Restaurant in Winter Park, United States
Soseki
450Pearl PointsTwo Michelin stars. Book well ahead.

About Soseki
Soseki holds back-to-back Michelin Stars (2024 and 2025), making it the most credentialed restaurant in Winter Park and one of the few in Florida sustaining this standard year-over-year. At $$$$ with a precision fusion tasting menu from Chef Silvio Nickol, it earns the price — but only if you're booking a table. This is strictly a dine-in experience; the format doesn't translate off-premise.
Soseki, Winter Park — Pearl Verdict
If you've already been to Soseki once, the question isn't whether to return — it's whether the experience holds at a second visit, and what you'll notice that you missed the first time. The short answer: it holds. Soseki has earned back-to-back Michelin Stars in 2024 and 2025, and that consistency is the real signal here. This is not a restaurant coasting on a single good review cycle. At the $$$$ price point, repeat visits reveal the kind of considered detail that tends to disappear at restaurants where opening-year energy has faded. For a second-timer in Winter Park, Soseki remains the clearest answer to the question of where to spend serious money on a serious meal.
The Portrait
Soseki sits on West Fairbanks Avenue in Winter Park, Florida , a suburban address that, on paper, does not prepare you for what the room delivers. The visual experience begins with the plating. At this format and price level, the plates are the first thing that reads as intentional: composed, precise, and carrying the language of a kitchen that has thought carefully about what the eye registers before the palate does. Chef Silvio Nickol brings a European fine-dining sensibility to a fusion framework, and the result is a visual vocabulary that feels coherent rather than eclectic. If you came the first time and remember the plates looking considered, that impression is structural, not accidental.
The fusion designation can mislead. This is not fusion in the sense of combining crowd-pleasing elements from multiple traditions. It is fusion in the sense that a chef with specific European training is working with ingredients and references that cross borders deliberately. The effect, for a returning guest, is that dishes reveal more on second exposure , the logic behind the combinations becomes clearer, and you start to read the menu as a point of view rather than a list of options. That is the experience Michelin-starred tasting menus in this tier are supposed to deliver, and Soseki delivers it.
For context on where Soseki sits nationally: the closest comparison points are not Florida restaurants but destination tasting menus in other cities. Restaurants like Smyth in Chicago, Lazy Bear in San Francisco, or Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg occupy a similar tier , serious, ingredient-led tasting menus where the price reflects genuine kitchen ambition rather than room rent. Soseki is operating in that conversation. That it does so in Winter Park, rather than a major coastal market, makes the booking case stronger, not weaker. You are getting a nationally competitive experience at a destination where hotel rates, parking, and the surrounding cost-of-evening are a fraction of New York or San Francisco comparables like Le Bernardin or The French Laundry in Napa.
Two consecutive Michelin Stars also tell you something specific: the 2025 retention is more meaningful than the 2024 award. First-year stars sometimes reflect promise; second-year retention reflects execution. Soseki has now demonstrated it can sustain the standard, which is exactly what a returning guest , or a first-timer planning a special occasion , needs to know before committing at this price level.
On the Editorial Angle: Does the Food Travel?
Given Soseki's format , a precision tasting menu built around composed plates with multiple elements and deliberate visual presentation , this is not food designed for off-premise consumption. The architecture of a tasting menu course, particularly at the $$$$ tier where plating, temperature, and sequence are central to the experience, does not survive a takeout container or a delivery window. If you are considering Soseki for any reason other than dining in the room, redirect that budget. The format requires the room. Compared to more casual Winter Park options like Prato or Chuan Fu, where takeout is a reasonable extension of the core offering, Soseki is a dine-in-only proposition in every meaningful sense. Book the table or don't book at all.
The Milestone Frame
2025 marks Soseki's second consecutive Michelin Star year. For a restaurant in a mid-sized Florida city, that is a real credential , it places Soseki in a short list of Florida destinations that have sustained Michelin recognition beyond an initial award. The anniversary of that recognition is worth noting because it reframes the booking question: you are not taking a chance on a promising newcomer. You are booking a restaurant with a two-year track record of performing at star level, in a market where that standard is genuinely rare. For fusion-format tasting menus across the US, you can find comparable ambition at places like Jae in Düsseldorf or San-Hô in Adeje internationally, but domestically and at this price point in Florida, Soseki has no direct competition.
