Winslow's Home
Winslow's Home sits on Delmar Boulevard in University City, a stretch that anchors the Loop neighborhood's reputation for independent, community-rooted dining. The venue operates as a neighborhood institution within a St. Louis corridor that draws a mix of students, families, and longtime residents. For visitors working through the Delmar dining scene, it belongs in the same conversation as Salt + Smoke and Fitz's Delmar.
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- Address
- 7213 Delmar Blvd, St. Louis, MO 63130
- Phone
- +13147257559
- Website
- winslowstable.com

Delmar Boulevard and the Independent Dining Tradition
University City's Delmar Boulevard has long functioned as a counterpoint to St. Louis's more polished dining corridors. The stretch known as the Loop built its reputation on independent operators, not chain formats, and the result is a mixed, layered dining scene where coffee shops, barbecue counters, seafood houses, and neighborhood spots share the same few blocks. Winslow's Home is a restaurant in St. Louis, Missouri, serving Farm-to-Table American Cafe fare at a casual, walk-in-friendly price point of about $20 per person. Winslow's Home, at 7213 Delmar Blvd, occupies that tradition directly. It sits within a neighborhood where the dining proposition is less about fine-dining credentials and more about anchoring daily life for the people who live, work, and study nearby.
That positioning matters when framing what Winslow's Home is. The Loop is home to venues across a wide range of formats: Salt + Smoke draws the barbecue crowd, Lu Lu Seafood & Dim Sum anchors the Chinese dining contingent, and Fitz's Delmar has operated as a neighborhood landmark for decades. Winslow's Home fits within this pattern of independently owned, locally embedded dining rather than the nationally recognized fine-dining tier represented by venues like Alinea in Chicago or The French Laundry in Napa. The competitive set here is local and community-driven.
The Cultural Weight of Neighborhood Dining in Mid-America
Mid-American cities like St. Louis carry a specific dining culture that national food media has historically undervalued. The city's food identity runs through community anchors, family-operated businesses, and places that serve a neighborhood across multiple meal occasions rather than targeting destination diners flying in for a single experience. Winslow's Home reflects that pattern. Its Delmar Boulevard address places it at the center of a neighborhood with Washington University immediately to the west, a student and faculty population that generates year-round foot traffic, and a residential community that expects its dining spots to function as genuine local infrastructure.
This is a different model from the chef-driven destination dining that defines venues like Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown, where the experience is built around a single, tightly controlled format. Neighborhood venues on corridors like Delmar serve a broader purpose: they absorb weekday breakfast traffic, weekend brunches, and casual weeknight dinners from the same returning customers. The cultural value in that kind of operation is harder to quantify in stars and scores but no less real. Across American food culture, venues that function as genuine neighborhood anchors over years often outlast more decorated peers that depend on a narrower, tourism-reliant audience.
For context, the gap between University City's neighborhood dining tier and the nationally recognized fine-dining tier is wide. Venues like Le Bernardin in New York City, Providence in Los Angeles, or Atomix in New York City operate within award structures and booking windows that function on different terms entirely. Winslow's Home does not position against that tier. Its relevance is local, and that is its strength.
The Loop as a Dining Corridor
Understanding Winslow's Home requires understanding Delmar Boulevard's character as a dining street. The Loop has developed over decades as one of St. Louis's most concentrated stretches of independent dining, music venues, and retail. It draws on the residential density of University City and Clayton to the west, and the energy of Washington University's campus. The result is a corridor where dining ranges widely in format and price, and where foot traffic is less seasonal than in downtown cores dependent on convention business or tourism peaks.
Within that corridor, a few venues have become reference points. Mi Ranchito anchors the Mexican dining end of the street, while Blue Ocean serves a different demographic within the same blocks. Winslow's Home operates within this mix. Its position on Delmar places it in a corridor that rewards regular visitors rather than one-time destination seekers, and that orientation shapes everything about what the venue delivers.
Planning a Visit
Winslow's Home sits at 7213 Delmar Blvd in the University City section of the Loop, accessible from both the Washington University campus and the residential neighborhoods flanking Delmar to the north and south. Walk-ins are welcome, and hours are Wednesday through Saturday from 8 AM to 7 PM, with Sunday service from 8 AM to 3 PM; the restaurant is closed Monday and Tuesday. The address is direct to locate within the Delmar corridor, with the restaurant falling in the denser block between Westgate and Limit avenues.
Booking and Cost Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Winslow's HomeThis venue — the venue you are viewing | $$ | , | ||
| Mi Ranchito | The Loop, Authentic Mexican | $$ | , | |
| Fitz's Delmar | $$ | , | Delmar Loop, Classic American Diner with Craft Sodas | |
| Salt + Smoke | $$ | , | University City, St. Louis-Style BBQ | |
| Lu Lu Seafood & Dim Sum | $$ | , | University City, Cantonese Dim Sum & Seafood | |
| Blue Ocean | $$ | , | University City, Japanese Sushi and Ramen |
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Warm and relaxed with bright red chairs at entrance, contemporary general store aesthetic, natural lighting from front patio, intimate mahogany-paneled private dining room with original artwork and oriental rugs.














