9 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.

Fish City

$$ | Central District Fodor's Choice

A cut above the average fish-and-chips restaurant, award-winning Fish City serves sustainably sourced seafood including Carlingford oysters, cod, scampi, and other treats. For non-pescatarians there are vegan and vegetarian options, too.

Café Parisien

$$ | Central District

Taking its name from the eponymous first-class café on RMS Titanic, Café Parisien divides itself into a downstairs creperie and a stylish upstairs restaurant in a landmark six-story sandstone building opposite City Hall. Choose from an array of savory or sweet crepes and galettes or head upstairs for main courses at lunch or dinner, which may include beef bourguignon or bouillabaisse, the celebrated stew of Provence. At £19.95 the two-course lunch menu du jour is expensive but worth it for the views.

Ask for a terrace table (the halogen heaters keep you warm on a chilly day) from where you can watch the progress of city life and cradle a digestif.

1–3 Donegall Sq. N, Belfast, BT1 5GA, Northern Ireland
028-9590–4338
Known For
  • Cod fillet, mussels, and white bean cassoulet
  • Hot smoked salmon omelet
  • Vegan beetroot rosti with tofu and pickled vegetables
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon.--Wed.

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The Cloth Ear

$$ | Cathedral Quarter

The Merchant Hotel's lively gastropub combines all the decorative charms of a traditional Belfast watering hole with a great choice of ales, wines, and whiskeys, and a menu that blends old-school favorites with imaginative modern fusion twists.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Coppi

$$ | Cathedral Quarter

The small dishes known as cicchetti, beloved of Venetian bars and a counterpart to tapas, draw the crowds to Coppi in the ever-popular Cathedral Quarter. Named after a world-champion Italian racing cyclist, Angelo Fausto Coppi, it serves flavorful Mediterranean cuisine amid modern industrial decor. Entrées include dishes such as risotto and mushroom puff, the traditional Roman specialty pork scallopine with mushrooms and spinach, or the staple porcini mushroom ravioli with duck ragù. For cicchetti dolce, the tiramisu is deliciously light, and it's no surprise that Italian wines feature prominently. Eat at the counter on high chairs or at cozy booths with rustic wooden tables.

St. Anne's Sq., Belfast, BT1 2LR, Northern Ireland
028-9031–1959
Known For
  • Huge T-bone steaks
  • Venetian-style pizzetta (mini-pizzas)
  • Best tiramisu in town
Restaurant Details
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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James Street & Co.

$$ | Central District

The mainstay of this classy city-center big hitter with an epic reputation is County Tyrone sirloin, rib eye, or beef fillet steaks as well as prime cuts including enormous Tomahawk steaks (for two) cooked to your liking on a charcoal grill. Based in a former linen mill, exposed brick walls and leather banquettes set the scene for a terrific meal. For an appetizer, try the Kilkeel crab and chili linguine or smoked eel and duck egg. Popular lunch choices may include blue cheese salad with candied walnuts or roast monkfish, while the two-course pre-theater menu (4:30--6:30) is a good value at £19.50. Evening staples of steak, fish, pork, and chicken are served with the Comber potato, characterized by its sweet, buttery flavor and harvested earlier than other potatoes; May and June are peak months to enjoy them. Such is their importance that they have been given a European designation of protection. Wash it all down with a choice of classic dry reds from the vineyards of Burgundy or Loire Valley favorites such as Sancerre or the smoky gunflint-flavored Pouilly-Fumé.

21 James St. S, Belfast, BT2 7GA, Northern Ireland
028-9560–0700
Known For
  • Charcoal grill chateaubriand and tomahawk steaks
  • Seared scallops and Irish pork belly with cauliflower and apple
  • Irish cod with shaved fennel and pea puree

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Mourne Seafood Bar

$$ | Central District

Connoisseurs of fresh fish and shellfish love Mourne Seafood, hidden down a side street and established as a firm favorite. Mussels are from Strangford Lough while oysters are sourced from shellfish beds in Carlingford Lough. Fresh seafood comes direct each day from the local ports of Annalong and Kilkeel and depend on the day's catch. The hake, accompanied with bouillabaisse potatoes and broccoli, and sea bream are done to perfection, but the standout dish for many is the seafood casserole with tomato sauce, fennel, thyme, and garlic served with focaccia. To complement your meal, try a bottle of Belfast Black or Maggie's Leap made by Whitewater Brewery in Kilkeel, or the locally made Shortcross gin. You can also eat and drink alfresco at the Shack, the Mourne's new open-air dining annex.

34–36 Bank St., Belfast, Northern Ireland
028-9024–8544
Known For
  • Tuscan prawns
  • Lobster burger
  • Beef-dripping chips

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The Muddlers Club

$$ | Cathedral Quarter

Though its name is derived from a revolutionary secret society that met here 200 years ago, there is nothing exactly covert about the Muddlers Club restaurant, beyond the fact that it is hidden away in a historic back alley and kind of hard to find. Fashionably unfussy, the succinct menu showcases blackened Mourne lamb, sea trout with Caesar salad, turbot, crab bisque, and pasta all artfully arranged. They also have a six-course seasonal tasting menu (£60) with wine pairing an additional £40, as well as a vegetarian tasting menu. For dessert, the divine plum chocolate and coconut ice cream is rich and faultless as is the chocolate, passion fruit, and dulce de leche.

1 Warehouse La., Belfast, BT1 2DX, Northern Ireland
028-9031--3199
Known For
  • Wicklow venison
  • Salt-aged beef short rib and bone marrow
  • Chocolate, passion fruit, and dulce de leche dessert
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Yard Bird

$$ | Cathedral Quarter

The humble chicken is the raison d'être of Yard Bird, on the site of a linen warehouse built in the 1750s. Start your visit with an aperitif in the Dirty Onion bar downstairs (ask the bartender about the pub's name), which retains the original, evocative tree-trunk-size beams, bare floors, and walls of the 18th century. Free-range chickens, marinated overnight in lemon, buttermilk, and paprika are cooked on the rotisserie, then cut in half and shared between two. From Sunday to Thursday there's a special deal, with whole chicken and a half carafe of wine for two (£26). Return to the Dirty Onion for a nightcap; with its smoky turf fire, timber decor, and craft beers from Europe and North America, it has a "speakeasy" feel, with live traditional music most nights, except Thursday (bluegrass night) and weekends, when acoustic groups take over both inside and out.

Every Saturday at 4 pm, two local musicians lead the Belfast Traditional Music Trail, a 90-minute walking tour through cobbled alleyways and into private bars in some of the city's oldest buildings. The tour assembles outside the Dirty Onion and tickets cost £15.

3 Hill St., Belfast, BT1 2LA, Northern Ireland
028-9024–3712
Known For
  • Tender rotisserie chicken
  • Fast service
  • Authentic pub with live music

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Zen

$$ | Central District

Offering a blend of Asian fusion, the standout dishes at Belfast's finest Japanese restaurant are the sea bass and sole, or the Zen monkfish. Among the discerning diners who frequent this lively spot, the delicious assorted mushroom teppanyaki is also a big hit, as well as the sushi and sashimi. Choose between wooden booths or—if prepared to hunker down on the floor Japanese-style—the traditional dining area; or opt for a discreet table for two divided by beaded curtains. Finish with a Japanese malt whiskey: Nikka Black is smoky and mellow and rounds out the perfect dinner.

55–59 Adelaide St., Belfast, BT2 8FE, Northern Ireland
028-9023–2244
Known For
  • Sea bass and sole
  • Carlingford oysters
  • Sushi and sashimi
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.--Tues.

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