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    Restaurant in Little Rock, United States

    The Bugler

    400pts

    Trackside steakhouse that justifies the trip.

    The Bugler, Restaurant in Little Rock

    About The Bugler

    The Bugler is the upscale steakhouse at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and the trackside setting is its clearest differentiator. At $$ pricing with a 150-selection wine list and a chef trained in French fine dining kitchens, it earns a recommendation for race day dining and special occasions. Booking is easy; reservations are recommended when racing is active.

    The Bugler, Hot Springs: Worth Booking for Race Day Dining

    If you want a steakhouse experience that doubles as a front-row seat to Oaklawn's horse racing, The Bugler earns a confident recommendation. It is the only upscale dining option positioned trackside at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Arkansas, and that setting alone separates it from every other steakhouse in the region. At $$ pricing (roughly $40–$65 per person for a two-course dinner before drinks), it sits in a reasonable range for what you get: a wine list of 150 selections, an executive chef with fine dining training in Lyon, and a room designed for guests who want the race-day atmosphere without sacrificing food quality.

    The visual draw here is immediate. A large bronze statue of a bugler marks the entrance, and racing trophies line the path into the restaurant. From the terrace, you watch the track directly — this is dining with a purpose-built view, not a loosely adjacent one. Inside, the setting is resort casual but polished enough for a celebratory dinner. The bread service sets an early tone: fresh-baked rolls arrive with three spreads, including salted butter, tomato butter, and a balsamic reduction, which signals that the kitchen is paying attention to the small details.

    Executive chef Ken Bredeson's menu adds international range to steakhouse structure. Seared scallops with jicama-papaya-mango slaw and a bourbon-glazed pork chop with chimichurri appear alongside the expected steakhouse cuts. Desserts, including Key lime cheesecake and a strawberry shortcake with Grand Marnier-soaked fruit, are listed as highlights by the inspector's notes. This is a kitchen that wants to do more than serve a standard steakhouse menu, and the price tier gives it room to try.

    The Wine Program

    Wine Director Rebekah Fleming oversees a list of 150 selections with a 3,600-bottle inventory, which is a credible number for a resort-adjacent steakhouse in Arkansas. The program focuses on France and California, and the $$ pricing means you can find bottles under $50 alongside higher-end options. The corkage fee is $25, which is reasonable if you want to bring something specific for a special occasion. For a food and wine enthusiast, this is a list worth engaging with rather than just ordering a house pour — it has enough depth to reward attention.

    Booking and Logistics

    Booking difficulty at The Bugler is rated easy, which reflects its Hot Springs resort setting rather than any lack of demand on race days. Reservations are recommended, particularly when Oaklawn's racing calendar is active. The restaurant offers valet and self-parking, private dining for groups, outdoor terrace seating, and amenities including gluten-free and vegetarian options. The dress code is resort casual. For a full picture of what else to do in the area, see our full Little Rock restaurants guide, our full Little Rock bars guide, and our full Little Rock hotels guide.

    Practical Details

    DetailThe BuglerThe Catbird Seat (Nashville)Harken Cafe (Charleston)
    CuisineAmerican Southern / SteakhouseProgressive American SouthernAmerican Southern
    Price Range$$$$$$$$
    Wine Program150 selections, 3,600-bottle inventory, $$ pricingCurated pairings, prix-fixe formatWine list, cafe-bar format
    Booking DifficultyEasyDifficult (advance booking required)Easy to moderate
    SettingTrackside at Oaklawn ParkUrban kitchen counterHistoric Charleston setting
    Leading ForRace day, special occasion diningSerious food enthusiastsCasual Southern dining

    For Southern-focused dining comparisons further afield, The Catbird Seat in Nashville is a strong benchmark for what progressive Southern cooking looks like at the leading of the price range, and Harken Cafe in Charleston offers a more casual point of comparison. If you are building a broader trip around food, our full Little Rock experiences guide and our full Little Rock wineries guide are worth checking.

