101 Great Irish Restaurants - The capital choices in Dublin
La Gordita, Montague Street, lagordita.ie
Vanessa Murphy and Anna Cabrera's La Gordita is an elegant Spanish bodega serving the kind of simple yet explosively delicious food that would quickly make you forget that you're within spitting distance of Camden Street.
For familiar flavours, you'll find much loved classics like croquettas and jamon Iberico, but dive deeper into the menu and you'll find true delight. The anchoas de Santona - fat, glistening anchovies with Valdeón blue cheese - will leave you breathless and smiling, while the morcilla de Burgos, served with caramelised piquillo peppers, is a bloody treat for the ages.
Top the whole experience with the world class service that the Hermanas Lola family are known for, and it's easy to love this little fat one.
Big nights out don't come much better ones that involve a table at this stylish steakhouse in the lavishly restored former home of the National Bank. The best seats in the house are the see-and-be-seen leather upholstered booths at the back of this glorious space, but there really isn't a bad table here.
Start with a cocktail in the bar; these guys really know their shaken from their stirred, and the martinis are among the best in the city. The Hawksmoor team go to great lengths to source their beef, always ensuring that it is ethically produced, and properly aged.
Constant innovation brings fun additions to the menu, such as the current Big Matt Burger, and the much missed Tayto ham and cheese toastie bar snack. The early dinner special (5pm-6pm), three courses for €36, is a good way to dip in, and if it's a Monday, a €5 corkage offer offer also applies.
Achara, Aston Quay, achara.ie
Northern Thai food grilled over charcoal finally made it to Dublin last summer, landing on busy Aston Quay, where a custom-designed Smokin' Soul rig is doing its bit to bring fire and smoke to the table.
It is a happy coincidence that Achara is located in the building next to the former USIT offices, where generations of students planned their escapes to far flung places, and where another generation can now relive a part of their Asian experience through dishes such as chilli beef krapao and panang curry.
Key team members at Achara, including chef and co-owner Graeme Reynolds travelled to Thailand on a food research trip earlier this year and the menu has grown to incorporate some of their findings. The pre-theatre menu (4pm to 6pm, Monday to Thursday) is a steal, with three courses and side dishes served family style for €25.
Bike Mike's, Blackrock, michaels.ie
Once there were three - Michael's, Little Mike's and Big Mike's - but now there is just the bigger, brasher latter, a lavishly appointed dining room, cocktail bar and terrace in the heart of Blackrock. Big Mike's is big in every sense, from its proprietor Gaz Smith's exuberant personality, to the expansive dining and drinking spaces, and the caveman sized cuts of carefully selected meat.
The surf and turf platters are the thing to have here, with a couple of cuts of beef, a generous selection of the catch of the day, and a panoply of locally caught shellfish, all swimming in butter, with sauces on the side and a bucket of homemade chips too.
The cocktails are innovative and fun, and the wine list is extensive. Come hungry and thirsty. The lunch specials, keenly priced, are always worth checking out.
Kicky's, Georges Street, kickys.ie
The food, indeed the entire experience at Kicky's, is exuberant, generous and occasionally playful, much like its co-owner and chef Eric Matthews. The menu reads like a list of what the chefs themselves would like to eat, and that's no bad thing.
It changes regularly but the 72-hour potato focaccia with carbonara butter and a snowy mountain of Permesan and pecorino; the rabbit Bolognese with pangrattato, and the unashamedly assertive cacio e pepe are staples. You'll also usually find a whole grilled fish, with glorious blistered skin, on the main course offering.
There would be an outcry if the Irish coffee dessert, a modern classic consisting of butterscotch whiskey sauce with a crunchy macaron topped by coffee ice cream, softly whipped mascarpone and a dusting of chocolate and nutmeg, were to disappear from the menu. Order a glass of co-owner Richie Barrett's famous home made limoncello to finish.
The Saddle Room at The Shelbourne, St Stephen's Green, theshelbourne.com
Slide into a properly comfortable and well considered dining chair and admire the snowy starched table linens, order a glass or two from the swanky new Champagne trolley, and it won't just be the collection of Martyn Turner cartoons on the walls that brings a smile to your face.
