
RESERVATIONS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED! VISIT OUR WEBSITE! Some walk-ins can be accommodated. The country’s first tasting-menu-only teaching restaurant – a truly unique and elevated experience where education meets experiential dining. Each year, a nationally acclaimed chef will work alongside our Ithaka Hospitality Partners team as well as Auburn University’s culinary science faculty to create a unique restaurant concept, providing an ever-changing culinary experience for students as well as clientele in a beautiful, intimate environment, with vegetables, produce and herbs coming from an operational rooftop garden, created and managed by Auburn University’s Horticulture Program, looking out over our iconic Samford Hall.
Hours
| Tuesday | 11 AM–2 PM, 5:30–9 PM |
| Wednesday | 11 AM–2 PM, 5:30–9 PM |
| Thursday | 11 AM–2 PM, 5:30–9 PM |
| Friday | 11 AM–2 PM, 5:30–9 PM |
| Saturday | 11 AM–2 PM, 5:30–9 PM |
| Sunday | Closed |
| Monday | Closed |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 205 S College St, Auburn, AL 36830
Phone: (334) 249-4275
Website: https://auburn1856.com/
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Reservations: auburn1856.comexploretock.com
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
1856 – Auburn University – Culinary Residence – The county’s first …
Reservations – 1856 – Auburn University
1856 – Culinary Residence – Auburn – a MICHELIN Guide Restaurant
Reviews
It is also such a wonderful concept to have a teaching restaurant with renowned chefs in residence to teach their craft to students. A unique dining experience that is on par with any Michelin star restaurant I have visited, with great wine pairings from Sommelier Thomas Price (as well as an extensive wine list), and a truly welcoming staff that from the front to the back deserve accolades for a job well done!
*Original Review: There is a lot of potential here! I would like to see improvement on the dishes temperature wise, taste wise, and presentation wise. The soup came out nearly cold. It had minimum flavor and did not offer a true coconut taste despite being called a coconut soup. I did enjoy the texture though! The salad did not have much flavor despite all of the toppings. The Strawberry Sundae was not terrible, but I felt the appearance could have been way better. The presentation was overwhelming. I did enjoy watching the team cook the dishes, but I didn’t see much communication nor inspiration, and that affected the outcome of the dishes. I did like the flower drink A LOT! It was quite nice and refreshing!
Dining at 1856 is akin to discovering a perfectly pitched note in a symphony of culinary legends. As seasoned patrons of the world’s most exalted establishments—from the pristine precision of Le Bernardin to the architectural elegance of Per Se, the emotive balance of Jean-Georges, and the exquisite minimalism of Masa—our standards are drawn from the apex of global gastronomy.
Yet within the heart of Auburn, 1856 delivered an experience as moving and masterful as any we’ve encountered. Led by Reese, whose quiet confidence and command—refined by her Fort Benning background—infused the evening with poised excellence, we encountered not only technical brilliance but a depth of service that was both intentional and human.
From the first pour of butterfly pea tea, presented with poetic flourish and expert insight, we were drawn into a progression of courses that paid reverent homage to the greats. The plates echoed the style and soul of Michelin’s finest—without mimicry, but with inspired interpretation. Each dish spoke with a culinary fluency that suggested years of mentorship under master chefs, though here, it is student hands—guided by vision and discipline—that execute with such clarity and heart.
Our table included a Forbes and Michelin-certified trainer and a luxury marketing consultant, individuals who’ve dined in rare air—where a seat commands $1,000. And yet, nowhere—at any price—have we experienced such comfortable perfection. The coffee service, a final act in this well-scored performance, was as refined and intentional as anything we’ve seen at Masa or Atelier Crenn.
This is Auburn hospitality elevated to a global standard. It recalled that pivotal moment in The Bear when Ritchie steps into his own, not through ego but through empathy, realizing that true excellence lies in making someone’s night—because it might make their day. That ethos lives here.
I gain a teary eye of pride as I write this, because—“I believe in Auburn and love it.” This is one more reason, as an Auburn man, that those words in our creed ring more true than ever.
And so, with great pride in my alma mater, and in brotherhood with my fellow and future alumni, I implore you: take the journey. Experience what Auburn is offering the world through 1856. Support these rising stars—our future leaders of industry—who are quietly mastering the art of luxury service with soul. As Jerry Inzerillo has so often declared from the stage at Forbes award after Forbes award: “They are doing great things—absolutely great things.” Auburn is no longer just part of the conversation. It is shaping it.