This is the latest for our destination dining guide, Eat Sheet. For more on how we do these a bit differently, head here first.
Amid all the industry challenges, the homegrown Richmond food scene remains resilient and strong. James Beard-nominated chefs inhabit every corner of the city and out into the suburbs. With few exceptions, the local love has kept national chain restaurants at bay, so chefs have free rein to experiment. Richmondâs proximity to abundant agriculture and fisheries means thereâs a real sense of community and collaboration among restaurant folk and food producers. For years, the area has benefited from the Richmond boomerang effect: leave for a while, but you always come back, very often to open a restaurant. Church Hill and Scottâs Addition host the current cool kids of restaurants, but donât sleep on other neighborhoods like Jackson Ward, the Arts District and Manchester. Plenty of worthy spots defy these categories and other intriguing revamps and new concepts are on the way, so donât hesitate to add to the list.
HOLD THE MEAT
Blue Atlas

When vegetarian and vegan dishes are your jam, itâs good to know that Rachel Best, chef and co-owner at Blue Atlas, tucked in a renovated school on Fulton Hill, was executive chef at Boulderâs Leaf and has been vegetarian for more than 15 years. With her husband, co-owner and co-chef, Ben Watters, a classically trained chef with stints at Lemaire and Brenner Pass, theyâve created a menu thatâs a world tour: Americas, Europe, Asia, Middle East, and Africa. The firepits below the portico and the view overlooking the city are twinkling delights, and the dishes sparkle, too. Eggplant Mnazaleh, Rajas con Crema and Tofu or Pork Belly bao buns are all sumptuous. Thereâs no scarcity of meat here, just appealing options for all. By day, hit the Market for vegan optional breakfast burritos, salads and sides. If the timing works, hit their Vegan Takeovers offered several times a year.
MUNCHIES
Black Lodge
When youâve tried every brewery in Scottâs Addition and need more solid sustenance, head to Brenner Passâs snarky sibling, Black Lodge, for suave snacks and cool drinks. Like Brenner, Black Lodge is fond of fondue. It trends European with caviar and shots, fish and chips, or fondue fries. The Alpine Dog with fondue, speck and fried onions, fits that trend and then they surprise with a Chicago Dog or Street Corn dog with lime crema. Go all in with a Tower of Power to load up on dogs, wings, patty melts and fries to finish strongâand very full. Once the kitchen closes, roller dogs keep you and the industry folks here company through the rest of the night at the bar, til 2 a.m. on weekends.
DOLLAR STRETCHER
Zorch Pizza

What Rob Zorch started as a NY-style slice-mobile in 2018 has found a home in Carytown, Richmondâs favorite shopping and eating district. A $26 pizza doesnât sound like a deal, but if itâs Zachos (tortilla chips, chorizo, jalapeños, pickled onions, all the cheeses) thatâs an app and entree in every bite. Youâll get 3 meals out of it or split it with pals. The savings add up. A $5 slice is nice if you splurged at Mongrel or Plan 9 Music. Zorch knows his way around pepperoni and sausage, sourcing sausage from local favorite, The Mayor, and he likes to play with specialty âzas like Detroit-style, Grandma, or General Tsoâs. Save room for Gobs, bakery Fat Rabbitâs two cake moons caressed by buttercream. Spiced Pumpkin til Thanksgiving and Eggnog Gobs after. Be on the lookout for their truck at Scottâs Addition breweries.
MAKE IT QUICK
Stellaâs Grocery
Named for Richmond legend Stella Dikos, of Stellaâs restaurant, Stellaâs Grocery is Richmondâs gourmet and gourmand go-to. Youâre never far from one of six markets which churn out the best take-out and prepared meals in the city. Thereâs the newly expanded original on Lafayette St. in the Near West End, plus Downtown, Scottâs Addition, Westhampton, and south of the river in Westover Hills and Manchester. Hours and offerings vary, with some locations offering more hot, made-to-order dishes and indoor dining than others, but bright flavors and large portions are the norm everywhere. Hearty dishes like Dijon Roasted Chicken and Short Ribs Ragu work to heat up later and lighter options like a Chicken Quinoa Bowl, Salad Shakers (Tuscan Farro w/ Chickenâdairy free or not) or a souvlaki pita make a quick lunch or picnics a breeze. If you need a gift, the combo of local consumables and intriguing wines and olive oils will please any recipient. The desserts are divine.
LOOKS CAN BE DECEIVING
Hatch Food Hall
Ignore the food court feel. There are two full bars, so these seven local food stalls in two ground floor sections of a Manchester condo complex beat any mall. The dining experience here is a test-drive of whatâs coming down the pike for the Richmond cuisine scene.
For the husband and wife team at Fat Kid Sandwiches, Hatch is the place to test their concept; for Beet Box, itâs the second location of the smoothie, juice and bowls biz. Sincero, the taco joint, went from pop-ups at breweries to steady gig. Royal Pig focuses on Cambodian dishes here and at breweries. Mike Lindsey and Kimberly Love-Lindsey operate two iterations of their empire here, the fried chicken-centric Buttermilk + Honey (w/ 2 larger locations in town) and Bully Burger for the meats. If youâre bully about the burger, try Lindsey Food Groupâs newest spot, ML Steak downtown or their popular Lillie Pearl. You might meet a James Beard-nominated chef, Lee Gregory (also of Alewife fame) or a recently named 2022 DC-Chesapeake StarChefs Rising Star, Bobo Catoe, Jr., hanging at their Odyssey Fish storefront while waiting for your catfish on a stick. Say hi.
ONE FOR THE FEED
LâOpossum