Know Before You Go
- Price tier: $$$$ , budget for a full tasting menu experience including beverages
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024 and 2025) , two consecutive years
- Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve well in advance; walk-ins are not a realistic option at this format
- Address: 955 W Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park, FL 32789
- Format: Tasting menu, dine-in only , off-premise is not a suitable use of this restaurant
- Leading for: Special occasions, returning diners, tasting menu enthusiasts, and anyone visiting Winter Park with a specific interest in Michelin-level fusion cooking
- Google rating: 4.9 from 282 reviews , a high score on a meaningful sample size for this format
- Chef: Silvio Nickol
More to Explore in Winter Park
If Soseki is fully booked or you're planning a broader trip, our full Winter Park restaurants guide covers the range from casual to fine dining. For where to stay, the Winter Park hotels guide has current picks. Rounding out an evening: the Winter Park bars guide, the wineries guide, and the experiences guide are all worth a look. For tea before or after, Krungthep Tea Time is a nearby option worth noting.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Soseki in Winter Park?
Ômo by Jônt is the closest comparison for format-driven tasting menu dining. If you want something less commitment-heavy at $$$$, AVA MediterrAegean on Park Avenue offers a la carte fine dining with a broader group appeal. Prato works well for a polished dinner without the tasting menu structure or the Soseki price point.
What should a first-timer know about Soseki?
Soseki runs a set tasting menu format — there is no a la carte option, so commit to the full experience before booking. At $$$$, it sits at the top of the Winter Park price range, and the Michelin Star recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals the kitchen is operating at a consistent level. The address on West Fairbanks Avenue is suburban; do not expect a high-profile dining district outside the door.
Does Soseki handle dietary restrictions?
Tasting menu restaurants at this level — particularly those holding consecutive Michelin Stars — typically accommodate dietary restrictions when notified at booking, but contact Soseki directly at 955 W Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park to confirm before reserving. Give as much notice as possible; last-minute requests on a composed multi-course menu are harder to absorb.
Is Soseki good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is a stronger choice than most alternatives in the region. Two consecutive Michelin Stars give it the credibility to anchor a milestone dinner — a birthday, anniversary, or out-of-town visit worth planning around. For groups who want a shared a la carte experience rather than a set menu, AVA MediterrAegean or Prato are easier to manage logistically.
How far ahead should I book Soseki?
Book at least four to six weeks out, particularly on weekends. A two-time Michelin Star restaurant in a city without a deep pool of comparable fine dining draws from well beyond Winter Park, which compresses availability. If you are visiting from out of town, lock the reservation before booking travel.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Soseki?
At $$$$ with back-to-back Michelin Stars under chef Silvio Nickol, Soseki clears the bar for value at the top end of Florida fine dining — particularly given the limited competition at this format in the Orlando metro area. If a fixed tasting menu is not your preferred format, or if you are dining in a group with mixed dietary needs, the value case weakens; consider Prato or AVA MediterrAegean instead.
Location
955 W Fairbanks Ave, Winter Park, FL 32789
Winter Park, United States
Compare Soseki
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soseki | Fusion | $$$$ | Hard |
| Ômo by Jônt | Contemporary | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Chuan Fu | Chinese | $$ | Unknown |
| Prato | Italian | $$ | Unknown |
| AVA MediterrAegean | Greek | $$$$ | Unknown |
| The Wine Room on Park Avenue | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between Soseki and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Ômo by Jônt — Contemporary, $$$$
- Chuan Fu — Chinese, $$
- Prato — Italian, $$
- AVA MediterrAegean — Greek, $$$$
- The Wine Room on Park Avenue — Notable alternative
How Soseki Compares in Winter Park
At the $$$$ tier, Soseki's direct Winter Park competitor is Ômo by Jônt, also priced at $$$$ and operating in the contemporary fine-dining register. The meaningful difference: Soseki has two years of Michelin Star confirmation; Ômo by Jônt operates in a similar price band but without the same documented recognition track. If the Michelin credential matters to your decision — and at this spend level, it should — Soseki is the clearer choice. If you want to compare two high-end experiences over two evenings in Winter Park, that pairing makes sense. Booking both in the same trip is a reasonable approach for serious diners.
AVA MediterrAegean is also priced at $$$$ and offers a Greek-inflected fine-dining format. It serves a different purpose: AVA is the better option when the group wants a shareable, more social dining format rather than the sequenced tasting menu structure Soseki delivers. For a large group or a table that wants to order a la carte at high quality, AVA is the more flexible booking. For a structured two- or four-top experience where the kitchen drives the meal, Soseki wins.
If budget is the constraint, Prato and Chuan Fu — both priced at $$ — represent the strongest value options in Winter Park. Prato handles Italian cooking with enough seriousness to satisfy a discerning table, and Chuan Fu delivers Chinese cooking at a price point that makes it easy to return often. Neither competes with Soseki on format or Michelin credentialing, but both are significantly easier to book and far less demanding on the budget. If you're weighing whether to spend at Soseki's level, the honest answer is: only do it if you want the tasting menu format specifically. For a great meal without the commitment, Prato or Chuan Fu will serve you better.
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