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    Restaurant in Birmingham, United States

    Bayonet

    575pts

    Bib Gourmand seafood. Book well ahead.

    Bayonet, Restaurant in Birmingham

    About Bayonet

    Bayonet earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand and landed on the NYT's 50 Best Restaurants in America list in 2025 — both in its opening year. The raw bar anchors Alabama and East Coast oysters, while Rob McDaniel's rotating sustainable fish menu does the serious work. Booking is Near Impossible; plan well ahead or attempt the bar early in the week.

    Who Should Book Bayonet

    Bayonet is the right call if you want a proper seafood-forward meal in Birmingham, Alabama, without the formality or price tag of a fine-dining room. It earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand in 2025 and landed on The New York Times' 50 Best Restaurants in America for 2025 — two signals that point in the same direction: serious cooking at prices that don't require a special occasion to justify. If you've already been once and stuck to the oysters, come back for the cooked fish program. That's where Rob McDaniel's real range shows up.

    The Room and the Energy

    The space runs airy and lively. Bayonet sits next door to Helen, the meat-focused Southern grill the McDaniels opened during the pandemic, and the two share a block presence that gives the area a genuine anchor. Bayonet's atmosphere skews upbeat rather than hushed — the raw bar is a social focal point, the room feels like people are actually enjoying themselves rather than performing a dining occasion. For conversation, earlier sittings will be easier than later ones as the energy picks up through the evening.

    Lunch vs. Dinner at Bayonet

    Bayonet only opened in March 2025, and with no published hours in the current data, it's worth checking directly before planning a midday visit. What is clear from the Michelin and NYT recognition is that the kitchen's output is consistent enough to draw national attention quickly. If lunch service is available, it's likely to offer the same tight, rotating menu at a lower-pressure pace , the raw bar format translates well to daytime dining, and a stop here before or after exploring downtown Birmingham makes logistical sense given the 2nd Avenue North address. Dinner is where the full dessert program , Candace Foster's work , comes into its own, and where the cooked fish dishes land with more context around them.

    What to Eat

    The menu rotates based on what's sustainable and seasonal, so specific dishes aren't guaranteed on any given visit. What the Michelin guide confirms: Alabama oysters from Dauphin Island share the raw bar with East Coast varieties, giving you a genuine regional comparison in a single order. On the cooked side, McDaniel has used cobia for schnitzel, paired Ora King salmon collar with a fruit salsa, and built a Gulf shrimp bánh mì with caramel sauce. These are not safe combinations , they're the kind of moves that either work completely or don't, and the Bib Gourmand suggests they're working. Sides rotate seasonally; the hand-cut fries with lemon aioli are a fixture. If Foster's desserts are on when you visit, order them , a peach hand pie and a semifreddo-based watermelon icebox have appeared on the menu, and that's the kind of pastry program that justifies saving room.

    Booking Reality

    Bayonet is currently rated Near Impossible to book. A Bib Gourmand and an NYT 50 Best nod in the same year, in a city that doesn't have an oversupply of nationally recognised seafood restaurants, creates a genuine reservation crunch. Plan well ahead. If you're flexible on timing, earlier in the week and earlier in the evening are your leading options for availability. Walk-in attempts at the raw bar may be possible, but don't build a trip around that assumption.

    Practical Reference

    Bayonet is at 2015 2nd Ave N, Birmingham, AL 35203. Cuisine: seafood-forward with a rotating sustainable fish menu and a raw bar anchored by Alabama and East Coast oysters. Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2025; NYT 50 Best Restaurants in America 2025. Booking difficulty: Near Impossible. Price range, hours, and booking method are not confirmed in current data , check directly with the restaurant before visiting.

    Quick reference: 2015 2nd Ave N | Seafood | Michelin Bib Gourmand 2025 | NYT 50 Best 2025 | Near Impossible to book.

