2095 Best Restaurants in USA

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We've compiled the best of the best in USA - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Boulder Dushanbe Teahouse

$$ Fodor's Choice

Feast your eyes on the intricately carved walls, pillars, and ceiling at this unique teahouse, a gift from Boulder's sister city Dushanbe, Tajikistan; Tajik artisans decorated the building in a traditional style, with ceramic Islamic art and a riot of colorful wood. The menu presents a culinary cross section of the world, with dishes including North African harissa chicken, spicy Indonesian peanut noodles, and Tajik shish kebab.

Boulevard

$$$$ | Embarcadero Fodor's Choice

Celebrated local chef Nancy Oakes' high-profile, high-priced eatery in the historic 1889 Audiffred Building has been attracting well-dressed locals and flush out-of-towners since 1993. A striking belle époque interior (originally designed by Pat Kuleto and later touched up by Ken Fulk, both star local architects) is the setting for sophisticated American food with a French accent and a distinct local California produce twist.  The main dining room has a three-course set menu with several options in each course, while most of that menu is available à la carte in the bar area.

1 Mission St., San Francisco, CA, 94105, USA
415-543–6084
Known For
  • Any pork chop preparation
  • Polished service
  • Dungeness crab and grapefruit salad when in season
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No lunch
Reservations essential

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Bourbon Steak

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

This upscale steak restaurant run by top-rated chef Michael Mina lives up to the royal reputation of the Fairmont Scottsdale Princess. Its severe but stunning stone-and-glass entrance lets people know they are in for something serious—seriously good. Select from American-grade or Japanese Kobe beef, but be prepared for steep prices. Even the fries are luxurious here. If you're on a budget, head to the adjacent burger bar—you won't be disappointed.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Bowens Island

$$ Fodor's Choice

Hurricanes, fires, and the onslaught of trendy restaurants hitting downtown can't tamp down this family-owned seafood shack that's littered with oyster shells and graffiti. The menu is reliable: big ol' shrimp, fried or boiled; shrimp and grits; hush puppies; and the biggie—trays of piping hot steamed oysters. Dinner is served in an enclosed dock house, on a covered deck, and inside the main building. Find the local landmark on a slip of an island about 20 minutes from downtown and just before Folly Beach. When you see the sign, follow the dirt road until you see water. (Boaters can dock here while they eat.)

1871 Bowens Island Rd., Charleston, SC, 29412, USA
843-795–2757
Known For
  • One of the last old-school seafood shacks left
  • Traditional Lowcountry boil with straight-out-of-the-water seafood
  • Long lines on weekends
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Brancaccio's Food Shop

$ Fodor's Choice
In need of picnic supplies, lunch, or a take-home meal? Owner Joe Brancaccio has been feeding the neighborhood with his daily-changing menu of sandwiches, rotisserie chicken, and prepared pastas and vegetables since 2010, and the shop just keeps getting busier. There are also house-baked croissants (plain, chocolate, or cheese), imported Italian sodas, and hard-to-find Mexican Coca-Cola (made with cane sugar, not high-fructose corn syrup).

Brasserie La Banque

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

French fine dining with a hint of Carolina flair is flawlessly executed at this stunning brasserie in a former bank with soaring ceilings and wide windows overlooking horse-drawn carriages on Broad Street. Yes, you'll find escargots, foie gras, and steak frites, all executed at the highest possible level, but save room for entrées like the duck breast cassoulet, served over a confit leg with the perfect amount of crispy indulgence. Before or after your meal, grab a drink downstairs in the speakeasy-esque Bar Vaute, built into the semi-underground former vault. 

1 Broad St., Charleston, SC, 29401, USA
843-779–1800
Known For
  • Seasonal spins on classic French cocktails
  • Alluring menu fit for special occasions
  • Dining in handsome, unique environs
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays
Reservations essential

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Brazilian Grill

$$$ Fodor's Choice

At this all-you-can-eat churrascaria, waiters continually circulate through the dining room offering more than a dozen grilled meats—beef, pork, chicken, sausage, and the beloved Brazilian chicken hearts—on large, swordlike skewers. The massive buffet is laden with soups, salads, and side dishes, including plantains, rice, and beans; vegetarians could happily eat from the buffet, but the smell of grilling meat does permeate the restaurant.

Breadfarm

$ Fodor's Choice

A favorite stop on the Bow-Edison Food Trail, this cozy purveyor of savory artisan breads and delectable pastries is a great place to stock up on picnic supplies before venturing up scenic Chuckanut Drive. The offerings change regularly and feature ingredients from local farms—you might find pumpkin brioche, herb focaccia, black olive baguettes, ham-and-cheese pastries, and chocolate babkas.