    FAQs

    • Does The Bugler handle dietary restrictions? Yes. The restaurant lists gluten-free and vegetarian options among its amenities. If you have specific requirements beyond those, call ahead , the kitchen's range suggests flexibility, but confirming in advance is the safe move for a special occasion dinner.
    • What should I wear to The Bugler? Resort casual is the stated dress code. That means smart-casual clothing is appropriate , no need for formal attire, but the $$ price range and polished setting mean you will feel more comfortable avoiding overly casual dress. Think collared shirts and neat trousers rather than race-day sportswear.
    • Can The Bugler accommodate groups? Yes. Private dining is listed as an available amenity, which makes it a practical option for larger celebrations or corporate events. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm group size availability and any minimum spend requirements for private spaces.
    • What are alternatives to The Bugler in Little Rock? The Bugler is in Hot Springs rather than Little Rock proper (about 55 miles southwest), which matters for trip planning. For American Southern dining with a similar upscale casual register in the broader Arkansas region, options are limited , which is part of what makes The Bugler worth the drive if you are visiting Oaklawn. See our full Little Rock restaurants guide for city-based options.
    • Is The Bugler good for a special occasion? Yes, with context. The combination of the trackside setting, a 150-selection wine list, private dining availability, and a $$ price range makes it well-suited for birthdays or anniversaries tied to a race day visit. If you are not visiting Oaklawn, the setting loses some of its appeal , in that case, consider whether the drive from Little Rock is justified by the occasion.

    Compare The Bugler

    Getting a Table: The Bugler and Alternatives
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    The BuglerAmerican SouthernEasy
    Le BernardinFrench, Seafood$$$$Unknown
    AtomixModern Korean, Korean$$$$Unknown
    Lazy BearProgressive American, Contemporary$$$$Unknown
    AlineaProgressive American, Creative$$$$Unknown
    Atelier CrennModern French, Contemporary$$$$Unknown

    A quick look at how The Bugler measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does The Bugler handle dietary restrictions?

    Yes. The Bugler lists gluten-free and vegetarian options among its amenities, so both restrictions are accommodated at the menu level. The kitchen has a French-trained executive chef with broad technique, which generally translates to flexibility on preparation. Call ahead if your needs are specific, since phone details are not publicly listed and confirming via reservation is the safer route.

    What should I wear to The Bugler?

    Resort casual is the documented dress standard, which at a trackside steakhouse at a casino resort means smart separates rather than formal wear. On race days, expect the crowd to skew dressed-up; a blazer fits the room without overdoing it. Jeans and a collared shirt work on quieter evenings.

    Can The Bugler accommodate groups?

    Private dining is listed as an available amenity, so groups with a dedicated space in mind should request it at booking. The restaurant is set within Oaklawn's resort footprint, which typically means more operational capacity than a standalone restaurant of similar standing. Reservations are recommended regardless of group size, and race-day weekends will compress availability.

    What are alternatives to The Bugler in Little Rock?

    The Bugler is actually in Hot Springs, about 55 miles southwest of Little Rock, so it is not a practical substitute for a city dinner. If you are in Little Rock proper and want a comparable steakhouse format, look at local options downtown rather than making the drive unless Oaklawn's racing is part of the plan. The Bugler's value proposition is the trackside setting combined with a $$ cuisine price point, which is hard to replicate in a city restaurant context.

    Is The Bugler good for a special occasion?

    Yes, particularly if the occasion benefits from a memorable setting. A table overlooking Oaklawn's historic horse racing track on a race day adds a layer that most steakhouses at a $$ price point cannot match. The menu includes dishes like Key lime cheesecake and Grand Marnier-soaked strawberry shortcake, so dessert is a genuine finish rather than an afterthought. For a birthday or anniversary where atmosphere carries as much weight as food, this is a stronger pick than a generic upscale steakhouse.

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