Skip to main content

    Restaurant in Minneapolis, United States

    Vinai

    415pts

    Esquire-ranked Hmong cooking. Book it now.

    Vinai, Restaurant in Minneapolis

    About Vinai

    Vinai is Minneapolis's most compelling new restaurant right now: chef Yia Vang's modern Hmong cooking earned an Esquire Best New Restaurant nod in 2024 (#17 nationally) and a 4.7 Google rating. Book it for a special occasion if you want a meal with genuine cultural depth, not just a prestigious address. Booking is currently Easy — do not wait for that to change.

    Should You Book Vinai?

    Yes, book it — and book it soon after landing in Minneapolis. Vinai earned its place on Esquire's Leading New Restaurants list for 2024 (ranked #17 nationally), and a 4.7 Google rating across 277 reviews suggests the recognition is well-founded. The restaurant, from chef Yia Vang, serves modern Hmong cooking drawn directly from family tradition — and there is nowhere else in Minneapolis, or arguably the Midwest, offering this specific culinary point of view at a sit-down level. If you are planning a special occasion and want something that feels genuinely significant rather than generically upscale, Vinai is the right call.

    What Vinai Is

    Vinai sits at 1300 NE 2nd St in Minneapolis's Northeast neighborhood, a part of the city that has grown into a serious dining corridor over the past decade. The restaurant is named after the Ban Vinai Refugee Camp in Thailand, where chef Yia Vang's parents met before eventually settling in the United States. That history is not decorative context , it is the organizing principle of the menu, which works through Hmong family dishes and reframes them for a restaurant setting without stripping out what makes them meaningful.

    The spatial experience matters here. Northeast Minneapolis restaurants tend toward warehouse-scale rooms or converted industrial spaces, and Vinai fits that template while using it thoughtfully. The room is designed to feel anchored rather than cavernous , expect a layout that supports the kind of meal where conversation is part of the point. For a special occasion, the physical setting delivers: it reads as a proper occasion restaurant without the formal stuffiness of a hotel dining room or a legacy steakhouse.

    Service at Vinai has drawn consistent praise in early reviews, and on a practical level, that matters when you are paying for a celebratory meal. The staff are reportedly knowledgeable about the menu's cultural context , which is genuinely useful given that many diners will be encountering Hmong cuisine in a restaurant format for the first time. That kind of service does meaningful work: it helps you understand what you are eating and why, which makes the meal more worthwhile, not just more comfortable. Whether the service polish holds as the restaurant matures past its opening period will be worth watching, but the early signals are good.

    For comparison: if you are weighing Vinai against Owamni , the James Beard Award-winning Indigenous restaurant also in Minneapolis , both restaurants are doing similar conceptual work: centering a culinary tradition that does not get mainstream restaurant attention and executing it at a high level. Owamni has the longer track record and the awards pedigree. Vinai is newer and has less institutional recognition so far, but the Esquire nod is a credible signal that the kitchen is operating at a comparable level. If you can do both on a Minneapolis trip, do both. If you have to choose for a single special occasion dinner, Vinai's 2024 momentum makes it the sharper pick right now.

    Also worth knowing: for diners who have eaten at places like Atomix in New York, where Korean culinary heritage is explored through a tasting menu format, or Lazy Bear in San Francisco, where personal narrative drives the food, Vinai operates in recognizable territory. The ambition is real. This is not a heritage restaurant that coasts on sentiment , it is a kitchen using cultural specificity as a source of culinary discipline. Diners who appreciate that register will find Vinai particularly satisfying.

    For broader Minneapolis dining context, our full Minneapolis restaurants guide covers the city's range. If you are building a longer trip, the Minneapolis hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful companion reads.

    Practical Details

    Vinai is at 1300 NE 2nd St, Minneapolis, MN 55413, in the Northeast neighborhood. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means you should not need to plan weeks out, but given the Esquire recognition and the restaurant's growing profile, booking a few days ahead for weekend slots is sensible. For a special occasion, book earlier rather than later to have flexibility on timing. Price range data is not confirmed in our database; check directly with the restaurant for current pricing before budgeting your evening. Hours and phone information are not currently listed , check the restaurant's own channels for up-to-date service times.

    Quick reference: 1300 NE 2nd St, Minneapolis | Esquire Leading New Restaurants 2024 (#17) | Booking difficulty: Easy | Price range: confirm directly

    How Vinai Compares to Other Minneapolis Restaurants

    {{vs_category_html}}

    Worth Exploring Nearby

    • Owamni , James Beard-winning Indigenous cuisine; the closest peer to Vinai in ambition and cultural specificity
    • Hai Hai , James Beard-nominated; Southeast Asian cooking that shares some culinary geography with Hmong cuisine
    • Spoon and Stable , New American; the reliable Minneapolis special-occasion standard if you want something more familiar in format
    • 112 Eatery , Italian-inflected; a long-standing Minneapolis favorite for a more casual celebratory dinner
    • Diane's Place , Worth knowing for a different side of Minneapolis dining

    Compare Vinai

    How Easy to Book: Vinai vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    VinaiHmongEasy
    112 EateryItalianUnknown
    Brasa RotisserieAmerican CreoleUnknown
    Kincaid’sSteakhouseUnknown
    Lobby Bar at the PeninsulaModern AmericanUnknown
    Manny’s SteakhouseSteakhouseUnknown

    How Vinai stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Vinai?

    Vinai's focus is on Hmong cultural cooking rooted in family and history, not fine-dining ceremony. Dress as you would for a serious neighborhood restaurant — neat casual fits the room. There is no indication of a formal dress code, so leave the jacket at home unless you want to wear it.

    How far ahead should I book Vinai?

    Book at least one to two weeks out, especially for weekends. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so you are unlikely to need months of lead time the way you would at a tasting-menu destination — but an Esquire #17 ranking for 2024 means local interest is high and same-week availability may be tight.

    Can Vinai accommodate groups?

    Nothing in the available record restricts group bookings, and the Northeast Minneapolis location at 1300 NE 2nd St suggests a full-service dining room rather than a counter-only format. For parties of six or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm table configuration and any group policies.

    What are alternatives to Vinai in Minneapolis?

    For a different take on culturally specific, chef-driven cooking in Minneapolis, Brasa Rotisserie offers Caribbean and Southern-inflected food at a more casual price point. If you want a Minneapolis institution with a longer track record, 112 Eatery is the comparison. Neither replicates what Vinai does — Hmong family cooking with a named chef and national recognition is its own category in this city.

    Is Vinai good for a special occasion?

    Yes, particularly if the occasion calls for something with a story behind it. Vinai is named after the Ban Vinai Refugee Camp where Chef Yia Vang's parents met, and the food is built around that history — which gives a dinner here more weight than a generic upscale night out. The Esquire Best New Restaurants ranking for 2024 adds external validation if you need it for convincing a skeptical guest.

    Recognized By

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Vinai on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.