Restaurant in Tampa, United States
Michelin-noted Nordic in an unlikely ZIP code.

Fisk earns back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) for bringing disciplined Scandinavian cooking to Tampa's Westshore corridor — a neighbourhood that needed exactly this. At $$$, chef Fletcher Andrews runs one of the most technically credible kitchens in the city, with a 4.7 Google rating across 4,153 reviews backing it up. Book mid-week for the best experience.
If you have been to Fisk once, the question on a return visit is whether the Scandinavian format still holds its logic in a city better known for Cuban sandwiches and Gulf seafood. It does. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) confirm that what chef Fletcher Andrews is doing at 2205 N Westshore Blvd is not a novelty act — it is a considered, disciplined kitchen operating at a level that Tampa's dining scene genuinely needed on that stretch of Westshore Boulevard. If you have not been: book it. If you have: the case for a return is just as strong.
Fisk occupies a specific and useful position in Tampa's food map. Westshore is a business-corridor neighbourhood , hotel clusters, airport adjacency, chain restaurants filling expense-account dinners , and Fisk reads as a deliberate counterpoint to all of that. The room, by design, signals that you are somewhere intentional. The visual register is Nordic restraint: clean lines, considered lighting, the kind of space where the plate arriving in front of you is meant to be the focal point rather than competing with the décor. For a food-focused diner, that framing is exactly right.
Scandinavian cuisine in the American South is a specific bet. The pantry logic , preservation, fermentation, cold-climate produce sensibility, fish as the structural centre , does not map onto Florida instinctively. But that tension is part of what makes Fisk worth attention. Andrews is working with a culinary grammar that is disciplined and restrained where much of Tampa dining leans generous and abundant. If you are the kind of diner who gravitates toward Scandinavian kitchens when travelling , say, Endlich in Sankt Anton or Familjen in Gothenburg , Fisk will feel immediately legible. If Nordic formats are new to you, treat this as a strong entry point: the price tier (
At $$$, Fisk sits in a price range that demands some justification in a city with serious value options. The Michelin Plate citation is the clearest available signal: this is a kitchen the Michelin inspectors found technically credible two years running. That does not guarantee the meal will suit every palate, but it means the execution is not in question. For Tampa, where Michelin recognition at any level remains relatively rare, two consecutive plates place Fisk in a short list of kitchens operating at a documented standard.
The neighbourhood anchor function matters here. Fisk is not a downtown destination pulling from the full metro area in the way that Bern's Steak House does, with its decades of institutional gravity. It is a neighbourhood-scale serious restaurant that raises the quality floor for everything around it , the kind of place that makes an area worth dining in rather than just staying in. For visitors based in Westshore hotels, that is genuinely good news: you do not need to cross the city for a meal worth your time.
Timing matters at Fisk. Weekday evenings , Tuesday through Thursday , are the window where you get the kitchen at full focus without peak-weekend pressure. The Westshore corridor is business-driven, which means Friday and Saturday bring a different crowd energy and potentially longer waits if walk-in traffic picks up. For a serious, conversation-centred dinner, mid-week is the call. If you are visiting Tampa for a short trip and only have a weekend available, book as far ahead as the reservation system allows and request whatever the quieter seating time is , early dinner before 7 PM is likely your better option over the peak 7:30 to 9 window.
For the food-focused traveller building a Tampa itinerary, Fisk fits logically alongside Ebbe (contemporary) and Kōsen (Japanese) as part of a short list of kitchens operating with genuine ambition. Tampa's dining scene has developed considerably, and Pearl's full Tampa restaurants guide maps the wider picture. If your trip extends beyond food, our Tampa hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest.
On the national scale, Fisk is not competing with Le Bernardin or The French Laundry , that is not the relevant comparison. The more useful frame is what Lazy Bear does for San Francisco or what Smyth does for Chicago's West Loop: a serious, identifiably-voiced kitchen that gives a neighbourhood a reason to be on the dining map. Fisk does that for Westshore. That is not a small thing.
The 4.7 rating across 4,153 Google reviews is a useful data point precisely because of the volume: at that review count, the score is not driven by a loyal early-adopter cohort. A sustained 4.7 across thousands of guests means consistent execution across a wide range of expectations and occasions. That kind of breadth in positive sentiment, combined with two Michelin Plate citations, is as close to a durable quality signal as you can get at this price tier without a starred kitchen.
Fisk runs Scandinavian cuisine at a $$$ price point in Tampa's Westshore business corridor — not a neighbourhood you'd expect to find this format. Chef Fletcher Andrews has earned two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025), which tells you the kitchen is consistent. Go in knowing the concept is Nordic, not surf-and-turf Florida, and you'll calibrate expectations correctly.
Fisk holds two Michelin Plates, which signals solid technique and coherent cooking rather than Michelin-star ambition. At $$$, the tasting format works if you're buying into Scandinavian structure — restrained flavours, precision over abundance. If you want richness and volume, Bern's Steak House is a better spend. Fisk rewards diners who engage with the format on its own terms.
Specific dietary accommodation policies aren't documented in available venue data for Fisk. Standard practice at $$$ Michelin-recognised restaurants is to accommodate restrictions when flagged at booking — check the venue's official channels when reserving and confirm in advance, particularly for a tasting-menu format where courses are pre-set.
Yes, with a caveat on setting: Westshore is a business-corridor location, not a destination neighbourhood, so the atmosphere is driven by the room and the food rather than the street outside. Two Michelin Plates give it the credibility to anchor a celebratory dinner. For a more atmospheric Tampa special-occasion room, Columbia in Ybor City offers a very different kind of event — Fisk is the better call if the meal itself is the occasion.
Fisk's dress expectations aren't specified in the venue record, but a Michelin-recognised Scandinavian restaurant at $$$ in a business-adjacent corridor typically draws a dressed-up-casual crowd — think dinner-out clothes rather than formal wear. A jacket is unlikely to be required, but this isn't a shorts-and-sneakers room.
For Tampa fine dining with more local history, Bern's Steak House is the established benchmark. Rocca covers Italian at a comparable price tier. Columbia is the call for a full Tampa experience with a longer legacy. If the Scandinavian-Nordic format specifically is what draws you to Fisk, there's no direct Tampa equivalent — Fisk is the only game in that lane.
At $$$, Fisk is priced in line with Tampa's serious dining tier, and two Michelin Plates confirm the cooking justifies the spend. The value case depends on format fit: if Nordic cuisine works for your table, the quality-to-price ratio is solid. If your group is price-anchored on Florida seafood or steakhouse volume, the spend makes more sense at Bern's.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.