Dublin Restaurants

With the Irish food revolution long over and won, Dublin now has a city full of fabulous, hip, and suavely sophisticated restaurants. More realistic rents have seen a new cohort of experimental eateries crop up alongside award-winning Euro-toques and their sous-chefs who continue to come up with new and glorious ways to abuse your waistline. Instead of just spuds, glorious spuds, you’ll find delicious new entries to New Irish cuisine like roast scallops with spiced pork belly and cauliflower au gratin topped with a daring caper-and-raisin sauce or sautéed rabbit loin with Clonakilty black pudding. Okay, there’s a good chance spuds will still appear on your menu—and most likely offered in several different ways.

As for lunches or munchies on the run, there are scores of independent cafés serving excellent coffee, and often good sandwiches. Other eateries, borrowing trends from all around the world, serve inexpensive pizzas, focaccia, pitas, tacos, and wraps (which are fast gaining in popularity over the sandwich).

Dubliners dine later than the rest of Ireland. They stay up later, too, and reservations are usually not booked before 6:30 or 7 pm and up to around 10 pm. Lunch is generally served from 12:30 to 2:30. Pubs often serve food through the day—until 8:30 or 9 pm. Most pubs are family-friendly and welcome children until 7 pm. The Irish are an informal bunch, so smart-casual dress is typical.

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  • 1. Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen

    $$$$ | Dublin North

    When Michelin-starred chef Mickael Viljanen partnered up with this venerable Dublin dining institution, great things were expected. We weren't disappointed. This wonderful, culture-vulture favorite gets its name from its location, downstairs in the vaulted, stone-wall basement of the Dublin Writers Museum; the natural stone-and-wood setting makes it cozily cavelike. The daringly modern French, four-course, set dinner menu is the talk of the town and W. B. Yeats himself would have loved the roast pigeon, brussels sprouts, pear, offal tart all with sauce perigourdine. The only downside is the place is so popular you have to book well in advance.

    18–19 Parnell Sq., Dublin, Co. Dublin, Dublin 1, Ireland
    01-873–2266

    Known For

    • Polite and attentive staff
    • Offers chef's table experience
    • Flawless food and service

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Sat., Reservations essential
  • 2. Forest Avenue

    $$$$ | Georgian Dublin

    Named after the street in Queens where chef-owner Sandy Wyer grew up, Forest Avenue is a star on the Dublin food stage. The menu is a five-course taster, and while choice is limited, quality and value are off the charts. The open kitchen gives the place a lively vibe and Sandy and her Irish husband, John, are only too willing to discuss each dish with interested guests. A floor-to-ceiling glass frontage allows the light to flood in across the elegant white-brick walls. Try the confit cod with pumpkin and crab velouté. They do a cheaper three-course lunch menu Thursday to Saturday.

    8 Sussex Terr., Dublin, Co. Dublin, 4, Ireland
    01-667–8337

    Known For

    • Warm, friendly vibe
    • Daring tasting menu
    • Pairing wine with food

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Tues. No lunch Wed.
  • 3. Mae

    $$$$ | Dublin South

    Located upstairs at the wonderful French Paradox wine shop, this cozy new restaurant sees celebrated local chef Grainne O'Keefe work her magic on the best of Irish produce. The fixed-price tasting menu changes with the seasons, moving from starters like aubergine tart with goat cheese and pickled walnut to meat courses like Iberico pork, with anchovy, dates, and confit potato. 

    53 Shelbourne Rd., Dublin, Co. Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland
    01-231--3903

    Known For

    • Great wine selection
    • Celebrated chef
    • Cozy vibe

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch.
  • 4. One Pico

    $$$$ | Southside

    Chef-owner Eamonn O'Reilly cuts quite a dash, but it's his sophisticated, daring, contemporary cuisine that tends to seduce visitors to his little restaurant tucked away in a quiet lane only a few minutes from Stephen's Green. As is usual with Dublin's luxe eateries, the fixed-price lunch and pre-theater menus offer great value. Try the incredible scallop ceviche to start. Dishes such as pigeon with chicory, salsify, and baked celeriac puree demonstrate the mix of traditional and cutting-edge cuisine. 

