The Best New St. Louis Restaurants of 2018

Nudo House on the cover of Food & Wine. Zoe Robinson in Vogue. Travel and Leisure touting St. Louis as America’s next great food city. 2018 again saw the national spotlight cast its glow on the St. Louis food scene, and the city did not disappoint.

Credit for St. Louis’ ascent into the pantheon of great American food cities goes to the pioneers and innovators who have spent the last decade (and more) elevating its profile. This year, many of them continued their run with thrilling new restaurants, their most personal concepts yet. At the Benevolent King, Ben Poremba found himself back in the kitchen, often alongside his mother, exploring the cuisine of his youth. Gerard Craft’s Cinder House is a sleek, trendy hotspot in the Four Seasons Hotel; it’s also an earnest homage to the woman who taught him to love food. Anthony Devoti, a supremely talented chef who spent twelve years quietly running one of the city’s best restaurants, turned that concept into a celebration of his Italian roots. And of course, there is the inimitable Zoe Robinson, whose dazzling Billie-Jean feels like the restaurant she was born to run.

You cannot talk about St. Louis restaurants in 2018, however, without noting a slate of prominent closures, two of which would have made this list. Mike Randolph’s Privado would have likely topped it, but Randolph shuttered the restaurant not yet a year into its run. And if the Privado news was surprising, Randolph shocked the city when he announced that he would also close his acclaimed Público by the end of the year. Meanwhile, Squatters Café was always conceived of as a temporary project for chef Rob Connoley while he worked to open Bulrush, but coupled with the closures of beloved and well-received spots including Quincy Street Bistro, Parigi, Vista Ramen, Element and Porano Pasta, it stung. Add this month’s closure of the landmark Cardwell’s at the Plaza, and the scale of loss starts to feel significant.

These closures have made me question whether we’re less coming into our own as a food city and more in the midst of a bubble that is bursting. But then I look at the restaurants on this list, as well as the other worthy new spots that did not make the top ten, and I’m convinced the present and future are bright.

It’s not the national spotlight that is making them shine; that brightness comes from within. St. Louis has more good restaurants today than it’s had at any point in recent history, and it’s regularly adding even more, including the promising Savage, which opened in the fall and wasn’t reviewed in time to make this list.

With that sort of growth, there are bound to be fits and starts along the way — not a bubble, but an evolution. And now that we’ve tasted what these chefs have to offer, there’s simply no going back.

- Cheryl Baehr

Nudo House on the cover of Food & Wine. Zoe Robinson in Vogue. Travel and Leisure touting St. Louis as America’s next great food city. 2018 again saw the national spotlight cast its glow on the St. Louis food scene, and the city did not disappoint.

Credit for St. Louis’ ascent into the pantheon of great American food cities goes to the pioneers and innovators who have spent the last decade (and more) elevating its profile. This year, many of them continued their run with thrilling new restaurants, their most personal concepts yet. At the Benevolent King, Ben Poremba found himself back in the kitchen, often alongside his mother, exploring the cuisine of his youth. Gerard Craft’s Cinder House is a sleek, trendy hotspot in the Four Seasons Hotel; it’s also an earnest homage to the woman who taught him to love food. Anthony Devoti, a supremely talented chef who spent twelve years quietly running one of the city’s best restaurants, turned that concept into a celebration of his Italian roots. And of course, there is the inimitable Zoe Robinson, whose dazzling Billie-Jean feels like the restaurant she was born to run.

You cannot talk about St. Louis restaurants in 2018, however, without noting a slate of prominent closures, two of which would have made this list. Mike Randolph’s Privado would have likely topped it, but Randolph shuttered the restaurant not yet a year into its run. And if the Privado news was surprising, Randolph shocked the city when he announced that he would also close his acclaimed Público by the end of the year. Meanwhile, Squatters Café was always conceived of as a temporary project for chef Rob Connoley while he worked to open Bulrush, but coupled with the closures of beloved and well-received spots including Quincy Street Bistro, Parigi, Vista Ramen, Element and Porano Pasta, it stung. Add this month’s closure of the landmark Cardwell’s at the Plaza, and the scale of loss starts to feel significant.

