Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in Portishead
Hardens guides have spent 34 years compiling reviews of the best Portishead restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 51 restaurants in Portishead and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Portishead restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Portishead Restaurants
1. Harbour House
British, Traditional restaurant in Bristol
The Grove, Harbourside - BS1
“The riverside terrace is appealing in better weather” at this brilliantly located venue on Bristol’s waterfront – converted from one of the South West’s last remaining 19th-century transit sheds (designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel) the interior is “well-spaced”. It offers a large, all-day menu featuring something for everyone: dishes that went down well this year include grilled mackerel on focaccia, roasted cod on risotto and a decent warm Bakewell tart.
2. Clifton Sausage
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
7 Portland St - BS8
“Why isn’t there a quality sausage restaurant like this in every town?” – Simon & Joy’s descriptively named feature has thrived for over twenty years on “quintessential English grub done really well”.
3. Noah’s
Fish & chips restaurant in Bristol
1 Brunel Lock Road - BS1
“Tucked between a flyover and the docks” – and “with great views of the Avon Gorge and Suspension Bridge” – a “Bristol legend” which was formerly greasy spoon Lockside, and on a funny note “was the café in TV’s ‘Only Fools and Horses’”. Current owners Daniel and Joie Rosser (his father Garry runs the much-loved Scallop Shell in Bath) relaunched the venue in May 2023 as a chippie, winning bronze in the National Fish & Chip awards shortly afterwards. On the menu, “expertly cooked fish ’n’ chips” with “amazing batter”, therefore, but also “fancier” fare.
4. The Granary & The Granary Club
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol city centre
32 Welsh Back - BS1
The Granary is a buzzy, neighbourhood all-day eatery near Queen Square in central Bristol, with a great vibe and striking interiors and has been featured in The Telegraph, The Times & Condé Traveler.Think unique, period windows flooding the space with light, ...
5. Puro
British, Modern restaurant in Clevedon
Rear of 32 - 34 Hill Road - BS21
PURO Restaurant & Bar is a modern venue for relaxed, yet sophisticated, eating and drinking.All our food is fresh, with a focus on well sourced ingredients, providing simple but quality, seasonal food. In addition to the food menu is a carefully selected wine list (...
6. Prego
Italian restaurant in Bristol
7 North View - BS6
This “very busy Italian neighbourhood bistro” in Westbury Park was set up by floorlayers Olly Gallery and Julian Faiello – and what a success their professional volte-face has proved, with a successive wave of talented local chefs passing through its doors over the past decade. The crowd-pleasing menu – spanning arancini, pasta dishes and sourdough pizzas – features some “very good” food which you can now enjoy on the heated, fairy-lit terrace: a Covid-era addition.
7. Little French
French restaurant in Bristol
2b North View, Westbury Park - BS6
Set up in 2019 by Freddy Bird & wife Nessa (the latter in charge of FOH, and also the mastermind behind the restaurant’s crockery and ceramics), this Westbury Park icon continues to turn out “classic French bistro food with authentic Gallic ingredients” that “evokes happy memories” of dining across the Channel. Given Freddy’s starry TV stints alongside Roux Jr and co., and its own local reputation (it’s “hard to get a resa”), it did strike the odd cynic this year as “disappointing because of all the gushing praise” (not helped, by the fact it’s also “expensive”). Reports were, however, très bien in the main.
8. The Ivy Clifton Brasserie
British, Traditional restaurant in Bristol
42-44 Caledonia Place - BS8
Abu Dhabi royal Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed al-Nahyan was – as of mid 2025 – rumoured to be on the verge of buying a £1 billion stake in Richard Caring’s restaurant empire, of which this famous brasserie chain is the crown jewel. Presumably, he’s more interested in ‘rolling out’ the brand in The Gulf and beyond rather than dropping by for a Salmon Fishcake and ‘Ivy Chocolate Bombe’, but if he’d asked the opinion of our annual diners’ poll, we’re not sure that he’d sign on the dotted line. “How can a restaurant with this heritage produce such uninspired, tick-box food?” is a question merited by its poor ratings, ditto what explains the “very slow and disinterested service”? The answer may be that “you don’t come here for the food, obviously” but for the “gorgeous” interior design and “picturesque” locations that continue to underpin their appeal. Let’s hope for the Sheikh’s sake that the middle classes of the Arab World are as undiscerning as those from the UK!
9. The Vincent Kitchen
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
Queen Victoria House, Redland Hill - BS6
2022 Review: “Recently opened of all places in a retirement village” – a modern development of 64 apartments in Redland – “but open to the public”: this September 2020 newcomer is run by local caterers CleverChefs and occupies a light-filled space with open kitchen overlooking an arboretum garden. Open from breakfast and throughout the day, it wins strong early feedback for “assured cooking at reasonable prices”.
10. Spiny Lobster
Fish & seafood restaurant in Bristol
128-130 Whiteladies Road - BS8
Clifton-ites and Bristolians have been flocking to Mitch Tonks’s smart seafood specialist (plus on-site fishmonger) for two decades — and no wonder since it “never disappoints”. Catch from Brixham and Cornwall (including the namesake crustacean) is cooked to fine effect over the Josper grill, and their “jazz nights (the last Sunday of every month) are a hit” as well.
