The Restaurant
Olio sits one block south of Atlantic Avenue on SE 2nd Avenue, inside a renovated 1920s historic building that the restaurant has occupied since 2002. The space is split between a polished bar room — twelve high stools, a serious cocktail mise, and the kind of regular crowd that walks in three nights a week without a reservation — and a quieter main dining room of about sixty covers under low-hung Edison bulbs.
The kitchen runs as contemporary American with eclectic influences: a daily-changing tartare, wood-fired pizzas, a pan-roasted local snapper, a slow-braised short rib that has stayed on the menu for over a decade, and a small list of seasonal tapas-style small plates designed for solo or two-person sharing. The local-and-organic sourcing language is real — the kitchen has long-standing relationships with three Palm Beach County farms — but the menu never lectures the diner about it. The wine list is shorter than Tramonti's (about 120 bottles) but smartly chosen, with a particularly strong by-the-glass programme.
The bar is the secret. The cocktail list runs about fifteen — sharper than most Delray bars, with a barrel-aged Negroni and a smoked Old Fashioned worth ordering — and the bar menu is the full menu. For solo travellers, the high stools at the bar give access to chef-driven cooking in a room where eating alone is genuinely comfortable. For couples, the dining room is intimate without being precious.
Why This Is Delray Beach’s Solo Dining Pick
For solo dining in Delray Beach — and the city's hotel population, particularly business travellers at The Seagate and the Marriott, generates a steady stream of single diners — Olio is the obvious move. The twelve-stool bar runs full chef-menu service, the bartender is attentive without being aggressive about it, and the conversation around the bar (Delray regulars catching up after work) gives the solo diner the ambient warmth that lonely hotel dining rooms cannot manufacture. Pace your own meal, watch the room, leave when you are ready.
Leave a Review
Registered members get published by default; guest reviews are moderated first.