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    Restaurant in Miami, United States

    Mignonette

    210Pearl Points

    Flip-flops or dinner jacket, just book it.

    Mignonette, Restaurant in Miami

    About Mignonette

    Mignonette is Miami's most consistent oyster bar at the $$$ tier, holding a Michelin Plate and a 4.5 Google rating across more than 1,000 reviews since opening in 2014. The smoked fish dip, rotating bivalve selection, and mussels in spicy tomato sauce make it worth ordering beyond the raw bar. Book for weeknight dinners; solo diners work particularly well at the counter.

    Pearl's Verdict

    If you have been to Mignonette once and ordered the oysters, go back and work through the small plates. This Michelin Plate-recognised oyster bar on NE 18th Street has been one of Miami's most reliable seafood destinations since 2014, and the kitchen earns that reputation not through spectacle but through technical consistency — proper shucking, well-sourced bivalves, and supporting dishes that hold their own rather than coasting on the raw bar's reputation. At the $$$ price point, it delivers more focused seafood cooking than most of what you'll find at this tier in Miami. Book it for a weeknight dinner when you want something substantive without the theatre of a $$$$-range tasting menu.

    The Case for Mignonette

    The room itself does a lot of the work before the food arrives. Mignonette occupies a converted 1930s gas station in the Edgewood neighbourhood, with warehouse floors, generous booths, and floor-to-ceiling windows that pull in the evening light. A vintage marquee outside lists the day's bivalves. It is the kind of space that manages to feel both casual and considered — you can arrive in flip-flops or a dinner jacket and neither will feel wrong. That tonal flexibility is rare, and it is part of why the restaurant has built a loyal following across eleven years of operation.

    Chef Dan Serfer's kitchen does not try to reinvent the oyster bar format. What it does instead is execute within it with a precision that separates Mignonette from the city's more relaxed raw bars. The daily bivalve selection rotates with supply, which means the marquee out front is functional information rather than decoration. For a returning guest, the smoked fish dip served with buttered saltines is the right place to start , it is the kind of dish that reads simple on paper but signals real kitchen discipline in execution. The mussels in spicy tomato sauce make a strong follow to that, and key lime pie closes the meal without overreaching. These are not complicated dishes, but that is the point: Mignonette's technical edge shows in how cleanly each one is executed rather than in ambitious plating or novel combinations.

    The Google rating of 4.5 across more than 1,000 reviews tells you something useful: this is not a restaurant that spikes on novelty and fades. The consistency that sustains that score over a multi-year sample is the same consistency you should expect on any given Tuesday night. For seafood at this price tier in Miami, that reliability puts it ahead of flashier competitors that peak on first visits.

    Mignonette opens at 5 pm seven days a week and runs through 10 pm. Booking difficulty is moderate , reservations are worth making, particularly for weekends, but the format is forgiving enough that a well-timed weeknight walk-in is not out of the question. The single-seater counter dynamic works well here: solo diners can park at the bar, watch the shucking, and build a full meal from the small plates list without the awkwardness that solo dining sometimes produces at table-service restaurants. If you are comparing this to The River Oyster Bar for a solo seafood dinner, Mignonette's room and format give it a slight edge for the experience, while both operate at a comparable price level.

    For Miami seafood in a broader sense, the city offers range: Garcia's Seafood Grill & Fish is the casual daytime option, Joe's Stone Crab occupies the institution tier, and ITAMAE covers the Peruvian-inflected seafood angle. Mignonette sits in the middle of that range , more focused than Garcia's, more accessible than Joe's, and doing a different technical thing than ITAMAE. If precision oyster work and a well-edited small plates menu are what you are after, Mignonette is the call. For a wider view of where to eat across the city, see our full Miami restaurants guide. Planning a full trip? Our Miami hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.

    For context on where Mignonette fits in the wider seafood conversation: the technical rigour here is a different register from fine-dining seafood destinations like Le Bernardin in New York City or The French Laundry in Napa, but the kitchen's commitment to sourcing and execution puts it in the same conversation as restaurants that take the raw bar format seriously as a discipline rather than a backdrop. Internationally, the focused single-protein philosophy is comparable in spirit to places like Gambero Rosso and Alici Restaurant on the Amalfi Coast , restaurants where the point is to do one thing at a high level and resist the temptation to expand the concept beyond its natural scope.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google: 4.5 / 5 (1,045 reviews)
    • Awards: Michelin Plate (2025)
    • Price: $$$
    • Cuisine: Seafood / Oyster Bar

    Booking and Practical Details

    Mignonette is open Monday through Sunday, 5–10 pm. Reservations are recommended for weekends; weeknight walk-ins are feasible but not guaranteed. The address is 210 NE 18th St, Miami, FL 33132. Dress code is informal , the room accommodates both ends of the spectrum without friction. Solo diners, couples, and small groups all work well here; larger parties should think about whether the format suits their expectations before booking.

