The Top 10 Tasting Menus Near Ria's Bluebird
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Rank 1. Staplehouse
New American
In Old Fourth Ward, Staplehouse trades white tablecloths for a counter and casual courtyard where diners order, drink, and linger over seasonal pizzas and charcuterie. The kitchen pivots its limited menu daily, treating each board and sandwich as an expression of what's fresh and available.
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Infatuation #22 · The 25 Best Restaurants In Atlanta
- Eater 2016 · The Best New Restaurants in America
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Rank 2. Lazy Betty
Experimental
Ron Hsu and Aaron Phillips orchestrate a tasting menu where regional Southern ingredients meet delicate Asian sensibilities. A tuna roll wrapped in translucent bluefin, mushroom and chestnut ravioli with potlikker vichyssoise, and honey-lacquered duck demonstrate a kitchen thinking clearly about flavor rather than flourish.
- Michelin Guide 1 Star
- The Infatuation Infatuation’s Highest-Rated Restaurants In America
- James Beard Awards 2023 · Semifinalist · Best Chef: Southeast · Ronald Hsu and Aaron Phillips
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Rank 3. Bacchanalia
New American
Dark wood and Edison bulbs frame a dining room where Georgia produce takes center stage across a four-course prix fixe with theatrical touches—dishes emerge on carts, beneath glass cloches—and genuine choice. A crab fritter has anchored the menu since opening; a grapefruit soufflé with pistachio crumble and rose cream closes it with restraint and precision. Handsome without pretense.
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Rank 4. Georgia Boy
Creative New American
A hidden counter restaurant accessed through a secret door in Southern Belle's library, where Chef Joey Ward stages playful, experimental tasting menus with flourishes like seared snapper served with cereal and tableside coconut broth. The theatrical presentation and inventive cooking justify the special-occasion price.
- Eater Most Innovative Chef · Joey Ward
- Michelin Guide Selected Restaurant
- The Infatuation #6 · The 25 Best Restaurants In Atlanta
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Rank 5. Ryokou
Japanese
Behind an unmarked door in an industrial building, Chef Paul Gutting seats fewer than a dozen guests at a bare counter to chart a region-by-region path through Japan's cuisines. The somen arrives with ice for temperature play, the black throat sea perch glistens under salt, and each course unfolds as a considered argument about restraint and ingredient.
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Rank 6. Atlas
New American
Inside the St. Regis, Chef Freddy Money's restaurant pairs rotating fine art with a seasonal American menu enriched by European technique—lobster with smoked paprika butter, sherry-caramelized sweetbreads, Australian wagyu—all delivered in a room designed for celebration rather than restraint.
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Rank 7. O by Brush
Omakase Sushi
Chef Jason Liang's omakase counter transforms hay-smoked fish and dry-aged cuts into a procession of precise, small revelations. The sake program matches each course with the same careful attention that defines this Michelin-starred counter tucked inside a luxury shopping center.
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Rank 8. Omakase Table
Japanese
Chef Leonard Yu commands a intimate counter where traditional omakase unfolds with seasonal precision, each course—from wagyu in sukiyaki to seared sole—executed without artifice. The meal culminates in restrained elegance: uni gohan with otoro and a delicate panna cotta that feels inevitable rather than showy.
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Rank 9. Omakase Table
Sushi
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Rank 10. The Alden
New American
Chef Jared Hucks charts a globally influenced course at this plush Chamblee dining room, where locally sourced ingredients ground each dish—lamb with pink peppercorns, snapper with heat and acid. The leather banquettes and attentive service encourage lingering over desserts like grapefruit curd on tandoori shortbread.