The 10,000-square-foot space will pay tribute to Brock’s childhood, with food and culture from his years in Virginia’s Appalachian coal country.
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Sean Brock
Credit: © Andrea Behrends

WhenSean Brockannounced theend of his twelve-year partnershipwith Neighborhood Dining Group this past summer, theJames Beard Award-winning chefremained tight-lipped on what his next project would be – until now. Brock is expected to open a 10,000-square-foot multifaceted restaurant complex in EastNashville, where he will celebrate the food he grew up with, according to theWSJ Magazine.

Brock, a trailblazer in Lowcountry cooking, grew up in Virginia’s Appalachian coal country bordering Tennessee and Kentucky; at the time, he didn’t realize much of what he ate, like sour corn, beans, and pawpaws, qualified as cuisine, telling the WSJ Magazine, “It was just what you ate.”

That will change once the chef’s the two-story restaurant debuts sometime in late 2019 or early 2020. The space will include an intimate upstairs tasting menu-style room, which will focus on Brock’s interpretation on the future of Southern food, paired with a casual downstairs dining area with an open kitchen.

The first floor will also double as Brock’s personal Southern folk art museum, showcasing items he’s collected over the years. If that wasn’t enough, there will be snacks served on a screened-in porch, a living room-like lounge, and a standalone cocktail bar focused on fresh-pressed produce spiked with alcohol. Though Brock hasn’t specifically revealed what will be served, he did say there will be a “focus on fermentation and mix of Cherokee and German-immigrant traditions,” according to the magazine.

In addition, the chef also said that the project will include an heirloom seed bank, a mindfulness center focused on mental health for his team, and a podcast on Appalachia called "Before It’s Too Late," which will be produced in an on-site recording studio.

Though Brock stepped away from his partnership with NDG, he still serves as "founding chef and culinary advisor" at theHusksin Charleston, Nashville, Greenville, and Savannah, but he is no longer be involved with Minero, McCrady’s, orMcCrady’s Tavern. During his time with NDG, Brock earned the James Beard Award for Best Chef: Southeast, as well as multiple JBA nominations for his commitment to long-forgotten products, heirloom crops, and Southern techniques and traditions.