    5–6 Molesworth Pl., Dublin, Co. Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland
    01-676–0300

    Known For

    • Gregarious chef-host
    • Daring ingredient combinations
    • Passion-fruit soufflé

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Reservations essential
  • 5. Restaurant Patrick Guilbaud

    $$$$ | Georgian Dublin

    Also known as "Dublin's finest restaurant," this Michelin-starred place on the ground floor of the Merrion Hotel boasts a menu described as French, but chef Guillaume Lebrun's genius lies in his occasional daring use of traditional Irish ingredients—so often taken for granted—to create the unexpected. The ambience is just as delicious, if you're into lofty, minimalist dining rooms and Irish modern art (the Roderic O'Conors and Louis le Brocquys are all from the owner's private collection). The best dishes are flawless, such as the roast red leg partridge. Follow that, if you can, with the assiette au chocolat (a tray of five hot and cold chocolate desserts). Nearly as impressive are the 70-page wine list, the view of the Merrion's manicured gardens, and the two-course lunch special. Soaring white vaults and white walls won't make you feel warm and cozy, but you can always go somewhere else for that.

    21 Upper Merrion St., Dublin, Co. Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland
    01-676–4192

    Known For

    • Award-winning chef
    • Annagassan blue lobster
    • Irish modern art collection

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon., Reservations essential
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  • 6. The Greenhouse

    $$$$ | Southside

    The elegant dining room of this Michelin-starred restaurant is a touch posh, with turquoise velvet seats and white tablecloths, but the food of one of Ireland's hottest and most creative chefs, County Clare man Mikael Viljanen, deserves its stage. The four-course, fixed-price menu is proud of its French influences, but constantly surprises with starters like a whipped foie gras topped with Granny Smith apple gel, walnut, and smoked eel. For a main try the sole with miso, cauliflower, roasted yeast, and winter truffle. The rhubarb blancmange with ginger is a thrilling dessert. The lunch menu is surprisingly good value.

    21 Dawson St., Dublin, Co. Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland
    01-676--7015

    Known For

    • Michelin star
    • Creative twists on French classics
    • Luxurious lunches

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon.
  • 7. Variety Jones

    $$$$ | Dublin West

    Unassuming Thomas Street is the last place you'd expect to find a Michelin-starred restaurant, but that's exactly where celebrated chef Keelann Higgs set up shop. Inside, you're greeted by the smell of wood smoke, and the narrow dining room is dominated by an open kitchen where cooking is done over a blazing fire. The menu is short and prix fixe, so you select five to seven dishes. Choosing is the only problem when faced with starters like salt-baked celeriac with grilled cabbage, stout, lardo, and an aged cheddar mousse. The pearl barley risotto with soft egg and crispy shallots is another standout. Finish with the blood orange cake with lemon curd and vanilla creme fraiche. Note: Does not offer a vegetarian menu or dairy-free options. 

    78 Thomas St., Dublin, Co. Dublin, Dublin 8, Ireland
    01-516--2470

    Known For

    • Open-fire cooking
    • Great wine list
    • Creative takes on classic dishes

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch.
  • 8. Shanahan's on the Green

    $$$$ | Southside

    Glowing with gilded chandeliers and graced with a few marble fireplaces, this American-style steak house in a restored Georgian town house offers a sleekly elegant setting in which to chow down on some of the most tender Irish Angus beef this side of the Atlantic (they cook it in a special high-temperature oven, searing the outside to keep the inside good and juicy). If steak doesn't float your boat, they also do a mean baked turbot with mussels, clams, and creamed fennel and leek. Oreo-cookie-crust cheesecake is the perfect way to finish off the feast, but many will consider the decor—think sash windows, gilt mirrors, and plush carpets—rich enough.

    119 St. Stephen's Green, Dublin, Co. Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland
    01-407–0939

    Known For

    • Amazing cheesecake
    • Sumptuous surroundings
    • Deep wine list

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: No lunch Sat.–Thurs., Reservations essential

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