Edessa is named for a historically significant city in Northern Mesopotamia — known today as Urfa in southeastern Turkey — a crossroads of Kurdish, Turkish, Armenian, and Arab cultures that produced one of the region's richest cooking traditions. The restaurant brings those layered flavors to Nolensville Pike, Nashville's most genuinely diverse food corridor.
The mixed grill kebabs come off the charcoal properly — smoky, charred, served with sliced onion and fresh herbs. The ceviche is a somewhat unexpected offering in this context and consistently earns its reputation as among the best in Nashville. The Kabob Festival is the full-course platter: appetizers, salad, soup, various kebabs with rice, and baklava. All meats are halal.
The format is casual and family-oriented with generous portions. The pricing is accessible. This is a kitchen cooking seriously for its own community, which is the best possible context for food this specific.
The charcoal kebabs are smoky and properly charred. The ceviche — an unexpected standout — is among the best in Nashville. The Kabob Festival platter is the full-course way to eat here.