A meal at the Saddle Room at the Shelbourne is undoubtedly an indulgence, but it needn't cost the earth. Three courses at lunch or pre-theatre is €47, and they don't hold back on the opulent extra little touches.
Executive chef Garry Hughes and Saddle Room head chef Phily Roe have simplified some elements of the menu here, bringing flawless ingredients front and centre. At dinner, the incredibly tender and flavoursome Black Angus beef from Cork is carved tableside for added drama.
Nightmarket, Ranelagh, nightmarket.ie
If it's authentic Thai food you are looking for, you'll find it here at this smart suburban spot, where Jutarat Suwankeeree, known to all as R, puts a spotlight on the spicy seafood dishes from her coastal home town of Hua Hin, as well as the dishes she learned to cook with her grandmother in Chiang Mai.
The extensive menu is a roll call of Thai favourites, prepared and served just as they should be. Front of house, and stewardship of a wonderful wine list with an entire page devoted to riesling, is in the hands of R's partner in business and in life, Limerick man Conor Sexton.
Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen, Parnell Square, chapteronerestaurant.com
Eating in Chapter One is like watching the Russian State Ballet do Swan Lake - it's pacey, perfectly executed and exciting. This long-established bastion of Irish hospitality found a new iteration under Mickael Viljanen a few years back, securing a second Michelin star in the process.
The restaurant is situated in a building which once accommodated the Jameson family, though the cosiness of this basement room would make you forget you were in Dublin. Expect classics like foie gras royale with smoked eel and green apple, sensational takes on seasonal cooking and service that would stand out anywhere in the world. Skip the Irish coffee trolley at your own peril.
Lena, Portobello, lena.ie
You could almost feel the T-Rex sized footsteps quaking the glasses of water on the desks of every Irish food writer when news broke that the team behind Uno Mas would be taking over Lock's on Windsor Terrace, and reopening it as Lena. This level of hype can harm a restaurant more than help it, but Lena is a restaurant that exudes a calm, cool composure, and is putting out some of the best food in the city.
Start with a simple fritti of anchovy and sage, an aromatic face punch that will leave you thanking the pugilist, in this case, Paul McNamara, for blessing your cheek before turning the other for an ethereal osso bucco on a bone marrow rich Milanese risotto. Cap it off with a rum baba for a picture perfect landing.
Eating food like this while watching swans glide down the canal is close to the peak of Dublin existence as it gets.
Bastible, South Circular Road, bastible.com
There are rooms and restaurants in this world that you can't help but feel good in, and Bastible is among them. Located on the South Circular Road, it serves up the kind of clean, seasonally driven and delicious food in a manner that would make you think they can do it in their sleep.
Chef Killian Walsh has a way of balancing flavours that is rare and wonderful, knowing when to put the foot on the gas or hit piano piano on the score, and the results speak, whisper and shout for themselves. This neighbourhood restaurant has evolved into a well deserved destination that is well worth the journey, no matter the start point.
Grano, Stoneybatter, grano.ie
Grano is a love letter to the dry soils and hot pork specialities of Calabria, all tucked away in a little room off Manor Street in Stoneybatter. The brainchild of chef Roberto Mungo, Grano is one of Dublin's most in demand restaurants for very good reason.
The pasta, made fresh every day, and often within sight of where you're sitting, is as close to perfect as you can get this side of the strait of Messina, and the cacio e pepe suppli are a Dublin staple at this point, but scratch deeper and you'll see what makes Grano truly spectacular.
Almost everything on the menu, right down to the wheat in the pasta, is brought over from Calabria. Don't miss the scaldanduja, a fiery spreadable pork sausage, cooked over candle flame, and the house wine, senza dubbio, a gaglioppo/greco nero blend made specifically for Grano, and another reason to ever doubt what it, and Calabria are about.
Variety Jones, Thomas Street, varietyjones.ie
After a fire ravaged its new home on 79 Thomas St just days after opening, there was a collective intake of breath from the hungry crowds of Dublin eaters at the thought of Variety Jones being no more.
But you can't keep a good thing down, and Variety Jones is very high up the list of good things. A family run and owned restaurant through and through, it's one of the most exciting places you can hold a knife and fork in the city.
