where to eat on the plateau





Where to Eat on the Plateau | Cashiers Note Guides



Guide

Where to Eat on the Plateau

From farmhouses and box canyons to brewpub lawns and Main Street trattorias, the
Highlands–Cashiers Plateau punches way above its weight in food. This guide shares
where to eat in and around Cashiers, Highlands, Lake Glenville, and Sapphire—sorted
by vibe, not stars—so you can match meals to the kind of trip you’re having.

Pair this with

48 Hours in Cashiers & Highlands
,

Fall Leaf Season on the Plateau
, and our

Buying on the Highlands–Cashiers Plateau
guide if you’re also quietly scouting.

1. How to Use This Guide (And When to Reserve)

Think of this as a shortlist, not a directory. Pick 1–2 “anchor” meals for your
trip (farmhouse, canyon, Main Street splurge), then fill in the rest with casual
spots and coffee runs.

In-Season (Summer & Fall)

  • Reserve fine dining and canyon/farmhouse spots well ahead.
  • Arrive early for patios, brewpubs, and popular casual spots.
  • Expect some places to close one or two nights a week.

Shoulder & Off-Season

  • Check hours—some restaurants go seasonal or close entirely for winter.
  • Walk-ins are easier, but options can be fewer.
  • Great time to linger at local coffee shops and pubs.

How Locals Eat

  • Midweek dinners to avoid crowds.
  • Farmers market or gourmet grocery for hike and lake picnics.
  • One “big” reservation per weekend; the rest casual.

2. Cashiers: Brewpub Lawns, Farmhouses & Canyon Suppers

Cashiers is all about contrasts: a brewpub in a grassy park one night, a 100-year-old
farmhouse the next, then a box canyon dining room ringed by cliffs.

Whiteside Brewing Company (Cashiers)

Casual
Brewpub · Outdoor lawn · Kid-friendly

“Brewpub in a parklike setting… right in the heart of Cashiers.” Think house-brewed
beers, a Smash Burger and sandwiches, plenty of picnic tables, and room for kids
to roam while you watch the ridgeline.

  • Good for: first night in town, families, large groups.
  • Vibe: relaxed, order-at-the-counter, live music and events
    in season.
  • Details:

    whitesidebrewing.com

The Orchard Restaurant (Cashiers)

Dinner
Farmhouse · “Rustic elegance” · Reservations recommended

Set in a 100-year-old farmhouse, The Orchard serves American cuisine “with a
Southern flavor” in multiple dining rooms and on a porch overlooking an apple
orchard and gardens. It’s a long-time plateau favorite for special occasions
and grown-up dinners.

  • Good for: celebratory dinners, multi-generational trips.
  • Vibe: mountain-classic, white tablecloth energy without
    feeling stuffy.
  • Details:

    theorchardcashiers.com

Canyon Kitchen at Lonesome Valley (Cashiers/Sapphire)

Destination
Scenic · Seasonal · Reservations essential

Canyon Kitchen is often described as one of the most beautiful restaurant settings
in the country: a meadow at the base of a thousand-foot granite box canyon, with
sophisticated Appalachian-inspired cuisine and serious cocktail game. This is your
“we’ll remember this night” reservation.

Cornucopia & Other Cashiers Casual Staples

Casual
Porches · Picnic · Everyday meals

Beyond the headliners, Cashiers has a cluster of local staples: Cornucopia for
porch-and-picnic-lunch vibes, Slab Town Pizza for post-hike pies, Cashiers Valley
Smokehouse for barbecue, Crossroads Custard & Cold Brew for frozen treats,
and Buck’s Coffee as the unofficial town hall at the crossroads.

3. Highlands: Main Street Classics & Lakeside Legends

Highlands is where you walk to dinner, make a 7:30 reservation, and decide between
Italian, French, Southern, or “whatever’s pouring at the wine bar.” In season, book
ahead—especially around festivals and leaf season.

Ristorante Paoletti (Highlands)

Dinner
Italian · Main Street · “Best of the Best”

A Main Street institution serving northern Italian–leaning dishes, a deep wine
list, and old-world atmosphere. Recently ranked among Tripadvisor’s “Best of the
Best” restaurants in America, it’s the classic Highlands date-night or celebration
spot—plan ahead for prime times.