    Explore More in Birmingham

    Bayonet sits within a broader dining scene worth knowing. For seafood with a different format, The Oyster Club by Adam Stokes is the closest direct comparison in the city. For something more experimental, Albatross Death Cult is worth a look. If you want Indian fine dining, Opheem holds strong. For modern cuisine at the leading end, Adam's and Simpsons are the reference points. You can browse the full picture in our Birmingham restaurants guide, or check our guides to Birmingham hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences.

    For context on where Bayonet sits in the wider US seafood conversation, consider what separates it from destination restaurants: Le Bernardin in New York City and The French Laundry in Napa operate at a different price point and formality level entirely. Closer in spirit to Bayonet's accessible-but-serious positioning are Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Emeril's in New Orleans , both places where the cooking has genuine ambition without the room demanding you treat dinner like a ceremony. For comparison further afield, Alinea in Chicago and Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg show where the high end of American tasting-menu dining sits, while Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici on the Amalfi Coast illustrate how European seafood-specialist restaurants approach a similar product-first philosophy.

    Compare Bayonet

    How Bayonet Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    BayonetSeafoodMichelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Everyone is having fun at airy Bayonet, where Alabama oysters from Dauphin Island fight it out at the raw bar with East Coast stalwarts. The tight menu features a rotating roster of sustainable fish selected and cooked by Rob McDaniel, who opened the meat-centric Southern grill Helen next door with his wife, Emily, during the pandemic. He uses caramel sauce to punch up a bánh mì stuffed with Gulf shrimp, makes schnitzel out of cobia and pairs an acidic fruit salsa with fatty Ora King salmon collar. Sides are seasonal, like a bowl of lady peas, sweet Marconi peppers and cherry tomatoes, but the hand-cut fries with lemon aioli are always around. Candace Foster makes dessert, which one lucky summer night meant a glazed peach hand pie and “watermelon icebox” — a perfect slab of semifreddo with juicy cubed watermelon, granita and a kiss of olive oil. Opened: March 2025; Named one of The New York Times’ 50 Best Restaurants in America, 2025, Bayonet is a spirited raw bar and seafood-forward restaurant from Chef Rob and Emily McDaniel, committed to responsible dining and locally inspired flavors.Near Impossible
    Adam'sModern Cuisine££££Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    SimpsonsBritish, Modern Cuisine££££Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    OpheemIndian££££Michelin 2 StarUnknown
    Riverine RabbitModern Cuisine££Unknown
    TropeaItalian££Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Bayonet?

    The room is described as airy and lively, not formal — so dress accordingly. Think put-together casual: no jacket required, but the Bib Gourmand crowd tends to make an effort. Dressing the way you would for a good neighbourhood bistro is a safe read on the room.

    Is Bayonet good for solo dining?

    Yes, and the raw bar counter is the reason. Solo diners at a raw bar can pace their own meal and engage with the rotating fish selection without the awkwardness of a table for one. Bayonet's format — small, energetic, seafood-forward — suits single diners well. Given how hard the reservation is to get right now, a solo seat may actually be easier to land than a table for two or four.

    What should a first-timer know about Bayonet?

    The menu rotates based on what's sustainable and in season, so don't arrive with fixed expectations about specific dishes. What is consistent: Alabama oysters from Dauphin Island at the raw bar, hand-cut fries with lemon aioli, and Rob McDaniel's approach of treating fish the way a Southern grill treats meat. Bayonet holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) and was named to the New York Times' 50 Best Restaurants in America the same year — both within months of opening in March 2025.

    Can I eat at the bar at Bayonet?

    Bayonet has a raw bar as a core part of its concept, and based on the Michelin description the counter seating is central to the experience. For a near-impossible reservation, bar or counter seats are often the practical path in — worth asking specifically when you contact the restaurant.

    Does Bayonet handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu is seafood-forward with a rotating sustainable fish focus, so pescatarians are well-served by design. For other restrictions, the rotating menu and creative preparations — cobia schnitzel, bánh mì with Gulf shrimp, salmon collar — suggest kitchen flexibility, but nothing in the available data confirms specific allergy protocols. Contact Bayonet directly at 2015 2nd Ave N, Birmingham, AL 35203 to confirm before booking.

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