Looking for genuine traditional Irish food in Dublin in 2026 takes a bit of navigation. The city has a thousand pubs and restaurants serving variations on Irish stew, fish and chips and beef and Guinness pie — but the difference between a tourist-trap version and the real thing is significant. This guide ranks the 15 best traditional Irish restaurants in Dublin, with honest assessments of which dishes each one does best, where the locals actually eat, and which famous addresses are worth the visit and which to skip.

Best traditional Irish food Dublin 2026
Traditional Irish food Dublin 2026 – where to eat the real thing.

Pair with our pillar guide on Dublin restaurants & food and our Dublin nightlife & pubs pillar for the wider picture.

What Is Traditional Irish Food, Really?

Traditional Irish cuisine is rooted in 19th- and early-20th-century rural life: slow-cooked meat, root vegetables, dairy, and an extraordinary variety of potato preparations. Dublin’s own contribution is Dublin Coddle, a slow-cooked sausage-and-bacon stew that dates back to the early 1700s. Most other dishes you’ll see on Dublin menus — Irish stew, boxty, colcannon, champ, brown bread, brown crab and Atlantic salmon — come from across the island.

The Irish food scene has transformed dramatically since 2000. The country now has 23 Michelin-starred restaurants, a thriving artisan food movement, and a generation of chefs reinventing traditional dishes with modern technique. The best Dublin restaurants for “traditional Irish” in 2026 are typically one of three types: heritage pubs serving high-quality versions of classics, modern Irish restaurants reinterpreting heritage dishes, and casual pub-style restaurants doing the classics well.

10 Traditional Irish Dishes You Should Try

Irish stew is the country's national dish
Irish stew is Ireland’s most famous traditional dish.
  • Irish Stew: Slow-cooked lamb or mutton with potatoes, onions, parsley and carrots. Originally peasant food; now national dish.
  • Dublin Coddle: Sausages and rashers slow-cooked with potatoes, onions and parsley in stock. Quintessentially Dublin.
  • Beef and Guinness Stew / Pie: Slow-braised beef in Guinness with mushrooms, onions and carrots. Often topped with a pastry lid as pie.
  • Boxty: A pancake made from grated raw potato and mashed potato. Served with various fillings; specialist restaurants include The Boxty House in Temple Bar.
  • Colcannon: Mashed potato with cabbage or kale, scallions, butter and cream. Often the side dish to bacon and cabbage.
  • Champ: Mashed potato with scallions and butter; lighter than colcannon.
  • Bacon and Cabbage: Cured pork loin (bacon collar) with cabbage and parsley sauce. Sunday-lunch staple.
  • Fish and Chips: Battered cod or hake with chunky chips. Best from chip shops (Beshoff’s, Leo Burdock) but pub versions are also strong.
  • Brown Bread / Soda Bread: Buttermilk and wheat flour bread. Served with butter at every Irish meal.
  • Seafood Chowder: Creamy fish soup with potatoes, smoked haddock, salmon and cream. Coastal classic.

15 Best Traditional Irish Restaurants in Dublin

1. The Winding Stair

Above the famous Winding Stair Bookshop on Ormond Quay. A modern Irish restaurant that reinvents traditional dishes with contemporary technique. The seafood chowder, smoked Carrickmacross cheese with poached pear, and Donegal smoked salmon are among the best versions in the city. Strong Irish wine list. Books 2-3 weeks ahead.

  • Address: 40 Ormond Quay Lower, Dublin 1.
  • Style: Modern Irish.
  • Price: Lunch from €25, dinner from €45.
  • Best for: Diners wanting traditional Irish elevated to fine dining without being a tasting menu.

2. The Brazen Head

The Brazen Head is reputedly Ireland's oldest pub since 1198
The Brazen Head, reputedly Ireland’s oldest pub (1198), serves textbook Irish stew and beef & Guinness pie.

Reputedly Ireland’s oldest pub (est. 1198), the Brazen Head serves textbook versions of all the Irish classics. The beef and Guinness stew, Irish stew, Roaring Water Bay mussels and bacon and cabbage are all strong. Live trad music nightly. Books not strictly required for the bar/restaurant but advisable for evening dining.

