The Refectory



A Columbus institution with over four decades of classical French cooking, The Refectory operates in a converted 19th-century church on Bethel Road. Chef Richard Blondin leads the kitchen through a seasonal menu with French technique at its core, supported by a 2,800-bottle wine inventory that earned Star Wine List recognition in 2022. Opinionated About Dining ranked it among North America's top restaurants in both 2023 and 2025.

Classical French in a City That Mostly Looks Elsewhere
American dining cities tend to sort themselves quickly: some build reputations around a single category, others accumulate a diverse field. Columbus sits closer to the latter, with a restaurant scene that spans Midwestern farm-to-table, Southern-inflected cooking, and steakhouse culture. Within that field, sustained classical French at the dinner-only level is a narrower proposition, and The Refectory on Bethel Road has held that position for decades. The address alone signals something: a converted 19th-century church, stone and stained glass rather than the industrial aesthetic that dominates newer openings, places this room in a different register before anyone has ordered a drink.
That physical context matters more than atmosphere for atmosphere's sake. Formal French cooking has always depended on an environment that signals deliberate time, the kind of room where the pace is set by the kitchen, not the diner's schedule. The Refectory's setting enforces exactly that contract. You arrive knowing this will take the better part of an evening, and the architecture makes that feel appropriate rather than inconvenient.
The French Technique Argument, Applied to Ohio
Classical French cuisine occupies a complicated position in contemporary American dining. At the leading end nationally, houses like Le Bernardin in New York City or The French Laundry in Napa operate with the staffing depth and procurement infrastructure that only major culinary markets can support. In smaller cities, classical French often calcifies into something nostalgic, dependent on reputation rather than execution. The interesting cases are the ones that hold technique without becoming a museum piece, where seasonal adjustment keeps the menu in conversation with what's available rather than what's traditional by rote.
Chef Richard Blondin's approach at The Refectory falls into that more demanding category. The menu reads French and seasonal simultaneously, a combination that requires constant recalibration rather than the repetition of a fixed repertoire. Sauce work, the index of classical French training, remains central, but the raw material changes with the calendar. That balance, between the discipline of a codified cuisine and the responsiveness of market-driven cooking, is what separates a functioning French kitchen from one running on inertia.
Among North American peers operating at this scale and format, Blondin holds a position comparable in ambition to what chefs at Hotel de Ville Crissier demonstrate in their European context or what Sézanne in Tokyo achieves with French technique transplanted into a foreign culinary environment: the argument that classical cooking remains a live discipline rather than a preserved one.
The Wine Program as a Separate Credential
French restaurants in America tend to divide along the wine question: either the list is an afterthought, gesturing toward France with a handful of recognizable labels, or it becomes a genuine program in its own right. The Refectory belongs to the second category, and the data bears this out. Sommelier Ivan Zuna oversees an inventory of 2,800 bottles across 675 selections, with particular depth in California, Bordeaux, Burgundy, France broadly, Italy, and Port. Star Wine List awarded the program a White Star in August 2022, a recognition that places it in a meaningful peer set at the national level rather than simply within Ohio.
The pricing tier is listed as mid-range on Star Wine List's scale, meaning the list runs across price points rather than concentrating exclusively at the high end. For a classical French program, that kind of range matters: it allows the kitchen's food to be supported at different spend levels without forcing every table toward a single register. A list of 2,800 bottles at that breadth is a serious working tool for a sommelier, not a display case.
For context on where this sits relative to the national conversation about destination wine programs, compare it to what Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg does at the higher end of the price spectrum, or the way Lazy Bear in San Francisco approaches pairing as an integrated part of the meal rather than an add-on decision. The Refectory's program operates differently in format but with comparable seriousness about depth.
Where It Sits in Columbus and in the National Ranking
Opinionated About Dining, one of the more data-driven restaurant ranking systems in North America, listed The Refectory among its recommended North American restaurants in 2023 and placed it at #578 in its 2025 ranking of the continent. At the Columbus level, that ranking positions it in a different competitive tier than the city's more casual or genre-specific dining, from Camp Washington Chili's regional institution status to the Southern and Creole cooking at Nolia Kitchen. Within Cincinnati and the broader Ohio metro dining conversation, it shares a formal-dining register with venues like Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse and the more contemporary positioning of Boca and Pepp & Dolores, though its French classical format places it in a category with few direct local comparisons.
At the national level, the OAD ranking puts The Refectory in a tier occupied by serious regional restaurants with consistent technical execution rather than the handful of high-volume destination addresses that anchor the top 100. For diners calibrating expectations, that means a kitchen working at a level of rigor that justifies the dinner-only commitment, without the theatrical production formats that characterize places like Alinea in Chicago or the broader media profile that surrounds Emeril's in New Orleans.
Planning the Visit
The Refectory operates Wednesday through Saturday for dinner only, with service beginning at 5:15 pm Wednesday through Thursday and at 4:45 pm Friday and Saturday. The kitchen closes at 8:45 pm midweek and 9:45 pm on weekends. The address is 1092 Bethel Road, Columbus, OH 43220. General Manager and Owner Kamal Boulos oversees front-of-house operations alongside sommelier Ivan Zuna, which means wine decisions at the table have direct access to the program's curator. The cuisine pricing sits at the mid tier on a two-course dinner basis, which for a French classical format with a credentialed wine program represents competitive value against peer addresses in larger markets. Reservations are advised given the limited weekly operating window.
For those building a broader Columbus or Ohio dining itinerary, EP Club's full guides cover the region's restaurants, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences: see our full Cincinnati restaurants guide, Cincinnati hotels guide, Cincinnati bars guide, Cincinnati wineries guide, and Cincinnati experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Category Peers
A short peer set to help you calibrate price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Refectory | French | The Refectory is a restaurant in Columbus, USA. It was published on Star Wine Li… | This venue |
| Camp Washington | Chili | Chili | |
| Wildweed | Midwestern Farm-to-Table | Midwestern Farm-to-Table | |
| Nolia Kitchen | Southern/Creole | Southern/Creole | |
| Boca | |||
| Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse – Cincinnati |
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