Metro Denver's Best Wood-Fired Restaurants | Westword
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The Eleven Best Wood-Fired Restaurants in Denver and Boulder

Cooking over hardwood is a red-hot trend right now, and many new restaurants are outfitting themselves with grills, ovens and rotisseries fueled by oak, hickory, mesquite and fruit woods. Newcomers are adding a smoky note to the skies over Denver, along with many older favorites. Here are the twelve best...
The flavor of wood is an integral ingredient at restaurants like Cattivella.
The flavor of wood is an integral ingredient at restaurants like Cattivella. Mark Antonation
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Cooking over hardwood is a red-hot trend right now, and many new restaurants are outfitting themselves with grills, ovens and rotisseries fueled by oak, hickory, mesquite and fruit woods. Newcomers are adding a smoky note to the skies over Denver, along with many older favorites. Here are the twelve best wood-fired restaurants in the metro area — keeping in mind that we're leaving barbecue and primarily-pizza places for another day.

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Acorn heats up the Source with oak-fired cooking.
Danielle Lirette
Acorn
3350 Brighton Boulevard
720-542-3721
Acorn, which opened in September 2013, doesn’t fall too far from its older sibling, Boulder's Oak at Fourteenth (which also made this list). The space is different, of course: Acorn takes full advantage of the ultra-urban, industrial-chic feel of the Source, with plenty of exposed brick, metal ducts and graffiti. But the menu embodies the same "wood-fired seasonal cooking" that's made Oak one of Boulder's most inspiring — and popular — restaurants, here focusing more on small plates, and a few very large plates, rather than dividing dishes by more traditional courses.

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Stacks of wood are a hint of what you're in for at Annette.
Danielle Lirette
Annette
2501 Dallas Street, Aurora
720-710-9175

Located in Stanley Marketplace, Annette follows in the footsteps of many small-plates eateries that anchor our dining scene, not least of which is Acorn, where chef/owner Caroline Glover previously worked. Seasonal ingredients are revered, and pickled accents pop up everywhere. A wood-fired grill adds a cozy rusticity that you smell when you walk in the door. The restaurant is at its best when showcasing Glover’s take on comfort food: pillowy gnocchi, or whole wood-grilled fish with Calabrian chile jam, grilled carrots and snap peas.

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Arcana aims for rustic Americana with an upscale twist.
Danielle Lirette
Arcana
909 Walnut Street, Boulder
303-444-3885
When Arcana opened in 2016, the mission of this high-aspiring Boulder restaurant was to explore what it calls “the true identity of American cuisine,” putting out elaborate, special-occasion fare. Under chef/partner Kyle Mendenhall, the restaurant adds the rustic elements of smoke and char to its seasonal Colorado cuisine, with an intriguing nod to history in touches such as slapjacks and kitchen pepper. The restaurant goes to extra lengths, baking its own bread and making its own cultured butter; the simplicity of both allow diners to taste the wood flavors captured in the bread.

Bar Dough
2227 West 32nd Avenue
720-668-8508

To mistake Juan and Katie Padro's Italian eatery, which opened right next door to their Highland Tap & Burger in the fall of 2015, for just another wood-fired-pizza joint would be to miss out on the Italian and Italian-American fare from chef-partner Max MacKissock and new executive chef Carrie Baird. Handmade pastas dressed in traditional (and not-so-traditional) sauces tempt alongside fire-roasted carrots and meats like porchetta that pick up a hint of smoke.

Basta
3601 Arapahoe Avenue, Boulder
303-997-8775

Chef/owner Kelly Whitaker has a passion for grains, bread and baking, which is evident in the wood-baked loaves and pizzas at his Boulder restaurant. But pizza isn't the only thing Whitaker cooks in the Italian dome oven: a selection of seasonal and rustic small plates — all kissed with smoke — and a few larger plates focus on simplicity and the ingredients at hand.

