Restaurant in Aspen, United States
Bosq
450Pearl PointsMichelin-starred foraging menu. Book early.

About Bosq
Bosq is Aspen's only Michelin-starred restaurant (2024) and the strongest case for a serious dinner in town. Chef Barclay Dodge's foraging- and fermentation-driven tasting menu is customisable from four courses, with an engaged staff and a notable wine list. Book as far ahead as possible — this is not a walk-in option.
Verdict: Book Bosq if foraging-driven tasting menus are your format — and book early
Bosq earns its 2024 Michelin star honestly. Chef Barclay Dodge is running one of Aspen's most ingredient-focused kitchens, and the customisable tasting format (four courses minimum, built to your preferences) makes it a more accessible entry point than the rigid omakase-style menus you'll find elsewhere at this price tier. If you're visiting Aspen and want one serious dinner, this is a strong candidate. But seats are limited, demand is high, and walk-ins are not a realistic option — treat this as a hard booking from the moment your trip is confirmed.
What Bosq Actually Is
Located at 312 S Mill St in central Aspen, Bosq is a contemporary restaurant built around a sourcing philosophy that is specific enough to matter. Foraged ingredients , hand-picked spruce tips are one documented example , sit alongside produce from local farms and butter from a regional cooperative dairy. Even proteins sourced from further afield get integrated into the local framework: New England lobster, for instance, is grilled over juniper wood, which is not a decorative flourish but a deliberate way of grounding an out-of-region ingredient in the mountain environment around Aspen.
That level of sourcing specificity is what separates Bosq from the broader category of upscale contemporary restaurants in ski towns. Aspen has no shortage of $$$$-tier dining, but most of it is importing luxury ingredients and plating them well. Bosq is doing something structurally different: the menu's identity is shaped by what is available locally and seasonally, which means the kitchen's work starts before anything arrives at the stove. For a first-timer, this distinction is worth understanding before you sit down , it reframes what you're paying for.
If you're looking for comparable approaches elsewhere in the US, think of venues like Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg or Smyth in Chicago, both of which tie tasting menus tightly to sourcing provenance. Bosq operates at a similar conceptual level, with the added dimension of high-altitude foraging and the specific ingredient palette of the Colorado Rockies.
The Room and the Experience
The interior is dimly lit and visually moody on first impression , not austere, but definitely atmospheric. For a first-timer expecting the bright, neutral dining rooms common to many Michelin-tracked restaurants, this may take a moment to adjust to. The staff are described as charmingly loquacious, which in practice means you'll get detailed explanations of ingredients and provenance without needing to ask. The wine list is noted as impressive. Neither of these details are incidental: for a tasting menu format, the quality of service pacing and the depth of the wine programme significantly affect whether the price feels justified by the end of the meal.
The customisable tasting structure is a practical advantage for groups with mixed dietary priorities or varied appetites. Four courses is the stated minimum, with the option to build beyond that. This is more flexible than fixed tasting formats at restaurants like The French Laundry in Napa or Le Bernardin in New York City, where the kitchen dictates the structure entirely. For a first visit, the ability to calibrate the experience is genuinely useful.
Price and Value
Bosq is priced at $$$$ , Aspen's top tier. Whether that's justified depends on what you're comparing it against. Within Aspen, the Michelin credential puts it in a category of its own. Outside Aspen, the sourcing-led contemporary format and the calibre of the wine programme position it alongside restaurants charging similar or higher prices in major US cities. If you're arriving from a market like New York or San Francisco where Michelin-starred tasting menus routinely run well above $200 per head before wine, Bosq's price point will read as competitive. If Aspen's $$$$ tier is your reference point for the trip, it is at the expensive end , but it is the end of that range that can justify itself.
For context on what Michelin-starred contemporary cooking costs across the US, Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Jungsik in Seoul offer useful price-tier comparisons at the starred level. Domestically, Emeril's in New Orleans and César in New York City provide a reference for what contemporary-leaning fine dining looks like at various price points.
Google Reviews: 4.4 / 5 (223 reviews)
A 4.4 across 223 reviews at this price tier is a credible signal. Michelin-starred restaurants in resort towns can attract reviews from diners who found the experience misaligned with their expectations, so a score in this range, held across a meaningful sample, suggests Bosq is delivering consistently for its target audience.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 312 S Mill St, Aspen, CO 81611
- Price range: $$$$ (four-course minimum tasting format)
- Award: Michelin 1 Star (2024)
- Google rating: 4.4 / 5 (223 reviews)
- Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve as far in advance as possible; walk-ins are not a viable plan
- Format: Customisable tasting menu, four courses minimum
- Sourcing: Foraged, fermented, and locally farmed ingredients; regional dairy; seasonal produce
- Service style: Staff are detailed and engaged , expect conversation about the food
- Leading for: Couples, small groups with a shared interest in ingredient-driven cooking
- Less suited for: Large parties, diners who prefer à la carte flexibility
Explore More in Aspen
Bosq sits within a competitive dining scene. For a broader view of where to eat, drink, and stay, see our full Aspen restaurants guide, our full Aspen hotels guide, our full Aspen bars guide, our full Aspen wineries guide, and our full Aspen experiences guide. Other Aspen restaurants worth considering include Element 47, Mawa's Kitchen, Prospect, 300 Puppy Smith St #202, and 7908 Aspen.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What should I order at Bosq? Bosq runs a customisable tasting format rather than à la carte, so the question is less about individual dishes and more about how many courses to take. Four is the stated minimum; if the kitchen is working with foraged or fermented ingredients that cycle seasonally, going beyond four gives the kitchen more room to show its range. Ask the staff what's currently driving the menu , given their noted engagement with guests, you'll get a direct answer.
