The Restaurant
Caprice Bistro opened in 2003 inside a restored two-storey brick building at 10 Market Street - a block west of the Cape Fear River waterfront and at the western end of the downtown Wilmington historic district - and has remained the city's most authentic French-Belgian bistro for more than two decades. The restaurant operates across two distinct levels: a ground-floor dining room with classical bistro layout (approximately sixty covers across a warm-lit single space with white-paper-over-white-cloth tables, deep-leather banquettes along the side walls, exposed-brick architecture, a polished wood bar at the back that seats six, and dog-friendly sidewalk seating fronting Market Street); and an upstairs sofa bar (approximately forty seats across a deep-couched lounge layout with classical French-cafe acoustics, a separate bar programme, and the kind of late-night register that no other downtown Wilmington room can sustain).
The kitchen project under chef-owners Pat and Therese Bertaux - a French chef and his Belgian wife who built the restaurant from a small downtown bistro into the city's most authentic French establishment - is rigorously classical French and Belgian. The menu has remained structurally consistent across the restaurant's twenty-year run: country pate de campagne with cornichons and grain mustard; escargots de Bourgogne in herbed garlic butter; Belgian moules-frites in white wine, garlic and shallots (the kitchen's most-ordered dish); steak au poivre with green-peppercorn cream sauce and pommes frites; duck a l'orange with classical reduction; coq au vin with bacon, mushrooms and pearl onions over buttered noodles; a rotating bouillabaisse that draws on the regional Atlantic catch; and a daily-changing prix-fixe menu that runs at a price point structurally accessible for a serious downtown dinner. The dessert programme is genuinely French - the creme brulee, the chocolate mousse with creme Chantilly, the daily tarte aux pommes - and the cheese course is among the most considered in coastal Carolina.
The upstairs sofa bar is Caprice's secondary signature and the reason the restaurant occupies a structural position in the Wilmington late-night calendar that no other room can match. The lounge runs from late-afternoon through one o'clock most nights of the week, serves a tight late-night menu of cheese plates, charcuterie and bistro snacks, and has the kind of classical French-cafe acoustics - low conversation, low lighting, classical jazz from the small house sound system - that has made the room the unofficial late-night gathering place for downtown Wilmington's senior creative class. The wine programme runs approximately one hundred and twenty references with explicit depth in Loire whites, Cotes-du-Rhone reds, Champagne, and a serious Belgian beer programme that includes the city's most considered Trappist-ale selection. For a downtown Wilmington meal that wants authentic French-bistro craft without the Lumina Station drive, Caprice Bistro has been the settled answer for two decades.
Why This Is Wilmington’s First Date Pick
For a first date in downtown Wilmington, Caprice Bistro is structurally the right call. The classical French-Belgian bistro frame removes the first-date negotiation pressure - the moules-frites and a glass of Sancerre is an evening that reads as deliberate without performing sophistication, and the two-storey building structure means the date can naturally migrate from the ground-floor dining room to the upstairs sofa bar for a post-dinner second drink without changing venues. The ground-floor dining room's lighting and table spacing support genuine conversation across a two-hour table; the price tier (most mains fall between twenty-six and thirty-eight dollars) signals deliberate care without veering into first-date pressure; and the dog-friendly sidewalk seating in the warmer months supplies the kind of casual European-cafe backdrop that few American small-city downtowns can offer. The 10 Market Street address is a two-minute walk from the Cape Fear River waterfront and a five-minute walk from the Wilmington Convention Center, which means a post-dinner walk along the Riverwalk is the natural close - the kind of structural follow-through that gives a first date a clear narrative arc from cocktail through dinner through riverside walk through upstairs nightcap.
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