The Restaurant
Liberty Food & Wine Exchange opened in 2013 at 100 North Sierra Street, on the ground floor of a downtown Reno building two blocks from the Truckee Riverwalk, and is the flagship of chef Mark Estee — a Connecticut-trained American chef who moved to northern Nevada in 2005 and has been the defining figure of the region's farm-to-table movement ever since. The dining room runs about ninety covers across a high-ceilinged industrial-chic space of exposed brick, polished concrete, salvaged-timber communal tables, a long marble bar, and a glass-fronted boutique wine market at the entrance where the by-the-glass list is poured directly from the retail shelves.
The cooking is hand-crafted, shareable plates with a working international vocabulary — Italian, Spanish, Mediterranean, French, with deep grounding in northern Nevada produce and producers. The menu rotates frequently but the spine holds favourites that have been on the kitchen since opening: a hand-stretched Margherita pizza from the wood-burning oven, a black-pepper bucatini cacio e pepe, an artichoke-pesto focaccia, a smoked-bone marrow with grilled bread and parsley-salsa verde, a daily charcuterie board sourced from Nevada and California producers, and a fondue programme that has become the room's most-ordered group share. The brunch menu, served Friday through Sunday, runs through a serious eggs Benedict, a salmon-and-dill plate, and a sourdough pancake stack with Nevada honey.
The wine programme is the quiet centrepiece. The in-house wine-mixing station — a custom bar concept Estee built into the centre of the room — lets diners taste through small flights before committing to a full pour, and the boutique market at the entrance carries around five hundred references for retail purchase. The list works deep across small-production California, Oregon, Washington, and a thoughtful collection of Italian, Spanish and French producers. Liberty has carried multiple Edible Reno-Tahoe recognitions for its farm-to-table commitment, and the room is the natural choice for any Reno guest looking for the most progressive kitchen in the city.
Why This Is Reno’s Team Dinner Pick
Liberty Food & Wine Exchange is the Reno team-dinner room because the venue is built for shared, communal eating without any of the formality that can compromise a working group's evening. The shareable-plate format means a team of eight or twelve does not need to negotiate individual orders — the kitchen sends ten or fifteen plates to the centre of the table and the team eats together. The communal-tables design accommodates an awkward odd-numbered party without breaking up the group. The wine-mixing station gives every guest tools for tasting without forcing a single bottle commitment. And Mark Estee's name — a Nevada culinary fixture for two decades — is recognised by any Reno regular as the host's deliberate, careful choice.
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