Breadline Cafe

$$ Fodor's Choice

Since the early 1980s, Breadline has been a top dining destination in the Okanogan Valley for hearty servings of eclectic fare. The menu features local organic produce, a variety of freshly baked breads, and locally raised natural Angus beef. You'll find Cajun dishes such as jambalaya, as well as an around-the-world assortment of cuisines, including Italian and Greek. The bakery features such sweet treats as lavender shortbread cookies, espresso brownies, elaborately-decorated cakes, and other pastries and breads for take-out.

102 S. Ash St., Omak, 98841, USA
509-826–5836
Known For
  • The apple pie, pink cookie, and fresh baked bread are local favorites
  • Soda fountain treats like huckleberry milkshakes
  • Take-out cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Sat.–Mon.

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Breakwater

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Enjoy fresh-caught New England seafood (and more) dockside at Breakwater, midway along Water Street in Stonington Borough. Dine inside or outside on the deck in warm weather; the roomy bar is a popular gathering place in winter months.

The Brew & Brew

$ | East Austin Fodor's Choice

What started as a streamlined coffee and craft beer purveyor with sparse hours has evolved into an all-day mainstay of east Austin. The industrial garage vibe blends in well with its I–35-adjacent neighbors and attracts a hip clientele from morning to night, who flock here for cold brews and stacked breakfast sandwiches and then like to stick around for their local lineup of draft brews, full bar, and light café fare including late-night guilty-pleasure snacks.

Brezza

$$$$ | North Strip Fodor's Choice

This sleek restaurant may be decorated primarily in neutrals, but the food by James Beard–nominated chef Nicole Brisson brings plenty of color. Her updated Italian classics include Tuscan carne cruda with lemon, capers, and shallots; herb tagliatelle with rabbit ragu; a whole branzino; and a 120-day dry-aged 42-ounce tomahawk. At lunch, choices include a sausage and fontina tart, and charred octopus. Ciccetti Hour is from 3:30 to 5 pm daily. When the weather’s grand, dine on the lovely expansive patio, which is surrounded by olive trees saved from the old Stardust.

3000 Las Vegas Blvd. S, Las Vegas, NV, 89109, USA
702-676–6014
Known For
  • Rising chef Nicole Brisson
  • Classic dishes with original takes
  • Expansive patio with olive trees

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Bricco Salumeria

$ | North End Fodor's Choice

Frank DePasquale’s sandwich and pasta shop is easy to miss, but just follow the steady stream of savvy locals down the alley adjacent to his award-winning restaurant to find the tiny spot packed with imported Italian meats and cheeses, vinegars, tomatoes, olive oils, and more. The monumental Italian sandwich is a heaping pile of mortadella, Genoa salami, soppressata, provolone, and all the fixings, while the packed chicken parmigiano is a shareable feast. All are served on house-made breads from the panetteria next door.

Brick & Fire Bistro

$$ Fodor's Choice

Nearly every seat in this urbane bistro has a view of its most important feature—a wood-fired brick oven used to prepare everything from local Kumamoto oysters and creatively topped pizzas to wild-mushroom cobbler. Soups, several well-constructed salads, grilled meats, and seafood round out the menu.

Brick's River Cafe

$$ Fodor's Choice

Locals and visitors alike flock to Brick's for country cooking with a view. The restaurant itself has a humble interior, but it's the patio overlooking the Medina River that wins everyone's heart. It's a great spot to start with a mason-jar drink while you wait for a table to sample the simple but well-done menu, with comforting classics like a crispy Jager Schnitzel with mushroom sauce and braised cabbage, homemade meatballs, and smashed potatoes.

Brigitte Bistro

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Youthful vacations in southern France inspired the menu at the wide-windowed storefront restaurant opened by Nick Ronan, a longtime San Francisco restaurateur and author of The Kissing Chef. "I feed my soul through people," the chef has been known to declare, his zeal for community informing his effusive hospitality and diligent Cal-modern reinterpretations of onion soup, cassoulet, coquilles St. Jacques, beef Bourguignon, and other familiar fare.

841 Petaluma Blvd. N, Petaluma, CA, 94952, USA
707-981–8381
Known For
  • French feel, including piano player
  • Pâté en croûte (pâté in a crust) and escargots starters
  • French-heavy wine list with Napa/Sonoma small-lot complements
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.

