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Mad Egg

From cheese to chimichurri: 22 innovative Dublin restaurants changing the way we eat in 2019

The capital’s food culture is changing. Here are the places pushing it forward.

THERE HAS NEVER been a better time to be a foodie in Dublin. The restaurant and café landscape is arguably healthier and more competitive than it has ever been with hot ticket eateries opening on what seems to be a weekly basis.

“We’ve always lagged behind other European and global cities in terms of variety and quality of food offering, but it’s changing so quickly,” says Lisa Cope, editor of All The Food. “It’s like there’s an electric current running through the city.” 

The recession helped kickstart this restaurant boom with budding chefs availing of cheap rents and opening interesting, modern establishments. More recently, chefs and restaurateurs who emigrated during the economic downturn have started to return home and are bringing with them the knowledge they have gleaned from working in the likes of London and New York.

As a result, the capital is now home to an eclectic selection of food joints to cater to nearly every palate and price point. Whether you fancy something high-end or casual, homegrown or exotic, you’re sure to be covered. All in all, it’s an exciting time to be a foodie.

“We’re seeing people getting seriously excited about food now – running to new restaurants, or to try new dishes on a menu, or buying tickets for pop up chef events before they sell out,” says Cope. “A new breed of food adventurers are being born. People are travelling around the country just to eat at Ox in Belfast, Ichigo Ichie in Cork or Aniar in Galway.”

With all this in mind, we decided to spotlight some of the cafés, bars and restaurants that are changing how we eat in 2019.

Bon appétit!

New cuisines

Over the past few years, chefs from both home and abroad have been broadening our culinary horizons and introducing Irish palates to foreign cuisines.

For instance, Nick Reynolds has been bringing a slice of the Caribbean to Rathmines with his pop-up venture Lil Portie. Alma in Portobello serves up breakfast and lunch with an Argentinian twist. Both Lucky Tortoise on Aungier Street and Bowls by Kwanghi on Marlborough Street are serving up modern dim sum at bargain prices.

Shouk is a little gem in Drumcondra doling out reasonably priced Israeli food while Grano in Stoneybatter is winning rave reviews for its authentic southern Italian cooking. That’s before you get to the likes of Brothers Dosirak, Kopitiam and Makati Avenue on Capel Street, which serve up Korean, Malaysian and Filipino food, respectively. 

“There are still a lot of gaps in the food scene in Dublin that are ripe to be filled,” says Cope. “Peruvian, Ethiopian, high end Japanese, more regional Chinese, a Dan Barber style farm-to-fork operation, and more ‘fast, cheap, good’ options like Lucky Tortoise. But it’s not a matter of someone deciding they want to open a restaurant and pulling a cuisine out of a hat. It needs to be the right person with all of the passion and love for the project or it won’t work.” 

Where does your food come from?

How many times have you seen McNally’s seasonal greens or Gubbeen chorizo namechecked on a brunch menu? Provenance is the name of the game these days with more and more chefs making a conscious decision to cook with local and seasonal produce. Think cafés like The Fumbally, Assassination Custard or Meet Me in the Morning. 

Cope points to chefs like Niall Sabongi of The Seafood Café or Gaz Smith of Michael’s “serving Irish people the the freshest fish straight from Dublin Bay” or fast casual chains like Mad Egg committing to only using Irish, free-range chicken as moves in the right direction. 

“[These] are all really encouraging signs of where we’re going with food, but there’s still a long way to go,” she says.  

Wine culture 

“One thing that’s been exciting to watch is that we’re finally developing a wine culture,” says Cope. She’s not wrong. Over the past few months, several wine bars and café cum wine bars have popped up around the country.

In Dublin, you have Loose Canon, which specialises in natural wine and cheese. Across town, you have the likes of Granthams and First Draft, which are coffee shops by day and wine bars by night. Buzzy Gertrude on Pearse Street has a wine list to die for. Even Krust on George Street has started serving vino in the evenings. 

“There are at least two more wine bars to come in the next couple of months and more in the planning,” says Cope. “It’s long been difficult to get a really good glass of wine in a bar in Dublin, and we’re looking forward to seeing more places pop up.” 

How very continental.

Filthy clean eats

As more and more people dip their toe into veganism, cafés and takeaways are beginning to expand their menus and realise there is a world beyond tofu. BuJo in Sandymount recently became the first restaurant in Ireland to serve the ‘Beyond Meat’ burger, which they describe as “a plant based burger that looks, cooks and satisfies like beef”.

