Natchez
Pearl Street Pasta

Pearl Street Pasta

105 S Pearl StMS 39120, Natchez, United States

Pizza • Cafés • French • Seafood


"Rose for this occasion. Sometimes you need to go a bit wrong during a meal before you can see the true medel of a restorer. This week at Pearl Street Pasta. PSP is a small invisible business in the historic downtown of Natchez. It is always among the top 3 4 places locals will recommend when you ask for a great meal in Natchez. We arrived just as the dinner service began and quickly became in the back of the venue near an impressive bar that stretched over the entire back wall of the restaures. We ordered a crab catcher. The crabcakes were light, tender and not overwhelming, a very nice version of one of my favorite dishes. My wife ordered shrimps and crust fish over penne with a light cream sauce. I had at least one taste and it was very nice dish, PSP understands that you don't have to drink a pasta dish in the sauce. The correct amount of sauce on a beautiful plate of penne with inzely sauteed crust tail and shrimp. Here is where they were challenged as a restorer, I took the recommendation of our server and order a nightly special Pan meerrot red Snapper served over a bed of mashed yukon gold potatoes with a beautiful tomato relish. The court sounded great and I decided to try it, but something went terrible wrong in the kitchen. After my second bite the acid level of much too much lemon in the sauce drove over the food and it was simply inaccessible. The bar call was the first to notice that I had hardly touched my main course. He entered and took the court and went to the kitchen. At moments our server had returned and offered an apology and the offer of a properly prepared speical or something else on the menu. Honestly, I was a bit beaten by another speical, so if in a pasta room go with a safe choice PASTA! I put an order for her signature jambayla Pasta, and mine or was apparently on top of the list as it was just moments before a new entree sat in front of me. During the waiting, the owner came to our table to apologize personally for the kitchen error. Pasta Jambalya satueed shrimps and Cajun sausages were sawed and combined with a beautiful cream sauce, raw tomatoes and basil were served over penne. Both pasta dishes were great! But the way in which the owner and the staff had risen in Peal Street after the failure of the main court was very praised."

