Restaurant in Walland, United States
The Barn at Blackberry Farm
800ptsFarm-sourced fine dining, serious wine cellar.

About The Barn at Blackberry Farm
The Barn at Blackberry Farm is a fine-dining room on a working Tennessee farm, with a 135,000-bottle wine cellar holding a World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation and farm-sourced American cooking under Chef Cassidee Dabney. Access is tied to a Blackberry Farm resort stay, pricing is $$$+, and the experience is worth building a trip around for food and wine explorers who want land-to-table depth.
Verdict: Book It If You're Staying at Blackberry Farm — and Understand What You're Paying For
The Barn at Blackberry Farm is a fine-dining room that earns its $$$+ price point through ingredient sourcing rather than spectacle. Access is genuinely limited: The Barn serves guests of Blackberry Farm resort first, and the property's remote location in Walland, Tennessee, means you're committing to a full stay, not a casual dinner detour. That scarcity is part of the value proposition, but it also means this experience requires planning. If you're already booked into Blackberry Farm, eating here is a direct yes. If you're considering a trip built around the restaurant alone, the calculus is harder.
The Room and the Farm Behind It
The dining room itself signals intent before a plate arrives. Custom chairs, antique-style linens, and sterling silver service create a setting that reads as Southern farmhouse translated into fine-dining language — formal enough to feel like an occasion, grounded enough not to feel pretentious. The visual coherence between the room and the wider 4,200-acre farm property is deliberate: what you see around you is the same land producing much of what ends up on your plate. For food and wine explorers who want context alongside their meal, this physical connection between farm and table is the main reason to be here, not just a marketing footnote.
Chef Cassidee Dabney frames the kitchen's output as expressive of the farm and the South, without being constrained to conventional Southern dishes. That distinction matters. Ingredients are sourced regionally or grown on the property itself, which means the menu tracks the farm's seasons, not a corporate calendar. Comparing this to farm-to-table operations at scale, the sourcing here carries more operational weight: at 135,000-bottle wine inventory depth and a wine program holding World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation, the surrounding infrastructure is serious. The food and wine programs are matched in ambition.
The Wine Program Is a Genuine Reason to Come
Wine Director Andy Chabot leads a cellar of 8,200 selections and roughly 135,000 bottles, with particular depth in California, Burgundy, Rhône, Tuscany, Spain, Oregon, and Washington. The World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation places The Barn in a narrow tier of American restaurants with genuinely serious cellars. Corkage is $50 if you bring your own, but given the list's depth, bringing your own is a harder case to make here than at most restaurants. Wine pricing sits at the $$$ tier, meaning the list skews toward $100+ bottles, which is consistent with the resort's overall positioning. For the explorer who treats the wine list as an itinerary, the sommelier bench , Andy Chabot, Kelly Schmidt, John Schlichting, Greg Wilson, Emma Wortman, David Bond, Melissa McAvoy, Callum Krishna, and Sadie Bales , is unusually deep for a property of this size.
Practical Details
The Barn serves lunch and dinner. Getting here requires a car: from Knoxville, take Highway 129 South to Highway 321 North toward Townsend, pass the Foothills Parkway, take the first right after the Parkway onto West Millers Cove Road, and the entrance is approximately 3 miles down on the left. Knoxville McGhee Tyson Airport sits roughly 25 km away. Cuisine pricing is $$$ (two courses, excluding tip and beverages, runs $66 or more). Booking difficulty is rated Easy by Pearl, which is worth noting given the resort's exclusivity framing , the harder lift is securing the hotel reservation, not the restaurant table. The Barn holds a Google rating of 4.8 from 108 reviews and a Pearl member rating of 4.7/5. General Manager Brian Lee oversees operations; ownership sits with Mary Celeste Beall.
How It Compares
For farm-driven fine dining with a comparable sourcing philosophy at the national level, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown is the most direct peer , deeper farm integration, harder to book, and set in a more accessible region. Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg offers a similar farm-to-table ethos with a stronger Japanese-influenced tasting menu format. If the Appalachian provenance and Southern framing matter to you, neither of those offers a substitute. Among the broader fine-dining tier, Smyth in Chicago and Le Bernardin in New York City share The Barn's seriousness about sourcing but operate in urban formats. The French Laundry in Napa and Lazy Bear in San Francisco are harder to book and more technically ambitious, but don't offer the land-and-table connection The Barn provides. For other American farmhouse-format comparisons, see Vintage Restaurant in Charlottesville and Restaurant at Winvian Farm in Morris.
