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Modern American Fine Dining
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Minneapolis, United States

Spoon & Stable

CuisineNew American
Executive ChefGavin Kaysen
Price≈$90
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium
Opinionated About Dining
Robb Report
James Beard Award

Set inside a converted horse stable in Minneapolis's North Loop, Spoon & Stable channels James Beard Award-winning chef Gavin Kaysen's French technique through the lens of Midwest seasonality. Ranked in the top tier of Opinionated About Dining's North American Casual list for three consecutive years, it occupies a distinctive position in the city's dining scene — ambitious without being austere, rooted without being provincial.

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Address
211 N 1st St, Minneapolis, MN 55401
Phone
(612) 224-9850
Spoon & Stable restaurant in Minneapolis, United States
About

The Room Before the Meal

Spoon & Stable is a restaurant in Minneapolis, where chef Gavin Kaysen serves Modern American Fine Dining at about $90 per person. There is something particular about dining in a space that was built for another purpose entirely. The North Loop address at 211 N 1st St was, before the neighbourhood's redevelopment gathered pace, a working stable. The architecture still carries that history: heavy timber, exposed brick, generous ceiling height, and a spatial logic that was never designed for intimacy but has been made to feel that way. Walking in, the room communicates a specific register — not fine dining's studied quiet, not a casual restaurant's ambient noise, but something in between that has become its own category in American dining.

North Loop's broader trajectory mirrors what has happened in former warehouse and industrial districts across American mid-size cities: creative businesses followed cheap space, then restaurants followed foot traffic, then the neighbourhood started being cited as a reason to visit the city. Spoon & Stable was part of that early momentum and remains one of its anchors.

The Ritual of the Meal Here

New American cooking as a category covers a wide range of approaches, from ingredient-forward minimalism to technique-heavy elaboration. What Kaysen's kitchen represents is a specific lineage: French classical training applied to Midwestern produce and cooking culture. This is not a novel concept nationally, but in Minneapolis it carries a particular weight. The Midwest has historically been underserved by the kind of serious French-influenced cooking that cities like New York, San Francisco, and Chicago have long taken for granted. Restaurants like Le Bernardin in New York City or The French Laundry in Napa exist in cities where the infrastructure — the supplier networks, the trained kitchen labor, the customer expectation, has been built over generations. Bringing that level of rigor to a regional context requires not just skill but conviction about what the local larder can support.

The pacing here matters. Meals at Spoon & Stable are not rushed productions, and the format is not a fixed tasting menu in the manner of, say, Alinea in Chicago or Lazy Bear in San Francisco. The à la carte and prix-fixe structure invites a different kind of attention from the diner, more agency, more conversation, a meal that can move at the table's own rhythm. That format choice is itself a signal about the intended experience: this is dinner as a social event with serious cooking at the center, not a performance where the kitchen controls every beat.

Seasonality is not decorative language here. Midwest seasons are pronounced, winters are hard and long, summers short and abundant, and a kitchen committed to the local growing calendar has to work within real constraints. That discipline tends to produce menus that shift meaningfully between November and July, and it gives regular visitors a reason to return across different times of year. If you are planning a visit, early autumn and the weeks before winter set in are when Upper Midwest produce is at its most varied and before the supply lines narrow.

Where It Sits in the Minneapolis Scene

Minneapolis has developed a dining identity that is more layered than its national profile suggests. Owamni has brought serious attention to Indigenous food traditions and ingredients. Hai Hai represents the James Beard-nominated end of the city's creative casual cooking. 112 Eatery has held its position as a late-night reference point. Brasa Rotisserie anchors the American Creole end of the spectrum. And Bûcheron occupies the French-American niche with its own distinct angle. Spoon & Stable sits above most of these in terms of formality and ambition, but it is not operating in a vacuum, it is part of a city that has built a credible independent restaurant culture over the past fifteen years.

Nationally, Spoon & Stable competes in a different reference class. Kaysen holds a James Beard Award, a credential that places him alongside chefs at properties like The Inn at Little Washington, Emeril's in New Orleans, or Bayona. The Opinionated About Dining rankings are a more granular signal: the restaurant appeared at #47 in the Casual North America list in 2023, climbed to #55 in 2024, and was ranked #9 in the Gourmet Casual Dining category in 2023. By 2025, it sat at #116 in the broader Casual list, a slight drift in ranking position that likely reflects both an increasingly competitive field and the natural volatility of crowd-sourced critical rankings rather than any meaningful change in the kitchen's output. OAD rankings draw from a concentrated pool of experienced diners and critics, so placement in any tier of that list carries more weight than a general review aggregate. The Google rating of 4.7 from nearly 2,900 reviews confirms consistent execution at scale, which is a different but complementary signal.

For comparison, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg represents a stricter farm-to-table model with a higher price point. Spoon & Stable is positioned below that ceiling, which makes it more accessible without operating at any significant compromise on quality.

Drinking and the Wider Evening

The North Loop has a functional bar culture around it, and the restaurant's own beverage program operates within a French-influenced framework consistent with the kitchen.

Planning Your Visit

The restaurant is at 211 N 1st St in the North Loop, a walkable district with reasonable parking and easy access from downtown Minneapolis. Reservations are essential. The room works for both business dining and occasion meals.

What to Order at Spoon & Stable

Kitchen's French technique applied to Midwest seasonal produce means the menu shifts with the calendar, so specific dish recommendations date quickly. The directional principle holds year-round: dishes that pair classical French preparation with regional ingredients are where the kitchen is doing its most coherent work. Proteins sourced from Upper Midwest farms and preparations that reflect the seasons, braised and roasted in winter, lighter and more produce-forward in summer, represent the kitchen in its most focused register. The à la carte format means a full table can move through multiple courses without the fixed progression of a tasting menu; three courses is the natural rhythm for most diners. Given Kaysen's James Beard recognition and the restaurant's sustained critical standing, the cooking here rewards a slower, more attentive approach to the meal rather than a quick dinner before another commitment.

Signature Dishes
pot roastpork chopspaghetti nero
Frequently asked questions

Peers in This Market

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Modern
  • Industrial
  • Sophisticated
  • Cozy
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
  • Brunch
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Craft Cocktails
Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
  • Local Sourcing
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Industrial charm with exposed brick walls, soaring ceilings, open kitchen, balancing contemporary elegance and understated luxury; bright and open space.

Signature Dishes
pot roastpork chopspaghetti nero