The tasting menu is always uncompromising on flavour, and unafraid to either push the boat out or plunge you into pure nostalgia via the by now legendary spaghetti Alfredo.
Anyone who has an image of professional kitchens as dark, shouty, flame-filled pits of aggressive tension should be prescribed a meal in D'Olier Street. The kitchen team, led by head chef and co-owner James Moore, exude a level of coordination and calm that is seldom seen anywhere.
This, of course, is reflected in the food - paced perfectly, generous, clean and delicious, and served n a room that is exquisitely lit and appointed. The menu changes regularly and continues to evolve and get better, and although D'Olier Street is a relative newcomer in the Irish restaurant landscape, it's already secured its status and has rightly won over the hearts and bellies of its diners.
Coppinger, Coppinger Row, bereenbrothers.com
In one of the greatest gastro-phoenix moves of the last decade, the Bereen brothers reopened Coppinger restaurant in the same site that it had originally inhabited as Coppinger Row, much to the joy of all.
The new project feels familiar, but with chef Dan Hannigan stepping up at the helm, the new Coppinger has stepped up a level. A glistening tranch of turbot with Basque vinaigrette remains among the best things we have eaten in some time, while the ever changing menu del dia, offering a three course midweek lunch for €20, remains unquestionably the best value in town.
As good for a 12 person celebration as it is for a solo lunch with a cold martini, Coppinger remains as cool as ever and is only getting better.
Spitalfields, The Coombe, spitalfields.ie
What could be more perfect than a restaurant in a pub? We're not talking about a pub serving sad shepherds pies or buckets of buffalo wings with bottled blue cheese. Spitalfields is something very different and quite wonderful.
A refuge nestled in The Coombe, Dublin's historical silk weaving quarter, it serves excellent modern Irish food backed up with some of the finest service in the city from veteran manager Declan Maxwell.
If you're of a sharing disposition, try the cock-a-leekie Pie, but honestly, you'll rarely put a foot wrong in Spitalfields. And the best thing about it? A perfect pint downstairs after dinner. You are in a pub after all.
Richmond, Portobello, richmondrestaurant.ie
The definition of a gem, Richmond is a small restaurant serving brilliant plates of food close to the Grand Canal. We could wax lyrical about the a la carte menu, which always delivers excellent value and quality, but what makes Richmond stand out is the Tuesday tasting, a five course menu priced at €72 offering a new selection every single time.
This is a restaurant that's not afraid to put the work in, and that is obvious on the plate. Impeccable cooking and balanced flavours, with the kind of technical prowess that doesn't lean into smoke and mirrors. The early evening menu, meanwhile, is some of the best money you can spend on food in the city, and the Sunday brunch is as good as you'd expect. If every neighbourhood had a Richmond, the city would be richer for it.
Bar Pez, Kevin Street, barpez.ie
Pass the threshold of this small but perfectly formed Kevin Street canteen and you could think yourself in San Sebastián or Santander. With rich wood panelling offering a golden hue, Bar Pez is a warm and inviting room staffed by people who truly love the product, and the small kitchen, located behind a counter, churning out brilliant bites.
The crab sandwich, made with No Messin' bakery milk bread, will stay with you for weeks after. The fish a la plancha - turbot on our last visit - is a reminder that often less is more, and that there are other worlds with quiet confident cooking behind steamy windows in the city centre.
If you think back to the idea of chipper dinners through the rose tinted lens of nostalgia, the current reality of that vision might be getting served in Fish Shop on Banburb Street, albeit with a few more feet of white marble counter and a wine list which reads like a Beano annual for Burgundy lovers.
It would be really easy to look at the chalkboard fish and chips menu and the friendly, easy service and think that Fish Shop don't take what it does too seriously. But sit down, have some perfectly seasoned dressed crab on toast with a glass of something cold and dry, and follow it with a fish (choose between hake, plaice or haddock) and some perfect chips, and you'll see that this is more shark than minnow.
Etto, Merrion Row, etto.ie
You will never forget the first time you eat the prunes in this tiny place on Merrion Row, and you may well find yourself gazing lovingly at these glistening stone fruits, poached in red wine and spices, with an almost impossibly architectural swirl of vanilla mascarpone on their flank.