Vish Shop on Dorset Street, meanwhile, is a plant-based takeaway offering vegan versions of chipper classics like fish and chips. Their cauliflower wings are sublime. Beast on Victoria Quay is a vegan takeaway and café that specialises in the likes of vegan jambons, vegan chicken balls and, yes, vegan garlic cheese chips.

Clean eating has never been so filthy.

More: ‘Better BBQ than Hong Kong’: The insider’s guide to finding fantastic Chinese food in Dublin>

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    Mute Martin Flood
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    Oct 31st 2016, 11:24 AM

    So they are protesting that a guy committed suicide after being caught illegally selling swordfish. Did I read the article correctly?

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    Mute Martin Flood
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    Oct 31st 2016, 1:38 PM

    Just read the (far more professional) article in The Guardian. Seems the poor guy slipped as he was trying to retrieve his fish from the truck. Horrible way to go.

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    Mute mac.kerel
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    Oct 31st 2016, 10:38 AM

    The last relatively stable country in North Africa… I smell another “Arab Spring” here…

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    Mute Warthog
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    Nov 1st 2016, 12:46 AM

    @mac.kerel:

    Yeah and wait for it…”and it was all instigated & orchestrated by the USA, the UK, the French and of course the USA’s Zionist allies the Israelies”! In fact they must have been one of them that threw him and his fish into the garbage truck in the first place!
    It has got so bad now that they will soon be blaming one or all of the above for the 1st and 2nd World Wars and all things in between and before!!!

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    Mute Colm Maguire
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    Oct 31st 2016, 10:36 AM

    Hello Journal.ie
    So the death of one guy in Morocco is a headline for Irish people? Nothing happening perhaps on the emerald isle? Without being disrespectful to this individual, surely there are thousand more injustices on a larger scale you COULD be reporting on? Some of them might even concern Ireland?

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    Mute Paul Hughes
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    Oct 31st 2016, 11:14 AM

    Think it’s to do with the implications of another potential Arab Spring movement

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    Mute David O'Brien
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    Oct 31st 2016, 11:16 AM

    Believe it or not some people are interested in international news too

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    Mute deisecelt
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    Oct 31st 2016, 11:17 AM

    yes while your at it write strongly worded letters to rte and tv3 insisting they stop broadcasting world news during the news slots. if only we could turn off the Internet in Ireland too so none of us have to be poisoned with information from around the globe.

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    Mute Colm Maguire
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    Oct 31st 2016, 11:39 AM

    @deisecelt: You miss the point completely. You must have turned off from the outside world in order to be that obtuse.

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    Mute Colm Maguire
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    Oct 31st 2016, 11:41 AM

    @David O’Brien: The death of one man in bin lorry, is seldom regarded as INTERNATIONAL news. This is local Moroccan news. There are many things happening in the Arab world in the north African states that are international news. I am merely pointing out, the oddity of this single story being highlighted by the journal.ie. However we could always just read what is posted without ever asking questions. Perhaps that is preferable to you?

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    Mute Bernard O'Brien
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    Oct 31st 2016, 12:36 PM

    So we have idiots that think a nationwide protest in Morocco shouldn’t make the papers ?

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    Mute Colm Maguire
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    Oct 31st 2016, 1:05 PM

    @Bernard O’Brien: Well conclusions like yours make me give up in despair. Read what was written not what you want to see……..

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    Mute Pat Farrelly
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    Oct 31st 2016, 9:01 PM

    @Colm Maguire: When you are in a hole it is considered a good idea to stop digging. One of the implications for Ireland and the rest of Europe is that if Morocco follows the rest of North Africa into anarchy it will mean more people in boats, lots more people in boats, trying to reach Europe and given that you can see Europe – Gibraltar and Spain – from the Moroccan coast what is already a flood has the potential to turn into a tsunami.

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    Mute Paudi Onail
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    Oct 31st 2016, 11:29 AM

    they love an old protest these arabs, a man gets killed in an accident and theres an investigation. happens here a lot on building sites, farms etc, we don’t see this. very aggressive. let the investigation do its job.

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    Mute Bob Twilliger
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    Oct 31st 2016, 12:52 PM

    Not making a link to the tragic story above but if you are just looking for a good read, check out the Clintons dealings with Morocco – made my head spin… https://theintercept.com/2015/04/22/inside-morocco-clinton-influence-campaign/

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