King's Tavern

King's Tavern

613 Jefferson St, Natchez I-39120-3319, United States

Pizza • Seafood • American • Fast Food


"Best experience in many years. We visited King’s Tavern on recommendation from several locals who said that the new ownership had really done something special with the place. They were right. The restaurant has a rustic exterior (oldest building in Natchez, MS , and an equally period-correct interior. It feels as if you have walked back in time to the early 1800s, into a turn-of-the-century tavern. The new owners (Regina and Doug Charboneau plan on starting a small-batch rum distillery in the tavern soon, and I can’t wait until it’s up and running. Upon entering, Ricky (our bartender – more on him later informed us that they specialize in local produce and small-batch drinks. This was emphasized when we ordered a Coke, and were told that they only had rootbeer, ginger ale, freshly-brewed iced tea, and mixed drinks. My wife ordered an iced tea, which was excellent. Ricky asked me what kind of drinks I preferred, upon which I informed him I enjoyed rum drinks, or perhaps a bourbon cocktail. Being that Ricky recently worked in Miami (and was from my hometown of New Orleans , he fixed me what turned out to be the best mojito that I’ve ever had. Ricky also had me taste a Ron Zacapa Centenario rum, which was stellar. Ricky really knows his stuff. He teaches a mixology class at the Tavern, which will DEFINITELY be on my to-do list when we return (which can’t come soon enough ! And, to top it off, he was the quintessential restaurant front man. He provided interesting tidbits about the restaurant, made good suggestions based upon qualifying questions, and made sure that our every need or want was satisfied. We ordered several different things for dinner. My wife started with a prosciutto, apple, and parmesan salad on mixed greens, topped with a lemon vinaigrette. The prosciutto was thinly sliced and provided a salty counterpoint to the sweet apple and nutty parmesan. The greens were obviously fresh, and the dressing was light, with just enough lemon juice give you that back-of-the-jaw punch on your first bite. I opted for their wood-fired oysters as an appetizer. They arrived in a small cast-iron skillet baked in their own liquor and some olive oil. They were easily some of the tastiest oysters I’ve ever had – that coming from someone who eats oysters probably once per week, lived in New Orleans, and recently shucked an entire sack over a weekend for eating raw and grilling. They were served alongside some grilled flatbread. We also had a small bowl of their sweet potato and Andouille sausage soup. The sweet potatoes were obviously fresh, as the soup still had some smaller chunks of potato. It was creamy, without being overly filling or rich. And, the sausage was superb. My wife commented that she could have made a meal out of just a few bowls of the soup. For our meals, we opted for their flatbreads. They have a wood-fired oven in-house, and they make wonderful use of it. I had a flatbread topped with brisket, caramelized onion and drizzled with a horseradish cream sauce. The brisket was very tender – not “fork tender”, but more along the lines of “blunt spoon” tender. The onions were sweet, and the horseradish was spicy. Taken all together, the smokiness of the flatbread and brisket, the sweetness of the onions and the spiciness of the horseradish made for a surprisingly good meal (though, upon reflection, I should not have been surprised, as everything we had was superb . My wife had their Madeline flatbread (for an interesting story, read up on the significance of “Madeline” as the name associates with King’s Tavern . It arrived with a sauce made from San Marzano tomatoes, fresh basil, farm-made mozzarella slices and fresh tomatoes. It was very reminiscent of a true-Italian “margherita” pizza. Without a doubt, this was the best single dish of the night. It was everything that a true margherita should be – full of flavor, but not heavy, thereby allowing you to taste and savor each ingredient, then adding them to each other to reach a new level of taste. Our last dish as a desert called the Black Bottom Pie. It consisted of a ginger-snap crust, filled with homemade dark-chocolate ice cream, and topped with a Bourbon cream topping. Like so many of our other dishes, it was simple enough so that we could enjoy every single ingredient, but each item seemed to be chosen so that the whole dish was better than simply the sum of its parts. To say that we enjoyed our meal is a gross understatement. Being from New Orleans, I am all-too-often disappointed when I travel and eat out. Even the best restaurants in other cities frequently fail to compare to the run-of-the-mill places in New Orleans. The King’s Tavern, on the other hand, can easily stand up to the best of the best. If you want run-of-the-mill fare, look elsewhere. If you want hoity-toity ambience and tuxedoed waiters, again – go elsewhere. If you want some of the best dishes, coupled with amazingly good drinks, served in a true colonial-style ambience, and tended to by the quintessential bartender, then head to King’s Tavern. (And, expect to return again and again! On a personal note, I want to thank Ricky and his staff for making my anniversary one to be remembered."

Natchez Brewing Company

Natchez Brewing Company

207 High St, 39120, Natchez, US, United States

Pubs • Pizza • Cafés • Brewery


"Very disappointing to go in on a FRIDAY night and be informed, at 8:02pm, that the RESTAURANT stops serving food at 8pm. On top of that, I’m sure I arrived probably a minute or two before 8pm because I had enough time to wait for a server to turn me, sample two beers, ask for the one I liked better, and then I started to order a pizza, and the server cut me off saying ‘we stop serving food at 8pm, and it’s… 8:02pm’ Rather rude… but I’ve always felt like that server (with the crazy hair) has always been a bit rude. If you don’t like working a customer service type job, maybe you should find yourself another job?I’ve always loved the brewery and its food and drinks, but seriously WHO MAKES THE HOURS?? Quite ridiculous to close at 9pm on a Friday or Saturday as it is, but just plain ludicrous to quit serving food at a restaurant at 8pm, especially on a Friday or Saturday.Edit to add (in response to owner):I understand having to make a change in hours due to short staff. However, the main thing that drove me to write the review was the attitude and demeanor of the server who waited on me. Especially considering the fact I actually came in before 8 and that it’s a recent change in hours (not yet even reflected online), I believe there should have been a 5 or maybe even 10 minute grace period after 8pm in which a person, especially one who has already came in before or even right at 8pm, can order food. If she had just taken my order of just ONE pizza but informed me that hours had changed to 8pm for future reference, I would have been mollified and next time I wanted food after 8pm I would just take my business elsewhere and not waste my time. It was the fact she said ‘Oh the kitchen stops taking orders at 8 and it’s… 8:02pm’ I mean really, just TWO minutes, in which I had already been in the restaurant? That’s where the real issue arises, and any customer service type employee should know how to handle a situation like that better than it was."