United States — Minnesota

St. Paul — Minnesota's Capital — Restrained, Refined, Quietly Top-tier

St. Paul has spent the last decade quietly outgrowing the shadow of its larger twin. Myriel earns Karyn Tomlinson's James Beard recognition. Meritage anchors downtown in classical French. Tongue in Cheek brings serious chef-driven cooking to the East Side. Estelle and Forepaugh's complete a five-table itinerary that proves the capital's restaurants no longer borrow stature from Minneapolis.

1James Beard Best Chef
5Editor Picks
1870Forepaugh’s Mansion Built

St. Paul’s Greatest Tables

5 restaurants listed

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Myriel Saint Paul Modern Midwestern restaurant
1
Impress Clients
Mac-Groveland / Highland Park — Saint Paul
Myriel
Modern Midwestern$$$$
St. Paul's most decorated kitchen. Karyn Tomlinson cooks a love letter to Minnesotan farmland that earned a James Beard Best Chef: Midwest medal and a Food & Wine Best New Chef nod in the same season.
Meritage Saint Paul French Brasserie restaurant
2
Close a Deal
Downtown / Hamm Building — Saint Paul
Meritage
French Brasserie$$$
Russell Klein's classic French brasserie inside the historic Hamm Building — the most quietly confident downtown table in the Twin Cities, with one of Minnesota's deepest French wine lists.
Tongue in Cheek Saint Paul New American restaurant
3
First Date
Payne-Phalen / East Side — Saint Paul
Tongue in Cheek
New American$$$
Chef-driven New American on Payne Avenue — the table that proved St. Paul's East Side deserves a destination dinner address, not just a neighbourhood one.
Estelle Saint Paul Spanish / Portuguese / Italian restaurant
4
First Date
Mac-Groveland — Saint Paul
Estelle
Spanish / Portuguese / Italian$$$
A cozy Iberian-Italian wine bar in Mac-Groveland — small plates, serious cellar, and the most romantic non-tasting-menu room in the city.
Forepaugh's Saint Paul New American / Historic restaurant
5
Proposal
Irvine Park Historic District — Saint Paul
Forepaugh's
New American / Historic$$$$
An 1870 Victorian mansion in Irvine Park reopened after a million-dollar restoration — St. Paul's most cinematic dining room and the city's default proposal address.

Best for First Date in St. Paul

Best for Business Dinner in St. Paul

The Top 5 St. Paul Restaurants

01

Myriel

James Beard — Best Chef MidwestModern Midwestern$$$$470 Cleveland Avenue South, Saint Paul

Myriel opened in 2021 in a small storefront at the corner of Cleveland and Highland Parkway in St. Paul's Mac-Groveland neighborhood, named for the merciful bishop in Victor Hugo's Les Misérables. Chef-owner Karyn Tomlinson — a Corner Table alumna and former Charlie Trotter line cook — went on to win the James Beard Award for Best Chef: Midwest in 2024 and a Food & Wine Best New Chef nod in 2023. The dining room is intimate at thirty-two covers, walnut tables under low-hung pendant lamps, an open pass that the chef herself works most services.

02

Meritage

James Beard SemifinalistFrench Brasserie$$$410 St. Peter Street, Saint Paul

Meritage occupies the ground floor of the 1919 Hamm Building on St. Peter Street, two blocks from the Ordway and across from Rice Park in central downtown St. Paul. Chef Russell Klein, a multiple James Beard Best Chef: Midwest semifinalist, opened it in 2007 as a Parisian brasserie homage and has held the menu close to its original template ever since: oysters from a six-state list at the marble bar, escargots, steak frites, sole meunière, plateau de fruits de mer. The dining room runs on copper-and-ebony banquettes, mirrored walls, a tin ceiling original to the Hamm Building.

03

Tongue in Cheek

Editor PickNew American$$$989 Payne Avenue, Saint Paul

Tongue in Cheek opened on Payne Avenue in 2014, a deliberate bet on St. Paul's East Side at a moment when no critic considered the neighbourhood a dining destination. The dining room is a former saloon — long, narrow, brick walls, a sixteen-seat marble bar facing an open kitchen — and the lighting is dim enough that the room reads as supper club at night even though the menu is unrelentingly contemporary. Roughly fifty covers across the bar, the main room, and a small back nook for parties of six to eight.

04

Estelle

Eater Twin Cities 38Spanish / Portuguese / Italian$$$1806 Saint Clair Avenue, Saint Paul

Estelle opened on Saint Clair Avenue in 2019 from the team behind W.A. Frost, working a small Mac-Groveland storefront into a thirty-eight-seat room of leather banquettes, candle-soft lighting, an exposed-brick bar lined with bottles. The cuisine — Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian — leans into the small-plates and shared-dishes format that southern Europe is best at: jamón ibérico carved tableside, gilda skewers of olive-anchovy-guindilla, octopus à feira, a short list of pastas and meat mains for the table that wants a more conventional dinner structure.

05

Forepaugh's

Historic Landmark DiningNew American / Historic$$$$276 Exchange Street South, Saint Paul

Forepaugh's occupies the 1870 Joseph Forepaugh House on Exchange Street, at the heart of St. Paul's Irvine Park Historic District — four blocks of Civil-War-era mansions a short walk from the river. The restaurant, after a multi-year closure, reopened in 2024 following a million-dollar restoration that preserved the Victorian interior: parquet floors, twelve-foot ceilings, the original carved-walnut staircase, three intimate dining rooms across the main floor seating between four and twenty guests apiece. The new operator is a local hospitality group with a track record on Summit Avenue and in Lowertown.

Dining in St. Paul

The insider’s guide to St. Paul’s table