    How It Compares

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Mignonette?

    Start with the oysters — they're the reason this Michelin Plate-recognised spot exists — but don't stop there. The smoked fish dip with buttered saltines and the mussels in spicy tomato sauce are worth ordering as a full small-plates meal alongside them. Finish with the key lime pie.

    Is Mignonette good for solo dining?

    Yes, and it's one of the better solo options in Miami at the $$$ price point. Chef Dan Serfer's oyster bar has an informal, counter-friendly energy — you can walk in alone wearing flip-flops and not feel out of place. The room gets lively as the night progresses, so solo diners are absorbed into the atmosphere rather than left stranded.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Mignonette?

    Dinner is your only option — Mignonette opens at 5 pm every day of the week. The later end of the evening tends to be louder and more social, so if you want a quieter table, aim for the first seating window.

    Does Mignonette handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is seafood-focused by design, so pescatarians are well-served. The venue database doesn't document specific allergy protocols, so if you have serious dietary restrictions, call ahead or check the current menu before booking. The small-plates format gives more flexibility than a fixed tasting structure.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Mignonette?

    Mignonette doesn't operate on a tasting menu format — it's an à la carte oyster bar with small plates. That's part of the appeal: you control the spend at a $$$ venue by ordering a few rounds of oysters and one or two plates rather than committing to a set progression. If you want a structured tasting format in Miami, Stubborn Seed or Boia De are better fits.

    Is Mignonette worth the price?

    At $$$, Mignonette holds up well given its Michelin Plate recognition and the consistency it has maintained since opening in 2014. You're paying for well-sourced oysters in a room with genuine character, not a tourist-facing seafood chain. For a comparable spend with a different focus, Ariete in Coconut Grove offers more ambitious cooking — but for oysters specifically, Mignonette is the clearer call in Miami.

    Location

    210 NE 18th St, Miami, FL 33132

    Miami, United States

    Compare Mignonette

    Getting a Table: Mignonette and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    MignonetteSeafood$$$Moderate
    Cote MiamiKorean Steakhouse, Korean$$$Unknown
    ArieteModern American, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Boia DeItalian, Contemporary$$$Unknown
    Stubborn SeedProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    Los Fuegos by Francis MallmannArgentinian$$$$Unknown

    How Mignonette stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    At the $$$ tier, Mignonette's closest Miami comparison is Boia De — both are critically recognised, consistently rated, and priced similarly, but they serve entirely different purposes. Boia De is where you go for contemporary Italian cooking in a tight, reservation-driven room; Mignonette is where you go when seafood precision is the specific goal. If you want a single $$$ dinner that does one category at a high level, Mignonette is the better call for seafood, Boia De for Italian. Cote Miami also sits at $$$, but it is a Korean steakhouse format — a different occasion entirely.

    Step up to $$$$ and the comparisons shift. Ariete and Stubborn Seed both operate at that tier with more structured menus and higher ambition in format. If you want a tasting-menu experience or a more designed progression through a meal, either of those is the right direction. Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann at $$$$ is worth considering if live-fire Argentinian cooking appeals, though it is a completely different register from what Mignonette does. The question is whether your evening calls for a focused, flexible meal or a set-piece experience — Mignonette answers the first, those three answer the second.

    For booking ease, Mignonette wins at moderate difficulty compared to Stubborn Seed and Boia De, which can run harder to book at peak times. If you are planning last-minute and want something at the $$$ level with genuine kitchen quality behind it, Mignonette is the most accessible of the group. For a broader view of where these venues sit in the Miami dining picture, see our full Miami restaurants guide.

    Hours

    Monday
    5–10 pm
    Tuesday
    5–10 pm
    Wednesday
    5–10 pm
    Thursday
    5–10 pm
    Friday
    5–10 pm
    Saturday
    5–10 pm
    Sunday
    5–10 pm

    Recognized By

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