Restaurant in Cincinnati, United States
Wildweed
925Pearl PointsCincinnati's most interesting tasting menu right now.

About Wildweed
Wildweed is the most interesting tasting-menu option in Cincinnati right now. Chef David Jackman's farm-to-table cooking — built around foraging, fermentation, and freshly milled grain — earned an Esquire Best New Restaurants ranking (#26, 2024) and a Pearl 2025 recommendation. Book the chef's counter for the full picture; the à la carte is a solid fallback if the counter is full.
Wildweed Is Not What You Think It Is
Most people hear "farm-to-table" and picture safe, predictable plates dressed up with a provenance story. Wildweed, which opened in July 2024 at 1301 Walnut St in Cincinnati's Over-the-Rhine corridor, is doing something more precise and more interesting than that framing suggests. This is a restaurant that grew out of a pasta pop-up started by David and Lydia Jackman in 2018, and it has since become one of the most regionally distinctive dining options in the Midwest — combining handmade noodles, freshly milled grain, wildcrafted local ingredients, and a tasting menu format that earned it a spot on Esquire's Leading New Restaurants list at #26 for 2024. Pearl has also recommended it for 2025. Book it before the word fully spreads.
What to Expect Your First Time
First-timers should know that Wildweed operates on two registers simultaneously. There is an à la carte menu, and there is a chef's counter tasting menu — the latter being the format that drew national attention. The tasting menu is roughly half the size of the à la carte in terms of options, which keeps it focused. Each course comes with context: you will hear about the foraging, the fermentation, the milling. This is not ambient storytelling for atmosphere. It translates directly into the food , in miniatures like cool marcona almond tofu with raw tuna and pickled ramps, or preparations that let the natural character of ingredients like lake perch come through cleanly. If you are visiting for the first time and want the full picture of what Wildweed is doing, the chef's counter is the right call.
The physical space matters here too. The chef's counter format means you are close to the kitchen, watching preparation in real time. The room reads intimate rather than cavernous, which suits the food: this is a restaurant designed around focused attention, not background dining. If you are coming as a group and the counter does not fit your party size, the à la carte menu on the main floor still gives you access to the kitchen's handmade pasta and seasonal cocktail program, which leans on the same wildcrafted ingredient ethos as the food.
Is Wildweed a Late-Night Option?
Hours are not confirmed in our current data, so we cannot verify how late service runs. What we can say is that the chef's counter format , with its coursed structure and deliberate pacing , typically runs longer than a standard dinner service. If you are planning an evening and want to know whether Wildweed fits a later slot, contact the restaurant directly before booking. The à la carte menu may offer more flexibility on timing than the tasting counter. Check for any bar seating availability if you are arriving later; seasonal cocktails are a genuine draw here, not an afterthought, and bar access could make Wildweed a viable late stop even outside full tasting-menu hours.
How to Book
Booking difficulty is rated Easy at this stage, which reflects the restaurant's relatively recent opening and the fact that national attention is still building. That said, Esquire recognition and a Pearl 2025 recommendation will drive reservations up. Book a few weeks ahead to be safe, especially for the chef's counter, which by its nature has limited covers. The à la carte room will be easier to access on shorter notice.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 1301 Walnut St, Cincinnati, OH 45202
- Cuisine: Midwestern farm-to-table with regionally distinctive Italian influence; handmade pasta, freshly milled grain, wildcrafted ingredients
- Chef: David Jackman (also forager, gardener, fermenter); co-owner with Lydia Jackman
- Awards: Esquire Leading New Restaurants #26 (2024); Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025)
- Google Rating: 4.6 out of 5 (135 reviews)
- Booking Difficulty: Easy , book 2–3 weeks ahead for the chef's counter; à la carte more flexible
- Format Options: Chef's counter tasting menu or à la carte
- Dress Code: Not formally stated , smart casual fits the room and the price point
- Price Range: Not publicly listed; tasting-menu format at this recognition level typically runs mid-to-upper tier for Cincinnati
- Hours: Not confirmed , contact the restaurant directly for current service times
- Opened: July 2024
How Wildweed Compares in Cincinnati
For a special-occasion dinner in Cincinnati, Wildweed is currently the most interesting option at the tasting-menu end of the market. Boca has long been the city's reliable fine-dining anchor, and it remains the safer bet if you want a proven track record and a more conventional format. Nolia Kitchen is the right call if Southern and Creole cooking is what you are after , it occupies a completely different register from Wildweed. Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse and Jeff Ruby's The Precinct serve a different occasion type entirely , big-room, celebration-focused steakhouse energy. Camp Washington is not a peer in format or price, but it is the most regionally specific thing you can eat in Cincinnati and worth a separate visit.
If you want to benchmark Wildweed against tasting-menu programs nationally, the relevant comparison set includes places like Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg , restaurants where the foraging and sourcing narrative is inseparable from the food on the plate. Wildweed is operating at a younger stage than either of those, but the Esquire recognition puts it in a credible position as a rising program. For Chicago-proximity context, Alinea sets the ceiling on avant-garde Midwestern fine dining; Wildweed is not chasing that register, which is part of what makes it compelling.
See our full Cincinnati restaurants guide, Cincinnati bars guide, and Cincinnati hotels guide to plan the rest of your visit. Also worth checking: our Cincinnati experiences guide and Cincinnati wineries guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Wildweed?