  • Good for: couples, food-focused trips, wine lovers.
  • Vibe: warm, intimate, bustling in season.
  • Details:

    paolettis.com

Madison’s at Old Edwards Inn (Highlands)

Breakfast · Lunch · Dinner
Hotel restaurant · Garden seating

Inside Old Edwards Inn & Spa, Madison’s serves refined Southern and European-leaning
dishes, with the Wine Garden providing a more casual, outdoor option. A go-to for
brunch, celebratory lunches, and lingering dinners built around local ingredients.

  • Good for: brunches, “we’re already strolling Main Street.”
  • Vibe: polished but comfortable; hotel energy.
  • Details:

    madisonshighlands.com

Wild Thyme Gourmet & Lakeside

Lunch · Dinner
Creative American · Lake-view dining

Wild Thyme Gourmet brings “Asian-inspired takes on classic American cuisine” with
a full bar and indoor/outdoor dining right in town, while Lakeside Restaurant and
On the Verandah lean into seafood and Southern favorites by the water with long
views and long wine lists.

Highlands Supper Club, Ugly Dog & More

Casual · Dinner
Southern comfort · Pub · New-school

At the Trailborn property, Highlands Supper Club serves Southern comfort and
Carolina barbecue with a separate bar program. In-town, The Ugly Dog Public House
and other pubs offer burgers, beers, and live music—ideal for nights when you want
more boots and denim than dress shoes.

4. Coffee, Dessert & Between-Meal Stops

These are the places you duck into between hikes, during rain, or when you need a
bribe to keep kids happy through one more waterfall.

Buck’s Coffee & Treats in Cashiers

Coffee
Espresso · Pastries · “De facto town hall”

At the crossroads in Cashiers, Buck’s Coffee is where locals, second-home owners,
and contractors all cross paths—espresso, pastries, and a small-town living room
feel. Pair it with sugar stops like Crossroads Custard & Cold Brew or Sugar
Cloud Baking when you’re roaming between trails and the Village Green.

Markets & Picnic Supplies

Picnic
Takeaway · Hike & lake fuel

Think of Cashiers Farmers Market, gourmet groceries, and resort markets as your
“trail kitchen.” Build hike and lake-day picnics from prepared foods, fresh
produce, and baked goods; eat them at overlooks, waterfalls, or on the boat at
Lake Glenville instead of in a crowded dining room.

5. Sapphire, Lake Glenville & Resort Dining

Around Sapphire and the lakes, dining is woven into resort and club life as much as
downtowns—think grill rooms, lake-club decks, and après-adventure meals.

Sapphire Valley Resort & Fairfield Lake

Resort
Family-friendly · Seasonal

At Sapphire Valley, on-site restaurants and snack bars orbit a cluster of family
activities: Fairfield Lake, zipline, rec center, and in winter, Ski Sapphire
Valley. Expect rotating menus and seasonal hours more than destination dining—but
the ability to feed kids without leaving the property is a feature, not a bug.

Lake Glenville & Club Dining

Lake
Club & neighborhood restaurants

Around Lake Glenville and nearby clubs (Trillium, etc.), dining often lives
inside clubhouses and neighborhood spots rather than freestanding restaurants.
If you’re a guest of a member or staying in these communities, lean on staff for
current best bets—and use Cashiers proper for “in-town” nights out.

6. Food Festivals & When to Plan Around Them

If you’re serious about eating on the plateau, consider timing a trip to land on
one of the region’s food-and-wine weekends.

Highlands Food & Wine (November)

Highlands Food & Wine is a four-day festival that brings Michelin-starred and
James Beard–recognized chefs, winemakers, and musicians to town each November.
Think Grand Tastings, block parties, “Smoke Signals” barbecue nights, and wine
dinners hosted across Highlands’ restaurants and venues.

Tickets and rooms book out far in advance; if this is on your list, reverse-plan
a trip around it and treat everything else—hikes, lake time, drives—as bonus.

Local Events & Pop-Ups

Throughout the year, restaurants on the plateau host wine dinners, guest-chef
nights, and seasonal menus. Check event calendars from chambers, resorts, and
individual spots when planning, and let one special dinner anchor the trip.

Let Cashiers Note Curate Your Next Meal Plan

This guide gives you a stable short list for where to eat on the Highlands–Cashiers
Plateau. The free weekly Cashiers Note adds what’s
changing: new openings, seasonal menus, chef moves, festival dates, and one
Property of the Week that often sits walking distance from a place
you’ll want to eat.


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