Tavern on Grand wasn't even a year old when its founder, David Wildmo, leaned on his St. Paul connections to get a plate of the restaurant's grilled walleye in front of Mikhail Gorbachev.
The Soviet leader was in Minnesota in 1990 for a state luncheon at the governor's residence, and when Wildmo learned that Wisconsin walleye was on the menu, he intervened.
"David twisted some arms pretty hard to make that happen," said Eric LeMay, Wildmo's stepson and a current owner of Tavern on Grand. "And ever since then, it's just kind of grown from there."
The legend of the Gorbachev lunch will live on, but Tavern on Grand will serve its last walleye this spring. The North Woods cabin-themed Grand Avenue restaurant, famous for its many preparations of Minnesota's state fish, will close in early June, the owners told the Star Tribune.
The decision to close is "multifaceted," LeMay said.
The end of a lease, a slowdown in business since COVID, steep price increases, a dip in foot traffic on Grand Avenue, and personal transitions for the family members who own the restaurant all were considerations.
"I think we'd rather leave on a high note and be happy and thankful rather than trying to take another shot and potentially turning it into a grind," LeMay said. "It just feels like even though it hurts, that this is the right time."

Over nearly 35 years, the St. Paul institution has cultivated a core of regular customers with near-fanatical devotion to its main dish. The Tavern on Grand serves some 15 tons of walleye a year, and claims to sell more than any other restaurant in the world. "That's a monumental legacy," said former Star Tribune restaurant critic Rick Nelson.