Restaurant in Miami, United States
Pastis
375ptsSerious wine, late nights, fair prices.

About Pastis
Pastis is Wynwood's most credible French brasserie: OAD Casual 2025 recognised, Star Wine List White Star awarded, and priced at $$ for food with a 450-selection wine list anchored in Burgundy and Bordeaux. With a 4.4 Google rating across 1,100+ reviews and easy booking access, it is the call for a late dinner, a celebration, or any occasion where France on the plate and in the glass is the point.
Verdict
Pastis Miami is the French brasserie that Wynwood actually needed. If you want a late-night room in Miami that handles both a serious wine list and a proper dinner without the South Beach premium, this is where to book. With a Google rating of 4.4 across more than 1,100 reviews, recognition from Opinionated About Dining Casual 2025, and a White Star from Star Wine List, Pastis earns its position at the leading of the Wynwood dining conversation. Book it for a date, a celebration dinner, or a late meal when most of the city has already called last orders.
The Room and the Experience
Pastis sits at 380 NW 26th St in Wynwood, Miami's gallery-dense northern district, and the visual identity of a proper French brasserie is the first thing that lands when you walk in. Think tiled floors, zinc-bar detailing, and the kind of warm amber light that makes any occasion feel considered. It reads as a serious room without being stiff, which is exactly the register you want for a celebration dinner or a first date where the stakes are real.
Chef Niko Jaakkola runs the kitchen under a French brasserie framework that covers lunch and dinner, and the format is wide enough to work across group configurations. This is not a tasting-menu-only room: the à la carte structure means you control pacing, which matters on a special occasion when you do not want a kitchen dictating your evening. For a comparable French experience at a higher price point, L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami operates in a more formal register; Pastis is the call when you want the flavour of France without the formality.
Late-Night at Pastis
One of Pastis Miami's clearest advantages in the Wynwood market is what it offers after standard dinner hours. A French brasserie format is structurally built for late eating: the menu holds up at 10 PM as well as it does at 7:30 PM, and the wine program gives you a reason to stay at the table rather than move on to a bar. Wine Director and owner Samuil Angelov, supported by sommeliers Jenni Räisänen and Franciska Szucs, has assembled a list of 450 selections across 2,905 inventory positions, with particular depth in Burgundy and Bordeaux. Pricing sits at the $$ tier for the wine list, meaning you can drink well without committing to three-figure bottles, though those exist too. For a late dinner in Miami where the wine list is part of the point, Pastis is a stronger call than most of what Wynwood offers.
The Wine Program
The Star Wine List White Star designation confirms what the inventory numbers suggest: this is a serious cellar for a neighbourhood restaurant. 450 selections, 2,905 bottles, with France at the core. Burgundy and Bordeaux are the stated strengths, which aligns with a French brasserie kitchen. If you are building a special-occasion dinner around wine, Pastis gives you more to work with than most of Miami's mid-range dining rooms. For comparison, Boia De has a compelling Italian-focused list at a similar price tier, but for French varietals and classical French pairings, Pastis is the more focused choice.
Value and Positioning
Cuisine pricing lands at $$ ($40–$65 for a typical two-course meal before tip and drinks), which positions Pastis as accessible for the quality on offer. You are not paying a South Beach location premium, and the OAD Casual 2025 recognition signals that the food is being taken seriously at the national level. That combination of reasonable ticket price, award-backed credibility, and a deep wine list makes Pastis a practical choice for celebration dinners where budget matters but experience quality cannot slip. For context on how French-format dining performs at a similar price tier elsewhere in the US, Scoundrel in Greenville and Boucherie NYC occupy comparable positions in their respective markets.
Practical Details
Address: 380 NW 26th St, Miami, FL 33127. Service covers lunch and dinner. Booking difficulty is rated easy, so you do not need to plan weeks in advance, though weekends and prime Friday slots will move faster. No dress code data is on record, but a French brasserie room of this quality warrants smart-casual at minimum. Group bookings appear viable given the format; contact the restaurant directly to confirm private-room options or large-table configurations. Phone and website are not on record in Pearl's current data, so approach via OpenTable or Resy for reservation access. General Manager Jenna Naukkarinen oversees operations.
Quick reference: 380 NW 26th St, Wynwood | French Brasserie | Lunch and dinner | $$ cuisine / $$ wine | Easy to book | 4.4 Google (1,124 reviews) | OAD Casual 2025 | Star Wine List White Star
Also Worth Knowing in Miami
If Pastis is fully booked or you want to compare before deciding, Ariete and Cote Miami are the other Wynwood-area options worth checking. For something in a completely different register, ITAMAE handles Peruvian-Japanese at a high level nearby. See our full Miami restaurants guide, our Miami bars guide, our Miami hotels guide, our Miami wineries guide, and our Miami experiences guide for broader planning context. For French dining benchmarks at the national level, Le Bernardin in New York sets the formal ceiling; for ambitious contemporary American comparisons, Alinea in Chicago, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, The French Laundry in Napa, Emeril's in New Orleans, and Stubborn Seed represent the wider US fine-dining context.
Compare Pastis
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pastis | French Brasserie | Easy | |
| Ariete | Modern American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Boia De | Italian, Contemporary | $$$ | Unknown |
| Cote Miami | Korean Steakhouse, Korean | $$$ | Unknown |
| Stubborn Seed | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | Argentinian | $$$$ | Unknown |
A quick look at how Pastis measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Pastis handle dietary restrictions?
French brasserie menus typically cover enough ground to accommodate vegetarians and pescatarians without special requests, but Pastis does not publish detailed dietary information in available records. Your best move is to call ahead or check the venue's official channels before visiting, particularly for stricter dietary needs like gluten-free or vegan.
What should a first-timer know about Pastis?
Booking is rated easy, so you do not need to plan weeks in advance — but the wine program is the real draw here. Pastis holds a Star Wine List White Star designation and 2,905 bottles across 450 selections, so arrive ready to spend time with the list. Pricing sits at $$ ($40–65 for a typical two-course meal before drinks), which means the wine side of the bill may outpace the food side if you engage seriously with it.
What should I order at Pastis?
Specific menu items are not published in available records, so dish-level recommendations are not possible here. What is confirmed: the kitchen runs under Chef Niko Jaakkola, the format is French brasserie covering lunch and dinner, and the wine program is the standout — particularly for Burgundy and Bordeaux. Let the sommelier guide you on bottle selection; the team includes two credentialled sommeliers.
Can Pastis accommodate groups?
No private dining or group capacity details are confirmed in available records. Given the Wynwood address and brasserie format, a call to the restaurant ahead of a group booking is the practical route. Easy general booking difficulty suggests the room does not fill to impossible levels, which is a reasonable sign for groups with some lead time.
Can I eat at the bar at Pastis?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available records, but French brasseries almost universally operate a bar counter as a standalone dining option — it is structural to the format. For solo diners or pairs looking to engage directly with the wine program, the bar is likely your best seat in the room.
Is Pastis good for solo dining?
Yes. A French brasserie format is one of the most solo-friendly restaurant structures: bar seating, a wine list worth working through, and no expectation of shared plates. At $$ pricing with a 450-label list recognised by Star Wine List, Pastis gives a solo diner real material to engage with across a full evening. The easy booking difficulty also means you are not locked out without a reservation made weeks out.
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