United States — Tennessee

Memphis — The Mid-South's chef-driven counterweight to the BBQ stereotype

Memphis cooks far beyond its barbecue reputation. Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen earned a Michelin Guide mention from the Patrick brothers. Restaurant Iris carries Kelly English's French-Creole. Folk's Folly has held the city's senior steakhouse position since 1977. Chez Philippe at the Peabody is one of the South's last classical French dining rooms. And Charlie Vergos' Rendezvous still smokes pork shoulder in the same downtown alley it has used since 1948.

1948Rendezvous Opened
5Editor Picks
1977Folk's Folly Opened

Memphis’s Greatest Tables

5 restaurants listed

Get the complete Memphis dining guide.

New openings, reservation tips, and editor picks — updated quarterly. Free to join.

$ under $40  ·  $$ $40–$80  ·  $$$ $80–$150  ·  $$$$ $150+ per person

Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen Memphis Modern Italian restaurant
1
First Date
East Memphis — Brookhaven Circle — Memphis
Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen
Modern Italian$$$
The Patrick brothers' Italian kitchen sits in a converted East Memphis bungalow — Michelin-mentioned, multi-year Beard semifinalist, and the chef-driven address every Memphian quietly defends as the city's best.
Restaurant Iris Memphis Modern Creole & French restaurant
2
Close a Deal
East Memphis — Laurelwood — Memphis
Restaurant Iris
Modern Creole & French$$$
Kelly English's Louisiana-rooted, French-trained Creole-American kitchen — a Beard semifinalist across multiple years and the chef-driven East Memphis room that handles the city's careful business dinners.
Folk's Folly Prime Steak House Memphis Steakhouse restaurant
3
Close a Deal
East Memphis — Mendenhall — Memphis
Folk's Folly Prime Steak House
Steakhouse$$$$
Memphis's original steakhouse, opened by Humphrey Folk in 1977 in a converted Mendenhall Road bungalow. Wet-aged prime beef, the Cellar piano bar downstairs, and the careful generational service that has defined the city's senior special-occasion dinner since the Carter administration.
Chez Philippe at The Peabody Memphis Classical French restaurant
4
Proposal
Downtown — The Peabody Hotel — Memphis
Chez Philippe at The Peabody
Classical French$$$$
One of the South's last classical French dining rooms, set inside the Peabody Hotel since 1981. Grand columns, banquettes, and a careful French tasting menu — the most-considered proposal address in the Mid-South.
Charlie Vergos' Rendezvous Memphis Memphis Dry-Rub Barbecue restaurant
5
Team Dinner
Downtown — General Washburn Alley — Memphis
Charlie Vergos' Rendezvous
Memphis Dry-Rub Barbecue$$
The downtown alley dry-rub rib room that defined Memphis barbecue. Charlie Vergos has smoked pork shoulder and ribs in the same basement since 1948 — no reservations, no apology, no equal.

Best for First Date in Memphis

Best for Business Dinner in Memphis

The Top 5 Memphis Restaurants

01

Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen

Michelin Guide MentionedModern Italian$$$712 W. Brookhaven Circle, Memphis

Andrew Michael Italian Kitchen opened in 2008 inside a converted bungalow at 712 W. Brookhaven Circle, a tucked-away East Memphis residential pocket that you would not stumble across — you have to know the address. Chef-owner brothers Andrew Ticer and Michael Hudman, both Memphis-born and Italy-trained, named the restaurant after each other's first names rather than a more obvious surname combination, which tells you something about how the kitchen sees itself. The dining room seats just over forty across a single warm bungalow space: hardwood floors, white walls, candlelit tables of four and two, a curved bar at the back where solo diners are welcomed onto the chef's counter view.

02

Restaurant Iris

Kelly English's chef-driven flagship — multi-year James Beard semifinalist for Best Chef: SoutheastModern Creole & French$$$4550 Poplar Avenue, Memphis

Restaurant Iris opened in 2008 in a converted Cooper-Young bungalow before relocating to a larger Laurelwood plaza dining room at 4550 Poplar Avenue in 2022 — a more polished setting that better matches chef-owner Kelly English's mature cooking. English, a New Orleans native and Le Cordon Bleu graduate who staged at Per Se before opening Iris in his early thirties, has carried the restaurant for nearly two decades as Memphis's senior chef-driven dining room. The current space seats roughly sixty across a warm contemporary room: hardwood floors, banquettes along one wall, deep gold lighting, a curved bar that doubles as a chef's counter, and a careful Memphis-art collection on the walls.

03

Folk's Folly Prime Steak House

Memphis's senior steakhouse — opened 1977 — the city's institutional special-occasion address for nearly fifty yearsSteakhouse$$$$551 S. Mendenhall Road, Memphis

Folk's Folly opened in 1977 when Humphrey Folk Jr. — a Memphis cattleman with no restaurant experience — bought a Mendenhall Road bungalow and converted it into the city's first dedicated prime steakhouse. The name was a tongue-in-cheek nod to local skepticism that a Memphis steakhouse could survive in a barbecue town. Nearly fifty years later, Folk's Folly is the city's institutional special-occasion dinner, run by the founding family's second generation and still occupying the same East Memphis bungalow with thoughtful expansions over the years. The main floor seats roughly one hundred and forty across multiple intimate rooms: wood-panelled walls, white tablecloths, brass fixtures, candlelit tables, leather banquettes, and a careful collection of Memphis-cattle history on the walls.

04

Chez Philippe at The Peabody

One of the South's last classical French dining rooms — inside the Peabody Hotel since 1981 — Memphis's most-considered formal dining destinationClassical French$$$$149 Union Avenue (The Peabody Hotel), Memphis

Chez Philippe opened in 1981 inside the Peabody Hotel at 149 Union Avenue, occupying a soaring two-story ballroom space that the hotel had previously used for ceremonial dinners. The room is one of the most architecturally significant restaurant settings in the American South: grand Corinthian columns rising to a coffered ceiling, deep banquettes in burgundy velvet, white-linen tables set at generous spacing, soft gold lighting from chandeliers, a careful collection of nineteenth-century French art, and a string quartet alcove that runs live music on weekend evenings. The dining room seats roughly seventy across two levels — a more intimate upper mezzanine and the grand main floor where most reservations are placed.

05

Charlie Vergos' Rendezvous

Memphis's most senior barbecue institution — the downtown alley dry-rub rib room since 1948 — the structural cultural anchor of American barbecue tourismMemphis Dry-Rub Barbecue$$52 S. 2nd Street (alley entrance), Memphis

Charlie Vergos opened the Rendezvous in 1948 in the basement of a downtown Memphis building at 52 S. 2nd Street, accessible only through an unmarked alley entrance off General Washburn Alley between Union and Monroe. The kitchen still operates from the same basement, the dining room still seats roughly two hundred and fifty across the original brick-walled, sawdust-floored, ceiling-low room, and the founder's grandchildren still run the front of the house. No restaurant in Memphis has earned more national barbecue-tourism column-inches than the Rendezvous — the room is the structural cultural anchor of the American dry-rub barbecue tradition and the address every visiting food writer, sports team, and inbound business traveller is sent to within their first forty-eight hours in town.

Dining in Memphis

The insider’s guide to Memphis’s table