Sky-high views, classic pours, no surprises
Downtown · Tulsa · Private Club Fine Dining (Contemporary American) · Visit Website ↗
Reviewed June 12, 2026
Wingman Metrics
When you're on the 31st floor of downtown Tulsa with a wine list in hand, the setting does a lot of the heavy lifting. The list reads exactly like you'd expect from a members-only city club: Napa, Bordeaux, Burgundy — all present, all correct, all priced accordingly. There's nothing here to shock you, and that's kind of the point.
The list runs 150 to 300 bottles and plants its flag firmly in the classics — Napa Cabernet, French Bordeaux, Burgundy Chardonnay, with Sonoma and Tuscany filling in the corners. Heavyweights like Opus One, Chateau Margaux, and Caymus Special Selection are front and center, which tells you exactly who this list is written for. Kistler and Far Niente round out a Chardonnay section that leans rich and opulent, no apologies. Don't come looking for skin-contact Slovenian orange or Jura Savagnin — that's not the game here, and it was never going to be.
With 15 to 25 pours by the glass, there's a real range to work with before you commit to a bottle. The selections mirror the larger list — expect familiar Napa and French names rather than anything adventurous. Rotation appears minimal, so don't expect a weekly refresh, but the quality floor is high enough that you're unlikely to get burned.
Far Niente Chardonnay — Unknown — ask your server
Far Niente is a legit Napa Chardonnay that holds its own against bottles costing significantly more. In a club setting where markups are real, this is one of the picks where the quality-to-price ratio is actually defensible — especially if you're matching it against one of the seafood dishes.
Kistler Chardonnay
Kistler doesn't get enough love in rooms where Caymus and Opus One get all the attention. This is serious, age-worthy Sonoma Chardonnay with actual texture and complexity — it's the move for anyone who wants to quietly drink better than everyone else at the table.
Caymus Special Selection Cabernet Sauvignon
Caymus Special Selection is a fine wine, but it is also one of the most marked-up bottles in American restaurant dining. You're paying a premium for a name that every steakhouse in the country stocks, and at Summit Club prices, you can almost certainly find something more interesting at a similar or lower price point.
Chateau Margaux + Prime Steak
This is the obvious call, and it's obvious for a reason. Margaux's elegance and structure don't bully a great piece of beef — they elevate it. If you're going to spend a serious amount of money on a steak 31 floors above Tulsa, this is the bottle that makes the whole experience feel intentional.
✔️ The Bottom Line
The Summit Club's wine program is exactly what it needs to be for its audience — polished, reliable, and heavy on the classics that members expect. Just know you're paying club prices, and plan accordingly.
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.