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Brix 25°

$$$ Fodor's Choice

Seasonally sourced contemporary American and European dishes are beautifully presented in this light-filled dining room with expansive outdoor terraces overlooking Gig Harbor. Dinners are elaborate affairs that feature seafood—perhaps Thai curry and coconut-steamed mussels—and rich classics such as grilled filet mignon with scampi-compound butter. Tempting desserts include an array of cakes, ice creams, and cobblers, and there's a fine wine to match every course. This wine-focused bistro takes its name from the term used by winemakers to describe the natural sugar content of grapes and wines.

3315 Harborview Dr., Gig Harbor, 98332, USA
253-858–6626
Known For
  • Sweeping harbor views
  • Outstanding wine list
  • Double-dark chocolate brownies with strawberries
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. and Wed. No lunch

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Broder

$ Fodor's Choice

This adorable neighborhood café—one of the most outstanding brunch spots in town—serves fresh and delicious Scandinavian food with fun-to-pronounce names like friterade applen (apple fritter) and aebleskivers (Danish pancakes). All the food—the hashes, lefse potato crepes, the baked egg scrambles, the Swedish breakfast boards—is delicious, with the Swedish meatballs in sherry cream sauce and salmon fish cakes with caraway vinaigrette being especially tasty among the midday choices. There are additional locations in North Portland, Southwest Portland, and Hood River in the Columbia Gorge.

2508 S.E. Clinton St., OR, 97255, USA
503-736–3333
Known For
  • Light-filled dining room with rustic-modern furniture
  • Often long waits for a table, especially for breakfast
  • Impressive selection of aquavit
Restaurant Details
Closed Tues. No dinner

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Broken Hearts Burger

$ Fodor's Choice

What does a mid-century burger joint look like in modern times? Retro décor including a vintage jukebox, pinball machine, and long diner-style counter, sure, but also fresh-ground local beef in the double-double-style Heartbreaker burger, Jump Back Sauce with house-made Japanese mayo, light-as-air doughnuts, orange wine, and the area's best beer list. It all comes together at Matt Walker's hometown restaurant for a perfect nostalgic experience that will bring you back to childhood summers, whether or not you spent them at one of Fairlee's lakeside sleepaway camps.

192 Main St., Fairlee, VT, 05045, USA
Known For
  • Crispy shoestring fries that take 36 hours to make
  • Fun and funky beverages sourced by the owner, who has an extensive cocktail background from Brooklyn and Burlington
  • Smashburgers made Oklahoma-style, with onions griddled in
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Brooklin Inn

$$ Fodor's Choice

Like the inn that houses it, this restaurant was modernized in 2021 and has seating in the dining room, bar, or garden. Items on its ever-changing menu feature local and seasonal produce and might include littleneck clams with tomato confit, lamb chops with mint and cucumber relish, or hand-rolled ricotta gnocchi. The bar menu offers small production wines, Maine craft beer, and creative spirits.

22 Reach Rd., Brooklin, ME, 04616, USA
207-359–2777
Known For
  • Garden seating
  • Trendy but casual atmosphere
  • Sophisticated fare
Restaurant Details
No lunch. Closed Sun.–Tues.
Only serves pizza on Sun.

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Brooklyn Roasting Company

$ | DUMBO Fodor's Choice
Artfully disheveled staffers brew coffee from fair-trade and rain-forest alliance–certified beans, while local gallerists and start-up techies flirt over perfectly poured cortados and other beverages at this East River--adjacent café. The loft-style industrial space is filled with antique roasting equipment and ample seating, and also serves pastries and sandwiches.

Brown's Brewing Company

$ Fodor's Choice

The brewpub occupies a circa-1850 riverside warehouse. In warm weather, locals linger on the outdoor deck overlooking the Hudson; inside, exposed-brick walls set off local memorabilia, antiques, and old photos. A slew of beers is concocted on-site, including the smooth oatmeal stout, which won a gold medal at the World Beer Cup. The pub menu has been expanded and offers classics like burgers as well as sophisticated seafood dishes.

Brown's Diner

$ | Hillsboro Village Fodor's Choice

One of Nashville's oldest restaurants still in operation, the famed Brown's Diner first opened its doors in 1927. This spot, housed in a large trailer, is popular with celebrities and regular ol' locals, and the burger is one of the best in town.