Even after all these years, Etto continues to bring the same levels of happiness, not just through prunes, but the whole menu. The mussels with nduja and sweetcorn are the stuff of legend, and the approach to simple yet elevated food results in a restaurant that is incredibly consistent and delicious. Be prepared to talk to your neighbours if you're sitting in the cosy dining room and once again, don't skip the prunes.
Uno Mas, Aungier Street, unomas.ie
An ode to the delicious offerings of the Iberian peninsula by restaurateurs Liz Matthews and Simon Barret and chef Paul McNamara, Uno Mas is undoubtedly one of Dublin's most loved restaurants. The feeling of anticipation and sharp intake of breath before your knife breaks the surface of the tortilla is something that everyone should experience at least once.
But it doesn't stop there - toothsome, tender rice with rabbit, shiitake and aged Manchego cheese or perhaps a delicious plate of Porchetta tonnato, guindilla peppers and crispy pig's ears? We could go on, but suffice to say you will seldom put a foot wrong in Uno Mas. A special mention has to go to the hospitality and service, which is amongst the finest in Dublin.
Library Street, librarystreet.ie
If you've eaten in Library Street, you may have had chef Kevin Burke serve you a fish head, and had it bring tears to your eyes. You won't have been said, though; instead you'd have been bowled over by one of the most delicious things you'll have ever eaten.
Looking down at the business end of a turbot that's been thickly coated in a phenomenal layer of a preserved lemon and miso condiment, plucking out the sticky cheeks and peeling delicate flakes of fish from the frame, will bring out something primal in you.
But there is so much more than fish heads on the menu in Library Street. The cooking is smart, precise and democratic, and the atmosphere is second to none.
Pickle, Camden Street, picklerestaurant.com
The depth of flavour that chef Sunil Ghai manages to cram into his cooking has to be tasted to be believed. Originally hailing from Gwalior, Ghai has ascended to the top of the food chain when it comes to Indian food in Ireland, with Pickle being the crown jewel of his restaurants.
Bejewelled curries, incredibly profound and complex flavours and a unique take on food from all over India, married with a love for Irish produce, makes any meal in Pickle one to truly remember.
Don't miss the goat keema pao - deeply aromatic goat mince on bread, rich with cinnamon, cardamom and cloves - and the pork champ vindaloo, a fiery take on the Indo-portugese classic. For groups, the Raan feast of a slow cooked leg of Irish lamb is one of the most impressive centrepieces in the country, and as good as it looks.
Foret, Sussex Terrace, foret.ie
The French have given a lot to this world - Peugeot pepper mills, pinot noir and the song Ca Plane Pour Moi by Plastic Bertrand to name a few. For years, however, Dublin has been screaming out for a good French bistro, and it finally has it in the form of Foret. Our advice is to book in for a long, leisurely lunch with the following game plan. Start with some home made saucisson, oeuf mayo, leek vinaigrette and some anchovies with ratte potatoes and fresh cheese.
Move onto the pig's head ballotine with a glass of Gamay or some rich, beefy, onion soup. Follow with a rare wagyu beef rump au poivre with a nice syrah is the logical next step, and the warm chocolate mousse is the perfect way to ride out a truly indulgent meal.
Finish with a pint in the wonderful O'Briens downstairs to bring you back to earth and go home knowing that you've dipped a little piggy in the brand of joie de vivre and savoir faire that Foret is serving by the plate load.
Volpe Nera in Blackrock is a shining example of what a good neighbourhood restaurant should be. The service makes you feel at home, the room is comfortable and unassuming, but as soon as plates hit the table, it's clear that Volpe Nera is all about the food.
Barry Sun's cooking is incredibly precise, clean and visually stunning, from perfectly dressed Flaggy Shore oysters on the half shell, mushroom dumplings in a soy broth that are almost too pretty to eat, and mains like wild John Dory or delicate mezzalune pasta filled with lemon and ricotta.
There are elements of Sun's Chinese roots, and nods to his time spent as head chef at the equally special Etto, but Volpe Nera is fast becoming a destination restaurant known for all the right reasons.
Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud, Merrion Steet, restaurantpatrickguilbaud.ie
The tagline on the website of Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud reads 'forty years of excellence', but it could easily have been 'forty years of changing the landscape of Ireland's restaurant scene and training some of the country's best chefs, therefore creating a legacy that continues to create ripples'.
It might not look great on a website, but it is undoubtedly true. The vibrant Irish dining scene of today has only been possible because of venues like Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud and Ross Lewis' original iteration of Chapter One - ambitious, forward-thinking establishments whose owners didn't see why Ireland shouldn't have world-class places to eat.
Some of the dishes here are by now legendary - the ravioli of blue lobster, the suckling pig croquette, the squab pigeon from Anjou - and they always deliver. But there are also newer additions like a 30-month comté soufflé with creamed morels and soy, a and spiced lamb with potato croissant. Don't even think about leaving without dessert.
Mamo, Howth, mamorestaurant.ie
The Business Post's most recent review of Mamó remarked that good restaurants 'help you park your worries at the door, then pick them up again in smaller packages once you've been well fed and watered'. But to call Mamó a good restaurant, it went on, 'does it a disservice; it is one of the best around'.
Every word of that remains true, because what Jess D'Arcy and Killian Durkin have created with this restaurant in Howth which they opened in 2019 is truly special. The food - including the famed 'cod chip' - is full of flavour and unpretentious, but also elegant and fresh. A wonderful wine list and some of the warmest service in the city makes this the complete package.
Reggie's, Rathmines, reggie's.ie
You don't expect to find one of the best salads around in a pizza place. But one taste of the pumpkin salad at Reggie's - earthy, roasted chunks of the stuff, with crispy cavolo nero and a pumpkin seed dressing - leaves you in no doubt about the commitment to quality you'll find here.
Reggie White worked in Pi, Bambino and Little Forest among others before opening his own place in Rathmines late last year. It's a bright, modern space where you'll find gorgeous 48-hour fermented sourdough pizzas, but also cacio e pepe arancini, superb chicken wings and - if you can find room for it - a good old fashioned ice-cream sundae for dessert.
Toon's Bridge Dairy, Andarl Farm, McNally's and Dermot Carey are just some of the top drawer Irish producers White has populated his menu with.
Big Fan, Aungier Street, bigfan.ie
Is Big Fan the most fun place to eat in Ireland? It's certainly up there. But we're not using the word 'fun' as it's normally used to talk about restaurants - 'the food's crap, but it's good fun' - because the food here is about as far away from that as it's possible to get.
Rob Hayes and Alex Zhang's bright, brash and exuberant Aungier Street venue is a delight, a place where you can head with a group, eat things like scamorza wontons and deep-fried duck wings, and drink cocktails like the Ho Lee Fook and the Spoilt Brat. And if all that doesn't sound like a great night out, we don't know what does.
Liath, Blackrock Market, liathrestaurant.com
It is still a thing of wonder, even after all these years, that you can find a two Michelin-starred restaurant down a lane off the main street in Blackrock in south Co Dublin. But that is where Aussie chef Damien Grey and his small but perfectly-formed team serve up some of the most delicate, smile-inducing food you'll find anywhere on this island.
The communal nature of the experience, with all guests arriving at the same time to this tiny dining room with the open kitchen at one end, only adds to the warm, welcoming and fun nature of a visit to Liath.
FX Buckley, Pembroke Street, thebuckleycollection.ie
Devilled kidneys or oysters to start? A ribeye, striploin or t-bone for mains? What about sides - beef dripping chips, creamed spinach, onion rings - all three perhaps? And would adding a truffle-fried egg be out of the question?
These are the delicious questions you must answer before starting a meal in this temple to Irish beef, but even before that, you'll need to decide on a cocktail to have in the wonderfully cosy Xavier's Bar of this superb steakhouse a few minutes walk from St Stephen's Green. Forget there's a world outside, and cocoon yourself away for a few hours of pure indulgence.
3 Leaves, Blackrock, 3Leaves.ie
Santosh Thomas and Milie Matthew are the husband and wife dream team behind 3 Leaves, an unassuming space in the Blackrock Market - yes, the same one that houses the two Michelin-starred Liath - where you can eat the Indian food of your dreams. First time visitor? Try the thali, the pan puri, the chicken biryani, though really you won't go far wrong whatever you choose.