Wildweed operates on two tracks: a chef's counter tasting menu and an à la carte menu, so decide your format before you arrive. The tasting menu is where chef David Jackman's foraging, fermentation, and handmade pasta work is most coherent — Esquire ranked it among the best new US restaurants in 2024 for exactly that reason. If you want flexibility, the à la carte menu offers roughly twice as many options. Either way, this is a more ambitious meal than most Cincinnati dining rooms attempt.
Can I eat at the bar at Wildweed?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in our current data, but Wildweed grew from a pasta pop-up with a convivial, hands-on ethos rather than a formal white-tablecloth format. The chef's counter is the most interactive seating option on record. Check directly with the restaurant at 1301 Walnut St for current bar availability.
How far ahead should I book Wildweed?
Booking is currently rated Easy, which reflects the restaurant's July 2024 opening and the fact that national attention is still building. That window will not stay open — Esquire and a Pearl recommendation tend to accelerate demand. Book two to three weeks out to be safe, and further ahead if you have a fixed date for a special occasion.
Is Wildweed good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is currently the most interesting special-occasion option in Cincinnati at the tasting-menu end of the market. The chef's counter format gives the meal a sense of occasion without the stiffness of a traditional fine-dining room. Wildweed's Pearl-recommended status and Esquire listing confirm it punches well above its 2024 opening age.
What are alternatives to Wildweed in Cincinnati?
For classic fine dining, Boca is the long-established benchmark. For a steakhouse occasion, Jeff Ruby's handles that format well. Nolia Kitchen is worth considering if you want a different take on locally focused cooking. Wildweed is the right call if a tasting menu with wildcrafted, fermented, and handmade-pasta-forward cooking is the brief.
Does Wildweed handle dietary restrictions?
Specific dietary accommodation policies are not confirmed in our data. Given the tasting menu format and kitchen's focus on hyper-seasonal, foraged ingredients, it is worth contacting the restaurant directly before booking if you have serious restrictions — tasting menus with this level of specificity typically require advance notice to adjust.
What should I order at Wildweed?
The chef's counter tasting menu is the format most aligned with what Wildweed is actually trying to do. Esquire singled out dishes involving lake perch and a marcona almond tofu with raw tuna and pickled ramps as standouts from a recent menu. The à la carte menu, built around handmade noodles and freshly milled grain, is the right pick if you want to eat more selectively.
Location
1301 Walnut St, Cincinnati, OH 45202
Cincinnati, United States
Compare Wildweed
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wildweed | The descriptions accompanying each course served at Wildweed’s chef’s counter are filled with action. The protagonist is David Jackman, a chef who you’ll learn is also a forager, gardener, fermenter and more. It’s common for restaurants to highlight the busywork behind their creations. It’s less common for those efforts to end up accentuating the silky beauty of lake perch or to lead to dishes as coherent and novel as cool marcona almond tofu jeweled with raw tuna and pickled ramps. Those are just two of the breathtaking miniatures from a recent tasting menu, which contains half as many options as the restaurant’s à la carte menu. Did we mention that this is also one of the Midwest’s most impressive and regionally distinctive Italian restaurants? Mr. Jackman, who owns Wildweed with his wife, Lydia, is cooking like Southwest Ohio lit a fire inside him. Long may it burn. Opened: July 2024; Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025); Wildweed is a 'fun-dining' restaurant in Cincinnati that grew from a pasta pop-up started by David and Lydia Jackman in 2018. It is known for its handmade noodles, use of freshly milled grain, seasonal cocktails, and a focus on wildcrafted and unique local ingredients.; Esquire Best New Restaurants #26 (2024) | — | |
| Camp Washington | — | ||
| The Refectory | — | ||
| Nolia Kitchen | — | ||
| Boca | — | ||
| Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse – Cincinnati | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Wildweed and alternatives.
Also Consider
- Camp Washington — Chili, Chili
- The Refectory — French, French
- Nolia Kitchen — Southern/Creole, Southern/Creole
- Boca — Notable alternative
- Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse – Cincinnati — Notable alternative
Wildweed is the strongest choice in Cincinnati if a chef-driven tasting format with a genuine sourcing story is what you are after. Boca is the city's most established fine-dining option and a safer bet for a conventional special-occasion dinner — longer track record, more predictable service rhythm, and a format that is easier to navigate. Wildweed is more interesting but less proven at scale. If your priority is reliability over novelty, Boca is the booking.
Nolia Kitchen operates in a different category entirely — Southern and Creole cooking rather than Midwestern tasting-menu fare — so it is not a direct comparison, but it is worth knowing about if your group is split on format preferences. Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse and Jeff Ruby's The Precinct suit a different occasion type: big-room celebration dining with a steakhouse anchor. Neither competes with Wildweed on culinary ambition, but both deliver a more legible special-occasion experience for groups who want that format.
Camp Washington is in a separate category on price and format — it is the most Cincinnati-specific meal you can have in the city, and worth a separate visit regardless of where you are eating dinner. The short version: book Wildweed for a food-first occasion where the cooking is the point. Book Boca if you want fine dining with a proven track record. Book Jeff Ruby's if the room and the occasion matter as much as the plate.
Recognized By
Explore Cincinnati
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