Solid Pours With a Sunset View
Utica Square · Tulsa · American with Southwest flair · Visit Website ↗
Reviewed April 1, 2026
Wingman Metrics
The wine list at Redrock Canyon Grill does exactly what it needs to do: it doesn't embarrass itself. Fifty-plus labels, a decent spread across California, France, Italy, and New Zealand, and prices that won't make you do a double-take. For a casual Southwest-leaning grill in Tulsa, this is a wine list that's actually trying.
The list leans predictably California-heavy — Quilt and Caymus hold down the Napa Cab corner for the crowd that wants a big, familiar red — but there are some genuine bright spots if you look past the obvious. The French presence is modest but respectable: Château de Ségriès Côtes-du-Rhône Rouge is a solid Grenache-driven pick, and the HB Rosé from Les Costières de Pomérols brings a legit Languedoc-Roussillon bottle to a menu that could easily have phoned it in with a Whispering Angel. Oregon and New Zealand get a seat at the table, and the Babich Sauvignon Blanc from Marlborough is a reliable crowd-pleaser. The gap is in depth — no real exploration of single-vineyard or grower-producer territory, and the list doesn't evolve much beyond accessible, brand-recognizable names.
Eighteen by-the-glass options is genuinely generous for this format, and the price spread from $8 to $27 means there's something for every comfort level. The Lunetta Prosecco and Vigneto Moscato d'Asti give the list a lighter, approachable entry point, while the glass program covers enough ground to not feel like a coin flip. Rotation appears minimal — this reads like a list that gets set and stays put.
HB Rosé Les Costières de Pomérols — $12
A French rosé retailing around $15 that you're getting for $12 a glass — that's barely above cost and a genuinely well-made Southern France rosé. Order it without overthinking it.
Château de Ségriès Côtes-du-Rhône Rouge
Most people at this table are scanning for Caymus, but the Ségriès is the smarter move — classic Rhône structure, Grenache-forward, and a fraction of the price. It's the kind of bottle that makes you look like you know what you're doing.
Caymus, Napa Valley, CA
Caymus is everywhere, costs a lot, and at $127 (presumably at the top of the bottle range) you're paying heavily for a name that's become more marketing than magic. The Ségriès or even the Quilt will serve you better for the money here.
Château de Ségriès Côtes-du-Rhône Rouge + Bone-in Pork Chops
Rhône Grenache has a natural affinity for roasted, fire-kissed pork — the herbal undertones and medium tannin cut through the fat without steamrolling the meat. It's a no-drama pairing that actually makes both better.
✔️ The Bottom Line
Redrock Canyon Grill isn't a wine destination, but it's a wine-respecting restaurant — and in Tulsa, that counts for something. The markup is surprisingly fair, the glass selection is broad, and if you know where to look on the list, you'll drink well without a second thought.
Midtown · Tulsa · Classic American Steakhouse and Continental Fine Dining
Celebrity is a Tulsa institution for a reason, and the wine list does exactly what it needs to do for a white-tablecloth steakhouse crowd — no more, no less. Send a friend here for the prime rib and a bottle of Jordan; just don't send them expecting to be surprised.
Plays It Safe
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Brookside · Tulsa · Italian
Mondo's wine list won't blow anyone's mind, but it does its job honestly — fair prices, decent Italian representation, and enough options to keep a table happy all night. Send your friends here for dinner without hesitation; just steer them toward the Allegrini instead of the Meiomi.
Crowd Pleasers
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Brookside / Peoria corridor · Tulsa · Italian
Prossimo is doing the right things with wine in a city where many restaurants don't bother — the Italian focus is genuine and the top-shelf picks show range. The markups keep it from being a great wine destination, but as a neighborhood Italian with a real list, it earns its place.
Solid Range
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Cherry Street · Tulsa · Creole and Cajun
Nola's is a genuinely fun place to eat Creole food in Tulsa, but the wine list is an afterthought dressed up in nice stemware. Lean hard into the cocktail menu or bring your own bottle — check if they have a corkage policy, because that might be your best move here.
Crowd Pleasers
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Rotating Cast
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Brookside · Tulsa · Modern American
Oren is the kind of wine list that makes you recalibrate your expectations for a mid-size city. It's not a deep cellar and there's no half-price night to celebrate, but the curation is thoughtful, the markups are mostly honest, and the picks are the kind you'd expect from a much bigger food scene. Worth ordering from the list — not just the cocktail menu.
Small but Thoughtful
Fair
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
Brady Arts District · Tulsa · Craft cocktail bar with beer and wine
Valkyrie is a cocktail bar first and a wine bar never, but the list has more backbone than it has any right to. Come for the drinks, stay curious about the Gamay.
Small but Thoughtful
Steep
Basic Stemmed
Willing but Green
Set & Forget
Acceptable
One wine list review, one adventure pick, one quick tip, and a personal note. Every week. Under 500 words.