Audrey and sister restaurant June occupy an austere but striking two-story building in East Nashville. In Brock’s own words, “My idea in designing Audrey was blending the scenes of where I grew up in Appalachia with my passion for a modern Japanese architecture—to make it feel like an Appalachian tobacco barn, but also to be contemporary.”
The interior, designed by Katie Vance of the Powell Architecture and Building Studio, features smooth concrete-skin walls, Japanese spindle-back chairs, booths upholstered in green chenille, and foliage hanging from the ceiling. A variety of Appalachian-sourced or Appalachian-inspired materials are used, along with artistic and architectural elements created by local makers, such as the sustainably produced wood furnishings from local producer Holler Design. There is even an eclectic art, photography, and textile exhibition. The overall effect is rustic but modern, Southern but outward-looking.
Audrey’s owner and chef Sean Brock was born in Virginia and raised from the age of 11—following the death of his father—by the maternal grandmother to whom the restaurant’s name pays tribute. He graduated in culinary arts in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2000, and three years later moved to Nashville, Tennessee, to take on the role of Executive Chef at the Hermitage Hotel and Capitol Grille restaurant. Here, he made a name for himself through his innate talent and interesting experimentation with Southern cuisine. Within a few years, he was ready to open his first restaurant. This was Husk, which Brock opened in Charleston in 2010 to national acclaim, allowing him to open further outposts in Nashville, Savannah, and Greenville in the following years, acting as culinary advisor in all four locations until 2019.
He returned to Nashville in 2020, where he first opened the burger and fried chicken joint, Joyland, before launching his flagship two-restaurant complex of Audrey and June the following year. While June is avant-garde and experimental, serving a tasting menu in minimalist surroundings, Audrey is more homely, heartfelt, and soulful.
Brock won a James Beard Award for Best Chef: Southeast in 2010 and is a four-time nominee and a semifinalist for Outstanding Chef. He has published two bestselling cookbooks—Heritage and South—and appeared on numerous television shows, including season two of Mind of a Chef, produced by Anthony Bourdain, which earned him a nomination for the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Culinary Host.
Audrey has received positive reviews from numerous media outlets. In 2022, it was included in the Robb Report’s list of the 10 Best New Restaurants in America as well as Esquire's 40 Best New Restaurants in America.