Dax, Pembroke Street, dax.ie
There is an argument, and it's a good one, that you haven't really experienced the essence of Irish fine dining until you've had a meal cooked for you by Graham Neville. His food - precise, refined, delicious - is perfectly suited to Dax, the basement restaurant that Oliver Meisonnave opened in 2004, and that even during the Celtic Tiger years managed to retain a sense of sophistication.
Expect French classics made with the best of ingredients, among them smoked salmon from Port Oriel, Wicklow Gap venison, Dinish Island scallops and lots more. Let Meisonnave guide you on your wine choices, and you are set for a truly magnifique Hiberno-French experience
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- The Irish Sun
We ditched the UK for Spain, we love the sun and relaxed culture, but paying bills & getting post is a total nightmare
A MUM who ditched the UK to live in sunny Spain has revealed it's not as easy as it seems. Becky, a mum-of-two, was sick of working to just pay the bills when she Advertisement 3 The family-of-four ditched the UK for sunny Spain Credit: Alamy 3 While Becky loved living there, she said there was lots to get used to Credit: tiktok/@bex_from_rain_to_spain 3 Alicante is famed for its golden beaches Credit: Alamy In She revealed that not only do teachers give students kisses on the cheek, but parents always casually hang around the gate after saying goodbye to their kids. But now, Becky has revealed the truth about living in Spain and just how 'easy' it is. While she says Spain 'still has her heart,' she explains that some day-to-day tasks are a total nightmare to do abroad. Advertisement READ MORE REAL LIFE STORIES In a short clip uploaded online, the content creator shared a detailed list of the struggles her family have faced since moving there. She said that paperwork isn't easy as you need seven documents and a stamp to get things verified. While UK post offers next day delivery and turns up at your doorstep, she said the reality in Spain is very different. "Spain: Parcel lost in the void. Try asking your neighbour, or their dog," she said. Advertisement Most read in Fabulous Comment Becky said that customer service was also not up to par, while she was used to polite call staff in the UK, she said you're often left on hold in Spain before being hung up on. And bills were a total nightmare to pay as well, rather than being able to pay online, she said you have to go to the bank and pay in cash on specific days. Villajoyosa: The Colourful Jewel of Europe Becky said bank holidays are also hard to navigate as every town has their own ones rather than them being nationwide . She finished the video saying: "Lif ein Spain is amazing... but dont come here thinking it's 'plug and play.' Advertisement "It's more, unplug, photocopy, replug, stamp and hope." The clip soon went viral on her TikTok account @ People were quick to take to the comments and it seemed many agreed with Becky. One person wrote: "Even speaking Spanish these things can be difficult." Advertisement Moving house hacks 1. Declutter Before You Pack Sort through your belongings and get rid of anything you no longer need. Donate, sell, or recycle items to lighten your load. 2. Create an Inventory Make a list of all your items. This helps keep track of everything and ensures nothing gets lost in the move. 3. Use Quality Packing Materials Invest in sturdy boxes, bubble wrap, and packing tape. This will protect your belongings during the move. 4. Label Everything Clearly label each box with its contents and the room it belongs to. This makes unpacking much easier and more organized. 5. Pack a 'First Day' Box Include essentials like toiletries, a change of clothes, snacks, and important documents. This will keep you from rummaging through boxes on your first day. 6. Take Photos of Electronics Setup Before unplugging your electronics, take photos of the wiring setup. This will make it easier to reconnect everything at your new place. 7. Use Suitcases for Heavy Items Pack books and other heavy items in rolling suitcases. This makes them easier to transport and reduces the risk of injury. 8. Colour-Code Your Boxes Use different coloured stickers or markers for each room. This will help movers quickly identify where each box should go in your new home. Another commented: "10 years and still needed stamps can make you cry." "Buying a car in UK, insured in 2 minutes, taxed in 2 minutes, in your name online 2 minutes, in Spain 2 weeks," penned a third. Meanwhile a fourth said: "Not easier but you're free time is so much more enjoyable." "This is the most accurate representation,' claimed a fifth Advertisement Someone else added: "Agreed!"