Skip to Main Content
Modern Italian American

Google: 4.1 · 189 reviews

← Collection
Price≈$50
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityLarge
James Beard Award
World's Best Wine Lists Awards

Madrina holds a 2-Star Accreditation from the World of Fine Wine London Awards, a credential that places it well above the mid-tier dining norm for a St. Louis suburb. Situated on West Lockwood Avenue in Webster Groves, Missouri, the restaurant operates in a neighbourhood known more for quiet residential streets than serious culinary recognition — making the accreditation a signal worth paying attention to.

Madrina restaurant in Webster Groves, United States
About

Where Webster Groves Meets Serious Dining

Webster Groves is not a neighbourhood that announces itself loudly. The streets running off West Lockwood Avenue are residential and unhurried, the kind of suburb that draws young families and long-term St. Louis residents rather than out-of-town visitors tracking restaurant heat maps. That context matters, because it makes Madrina's presence at 101 W Lockwood Ave a more interesting editorial fact than it might first appear. A World of Fine Wine London Awards 2-Star Accreditation is not distributed generously. The award programme evaluates wine lists with the same critical rigour applied to major urban dining rooms, and a 2-Star result places Madrina in company that most suburban American restaurants never reach. For a guide to how Madrina sits within the wider local options, see our full Webster Groves restaurants guide.

What the Wine Accreditation Actually Signals

The World of Fine Wine London Awards assess wine programmes on depth, sourcing intelligence, and the coherence of a list relative to the food it accompanies. A 2-Star result is the programme's second-highest tier, and it implies a kitchen and front-of-house team working from the same set of priorities. Restaurants earning this level of recognition typically commit to producers and regions with genuine traceability, and their lists tend to reflect editorial decisions rather than distributor defaults. That is the significant point here: the accreditation is less about the number of bottles on the list and more about how deliberately those bottles were chosen.

In the American Midwest, this tier of wine curation is far more common in Chicago or Kansas City's River Market than in a suburb of St. Louis. The comparison set for Madrina's wine programme skews toward urban fine dining rather than neighbourhood bistros. Restaurants like Alinea in Chicago and Lazy Bear in San Francisco operate wine programmes calibrated against their ambitious food formats; Madrina's accreditation suggests a similar pairing philosophy, adjusted for a very different physical and cultural setting.

The Ingredient Sourcing Frame

The editorial angle that makes most sense for a restaurant earning this kind of wine recognition is ingredient sourcing. Wine lists at 2-Star accreditation level are almost never assembled in isolation from the kitchen. The relationship between what arrives on the plate and what appears in the glass is, at this tier, structural rather than incidental. The most sustained examples of this in American dining sit at places like Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, where the sourcing chain is the menu, and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, where farm provenance dictates the format of each course. Madrina operates in a different price bracket and region, but the logic of its wine accreditation points toward a kitchen that has thought seriously about where its raw materials originate.

The Midwest does not lack for serious agricultural produce. Missouri sits within reach of Ozark-region farms, and the St. Louis dining scene has, over the past decade, developed a more explicit relationship with regional sourcing. That regional shift has given suburban restaurants a credible supply chain that did not exist in the same form twenty years ago. A restaurant in Webster Groves with a 2-Star wine list is well positioned to take advantage of that supply infrastructure, pairing regionally sourced produce with wines chosen to complement their specific character rather than their price point.

Positioning Within the St. Louis Dining Tier

St. Louis metropolitan area supports a range of dining ambitions. Tasting-menu formats and serious wine programmes exist in the city proper, but the suburbs have historically lagged in recognition. Madrina's accreditation represents a departure from that pattern. For comparison, restaurants operating at this level of wine programme sophistication on the coasts tend to carry additional markers: Michelin recognition at Le Bernardin in New York City, James Beard attention at Emeril's in New Orleans, or sustained critical presence as at Providence in Los Angeles and Addison in San Diego. Madrina's single confirmed credential is its wine accreditation, which on its own tells a specific and credible story about programme quality without requiring the broader awards apparatus that coastal restaurants accumulate.

That restraint in the credential stack is actually informative. A restaurant with one serious, independently verified accolade in a suburb that attracts little critical travel is making a statement about audience: it is not programming for reviewers, it is programming for guests who live close enough to return. That kind of repeat-guest orientation tends to produce more consistent sourcing relationships and more considered wine buying, because the room expects both to be maintained rather than performed for a one-time visit.

Planning a Visit

Madrina sits at 101 W Lockwood Avenue, Webster Groves, MO 63119, on the main commercial strip of the suburb, roughly fifteen minutes southwest of downtown St. Louis by car. West Lockwood Avenue has a concentration of independent restaurants and retail that makes it a sensible destination for a longer evening, and the neighbourhood is accessible without requiring a return trip through dense city traffic. For those arriving from further afield and planning an overnight, our full Webster Groves hotels guide covers the available accommodation options in the area. Guests extending their time in the suburb can also consult our full Webster Groves bars guide, our full Webster Groves wineries guide, and our full Webster Groves experiences guide for a fuller picture of the area.

Specific hours, pricing, and booking methods are not confirmed in the venue data available to EP Club at time of publication. Given the wine programme calibre, reservations made in advance are advisable; restaurants at this accreditation tier typically operate with a fixed capacity that fills on weekends without much buffer. Arriving without a booking on a Friday or Saturday carries meaningful risk of disappointment.

For readers tracking serious wine and food pairing programmes beyond the Midwest, the broader EP Club coverage of North American and international fine dining offers useful context: The French Laundry in Napa, The Inn at Little Washington, Albi in Washington, D.C., 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong, and Alain Ducasse at Louis XV in Monte Carlo each represent the global tier of wine-integrated dining that the World of Fine Wine accreditation programme benchmarks against.

Signature Dishes
linguine con vongolespaghetti carbonarabistecca Fiorentinawarm ricotta
Frequently asked questions

Fast Comparison

These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Cozy
  • Intimate
  • Romantic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Group Dining
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityLarge
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Subtle lighting, deep burgundy booths, dark wood accents, and indirect lighting creating an elegant, warm, and sophisticated mid-century luxury vibe.

Signature Dishes
linguine con vongolespaghetti carbonarabistecca Fiorentinawarm ricotta