If you're in Midtown to visit the High Museum of Art or to hear the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, you'll also find an active restaurant scene within a few blocks. South City Kitchen is where Southern cuisine meets today's contemporary style. Dine on sautéed shrimp and scallops, buttermilk fried chicken, crispy whole catfish, and desserts of fruit cobbler and chocolate pecan pie.
A few doors down is Fuego Spanish Grill, known for its happening patio, and an ideal spot to hear live Latin music. Diners linger there over lunch, tapas and entrees of Cuban steak, Cajun-spiced pork and crab cakes with grilled corn salsa.
Guests can almost hear the roar of the surf from Peachtree Road when they step into the Oceanaire Seafood Room, a sleek seafood and raw bar restaurant. The art deco dining room in shades of ice and watery blues will get you in the mood for an extensive selection of daily fresh fish. The portions and side dishes (don't miss the hash brown casserole) are big enough to share. Save room for Baked Alaska, flambéed at your table.
One newcomer is Trois. This three-level site has a first-floor bar with sofas and low-backed chairs. The second-level dining room has soaring windows and an open kitchen where chefs prepare beef bourguignonne, steak au poivre and flounder Parisian. It's also a gathering spot after a show, where desserts include lemon tart, apple sorbet and peanut brownies.
Before leaving the Midtown scene, drop by Sutra Lounge, adjacent to Fuego. This high-energy club features cocktails and music into the wee hours.
Take a stroll along Highland and Virginia avenues to window shop before having dinner in one of the neighborhood's several eateries. This hip community is home to La Tavola, an intimate trattoria where you can fill up on classic Italian dishes of pork saltimbocca, cauliflower risotto, spinach and smoked ricotta ravioli and veal scallopini.
A few blocks south along Highland, walkers will find Wisteria in an old brick storefront. Like La Tavola, the dining room is small and busy, but there usually is a seat available at the bar. The kitchen gives Southern dishes an update with entrees of pumpkin ravioli, shrimp and grits, rack of lamb and molasses-rubbed pork tenderloin.
Adjacent to the Highland Avenue district is another intown neighborhood, Inman Park, where The Grape is one of the latest additions. This wine bar is known for its by-the-glass and flight selection, as well as a retail area where you can take home a bottle. There also is a menu of small plates, from pâté and smoked salmon to Kobe beef sliders and New Zealand lamb chops.