  • Address: 20 Bridge Street Lower, Dublin 8.
  • Style: Heritage pub restaurant.
  • Price: Mains €18-26.
  • Best for: First-time visitors wanting the iconic Dublin pub experience and a textbook Irish stew.

3. The Boxty House

The specialist Dublin restaurant for boxty — potato pancakes — served with smoked salmon, beef, lamb or vegetarian fillings. In the heart of Temple Bar but better than most Temple Bar restaurants. Family-friendly.

  • Address: 20-21 Temple Bar, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Boxty specialist with full Irish menu.
  • Price: Mains €18-28.
  • Best for: Visitors wanting to try boxty in the place that does it best.

4. The Old Mill

Casual pub-style restaurant in Temple Bar serving classic Irish dishes. The Wicklow lamb shank and Dublin coddle are particularly strong. Reasonable prices for the area.

  • Address: 14 Temple Lane South, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Pub-style Irish restaurant.
  • Price: Mains €17-25.
  • Best for: Diners wanting good Irish stew and coddle without ceremony.

5. The Pig’s Ear

One of Dublin’s most-respected modern Irish restaurants. Set above an unprepossessing pub on Nassau Street opposite Trinity College. The menu changes monthly but consistently features rare-breed Irish pork, lamb shank, fish and root vegetables. The smoked eel, dressed crab, and stuffed Magpie pigeon are heritage signatures.

  • Address: 4 Nassau Street, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Modern Irish, fine dining.
  • Price: Mains €28-38; tasting menu €75.
  • Best for: Diners wanting traditional Irish ingredients with contemporary technique.

6. Etto

Sister restaurant to The Pig’s Ear, on Merrion Row. Smaller, less formal, with strong Irish-Mediterranean food. Excellent lunch deals at €25 for two courses. Books 2-3 weeks ahead.

  • Address: 18 Merrion Row, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Modern Irish-Mediterranean.
  • Price: Lunch from €25, dinner from €45.
  • Best for: Diners wanting fashionable Irish in a small-room setting.

7. O’Neill’s of Suffolk Street

Large traditional Dublin pub-restaurant near Trinity College. Famous for one of the best traditional Irish stews in the city; also strong on coddle and beef & Guinness pie. Family-friendly with kids’ menus.

  • Address: 2 Suffolk Street, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Traditional pub-restaurant.
  • Price: Mains €16-24.
  • Best for: Families and first-time visitors wanting reliable traditional dishes.

8. The Bull and Castle

Steakhouse and Irish gastropub at Christchurch. Strong on aged Irish beef from FX Buckley butchers; the bone-in ribeye and rare-breed Sunday roast are standouts. Family-friendly.

  • Address: 5-7 Lord Edward Street, Christchurch, Dublin 8.
  • Style: Irish steakhouse/gastropub.
  • Price: Mains €22-38.
  • Best for: Beef lovers; Sunday roast.

9. Oliver St John Gogarty’s

Famous Temple Bar restaurant-pub on Anglesea Street. The first-floor restaurant serves a strong selection of Irish classics including a full-meal colcannon. Live trad music daily. More tourist-aimed than the Brazen Head but still does the basics well.

  • Address: 58-59 Fleet Street, Temple Bar, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Temple Bar restaurant-pub.
  • Price: Mains €20-30.
  • Best for: Visitors wanting a Temple Bar meal with live music.

10. Trocadero

Old-school Italian-Irish restaurant on St Andrew Street near Trinity College. A Dublin institution since 1956 with classic comfort food in a richly-decorated dining room. Strong steak, fish and Irish pub-restaurant classics. The favoured haunt of Dublin actors and journalists.

  • Address: 4 St Andrew Street, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Old-school Italian-Irish.
  • Price: Mains €22-34.
  • Best for: Returning visitors wanting old-Dublin atmosphere and a pre-theatre dinner.

11. Sheehan’s

Traditional pub-restaurant on Chatham Street, just off Grafton Street. Strong on braised lamb shanks, traditional fish and chips, and beef and Guinness pie. Modestly priced for the location.

  • Address: 17 Chatham Street, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Pub-restaurant.
  • Price: Mains €16-26.
  • Best for: A reliable lunch near Grafton Street.

12. The Cliff Townhouse

Stylish modern Irish restaurant in a Georgian townhouse on St Stephen’s Green. Strong on seafood (Carlingford oysters, Dublin Bay langoustines) and game in season. Reservation required.