Escargots Ă la Ham Biscuit Basking in a Sweet Garlic Beurre Blanc.
Courtesy David Shannon/Courtesy David ShannonThe first course at LâOpossum, James Beard-nominated David Shannonâs Oregon Hill extravaganza, is a visual feast since you eat with your eyes first. Just make sure your mouth is ready for whatâs coming. Youâll want a full phone battery and an empty stomach to appreciate the spectacle and spectacular dining experience LâOpossum puts out. Savor the menu for the puns alone and then consider the exquisiteness of the dishes, such as Seared Sea Scallops & Braised Pork Belly a la Leviticus. The flame burns bright hereâespecially if you order La Petite Mort au Chocolat en FlambĂ©. As festooned as the place typically is with gaudy goodies and seasonal winks, at Christmas the jointâs decked out with boughs of folly. Get a reservation and live your best life!
HOT SPOT
eazzy burger

Pollo Diablo Sandwich.
Courtesy Eazzy BurgerSome whoâve worshiped at ZZQ, the Scottâs Addition Central Texas-style barbecue meat church from Pitmaster Chris Fultz and Pitmistress Alex Graf, hankered for fries with their brisket. Some sipping at next door Ardent Craft Ales fancied a burger with their beer. Problems solved with the opening mid-fall 2022 of eazzy burger. Itâs the greasy burger joint in Scottâs Addition that makes one feel good about pigging out on beef since the patty mix is dry-aged brisket, chuck, and short rib from Roseda Black Angus, a family, pastured beef farm in Maryland, dedicated, as eazzy burger is, to regenerative ranching and environmental stewardship. Compostable and recyclable products help the cause. The burgers are sensory sensations, delicious, drippy and deeply satisfying. The fries mouth-watering. Their housemade Eazzy sauce is dispensed generously, as culinary director Russell Cook said, âthe taste of a hamburger in a sauce.â Indoor and outdoor seating and the flexibility to bring ZZQ food here and vice versa with proximity to ZZQ and Ardent creates a culinary campus. Crave a Cheazzy or Chile Relleno burger? Make a beeline to get in line at eazzy burger.
IF IT AIN'T BROKE
The Roosevelt

When The Roosevelt opened in 2011, it turned charming Church Hill into a dining destination and hit the best of lists early and often. Now, with executive chef Leah Branch, one of the few African American female executive chefs in the region, it continues to be both a neighborhood gathering spot and a place worth driving miles for. Itâs quintessential 21st century Richmond dining, community-minded, welcoming and warm, with an appreciation for history, including the consequential contributions of Africans and their food to Southern dishes. Branchâs menu mixes an old-timey vibe with vibrance. The Confit Turkey Leg, with greens, carrots, honeynut squash veloute, puffed farro and fried sage is a standout. If going meatless appeals, try the Smoked Garnet Yam: sweet tea collards, eggplant curry, benne tahini, fried okra. Keep hoping for the return of brunch.
UNDER THE RADAR
Pinkyâs
Since Richmond magazine readers voted Pinkyâs Best New Restaurant this year, we want out-of-towners to meet the Mediterranean-infused spot in Scottâs Addition. The airy inside says upscale diner in a warehouse while the patio says stay awhile. Named after owner Steve DeRaffeleâs late mother, a New Yorker, Pinkyâs works. Dig in to tapas like Char-Grilled Octopus and Autumn Burrata or go medium on the sandwiches or big on the Mains. BrunchâSaturday AND Sundayâis inventive yet comforting. Lamb Papas is a cheesy, slurpy, spicy slurry over brunch potatoes with eggs. Pinkyâs 100 percent gluten-free fryer means gluten-intolerant folks can have confidence eating delectable dishes. Plenty of vegetarian and vegan options as well.