- Can I eat at the bar at Bosq? Bar seating is not confirmed in available data. At most Michelin-starred tasting-menu restaurants of this size in US mountain resort towns, bar seats are limited and often reserved through the same booking system as the main room. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm availability before assuming walk-in bar access is an option.
- Does Bosq handle dietary restrictions? The customisable tasting format suggests a degree of kitchen flexibility, and the staff's noted attentiveness points toward a service style that accommodates requests. That said, specific dietary restriction policies are not confirmed in available data. Flag any requirements at the time of booking rather than on arrival , at this price tier and booking difficulty level, arriving without that conversation is a risk not worth taking.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Bosq? For diners who care about sourcing provenance , foraged ingredients, regional dairy, locally farmed produce , yes, the format justifies the price. The Michelin star provides an independent quality benchmark, and the customisable structure means you're not locked into a fixed march through the kitchen's agenda. If tasting menus feel constraining to you as a format, or if you'd prefer à la carte flexibility, consider Prospect or another Aspen $$$$ option with a different format.
- Is Bosq worth the price? At $$$$ with a 2024 Michelin star, Bosq is the most credentialed contemporary restaurant in Aspen. If you're spending on one serious dinner during a ski trip or summer visit, the price is defensible against peers in major US cities. If your frame of reference is Aspen dining broadly, it is at the leading of the range , but unlike some of Aspen's expensive restaurants, Bosq gives you a clear reason why in the form of a sourcing-led menu and an independently verified quality signal.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Bosq?
Bosq's menu lets you build your own tasting of four or more courses, so there's no single dish to chase. Focus on whatever is foraging-led or locally sourced that night — dishes using ingredients like spruce tips or cooperative dairy butter reflect what the kitchen does best. Ask the staff for direction; the database notes they are notably communicative and willing to talk through options.
Can I eat at the bar at Bosq?
Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in available venue data. Given the customisable tasting format and the dimly lit, atmosphere-forward room, Bosq skews toward a seated, paced dining experience rather than a drop-in bar situation. Call ahead or check availability directly with the restaurant at 312 S Mill St before assuming walk-in bar access.
Does Bosq handle dietary restrictions?
The customisable format — four or more courses chosen by the diner — gives Bosq more flexibility than a fixed omakase-style menu. The kitchen works closely with local farms and foraged ingredients, which suggests a hands-on approach to sourcing, but specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented in the venue record. check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a hard requirement.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Bosq?
Yes, if foraging-driven, seasonally changing cooking is the format you want. Bosq holds a 2024 Michelin star — a meaningful credential in a resort town where plenty of $$$$-priced restaurants do not. The customisable tasting structure is a practical advantage over fixed menus: you control the length and pace. If you want à la carte or a shorter meal, the format may not suit you as well as other Aspen options.
Is Bosq worth the price?
At $$$$ with a 2024 Michelin star, Bosq is competitive within Aspen's top tier. The sourcing philosophy — foraged ingredients, local cooperative dairy, juniper-grilled proteins — justifies the price point more concretely than most Aspen restaurants at this level. Compared to Matsuhisa Aspen or The Little Nell's dining room, Bosq offers a more ingredient-specific, chef-driven experience rather than a brand-name or hotel-dining draw. If you're spending $$$$ in Aspen, Bosq is one of the stronger cases for doing so.
Location
312 S Mill St, Aspen, CO 81611
Aspen, United States
Compare Bosq
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bosq | At this singular enclave, Chef Barclay Dodge and his team are executing seasonally inspired cooking that focuses on foraging, fermenting and local farms. The dimly lit interior might seem moody and mysterious at first, but everything about the experience is open and accommodating, from the charmingly loquacious staff and impressive wine list to the menu format, which allows diners to customize their own tasting of four or more courses. From hand-picked spruce tips to butter from locally sourced cooperative dairy cows, this is a concept that pays attention to details—even ingredients from farther afield, like lobster from New England, gets a hit of local flavor from being grilled over juniper wood.; Michelin 1 Star (2024) | $$$$ | — |
| Prospect | $$$$ | — | |
| Matsuhisa Aspen | — | ||
| Hotel Jerome Century Room | — | ||
| The Little Nell | — | ||
| French Alpine Bistro | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Prospect — Contemporary, $$$$
- Matsuhisa Aspen — Sushi - Japanese, Sushi - Japanese
- Hotel Jerome Century Room — American, American
- The Little Nell — American Cuisine, American Cuisine
- French Alpine Bistro — French Alpine, French Alpine
Among Aspen's $$$$-tier restaurants, Bosq is the clearest choice if ingredient provenance and tasting-menu format matter to you. Its 2024 Michelin star puts it in a different credentialing bracket from Prospect, which offers contemporary cooking at a comparable price point but without an equivalent third-party quality signal. If you want a tasting experience with a verifiable benchmark behind it, Bosq is the harder booking for a reason.
Matsuhisa Aspen is the right call if you want Japanese-inflected cuisine and à la carte flexibility rather than a tasting structure. It draws a reliably high-profile crowd and is easier to book for larger groups. The Hotel Jerome Century Room and The Little Nell are better fits if you want American fine dining in a grand hotel setting, or if your group includes guests who would find Bosq's moody, intimate room less comfortable than a classic dining room. Neither carries Bosq's sourcing specificity, but both offer broader menus and more room to accommodate mixed-preference groups.
French Alpine Bistro is worth considering if you want a European-inflected atmosphere and a format that sits between casual and formal — it's a lower-pressure option than Bosq for evenings when a full tasting commitment doesn't fit the group's energy. For most first-time visitors to Aspen who want one genuinely memorable dinner, Bosq is the recommendation, with the caveat that you need to plan the booking well before arrival.
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