1932 Reserve, Osage Beach
May 2024
Prepare to be downright impressed at 1932 Reserve. Owner-restauranteur Mark Spears has aspired to create a bar program and restaurant unlike any other at Lake of the Ozarks. Mission accomplished.
Until two years ago, executive chef Scott Romano worked alongside Michelin-star and James Beard award-winning chef Charlie Palmer. Romano ran Palmer’s restaurants and lived in Sonoma County. After the last round of California fires, Romano and his wife moved back to her roots in the Ozarks where he has merged his culinary prowess with Spears’ team.
Spears, who grew up in Kansas City, had great memories of time spent at the lake. After playing professional soccer, he worked for chef-driven restaurants in San Diego’s luxury boutique hotels. Desiring to be closer to his roots, Spears and his family moved back to the Midwest and opened 1932 Reserve.
“We’re an upscale-casual restaurant with elevated food right on the water but with the feel of a Kansas City or St. Louis establishment,” says Spears.
On a Tuesday night, my husband and I dined in the circa 1932 building completed one year after the construction of Bagnell Dam. Located at the 17.5-mile marker, diners can pull right up to the dock and sit on the expansive deck overlooking the water. Inside, concrete floors and exposed ceilings lend an industrial vibe. The centerpiece bar displays lanterns salvaged from the original building, once the Ozark’s first lakeside lodging. Today, luxury vacation lofts lie above the restaurant.
We scooped up bold chorizo-chipotle sauce with the signature PEI mussels and golden fries. Sesame cauliflower fritti, encased in a crispy panko-sesame crust, came plated in a pool of finger-licking, chili-ginger sauce garnished with kimchi.
Flaky sea bass, pan-seared to perfection, was accompanied by artichokes, asparagus and fingerling potatoes atop a divine basil beurre Blanc sauce. Fork-tender, the hand-cut filet came with rosemary mashed potatoes, cauliflower puree and a robust red wine reduction. The two-day, brined pork chop with chorizo and cheddar smashed potatoes was accompanied by a delicious pecan-smoked bacon cream. Savory whipped bacon butter complimented corn bread garnished with jalapeno pickled green beans.
Desserts ranged from ooey-gooey butter cake to carrot cake and decadent s’mores cake. The bar serves more than 200 whiskey labels, several hundred wines and beer on tap. Hand-crafted cocktails included their Blackberry Bramble, so popular it’s on tap.
Visit 1932Reserve.com for more information.
Until two years ago, executive chef Scott Romano worked alongside Michelin-star and James Beard award-winning chef Charlie Palmer. Romano ran Palmer’s restaurants and lived in Sonoma County. After the last round of California fires, Romano and his wife moved back to her roots in the Ozarks where he has merged his culinary prowess with Spears’ team.
Spears, who grew up in Kansas City, had great memories of time spent at the lake. After playing professional soccer, he worked for chef-driven restaurants in San Diego’s luxury boutique hotels. Desiring to be closer to his roots, Spears and his family moved back to the Midwest and opened 1932 Reserve.
“We’re an upscale-casual restaurant with elevated food right on the water but with the feel of a Kansas City or St. Louis establishment,” says Spears.
On a Tuesday night, my husband and I dined in the circa 1932 building completed one year after the construction of Bagnell Dam. Located at the 17.5-mile marker, diners can pull right up to the dock and sit on the expansive deck overlooking the water. Inside, concrete floors and exposed ceilings lend an industrial vibe. The centerpiece bar displays lanterns salvaged from the original building, once the Ozark’s first lakeside lodging. Today, luxury vacation lofts lie above the restaurant.
We scooped up bold chorizo-chipotle sauce with the signature PEI mussels and golden fries. Sesame cauliflower fritti, encased in a crispy panko-sesame crust, came plated in a pool of finger-licking, chili-ginger sauce garnished with kimchi.
Flaky sea bass, pan-seared to perfection, was accompanied by artichokes, asparagus and fingerling potatoes atop a divine basil beurre Blanc sauce. Fork-tender, the hand-cut filet came with rosemary mashed potatoes, cauliflower puree and a robust red wine reduction. The two-day, brined pork chop with chorizo and cheddar smashed potatoes was accompanied by a delicious pecan-smoked bacon cream. Savory whipped bacon butter complimented corn bread garnished with jalapeno pickled green beans.
Desserts ranged from ooey-gooey butter cake to carrot cake and decadent s’mores cake. The bar serves more than 200 whiskey labels, several hundred wines and beer on tap. Hand-crafted cocktails included their Blackberry Bramble, so popular it’s on tap.
Visit 1932Reserve.com for more information.