Mignonette
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A converted 1930s gas station on the edge of Miami's Edgewood neighbourhood, Mignonette has operated as a Michelin Plate-recognised oyster bar since 2014. Chef Dan Serfer's room draws equally from flip-flop crowds and date-night regulars, anchored by a daily rotating marquee of bivalves, smoked fish dip served with buttered saltines, and a key lime pie that closes the night cleanly.

A Gas Station, a Cemetery, and the Leading Oyster Bar in Edgewood
There is a particular type of seafood institution that American port cities have always produced: unfussy, ingredient-led, slightly worn at the edges, and completely confident about what it does. Miami has a handful of them. Garcia's Seafood Grill & Fish holds the river end of that tradition. Joe's Stone Crab owns the tourist-facing prestige tier. Mignonette, on a quiet corner of NE 18th Street directly across from a city cemetery, occupies a more democratic middle ground: a Michelin Plate-recognised oyster bar that has been drawing a genuinely mixed crowd to Edgewood since 2014.
The building helps set the tone before anyone opens the door. The original structure dates to the 1930s, when it operated as a gas station, and the renovation preserved that industrial skeleton rather than smoothing it over. Warehouse floors, wide booths, and floor-to-ceiling windows make the room feel open and unhurried. A vintage marquee out front lists the day's bivalves, and on busy nights the chefs shucking beneath it are visible from the street — a kind of live advertisement that works better than most.
Where Mignonette Sits in Miami's Seafood Scene
Miami's seafood dining has historically split between the white-tablecloth continental tradition, the waterfront-casual category, and a newer wave of technically ambitious programs. The River Oyster Bar represents one strand of that more polished tier. Mignonette operates differently: the dress code is effectively nonexistent (flip-flops and dinner jackets have coexisted here without incident), the price point sits at $$$, and the format is built around the oyster counter as anchor rather than as add-on.
That positioning matters. Oyster bars at this level succeed or fail on sourcing discipline and rotation depth. Mignonette's daily marquee system — listing available bivalves by name rather than offering a static selection , signals that the kitchen is working with what's arrived, not defaulting to a permanent house list. It's the same logic that drives the leading raw bars in New York and New Orleans, and it places Mignonette in a regional peer set that extends well beyond Miami's own dining scene.
For broader context on where Mignonette fits within Miami's wider restaurant offering, see our full Miami restaurants guide. And for comparison, the emphasis on ingredient sourcing and daily product rotation connects to similar disciplines at seafood-focused institutions like Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici Restaurant on the Amalfi Coast , formats that share the philosophy of letting the catch dictate the menu.
The Food: Oysters as the Point, Not the Prelude
At restaurants where oysters appear only as an opening act, the kitchen's real investment lies elsewhere. Mignonette inverts that logic. A guest can construct an entire meal from the raw bar without ever touching the cooked menu, and the room is designed to make that feel natural rather than incomplete.
That said, the small plates justify their own attention. The smoked fish dip arrives with buttered saltines , a combination that reads as deliberately low-key but works because the components are treated seriously. Mussels cooked in spicy tomato sauce add a cooked-seafood anchor for guests who want something warmer. Key lime pie closes the meal in a register that fits the room: locally rooted, clean, and not trying to be anything more than what it is.
This approach to the supporting menu is characteristic of a broader shift in American seafood dining, where the leading rooms , from the focused tasting counter format at Le Bernardin in New York to more casual institutions across the Gulf Coast , have moved away from sprawling surf-and-turf menus toward tighter, ingredient-respecting lists. Mignonette sits closer to the casual end of that continuum, but the discipline is the same.
Chef Dan Serfer and the Edgewood Decade
Dan Serfer opened Mignonette in 2014, and the fact that it remains a neighbourhood reference point a decade on places it in a category that many Miami restaurants never reach. The city's dining scene turns over faster than most, driven by the same real estate pressures and seasonal tourism cycles that reshape neighbourhoods within a few years. A restaurant that holds its position for ten-plus years in that environment has done something structurally right, independent of any individual meal.
Serfer's approach, as readable from the room and the menu, prioritises consistency over elaboration. There is no tasting menu, no seasonal pivot to elaborate composed dishes, no attempt to reframe the oyster bar as something more conceptually ambitious. In the context of Miami's higher-end contemporary dining , where restaurants like ITAMAE and L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami operate in a different register entirely , Mignonette's refusal to move upmarket reads as an editorial choice, not a limitation.
The Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 confirms that the guide's inspectors found consistent, ingredient-led cooking worth flagging, even if the format falls outside the starred tier occupied by more technically driven rooms like Stubborn Seed or Ariete. A Plate designation at this type of venue functions as a quality signal for the casual end of serious dining , the guide's way of acknowledging that rigour doesn't require formality.
Planning Your Visit
Mignonette operates Tuesday through Sunday, 5 to 10 pm, with Monday service added to the weekly schedule. The address is 210 NE 18th Street in Miami's Edgewood neighbourhood, a few blocks from the Design District's southern edge. At the $$$ price tier, a full meal with oysters and small plates lands comfortably below the $$$$-bracket contemporaries on Miami's contemporary dining circuit. The room accommodates solo diners at the counter as easily as groups in the booths, and the atmosphere scales accordingly: quieter early in the week, audibly louder as Friday and Saturday nights progress. Google reviewers rate it 4.5 across more than 1,000 reviews, a data point that reflects both the volume of visits and the consistency of the experience across them.
For planning the wider trip, our Miami hotels guide, Miami bars guide, Miami wineries guide, and Miami experiences guide cover the broader city in the same editorial depth.
Frequently Asked Questions
Would Mignonette be comfortable with kids?
At the $$$ price point and with a format built around oysters and casual small plates, Mignonette is one of the more relaxed dining rooms in Miami , the dress code is essentially nonexistent and the room runs loud on busy nights, which makes it tolerant of younger guests in a way that the city's higher-formality seafood tables are not.
What's the overall feel of Mignonette?
In a Miami dining scene that ranges from beachfront hotel restaurants to tightly formatted tasting menus, Mignonette occupies a specific and deliberately held position: a Michelin Plate-recognised oyster bar at the $$$ tier, set in a converted 1930s gas station, where the atmosphere is genuinely egalitarian , the room draws solo diners, couples, and groups without signalling a preference for any of them. The Google rating of 4.5 across more than 1,000 reviews reflects that breadth of audience.
What do people recommend at Mignonette?
The oysters are the anchor: the daily marquee rotates available bivalves, so the selection changes with sourcing rather than staying fixed. Among the cooked options, the smoked fish dip with buttered saltines and the mussels in spicy tomato sauce are the most consistently cited small plates. Key lime pie closes the meal. Chef Dan Serfer's Michelin Plate recognition in 2025 aligns with a kitchen that treats these fundamentals , seafood sourcing, clean preparation, a short and honest menu , as the entire project, not a starting point for something more elaborate.
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