Chef David Hawksworth’s Nightingale Opens In Vancouver

July 11, 2016
DV
By Destination Vancouver
2 min read
Overhead view of a bar with dark wood shelves stocked with bottles and glasses, a chandelier above, and people seated at the marble counter.

Overhead view of a bar with dark wood shelves stocked with bottles and glasses, a chandelier above, and people seated at the marble counter.

Nightingale –acclaimed Vancouver Chef David Hawksworth’s long awaited restaurant has finally opened its doors. And from what I could tell on a jam-packed Monday evening? Doing just fine, thank you.

A server taking an order from two seated people in a warmly lit restaurant with wall decorations and other diners in the background.

No surprise. Hawksworth Restaurant in the Rosewood Hotel Georgia has been cleaning up when it comes to magazine awards since it opened in 2011, including Vancouver Magazine’s Restaurant of the Year and Chef of the Year for five consecutive years now, plus enRoute magazine’s top three Best New Restaurants, and Maclean’s magazine Restaurant of the Year. Prior to that in Europe, Chef Hawksworth has worked at Michelin-starred kitchens like Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons, L’Escargot and The Square.

Overhead view of six plates with various foods including salad, fries with dipping sauce, pasta with shrimp, and a sandwich on a wooden table.

But Nightingale? Perfectly suited for Vancouver. Less ‘fine dining’ (for whatever that means in our current restaurant culture) and more casual. The “way people want to eat today,” says Hawksworth. Plenty of fresh, locally sourced vegetables, seasonal salads, pizzas, proteins and pastas. Sharesie, family-style plates, served in an industrial-chic two-level space, with seating for 176. Prices? Modest indeed, plates ranging from $12-$25.

Bowl with colorful tomato salad topped with green herb sauce and a slice of toasted bread on a wooden table.

Menu highlights? Too many to list. But impressive is the heirloom tomato salad with roasted eggplant and pistachio salsa verde, plus the 18-month-aged prosciutto di parma pizza, the ricotta tortellini with fava tips, pine nuts, and morel mushrooms.

Plate of spaghetti with tomato sauce and basil leaves on a wooden table with a glass of water and utensils in the background.

The bar on the main floor itself is a stunner of a showpiece. Just sipping a classic cocktail there makes you feel like a million bucks.

Try the South Shore Sour – aperol, pedro ximénez sherry and grapefruit. Along with an impressive wine list, the restaurant has partnered with Main Street Brewing Company, to create a signature beer, named the Nighting-Ale. Clever.

Nightingale’s 7,400-foot interior was designed by multi-award winning Canadian design firm Studio Munge. A blend of refurbished light fixtures, exposed copper pipes, remodeled library furniture, marble countertops and light wood.

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