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    Restaurant in Staunton, United States

    Maude and the Bear

    350pts

    Thu–Sat tasting menu. Book it or skip it.

    Maude and the Bear, Restaurant in Staunton

    About Maude and the Bear

    A reservation-only seasonal tasting menu in a 1926 kit house in Staunton, Virginia. Chef Ian Boden's four-to-eight course dinners lean hard into local sourcing — ramps, morels, dry-aged proteins, preserved and fermented ingredients — in a spare, intimate room. Thursday through Saturday only, with an adjoining inn. Best for a special-occasion dinner for two.

    Verdict

    Four to eight courses in a 1926 Montgomery Ward kit house, Thursday through Saturday only, by reservation. That tight format is either exactly what you want or a reason to look elsewhere — but if a seasonal tasting menu in a genuinely intimate space sounds right for your occasion, Maude and the Bear is one of the more compelling reasons to make the drive to Staunton, Virginia. Opened in April 2024, it is new enough that securing a table is currently manageable, which won't last if the word-of-mouth momentum continues. Book it now, while booking is still easy.

    The Space

    The building itself shapes the experience before a single course arrives. The restaurant occupies a century-old Montgomery Ward catalog kit house — a structure assembled from a mail-order plan, now re-fitted as a spare, quietly atmospheric dining room. There are no grand gestures here: the space reads as stripped-back and deliberate, which suits the cooking. If you are expecting the buzzy energy of a city tasting-menu room, this is not that. What you get instead is a room that focuses your attention on the food and the company across from you, which makes it a sound choice for a date, an anniversary, or any occasion where the conversation matters as much as the meal. An adjoining inn is available for guests who want to extend the evening into a proper overnight stay , a practical option worth considering if you are travelling from outside the Shenandoah Valley.

    The Sourcing and the Menu

    The editorial angle here is ingredient sourcing, and the menu earns that focus. Chef Ian Boden builds his tasting menus around seasonal Virginia produce, and the specificity of those choices is what separates this from a generic farm-to-table format. The documented dishes tell you what to expect: ramp focaccia lacquered with schmaltz, rutabaga and frisée salad with limequat, ramp agnolotti with soft butterbeans, leeks and morels, and a finale of dry-aged rib-eye with a hickory nut, dried cherry and mushroom sauce. These are not crowd-pleasing combinations. They are ingredient-led, occasionally challenging, and show a kitchen genuinely interested in what grows locally and how fermentation, curing, and aging can deepen a dish's complexity. Preserved chi berries alongside dry-aged toro is the kind of pairing that only works when a chef understands the source material well enough to trust it. If that approach interests you, the current spring season is a strong moment to visit , ramps, morels, and early alliums are exactly the kind of produce this kitchen builds around.

    Four-to-eight course range gives the menu some flexibility, though without current pricing published, it is worth contacting the restaurant directly to confirm the format and cost before booking. For context, tasting menus at comparable seasonal New American venues in the mid-Atlantic region typically run between $95 and $175 per person before drinks; Maude and the Bear's positioning and format suggest a similar range, but verify this before you go.

    Who Should Book

    This works leading for two people marking something , a birthday, an anniversary, a deliberate slow dinner away from the city. The format (reservation-only, Thursday through Saturday, tasting menu) is not designed for casual drop-ins or large groups. Solo diners and couples will find the room and the pacing well-suited to the occasion. If you want flexibility , à la carte, walk-in availability, or a shorter meal , consider The Shack, Staunton's other serious New American option, which offers a different format at a different price point. For a broader view of where to eat, drink, and stay while you are in the area, see our full Staunton restaurants guide, our Staunton hotels guide, and our Staunton bars guide. If the Shenandoah Valley wine scene is on your itinerary, check our Staunton wineries guide and our Staunton experiences guide as well.

    Booking and Practical Details

    Maude and the Bear takes reservations for Thursday, Friday, and Saturday evenings. The restaurant is located at 1106 N Augusta St, Staunton, VA 24401. Given that it operates only three nights a week with a small-format dining room in a kit house, capacity is limited , book ahead rather than assuming availability. As of mid-2025, tables are not difficult to secure, but that is a function of the venue being relatively new. Booking 2–3 weeks out is a sensible lead time; peak weekends in summer and fall may require more notice. An adjoining inn is available if you want to make a night of it.

    Quick reference: Tasting menu, Thu–Sat by reservation only, 1106 N Augusta St, Staunton VA. Inn on-site for overnight stays.

    Compare Maude and the Bear

    Is Maude and the Bear Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Maude and the BearEasy
    Le Bernardin$$$$Unknown
    Atomix$$$$Unknown
    Lazy Bear$$$$Unknown
    Alinea$$$$Unknown
    Atelier Crenn$$$$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Maude and the Bear handle dietary restrictions?

    check the venue's official channels when making your reservation — tasting menu formats at this level typically require advance notice to accommodate restrictions. Given that Chef Ian Boden builds each menu around specific seasonal ingredients (ramp agnolotti, dry-aged rib-eye, preserved chi berries), substitutions are not a last-minute conversation. Flag any restrictions at booking, not on arrival.

    How far ahead should I book Maude and the Bear?

    Book as early as possible. The restaurant opens Thursday through Saturday only, by reservation, in a house-scale setting — seat count is small and the format does not accommodate walk-ins. For weekend dates, especially Friday and Saturday, assume at least two to three weeks lead time, more if you have a fixed date in mind.

    Is Maude and the Bear good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it is one of the better-suited formats for it in the Shenandoah Valley. Four to eight courses, reservation-only, Thursday through Saturday, with an adjoining inn for overnight stays — the structure removes the logistics problem from a celebratory dinner. It works best for two people with a deliberate reason to be there, not a group looking for flexibility.

    What should I order at Maude and the Bear?

    There is no à la carte menu — you are eating the tasting menu as Chef Ian Boden has composed it, four to eight courses depending on the evening. The kitchen has drawn notice for dishes built around seasonal Virginia produce: ramp preparations, dry-aged proteins, and foraged or preserved ingredients. The menu changes with the season, so what you eat depends entirely on when you go.

    What are alternatives to Maude and the Bear in Staunton?

    Staunton has a small dining scene, and nothing else in the city runs a comparable tasting menu format. If the reservation-only, multi-course structure does not fit your group, downtown Staunton has casual American options along Beverley Street. For a comparable tasting menu experience in Virginia, you would need to look toward Charlottesville or Richmond, where more options exist at varying price points.

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