Bubby's Burrito Stand

$ Fodor's Choice

This popular food stand sets up in a tiny trailer on the grounds of Hardeman Orchards between late April and late September. The owner (known by her childhood nickname Bubby) serves vegetarian burritos (with or without guacamole) and quesadillas. The heated tortillas are almost bursting at the sides with black beans, salsa, lettuce, cheese, and sour cream. There are two flavorful salsas that can be added; the green tomatillo one is spicier. Soft drinks and Mexican aguas frescas can be picked out of a cooler.

194 W. Market St., Red Hook, NY, 12571, USA
Restaurant Details
No credit cards
Closed Sun. and Mon.
Reservations not accepted

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Buca's Tuscan Roadhouse

$$$ Fodor's Choice

This romantic roadhouse near the Chatham border, adorned with tiny white lights, wine bottles, and warm-hue walls, might just transport you to Italy—and if it doesn't, the fantastic food certainly will. There are always excellent specials added to the menu; in the fall and winter, look for value-priced entrées, and in summer, their hot dog cart (in the parking lot) serves the best wieners on the Cape.

4 Depot Rd., Harwich, MA, 02645, USA
508-432–6900
Known For
  • Buca's bolognese with wild boar
  • Chocolate Italian wedding cake
  • Chicken saltimbocca
Restaurant Details
No lunch
Reservations essential

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bûccan

$$$ Fodor's Choice

An antidote to the sometimes stuffy and "jackets-encouraged" atmosphere of most restaurants on the island, chef-owner Clay Conley's ode to eclectic American cuisine neatly straddles the line between fine dining and exciting gastropub. The restaurant attracts both old money and the younger set, with a buzzing bar-and-lounge scene and an open kitchen showcasing the culinary acrobatics on display. The cooking here is flavorful and sophisticated with globe-trotting influences apparent (confit Rohan duck pancake) and upscale renditions of comfort food (sweet corn agnolotti with ricotta, bacon, and Espelette butter) along with straightforward classics (Prime NY strip with chanterelle mushrooms). Success has bred more delicious gems: The chef's sandwich shop, also on the premises just next door, draws beachgoers who want to pack a picnic lunch. An Asian spot next door called Imoto churns out izakaya-style dishes to rave reviews.

350 S. County Rd., Palm Beach, FL, 33480, USA
561-833–3450
Known For
  • Small sharing plates
  • Hamachi tiradito
  • Short-rib empanadas
Restaurant Details
No lunch
Reservations essential

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Buck & Johnny's

$$ Fodor's Choice

With its exposed brick interior and exterior, this Breaux Bridge eatery puts a spicy, Cajun twist on rich Italian classics. It's their world-famous Saturday morning zydeco brunch ($10 cover), however, that really brings in the visitors: locals and tourists swing by as early as 8 am to fill up on breakfast favorites and $15 bottomless cocktails, and to dance to live local bands before making the rounds to other Cajun Country parties.

100 Berard St., Breaux Bridge, LA, 70517, USA
337-442–6630
Known For
  • Live music Wednesday through Saturday
  • Fantastic crawfish enchiladas
  • Saturday morning dancing with bottomless cocktails
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. No dinner Mon.

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Buckhorn Saloon & Opera House

$$ Fodor's Choice

Come here to see 1860s Western decor and stay for the food—including some of the best steak and seafood in the region. The bar is a friendly place to gather; the dining rooms are cozy, the tablecloths white, and the walls replete with photos from the last 140 years of the area's history. The property also includes the Opera House, where live music is performed (on Friday and Saturday at 8).

Bucklyn Coffee

$ Fodor's Choice

This tiny, friendly shop serves big, flavorful coffee and interesting sweet and savory pastries. On sunny days the patio tables out front fill up with locals and visitors alike.

103 Main St., Blue Hill, ME, USA
917-971–3246
Known For
  • Excellently made coffee
  • Delicious pastries
  • Maine-roasted beans
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.

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Buckshot Honey

$$ Fodor's Choice

Dig in to some of the tastiest and most flavorful barbecue in the state at this upbeat restaurant in a handsome 1923 brick building that has at various times served as the local bank, police station, and city hall. The chef-owner describes his barbecue as Cascadian, and his specialties do reflect some creative regional influences—consider the gochujang-marinated burnt ends with chanterelle mushrooms, pickled onions, and sour corn, or the roast-veggie salad with pulled pork and black-garlic ranch dressing. 

38767 S.E. River St., Snoqualmie, 98065, USA
425-292–0200
Known For
  • Cabin in the Woods cocktail (bourbon, local apple cider, maple, lemon, and bitters)
  • Mac-and-cheese bowls with your choice of meat
  • Uncle Phil sandwich (smoked brisket, provolone, and horseradish mayo on challah)
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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