  • Address: 22 St Stephen’s Green North, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Modern Irish, refined.
  • Price: Mains €28-42.
  • Best for: Date night, seafood lovers, special occasions.

13. Hatch & Sons

Beneath the Little Museum of Dublin on St Stephen’s Green. Casual cafe-restaurant serving modern Irish takes on traditional sandwiches and comfort food. The Wicklow lamb burger, Carlingford oysters and the Irish-cure ham sandwich are quietly excellent.

  • Address: 15 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Modern Irish cafe.
  • Price: Lunch €14-22.
  • Best for: A relaxed lunch after visiting the Little Museum.

14. Mulligan’s

Untouched-by-tourism pub on Poolbeg Street, just south of Temple Bar. Famous for the perfect pint of Guinness and a small menu of traditional Irish lunch dishes — ham sandwiches, Irish stew, fish and chips on Friday. James Joyce drank here.

  • Address: 8 Poolbeg Street, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Heritage Dublin pub.
  • Price: Lunch €14-22.
  • Best for: Travellers wanting the most-authentic Dublin pub atmosphere and a textbook pint of Guinness.

15. The Long Hall

Victorian-era pub on South Great George’s Street with one of the most-photographed bar interiors in Dublin. Small menu of toasted sandwiches and Irish stew at lunch. The atmosphere is the meal.

  • Address: 51 South Great George’s Street, Dublin 2.
  • Style: Heritage Victorian pub.
  • Price: Sandwiches and stew €10-15.
  • Best for: A characterful lunch in one of the city’s most beautiful pubs.

Where to Eat Each Traditional Dish

Beef and Guinness pie is a Dublin classic
Beef and Guinness pie is a Dublin pub staple.
  • Irish stew: The Brazen Head (textbook), O’Neill’s of Suffolk Street, The Old Mill, Mulligan’s.
  • Dublin coddle: The Old Mill, O’Neill’s, the Brazen Head.
  • Beef & Guinness pie / stew: The Brazen Head, Sheehan’s, The Bull and Castle.
  • Boxty: The Boxty House (only specialist).
  • Colcannon (as main): Oliver St John Gogarty’s.
  • Bacon and cabbage: The Brazen Head (Sunday lunch only), Hatch & Sons.
  • Fish & chips: Beshoff’s (specialist), Leo Burdock (legendary takeaway).
  • Seafood chowder: The Winding Stair, The Cliff Townhouse, Klaw (Temple Bar oyster bar).
  • Soda bread: Bread 41 cafe, served with butter at every Dublin restaurant; buy at Sheridan’s Cheesemongers to take home.
  • Modern Irish degustation: The Pig’s Ear, Etto, The Pigeon House (a 30-min Luas hop south).

Dublin’s Best Fish & Chip Shops

Battered cod with chunky chips and mushy peas
Battered cod and chunky chips at a Dublin chip shop.

While many pub-restaurants do fish and chips, the specialist chip shops are arguably better at the dish. Dublin’s legendary chippers:

  • Leo Burdock (Christchurch and several other locations): The Dublin institution. Working as a chipper since 1913. Takeaway only.
  • Beshoff Bros (multiple locations including Howth and the city centre): Specialist seafood chipper with strong sit-down service.
  • The Big Red Bus (various locations): Quality fish and chips from a converted Routemaster bus.
  • The Codfather (Temple Bar): Convenient if you’re already in the area.
  • Tiger Bay (Howth Harbour): 25-minute DART ride for fresh-caught fish at the harbour.

Soda Bread & Brown Bread

Soda bread is the staple of every Irish meal
Brown soda bread is the staple of every Irish meal.

Brown soda bread — raised with bicarbonate of soda rather than yeast — arrives at the table at almost every traditional Irish meal. The best Dublin loaves:

  • Bread 41 (Pearse Street): Dublin’s most-acclaimed artisan bakery. The brown soda bread is famous.
  • The Winding Stair: Served with every meal; sold by the loaf to take home.
  • Brother Hubbard South: Excellent breakfast soda bread with their full Irish breakfast.
  • Sheridan’s Cheesemongers: Sells artisan soda bread to take home; perfect with Irish cheese.
  • The Fumbally: Their cafe sells brown bread by the loaf alongside the brunch menu.

