw a party.
South
Bar Cleeta
Bentonville, Arkansas
Trae and Weisi Basore bring their combined experience in NYC and L.A. fine dining to Arkansas at this small, savvy spot. While oysters, caviar, charcuterie and cheese are always on offer, the menu changes seasonally and at whim. Try dishes like burrata toast with rhubarb, jamón serrano and hazelnut streusel with a glass list of 15+ wines with generous, detailed descriptions.
Boia De
Miami, Florida
This diminutive hotspot seems to hover between a wine-bar feel (at the counter seats) and a celebratory dinner vibe at the outdoor tables. A smartly curated Old World wine list meets Italian-influenced dishes like veal sweetbreads with carrot, lettuce and cumin and tagliolini nero with king crab and Vin Jaune.
Margot
Miami, Florida
Glass pours change daily at Margot, which also draws fans for its terrific cocktail program. The small plates are just interesting—and delicious—enough that it’s a destination for food as well. Try dishes like salmon crudo with labneh and dill zhug (a spicy Yemeni herb sauce) and a sardine bành mì.
Saint-Germain
New Orleans, Louisiana
Located in balmy New Orleans, Saint-Germain takes its wine bar outside to a verdant garden, while food is served as a 10-course tasting-menu experience in the cozy indoor dining room. Naturally we recommend you experience both, especially on Wednesdays when there are deep bottle discounts.
Southwest
Ada’s Food + Wine
Las Vegas, Nevada
Chef-partner James Trees’ comfort-food standards—burrata, kale salad, pasta, chicken, steak and the like—taste anything but standard. There’s watermelon and spicy mojo with tea-brined pork loin; fried capers and grapefruit vinaigrette with grilled asparagus. To drink, choose from over two dozen glass pours and generous flights (try the “Nerd Out” flight with a friend).
Taos, New Mexico
An oasis in Taos, Corner Office promotes small plates, an increasingly ubiquitous term but that rarely involves dishes like chickpea tamales with creamed leeks and sweet and sour chicken liver. A detailed and wellpriced wine list makes it a legit destination.
Texas
Birdie’s
Austin, Texas
At Birdie’s, it’s first-come firstserved, you order at the counter, and Chef Tracy Malechek-Ezekiel’s menu can change daily (though the beef tartare with pecans, rosemary and Sonora wheat berries happily seems to be a staple). But close your eyes and taste and you might as well be at the finest Michelin-starred restaurant around. Beverage Director and Co-owner Arjav Ezekiel will guide you through pairings, including a fantastic Madeira selection.
June’s All Day
Austin, Texas
Proprietor and Master Sommelier June Rodil’s nowfamous “wine zine,” a madcap visual wine list that’s also wildly informative, shows the clear wine focus at this all-day bistro suitable for a quick glass and snack or a leisurely meal from the surprisingly extensive menu. For the right morning, the breakfast chalupa with Gilles Bonnefoy’s low-alcohol “Bulles Rouge de Madone” pét nat isn’t the worst idea.
Nancy’s Hustle
Houston, Texas
Wines equally straddle New and Old Worlds—plus hefty fortified and cider selections—at this sexy wine bistro. Chef Jason Vaughan has a playful touch with dishes like pickled oysters, pork and butter dumplings with yogurt and sauerkraut, white anchovies draped over leeks, and beef sticky rice with a Wagyu tri-tip.
Trova
Dallas, Texas
Trova takes meat and cheese boards to another level, with over a dozen charcuterie picks and almost 20 cheeses, along with creative small plates like “peaches + cream,” roasted local peaches with labneh, prosciutto and fennel pollen. The choose your-own-adventure theme continues with around 20 glass pours.
The Italy Issue
August/September 2023
In this issue, Wine Enthusiast celebrates all things Italian wine and food—from the rediscovery of Lambrusco’s sparkling wine to the ultimate guide to pizza and wine.
Nobody would confuse these with a wine bar, but if you have never visited these 25 restaurants, you may want to put them on the (Champagne) bucket list.
Acquerello | San Francisco, California
Addison | San Diego, California
The American Hotel | Sag Harbor, New York
Angus Barn | Raleigh, North Carolina
Auberge du Soleil | Rutherford, California
The Barn at Blackberry Farm | Townsend, Tennessee
Bern’s Steakhouse | Tampa, Florida
Billy Crews Fine Dining | Santa Teresa, New Mexico
Canlis | Seattle, Washington
Commander’s Palace | New Orleans, Louisiana
Frasca Food and Wine | Boulder, Colorado
The French Laundry | Yountville, California
Gary Danko | San Francisco, California
Guy Savoy | Las Vegas, Nevada
The Inn at Little Washington | Washington, Virginia
Joël Robuchon | Las Vegas, Nevada
L’Etoile | Madison, Wisconsin
Le Bernardin | New York, NY
The Little Nell| Aspen, Colorado
Lotus of Siam | Las Vegas, Nevada
The Modern | New York, NY
Pappas Bros. Steakhouse | Houston, Texas
Pluckemin Inn | Bedminster, New Jersey
PRESS | St. Helena, California
Sepia | Chicago, Illinois