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Best Brunch Restaurants in Coconut Grove

4 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked

Last Updated: February 2026

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Our Top Pick
Le Bouchon du Grove
A Lyon-style bouchon operating since 1994 where French-trained Chef Christian Ville cooks everything from scratch daily — no freezers, no microwaves — in a charming house converted into a sidewalk bistro that transports you to France.

Notable Picks

$$$ Coconut Grove French
A Lyon-style bouchon where Chef Christian Ville has cooked everything from scratch — no freezers, no microwaves — inside a converted Coconut Grove house for over 30 years. The kitchen runs on a tightly edited lineup of French comfort classics: gratinée onion soup, cast-iron pots of moules frites, chicken fricassée with porcini risotto, and a filet that regulars order without looking at the menu. Expect tight tables, a complimentary glass of sparkling wine at the door, and the kind of lived-in charm that gets louder and more fun as the room fills up.
Must-Try Dishes: Les Moules Marinières Pommes Frites Comme à Bruxelles, Escargots en Persillade, La Fricassée de Volaille à l'Ancienne, Risotto aux Cèpes et Biscuit de Parmesan
What Makes it Special: A Lyon-style bouchon operating since 1994 where French-trained Chef Christian Ville cooks everything from scratch daily — no freezers, no microwaves — in a charming house converted into a sidewalk bistro that transports you to France.
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$$$ Coconut Grove Lebanese
A design-forward Lebanese restaurant in Coconut Grove where a Beirut-trained chef works through contemporary mezze, skewer platters, and a Lebanese wine list with over three dozen bottles. It draws a social crowd for shareable spreads and weekend live entertainment, though midweek seatings deliver a quieter pace and more attentive service. The room is built around natural oak, terracotta, and handcrafted light fixtures that set a tone distinct from typical Middle Eastern dining in Miami.
Must-Try Dishes: Truffle Rakakat, Amal's Hummus, Pistachio Kabab
What Makes it Special: Modern Lebanese cuisine from a Beirut-trained chef served inside a 5,000 sq ft arabesque-inspired dining room with resident DJs and live entertainment in the heart of Coconut Grove.
$$$$ Coconut Grove Steakhouse, Seafood
Chef Guillermo Eleicegui's wood-fire-driven kitchen treats the open grill as both tool and theater — the braised ossobuco itself becomes a recurring ingredient threaded through empanadas and ragouts, giving the menu a coherent identity beyond standard steakhouse programming. Lighter courses like smoked beets with ricotta mousse and the sweetbreads with wagyu potato purée compete for attention against charred, dry-aged steaks. The Coconut Grove outpost runs quieter and more intimate than its MICHELIN Guide-listed Wynwood sibling, though service execution on busy nights still shows gaps that keep the overall experience uneven.
Must-Try Dishes: Braised Ossobuco Empanada, Bone Marrow with Ossobuco Marmalade, Mollejas (Sweetbreads with Wagyu Potato Purée)
What Makes it Special: Chef Guillermo Eleicegui's globally-influenced, wood-fire-driven kitchen anchored by a roaring open grill — a MICHELIN Guide-listed concept where the braised ossobuco itself becomes a recurring ingredient across empanadas, pot pies, and ragouts.

Worthy Picks

$$$ Coconut Grove Argentine
An owner-operated neighborhood parrilla where the kitchen keeps it tight — coarse salt, imported Argentine cuts, and a live fire that does the work without leaning on sauces or technique theater. The empanadas and sweetbreads reliably anchor the table before the skirt steak takes over, and BOGO wine nights on Mondays and Tuesdays add real pull for repeat visits. The elevated outdoor deck on Commodore Plaza turns a casual dinner into something that lingers, backed by staff who know regulars by name.
Must-Try Dishes: Entraña 14 oz (Skirt Steak), Arroz del Gaucho, Empanadas
What Makes it Special: Intimate, owner-operated neighborhood parrilla born from a wine trip to Mendoza, with premium Argentine-imported cuts cooked over fire with nothing but coarse salt — the antithesis of corporate steakhouse pomp.