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Wood fuels both the grill and the oven at Cattivella.
Danielle Lirette
Cattivella
10195 East 29th Avenue
303-645-6779

With Cattivella (which means "naughty girl"), chef/owner Elise Wiggins has created the kind of restaurant that reflects her many experiences traveling, working and eating in Italy. There's the wood-fired pizza oven used for far more than just pizzas; even beans are slow-cooked in glass flasks nestled in hot embers. There's the adjustable wood grill that gives meats (much of it brought in whole, then butchered and dry-aged on site) and vegetables a rustic, old-world depth of flavor. And there are the housemade breads and pastas that separate Cattivella from the standard bistro or trattoria. You're sure to feel spoiled — and even a little naughty — enjoying all types of delights at this unabashedly Italian eatery.


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Wood-grilled oysters are served sizzling in their shells at Fish N Beer.
Danielle Lirette
Fish N Beer
3510 Larimer Street
303-248-3497

Bigger may be better for certain things, but smaller and louder are no-brainers when it comes to instant ambience – and Fish N Beer, the latest offering from Kevin Morrison of Tacos Tequila Whiskey fame, has it in spades. The menu is as compact as the fifty-seat space, offering a tightly managed list of wood-grilled oysters and other small bites, plus wood-fired entrees and seasonal sides. Underutilized cuts make winsome appearances: Soy-glazed salmon collars sizzle on the open grill, and even standards like Brussels sprouts are charred over flames — and then tossed in bone-marrow butter.

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Hearth & Dram's grill turns out all manner of meats and veggies.
Danielle Lirette
Hearth & Dram
1801 Wewatta Street
303-623-0979
Jeffrey Wall was looking for a reason to come to Denver when the executive-chef position at Hearth & Dram popped up on his computer screen. It was a perfect match: The restaurant’s concept called for an ambitious whiskey collection, one Wall could match with a menu piled high with charcuterie, wood-fired proteins and unusual vegetables, as well as whole-beast feasts. The menu for Hearth & Dram, which continues to evolve, is loaded with smoked duck, brisket and even a hangar steak, along with spit-roasted specialties that end up in sandwiches and platters.

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Leña puts a Latin American spin on wood-fired cooking.
Danielle Lirette
Leña
24 Broadway
720-550-7267
The "ñ" makes all the difference for Leña, a smart Latin bistro on South Broadway. The name is the Spanish term for firewood, and a smoky flavor permeates much of Leña's menu. The roster, which draws from Mexico and Central and South America, boasts hard-to-find regional specialties like tlacoyos and Peruvian potatoes alongside simple cuts of meat from the grill. A full bar stocked with South American spirits like pisco makes the cross-continental journey a smooth one.

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Spit-roasted meats show up on a number of dishes at Mister Tuna.
Danielle Lirette
Mister Tuna
3033 Brighton Boulevard
303-831-8862
Troy Guard's homage to the Hawaii of his youth covers far more than grilled meats, since a sushi bar, a pickling station and housemade pastas are all part of the program — but you'd be remiss if you skipped the rotisserie selections slow-roasted over oak embers. Lamb, pork and beef all get a go over the grill, as do Pueblo-grown yams, shiitake mushrooms and a variety of seafood. It's like a campfire cookout with a chef as your camping buddy.

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Seasonal specials like this wood-roasted bone marrow are part of the program at Oak.
Facebook/Oak at Fourteenth
Oak at Fourteenth
1400 Pearl Street, Boulder
303-444-3622

The excellence of Oak at Fourteenth is apparent from the first sip of a cocktail created by beverage director/co-owner Bryan Dayton to the last taste of short rib or duck breast from chef/co-owner Steven Redzikowski's menu. The dining room is modern and streamlined, yet still feels warm and inviting, perhaps because of the wood smoke wafting from the kitchen. But whether the sense of comfort comes from that soft, campfire aroma or from the well-trained staff that never misses a beat, dinner at Oak is a full sensory experience, not just another meal. Since you're here to eat, though, bring a group and indulge in a large-format platter; the impressive ancho-glazed pork shoulder surrounded in roasted — nearly candied, really — seasonal vegetables is a jaw-dropper, even before you take your first bite. Wood-fired cooking has taken over the restaurant scene in Denver and Boulder, but Oak was one of the trailblazers that made it all possible.
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