These closures have made me question whether we’re less coming into our own as a food city and more in the midst of a bubble that is bursting. But then I look at the restaurants on this list, as well as the other worthy new spots that did not make the top ten, and I’m convinced the present and future are bright.

It’s not the national spotlight that is making them shine; that brightness comes from within. St. Louis has more good restaurants today than it’s had at any point in recent history, and it’s regularly adding even more, including the promising Savage, which opened in the fall and wasn’t reviewed in time to make this list.

With that sort of growth, there are bound to be fits and starts along the way — not a bubble, but an evolution. And now that we’ve tasted what these chefs have to offer, there’s simply no going back.

- Cheryl Baehr

Photos by Mabel Suen
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1. Billie-Jean 
7610 Wydown Boulevard, Clayton | 314-797-8484 
Zoe Robinson jokes that when she and her longtime collaborator, chef Ny Vongsalay, first embarked on their wild ride into the restaurant business some 30 years ago, they were too young to know better. Back then, she was a server, barely out of her teens and unexpectedly running her first restaurant after its former owners got into a heated dispute. Vongsalay had just made it to the U.S. after fleeing war-torn Laos. The pair instantly clicked, forging a friendship over a shared love of food that would last decades and usher them into the upper echelon of the city’s dining scene. Each restaurant they’ve opened — Café Zoe, Zoe Pan Asian Café, Bobo Noodle Company, I Fratellini, Bar Les Freres — has been stylish, innovative and well-executed, but their latest concept, Billie-Jean, is their most personal, and also their best.
Mabel Suen
1. Billie-Jean
7610 Wydown Boulevard, Clayton | 314-797-8484
Zoe Robinson jokes that when she and her longtime collaborator, chef Ny Vongsalay, first embarked on their wild ride into the restaurant business some 30 years ago, they were too young to know better. Back then, she was a server, barely out of her teens and unexpectedly running her first restaurant after its former owners got into a heated dispute. Vongsalay had just made it to the U.S. after fleeing war-torn Laos. The pair instantly clicked, forging a friendship over a shared love of food that would last decades and usher them into the upper echelon of the city’s dining scene. Each restaurant they’ve opened — Café Zoe, Zoe Pan Asian Café, Bobo Noodle Company, I Fratellini, Bar Les Freres — has been stylish, innovative and well-executed, but their latest concept, Billie-Jean, is their most personal, and also their best.
Billie-Jean is such a flawless blend of their personalities and culinary backgrounds that it may as well be an edible biography. Thrillingly modern, the restaurant effortlessly slips between Robinson’s contemporary American polish and Vongsalay’s Southeast Asian roots, resulting in such wonderful dishes as Hamachi crudo, baked quail eggs and its signature mahogany glazed spare ribs. When Robinson spoke about Billie-Jean earlier this year, she said that she feels her confidence and point of view have matured with each concept, leading her to a place where she can boldly put herself out there, head held high. With Billie-Jean, she has every reason to be proud. 
Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/billie-jean-thrilling-in-every-detail-is-zoe-robinsons-best-restaurant-yet/Content?oid=18595279.
Mabel Suen
Billie-Jean is such a flawless blend of their personalities and culinary backgrounds that it may as well be an edible biography. Thrillingly modern, the restaurant effortlessly slips between Robinson’s contemporary American polish and Vongsalay’s Southeast Asian roots, resulting in such wonderful dishes as Hamachi crudo, baked quail eggs and its signature mahogany glazed spare ribs. When Robinson spoke about Billie-Jean earlier this year, she said that she feels her confidence and point of view have matured with each concept, leading her to a place where she can boldly put herself out there, head held high. With Billie-Jean, she has every reason to be proud.

Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/billie-jean-thrilling-in-every-detail-is-zoe-robinsons-best-restaurant-yet/Content?oid=18595279.
2. Louie
706 De Mun Avenue, Clayton | 314-300-8188
Some restaurants remain vivid in the city’s dining consciousness even after they close. Matt McGuire’s King Louie’s is one of those places. After the end of the restaurant’s twelve-year run, McGuire went to work for the best of the best, making a name for himself as a front-of-the-house guru. The ghost of King Louie’s never left, however, and when McGuire felt ready, he jumped back into the role of restaurateur, opening the wonderful Louie in Clayton’s DeMun neighborhood.
Mabel Suen
2. Louie
706 De Mun Avenue, Clayton | 314-300-8188
Some restaurants remain vivid in the city’s dining consciousness even after they close. Matt McGuire’s King Louie’s is one of those places. After the end of the restaurant’s twelve-year run, McGuire went to work for the best of the best, making a name for himself as a front-of-the-house guru. The ghost of King Louie’s never left, however, and when McGuire felt ready, he jumped back into the role of restaurateur, opening the wonderful Louie in Clayton’s DeMun neighborhood.
Louie has been open less than a year, but it already feels like an institution, blending into the charming environs with both style and substance. McGuire jokes that King Louie’s was a neighborhood restaurant without a neighborhood; DeMun fills that void, giving you the sense that this was the place McGuire was meant to open all along. 
Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/louie-is-the-complete-package-the-kind-of-restaurant-where-everyone-wants-to-eat/Content?oid=19425551.
Mabel Suen
Louie has been open less than a year, but it already feels like an institution, blending into the charming environs with both style and substance. McGuire jokes that King Louie’s was a neighborhood restaurant without a neighborhood; DeMun fills that void, giving you the sense that this was the place McGuire was meant to open all along.

Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/louie-is-the-complete-package-the-kind-of-restaurant-where-everyone-wants-to-eat/Content?oid=19425551.
3. Cinder House
999 North Second Street | 314-881-5759
Gerard Craft was a picky eater as a kid, and might have subsisted off such bland fare as buttered noodles for his entire childhood were it not for his beloved nanny, Cecelia “Dia” Assuncao. Hailing from Brazil, Assuncao dazzled young Craft with her impeccable South American cooking, instilling a passion for food that ultimately led to his career as a renowned chef. Craft’s latest concept, Cinder House, succeeds not because it is a beautiful, delicious restaurant — though it is indeed those things — but because it is personal.
Mabel Suen
3. Cinder House
999 North Second Street | 314-881-5759
Gerard Craft was a picky eater as a kid, and might have subsisted off such bland fare as buttered noodles for his entire childhood were it not for his beloved nanny, Cecelia “Dia” Assuncao. Hailing from Brazil, Assuncao dazzled young Craft with her impeccable South American cooking, instilling a passion for food that ultimately led to his career as a renowned chef. Craft’s latest concept, Cinder House, succeeds not because it is a beautiful, delicious restaurant — though it is indeed those things — but because it is personal.
The restaurant’s South American slant is a beautiful love song to Assuncao, made even more thrilling by being sung in such a stunning setting (the view from the eight floor of the Four Seasons is simply awe-inspiring). Assuncao passed away in 2009, living long enough to see Craft established as a chef, but not so long as to see the restaurant she inspired. With Cinder House, Craft makes sure her memory lives on — and that her world-class cooking can touch all of us. 
Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/cinder-house-is-a-chefs-dazzling-tribute-to-the-woman-who-taught-him-to-love-food/Content?oid=28543277.
Mabel Suen
The restaurant’s South American slant is a beautiful love song to Assuncao, made even more thrilling by being sung in such a stunning setting (the view from the eight floor of the Four Seasons is simply awe-inspiring). Assuncao passed away in 2009, living long enough to see Craft established as a chef, but not so long as to see the restaurant she inspired. With Cinder House, Craft makes sure her memory lives on — and that her world-class cooking can touch all of us.

Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/cinder-house-is-a-chefs-dazzling-tribute-to-the-woman-who-taught-him-to-love-food/Content?oid=28543277.
4. The Benevolent King
7268 Manchester Road, Maplewood | 314-899-0440
One of Ben Poremba’s most foundational culinary memories came in his mom’s kitchen in Israel, where as a kid he helped her roll chicken-filled Moroccan cigars called briouat. Fast-forward a few decades, and Poremba has found himself back in the kitchen, paying homage to his culinary roots with his Moroccan-inflected restaurant and bar the Benevolent King.
Mabel Suen
4. The Benevolent King
7268 Manchester Road, Maplewood | 314-899-0440
One of Ben Poremba’s most foundational culinary memories came in his mom’s kitchen in Israel, where as a kid he helped her roll chicken-filled Moroccan cigars called briouat. Fast-forward a few decades, and Poremba has found himself back in the kitchen, paying homage to his culinary roots with his Moroccan-inflected restaurant and bar the Benevolent King.
The Benevolent King is a return to cooking for the James Beard-nominated Poremba, who stepped into the role of restaurateur since opening his wildly successful sister restaurants, Elaia and Olio, in 2012. At this Maplewood hotspot, he is as comfortable, and skillful, as ever. Poremba draws upon his Moroccan roots, creating a menu of ever-changing small plates that delight at every turn. Add an innovative bar program, overseen by the wildly talented Tony Saputo, and the Benevolent King is nothing short of spectacular. 
Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/at-the-benevolent-king-ben-poremba-triumphantly-returns-to-the-kitchen-and-his-roots/Content?oid=24217794.
Mabel Suen
The Benevolent King is a return to cooking for the James Beard-nominated Poremba, who stepped into the role of restaurateur since opening his wildly successful sister restaurants, Elaia and Olio, in 2012. At this Maplewood hotspot, he is as comfortable, and skillful, as ever. Poremba draws upon his Moroccan roots, creating a menu of ever-changing small plates that delight at every turn. Add an innovative bar program, overseen by the wildly talented Tony Saputo, and the Benevolent King is nothing short of spectacular.

Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/at-the-benevolent-king-ben-poremba-triumphantly-returns-to-the-kitchen-and-his-roots/Content?oid=24217794.
5. J. Devoti Trattoria
5100 Daggett Avenue | 314-773-5553
If you ask chef Anthony Devoti, he’s been running an Italian restaurant ever since he opened the acclaimed Five Bistro twelve years ago. Tomatoes plucked from the garden, basil fresh from his mom’s patio, a fierce commitment to nose-to-tail cooking — if you wanted to know what it’s like to eat in the Old Country, you had to look no further than his restaurant. The problem was that not many diners realized as much. Located on the Hill, Five Bistro was surrounded by American-style Italian joints, and its more modern (and subtle) charms flew under many diners’ radar.
Mabel Suen
5. J. Devoti Trattoria
5100 Daggett Avenue | 314-773-5553
If you ask chef Anthony Devoti, he’s been running an Italian restaurant ever since he opened the acclaimed Five Bistro twelve years ago. Tomatoes plucked from the garden, basil fresh from his mom’s patio, a fierce commitment to nose-to-tail cooking — if you wanted to know what it’s like to eat in the Old Country, you had to look no further than his restaurant. The problem was that not many diners realized as much. Located on the Hill, Five Bistro was surrounded by American-style Italian joints, and its more modern (and subtle) charms flew under many diners’ radar.
Wanting to reclaim what it means to be an Italian restaurant, Devoti closed Five this past year, reopening as the delightful J. Devoti Trattoria. More explicitly Italian than Five, J. Devoti Trattoria showcases the chef’s skill at making flawlessly executed, refined cooking feel accessible. It doesn’t get more authentically Italian than that. 
Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/j-devoti-trattoria-the-former-five-bistro-is-simply-terrific/Content?oid=24876358.
Mabel Suen
Wanting to reclaim what it means to be an Italian restaurant, Devoti closed Five this past year, reopening as the delightful J. Devoti Trattoria. More explicitly Italian than Five, J. Devoti Trattoria showcases the chef’s skill at making flawlessly executed, refined cooking feel accessible. It doesn’t get more authentically Italian than that.

Read about it https://www.riverfronttimes.com/stlouis/j-devoti-trattoria-the-former-five-bistro-is-simply-terrific/Content?oid=24876358.