3 Best Restaurants in Central District, Northern Ireland

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We've compiled the best of the best in Central District - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Deanes Restaurant

$$$ | Central District Fodor's Choice

For 25 years, Michael Deane has been the leader of the Belfast culinary pack, and his flagship operation has three distinct restaurants in one building. The Meat Locker is a beef-driven grill room and steak house; Eipic is an upscale, one–Michelin star restaurant and opulent champagne bar serving a variety of multicourse menus; and Love Fish is a less formal seafood restaurant with a Hamptons vibe. The Meat Locker is inspired by London's Hawksmoor steak-house chain. Menus come on meat hooks, while a "salt wall" is used for dry aging locally sourced beef. In the extension is the Eipic (Wednesday to Saturday evenings, lunch Friday), a classy round-table, 30-seater restaurant and champagne bar serving a variety of multicourse menus featuring venison, quail, or halibut; lunch costs either £30 or £45, and dinner £70. Running beside these two eateries, in an elongated conservatory, is the seafood restaurant Love Fish. A bright atmosphere with Brentwood steel chairs and local artwork dominate here. Lunchtime staples include fish-and-chips, roll-mop herrings on toast with chips, smoked mackerel salad or an open prawn sandwich, with main courses starting from £6.50. The Deanes empire also includes Deanes Deli Vin Café in Bedford Street, Deanes at Queens in the university area, and Deane and Decano on the Lisburn Road (check website for details).

28–40 Howard St., Belfast, BT1 6PF, Northern Ireland
028-9033–1134
Known For
  • Locally sourced beef at the Meat Locker
  • Elegant food at Eipic
  • Great value seafood at Love Fish
Restaurant Details
Eipic closed Sun.–Tues.; Meat Locker and Love Fish closed Sun. and Mon.

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The Great Room

$$$$ | Cathedral Quarter Fodor's Choice

Inside the lavish Merchant Hotel, beneath the grand dome of this former bank's great hall and Ireland's biggest chandelier, find the perfect setting for a memorable dinner of adventurous European fare. Exceptional dishes include wild Irish venison loin, lamb saddle, or, for vegetarians, pappardelle pasta with black truffles and olive oil. First-class service in truly opulent surroundings makes this restaurant worth a detour. The two-course dinner is £25 and three courses are £29.50 and are an exceptional value, considering the surroundings. There's also a nine-course tasting menu at £90 with wine or £70 without. Afternoon tea is also a specialty with vegetarian, gluten-free options. Vegetarian and vegan options such as artichoke royale, wild mushroom ristotto, and roasted cauliflower steaks feature on dedicated plant-based lunch and dinner menus.

35 Waring St., Belfast, BT1 2DY, Northern Ireland
028-9023–4888
Known For
  • Halibut with lobster mousee
  • Thornhill duck breast
  • Kilkeel crab with green apple, celeriac, and imperial caviar

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The Northern Whig

$ | Central District

Housed in an elegant former newspaper building in Belfast's historic Cathedral Quarter, the Northern Whig is spacious and stylish. From Thursday to Sunday evenings, one wall slides away so you can watch a jazz band, or a DJ playing funk and pop. The food is brasserie-style—not astonishing, but good. The environment, wine and gin selection, and cocktails such as Perfect Storm (rum, ginger beer, and Angostura bitters) or French Martini (pineapple juice, vodka, and raspberry liqueur) are the main draws, though.

2–10 Bridge St., Belfast, BT1 1LU, Northern Ireland
028-9050–9888
Known For
  • Brasserie-style food
  • Traditional wooden bar
  • Cocktails

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