11. Lido
Mediterranean restaurant in Bristol
Oakfield Place - BS8
“Unique” Clifton institution, where diners overlook swimmers in the restored 1850 pool below, while feasting on “consistently excellent dishes (often wood-fired), from a vibrant and frequently changing menu” – and the two activities can be combined in a ‘Swim and Eat’ package, with “great healthy options for those that want ’em” (there is also a spa and five newly opened bedrooms in a townhouse across the road). “This continues to be a favourite Bath/Bristol restaurant for a great meal almost 17 years after it opened – the atmosphere is quite literally exceptional”, while the Mediterranean-inspired food is “startlingly brilliant at these prices”. Top Menu Tip – “some fantastic inexpensive wines: try their Greek white!”.
12. Bravas
Mediterranean restaurant in Bristol
7 Cotham Hill - BS6
2023 Review: Well known down Brizzle way, this small (16 seats) tapas haunt has an outsized reputation for its authentic approach. Our feedback is limited, but it’s a favourite for one or two of our reporters who award it very high marks. It’s part of a local group, and its siblings include Cargo Cantina and Gambas.
13. Otira & Chandos Social
Australian restaurant in Bristol
5-7 Chandos Road - BS6
2022 Review: A restaurant of two halves partly inspired by Kiwi chef Stephen Gilchrist's home country of New Zealand, and also featuring an adjoining Argentinian tapas bar with counter-style seating – both highly regarded for their unusual combinations and accent on foraging. Only the latter, Chandos Social @ Otira, was open as of October 2021 – and offering tapas menus to share per couple – so do check ahead before you visit.
14. Wilson’s
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
24 Chandos Rd - BS6
“Incredible cooking” – “honestly some of the best anywhere my mind is blown every time I eat there” – is proclaimed by many fans (which, in her April 2025 review, included Sunday Times critic Charlotte Ivers) of this “stripped-back, busy dining room” from chef Jan Ostle and his wife Mary Wilson, which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year. The hyper-local menu showcases “loads of home-grown ingredients” from their own regeneratively farmed kitchen garden, and preparation is “imaginative and well thought out”. Ratings were dragged from 5/5 this year, by one or two diners nonplussed with what they saw as a heavy-handed approach to sustainable dining (“friendly service but disjointed by the obligatory extensive biography for each dish…”, “prioritisation of ethics over quality… terrible meal in parts, amazing in others… just tone down the creation of self-righteous plates and keep turning out the good ones!”).
15. The Kensington Arms
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
35-37 Stanley Rd - BS6
2024 Review: “Standards remain consistently high” at this Redland boozer – “part of the Pony and Trap Group” and offering “a step above pub food” (though not straying from the classics and laying on proper Sunday roasts). Top Tip – “there are two rooms upstairs you can have for exclusive use of groups”.
16. The Pony
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
291 North Street - BS3
2022 Review: The team from the former Pony & Trap in Chew Magna – nowadays The Pony Chew Valley – opened for the first time in Bristol with this new venture in May 2021 (rather late in the day to inspire survey feedback). The menu features dishes cooked over open fire from chef Hugo Harvey. But the ‘bistro’ appellation seems a bit of a misnomer, as the only evening option (there is a cut-down lunch alternative) is a 4-course menu and you need to pay up-front if you book in advance (which is the presumption).
17. Sonny Stores
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
47 Raleigh Road - BS3
“In a neighbourhood cafe setting, this is Italian-inspired cuisine of the highest order; and large plates for sharing work brilliantly” – so say fans of Pegs Quinn and his wife Mary’s white-walled and welcoming corner-site in Southville.
18. Box-E
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
Unit 10, Cargo 1, Wapping Wharf - BS1
“Imagine a fine dining tasting menu with an imaginative wine flight explained by a knowledgeable waitress, then realise you are sitting among a pile of cargo ship containers…sort of weird but it works” – the surprising formula at this 14-seater in Bristol’s Cargo development, helmed by ex-L’Ortolan chef Elliott Lidstone and wife Tess. It received real raves this year, with fans proclaiming Elliott’s “brilliant and well-balanced” food that’s “superb value for money” too, whether you go for the £59 per person tasting menu or the à la carte.
19. Root
Vegetarian restaurant in Bristol
Wapping Wharf - BS1
A “mainly plant-based” (but not only) dockside diner, on Wapping Wharf, that was set up in 2017 and is part of the six-strong ‘The Pony Family’ group, which also includes a Root spin-off in Wells, Somerset, as well as a cookery school. The “intriguing establishment” (one of a number of container-based venues in this foodie city) offers a “very interesting selection of plates”, and, given their ethos, the “veggie plates are the best”.
20. Gambas
Spanish restaurant in Bristol
Unit 15 Cargo 2, Wapping Wharf - BS1
“Bustling tapas restaurant” with “really good (and surprisingly cheap) fish/seafood plates”, set in an old shipping container on Wapping Wharf, overlooking Bristol harbour. Part of Kieran & Imogen Waites Season + Taste group, along with Bravas, Cargo Contina and Condesa.
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