Walk Eat Nashville

Walk Eat Nashville founder, Karen-Lee Ryan guides a group in front of Margot Café & Bar.

Former Journalist Karen-Lee Ryan started Walk Eat Nashville Food Tours after returning home from a 3 year sabbatical to San Antonio. “I missed Nashville like crazy.” When they returned in 2014, Nashville had grown so much, particularly the culinary scene, that she barely recognized the place. So she launched Walk Eat Nashville. It started with a single tour of East Nashville and has since expanded to include six different itineraries on the East Side, Downtown, SoBro, and Midtown, spread out over five days per week.

“I wanted to focus on the diversity of the scene and our local independent restaurants. I didn’t want to only showcase traditional Southern food. We’re wedded to introducing our guests to the passion of the people in the industry.” 

The Tour Guides

For that same reason, she’s also hired a group of guides made up of former journalists and food writers (disclosure: I’m one of them). “I hired journalists because we have all these fun tidbits and useless info rattling around in our heads. I wanted them to have a purpose,” Ryan explains. “Besides, they are great researchers and have incredible recall. I didn’t want our guides to have scripts, just the ability to tell fantastic stories about the city, its history, and our restaurants.”

The Tours

The featured restaurants must have their own stories as well. Ryan was very specific with her choices to include in her tours: 

Groups of up to 12 guests meet at central locations like the Country Music Hall of Fame or the lobby of the opulent historic Hermitage Hotel to begin their culinary odyssey on foot. After a brief introduction by the guide, the groups set off to visit five or six local restaurants in the three-hour tours that usually involve about 1½ miles of walking. Not all of the stops are strictly food-related. The trip to the Hermitage includes a stop for photos in their famous downstairs men’s room (if the coast is clear), and the Midtown tour takes guests for a stroll through the beautiful arboretum in the middle of Vanderbilt’s campus.

The unique perspective of discovering a city from the sidewalk makes a difference in Ryan’s eyes. “We often get the 30,000 ft. view of a city in magazines or online profiles, but it’s so much better to get the view from ground level, as opposed to from a bus or on the back of a trailer being dragged by a party tractor.”

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