Best Traditional Irish Restaurants by Type

Colcannon is mashed potato with kale or cabbage and butter
Colcannon — mashed potato with kale and butter — appears as a side at most traditional restaurants.

For first-time visitors

The Brazen Head, O’Neill’s of Suffolk Street, The Boxty House. All deliver textbook versions of the classics in atmospheric Dublin settings.

For modern Irish fine dining

The Pig’s Ear, Etto, The Winding Stair, The Cliff Townhouse. Traditional dishes elevated with contemporary technique and Irish-sourced ingredients.

For an authentic Dublin pub feel

Mulligan’s, The Long Hall, The Brazen Head. The most-authentic pub-restaurant atmosphere with simple traditional food.

For families

O’Neill’s of Suffolk Street, The Bull and Castle, The Boxty House. All welcome children and have kid-friendly menu options.

For Sunday roast

The Bull and Castle, The Brazen Head. Traditional Irish roast with all the trimmings; book ahead.

For lunch on a budget

Sheehan’s, Mulligan’s, Hatch & Sons. All offer lunch under €15 in central Dublin locations.

Practical Tips for Eating Traditional Irish Food in Dublin

  • Book ahead for dinner: The Pig’s Ear, Etto, Winding Stair, Cliff Townhouse all book out 1-3 weeks ahead.
  • Try the lunch deals: Most premium Irish restaurants offer prix-fixe lunch at 40-50% less than dinner.
  • Tipping: 10-12.5% in restaurants if a service charge isn’t already added; round up in pubs.
  • Don’t order chicken curry: Despite being on most pub menus, it’s not Irish food. Order the stew, coddle or bacon and cabbage instead.
  • Bread is usually free: Brown soda bread or wheaten bread arrives unprompted at most traditional restaurants. Eat it with butter.
  • Try the Guinness on tap: It’s served everywhere, but the pour quality varies. The Brazen Head and Mulligan’s pour the best pints of any pub on this list.
  • Pair with Irish whiskey: Most traditional restaurants have strong whiskey lists; ask the waitstaff for recommendations.
  • Vegetarians: The Brazen Head’s Shepherdless Pie is famous; Etto has strong vegetable options; The Boxty House offers veggie boxty fillings.
  • Allergies: All Dublin restaurants flag allergens on menus. Soda bread and stews typically contain wheat; coddle contains pork.
  • 2026 Tourist Tax: Doesn’t apply to restaurant bills, only accommodation.

Seasonal Irish Food in Dublin

Irish food traditions are highly seasonal. Dublin’s best traditional restaurants change their menus by the month, and certain dishes are essentially impossible to find outside their season. The Dublin seasonal calendar:

Spring (March-May)

New Irish lamb arrives from late March. Sea trout and salmon start running. Wild garlic, sorrel, nettles and ramps appear at the Fumbally Farmer’s Market. Easter Sunday lunch features roast lamb. The St Patrick’s Day weekend (17 March) brings traditional dishes onto every Dublin menu — though restaurants often add tourist-aimed novelty versions.

Summer (June-August)

Strawberries from Wexford, new potatoes from Wicklow, smoked salmon from Lough Neagh. Asparagus from the Boyne Valley. Sea trout and turbot peak. Crab from Dingle and Donegal. Outdoor eating peaks; many restaurants extend Sunday lunch service onto outdoor terraces.

Autumn (September-November)

Game season begins — pheasant, partridge, woodcock, hare and venison appear on the best Irish menus. Mussels and oysters peak (the Galway Oyster Festival is late September). Apples and pears from Tipperary orchards. Smoked eel comes back onto seafood menus. The Pig’s Ear and Etto are particularly strong in autumn.

Winter (December-February)

Hearty season — Irish stew, beef and Guinness pies, slow-cooked lamb shanks and game. Christmas dinner at top hotels and restaurants is its own annual tradition; book 2-3 months ahead. Winter mussels and clams. New Year’s Day in Dublin has limited restaurant service.