FAQs
- What should a first-timer know about The Barn at Blackberry Farm? The restaurant is part of the Blackberry Farm resort, so most diners are hotel guests. Cuisine is American farmhouse fine-dining at $$$ pricing, with ingredients sourced from the property and surrounding region. The wine list is one of the more serious in the American South, holding a World of Fine Wine 3-Star Accreditation. Expect a formal but warm atmosphere, not a casual meal. Plan the visit around a multi-night stay for full value.
- Can I eat at the bar at The Barn at Blackberry Farm? Bar dining availability is not confirmed in our current data. Contact the property directly to confirm seating options. Given the resort format, seating arrangements may differ from standalone restaurant bars. Check our full Walland bars guide for alternatives if bar-forward dining is your priority.
- Is The Barn at Blackberry Farm good for a special occasion? Yes, directly. The combination of the formal dining room, sterling silver service, a 135,000-bottle wine cellar, and the farm setting makes this one of the stronger special-occasion venues in Tennessee. The $$$+ price point and resort-stay requirement mean costs add up fast, but if the occasion warrants the investment, the experience is calibrated for it. For comparisons, Providence in Los Angeles and Emeril's in New Orleans offer special-occasion formats in more accessible urban settings.
- What should I order at The Barn at Blackberry Farm? Specific current dishes are not available in our data, and The Barn's menu tracks the farm's seasons, so what's on offer changes. The kitchen's stated philosophy is to express the farm and the South without defaulting to conventional Southern dishes, so expect regionally sourced ingredients prepared with fine-dining technique. For the wine pairing, the sommelier team is deep enough to make a guided pairing a worthwhile choice rather than selecting independently.
- What are alternatives to The Barn at Blackberry Farm in Walland? Within Walland, the closest alternatives are Blackberry Farm (New American, same property), Blackberry Mountain (American Mountain, adjacent property), and Three Sisters (American Southern). If you want fine-dining with serious farm sourcing outside Walland, Blue Hill at Stone Barns is the national benchmark. See our full Walland restaurants guide for broader options in the area.
- Does The Barn at Blackberry Farm handle dietary restrictions? Specific dietary accommodation policies are not confirmed in our current data. Given the kitchen's farm-sourcing model and fine-dining format, accommodations for dietary needs are likely handled on request, but you should contact the property directly before your stay to confirm. The farm-driven menu means substitutions may be more constrained than at a restaurant with a broader supplier base.
For more on the area, see our guides to Walland hotels, Walland wineries, and Walland experiences.
Compare The Barn at Blackberry Farm
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Barn at Blackberry Farm | American Farmhouse | Nestled among the Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee, Blackberry Farm, one of America’s finest luxury hotels is the location for The Barn restaurant. Set in the heart of the farmstead, The Barn offers refined fine-dining. Custom chairs, antique-style linens and sterling silver all capture the essence of farm dining in the South. The restaurant aims to “express the essence of our food from the farm and South, though not necessarily ‘southern food.’” The ingredients are sourced regionally or gro; HIGHLIGHTS: • COOKING CLASSICS DIRECTIONS & ACCESS: Directions By car From Knoxville, Hwy 129 S to Hwy 321 N towards Townsend. Pass the Foothills Parkway. Take the first right after Parkway on West Millers Cove Road. Entrance is 3 miles down on the left. By plane Knoxville 25 km GPS coordinates 35.6857 -83.8667 MEMBER SINCE: 4.7/5; WINE: Wine Strengths: California, Burgundy, Rhône, France, Tuscany, Italy, Spain, Australia, Germany, Oregon, Washington Pricing: $$$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $50 Selections: 8,200 Inventory: 135,000 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: American Pricing: $$$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Lunch and Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: Andy Chabot Sommelier: Kelly Schmidt, John Schlichting, Greg Wilson, Emma Wortman, David Bond, Melissa McAvoy, Callum Krishna, Sadie Bales Chef: Cassidee Dabney General Manager: Brian Lee Owner: Mary Celeste Beall; Nestled among the Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee, Blackberry Farm, one of America’s finest luxury hotels is the location for The Barn restaurant. Set in the heart of the farmstead, The Barn offers refined fine-dining. Custom chairs, antique-style linens and sterling silver all capture the essence of farm dining in the South. The restaurant aims to “express the essence of our food from the farm and South, though not necessarily ‘southern food.’” The ingredients are sourced regionally or gro; Nestled among the Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee, Blackberry Farm, one of America’s finest luxury hotels is the location for The Barn restaurant. Set in the heart of the farmstead, The Barn offers refined fine-dining. Custom chairs, antique-style linens and sterling silver all capture the essence of farm dining in the South. The restaurant aims to “express the essence of our food from the farm and South, though not necessarily ‘southern food.’” The ingredients are sourced regionally or gro; Nestled among the Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee, Blackberry Farm, one of America’s finest luxury hotels is the location for The Barn restaurant. Set in the heart of the farmstead, The Barn offers refined fine-dining. Custom chairs, antique-style linens and sterling silver all capture the essence of farm dining in the South. The restaurant aims to “express the essence of our food from the farm and South, though not necessarily ‘southern food.’” The ingredients are sourced regionally or gro; {"wbwl_source": {"slug": "the-barn-at-blackberry-farm", "page_type": "star_accreditation", "category_slug": "star-accreditation", "award_result": "Accredited", "is_global_winner": "False"}, "scraped_details": {"hero_image": "", "page_title": "3-Star Accreditation", "page_url": ""}, "source_row_snapshot": {"raw_name": "The Barn at Blackberry Farm"}}; Nestled among the Smoky Mountains of eastern Tennessee, Blackberry Farm, one of America’s finest luxury hotels is the location for The Barn restaurant. Set in the heart of the farmstead, The Barn offers refined fine-dining. Custom chairs, antique-style linens and sterling silver all capture the essence of farm dining in the South. The restaurant aims to “express the essence of our food from the farm and South, though not necessarily ‘southern food.’” The ingredients are sourced regionally or gro | Easy | — | |
| Blackberry Farm | New American | Unknown | — | ||
| Blackberry Mountain | American Mountain | Unknown | — | ||
| Three Sisters | American Southern | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about The Barn at Blackberry Farm?
The Barn is a hotel restaurant first — it sits within Blackberry Farm and is primarily oriented toward guests staying on the property. The $$$+ price point reflects ingredient sourcing from the farm and region, sterling silver service, and a wine list with 8,200 selections. Chef Cassidee Dabney's kitchen aims to express Southern farmstead cooking without being narrowly 'Southern food.' Come with that framing and the experience makes sense; arrive expecting a standard steakhouse and it won't land.
Can I eat at the bar at The Barn at Blackberry Farm?
Bar seating is not documented in the available venue data for The Barn. The dining room setup — custom chairs, antique linens, formal silver service — is oriented toward sit-down meals at lunch and dinner. check the venue's official channels before assuming walk-up bar access is an option.
Is The Barn at Blackberry Farm good for a special occasion?
Yes, provided the occasion suits a formal, rural retreat setting rather than a city splurge. The room is set up for that register: sterling silver service, a 135,000-bottle cellar overseen by Wine Director Andy Chabot, and a kitchen focused on regionally sourced ingredients. The 3-Star Accreditation from World of Fine Wine adds weight to the wine pairing case. If your party wants urban energy or a bustling room, this is the wrong call — but for an intimate celebration in a farmstead setting, it fits.
What should I order at The Barn at Blackberry Farm?
Specific dishes are not listed in the available data, so any named recommendation here would be fabricated. What the venue does confirm: the kitchen sources ingredients from the farm and surrounding region, and the menu philosophy is farm-driven rather than genre-bound Southern cooking. Given the wine program's particular depth in California, Burgundy, and Rhône, a food-and-wine pairing through the sommelier team is the highest-value move at this price point.
What are alternatives to The Barn at Blackberry Farm in Walland?
Within the Blackberry Farm property itself, Blackberry Mountain offers a different format and setting worth comparing if you're deciding between properties. Three Sisters is another on-site option. For farm-driven fine dining at a national peer level, Blue Hill at Stone Barns in Tarrytown is the closest structural comparison — similar sourcing philosophy, comparable formality, different geography.
Does The Barn at Blackberry Farm handle dietary restrictions?
Specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented in the venue data. Given the $$$+ price point and the farm-sourced, seasonally driven format, it is reasonable to expect flexibility — but confirm directly with the property before arrival, particularly for anything beyond common restrictions.
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