Dublin Food Markets for Traditional Ingredients

If you’re self-catering or want to take Irish food back home as souvenirs, Dublin’s best markets for traditional Irish food:

  • The Temple Bar Food Market (Meeting House Square, Saturdays): Artisan Irish cheese, bread, prepared food. The single best market for visitors to taste-test Irish food.
  • The Fumbally Farmer’s Market (Liberties, Saturday mornings): Smaller, more local. Sheridan’s Cheesemongers, Toonsbridge Buffalo Mozzarella, wild herbs.
  • Honest 2 Goodness Market (Glasnevin, Saturdays): The Dubliners’ food market — cheese, charcuterie, baked goods, prepared meals.
  • Dublin Flea Market (Newmarket Square, last Sunday): Smaller food section but excellent for artisan jams, preserves and chocolate.
  • Sheridan’s Cheesemongers (South Anne Street): Open daily; the best Irish cheese selection in the country (Cashel Blue, Coolea, Durrus, St Tola).
  • The Butcher’s Block (Smithfield): Daily butcher with rare-breed Irish meat and traditional cured bacon.
  • The Real Olive Co (multiple weekly markets): Olive oils and Mediterranean ingredients to pair with Irish cheese.
  • Murphy’s Ice Cream (Wicklow Street): Artisan Irish ice cream — the Cookies, Sea Salt, and Roasted Tea flavours are exceptional.

Bringing Traditional Irish Food Home

What you can buy in Dublin and take home as edible souvenirs:

  • Artisan Irish cheese: Sheridan’s Cheesemongers will vacuum-seal cheese for travel. Cashel Blue, Coolea, Durrus and St Tola travel well.
  • Smoked salmon: Sold at Dublin Airport in vacuum-sealed packs. Burren Smokehouse, Connemara Smokehouse and Frank Hederman are quality brands.
  • Irish whiskey: Available at Dublin Airport or distillery shops. Roe & Co, Teeling, Bushmills, Redbreast and Powers are accessible Dublin-area picks.
  • Soda bread mix: Available at the Temple Bar Food Market and SuperValu. Just add buttermilk at home.
  • Tayto crisps: The Irish institution; available at every supermarket. Original Cheese & Onion are the classic.
  • Kerrygold butter: Available worldwide but the Irish supermarket selection is wider.
  • Barry’s Tea or Lyons Tea: The two great Irish breakfast tea brands. Available at every supermarket.
  • Bunratty Meade and other Irish honey wines: Hadji Bey’s and Mitchell’s of Dublin wine merchants both stock these well.

Customs note: most countries allow vacuum-sealed cheese, smoked fish and unopened spirits in checked baggage. Check your destination’s rules before travelling.

Traditional Irish Food Dublin: FAQ

What is the most famous Irish dish?

Irish stew — slow-cooked lamb or mutton with potatoes, onions, parsley and carrots — is the national dish. The Brazen Head, O’Neill’s of Suffolk Street and Mulligan’s all serve textbook versions.

Where do locals eat traditional Irish food in Dublin?

Mulligan’s, The Long Hall, The Pig’s Ear (for elevated traditional), Etto, the Winding Stair, the Cliff Townhouse and Bread 41 cafe. Most Dubliners avoid Temple Bar restaurants unless meeting tourist visitors.

What is Dublin Coddle?

Dublin coddle is a slow-cooked stew of sausages, rashers (bacon), potatoes, onions and parsley in stock. It dates back to the early 1700s and is the only major dish unique to Dublin. The Old Mill, O’Neill’s and the Brazen Head all serve good versions.

Are there vegetarian or vegan options for traditional Irish food?

Yes — the Brazen Head’s Shepherdless Pie (vegan) is famous and converts many meat-eaters. Most modern Irish restaurants now offer strong vegetarian options including colcannon, boxty with vegetable filling, mushroom and lentil stew, and brown bread with Irish cheese.

How much does traditional Irish food cost in Dublin?

Pub-style traditional dishes run €16-26 for mains. Modern Irish restaurants run €25-40 for mains; tasting menus €65-90. Pub lunches under €15 are widely available.

Is Temple Bar good for traditional Irish food?

Mostly tourist-trap-priced versions of standard Irish dishes. Exceptions: The Boxty House (specialist), Oliver St John Gogarty’s (decent versions of the classics), and The Old Mill. For genuine versions, walk 5-10 minutes south or west.

What time do Dublin restaurants serve dinner?

Most pub-restaurants serve continuously from 12:00 to 21:00. Fine-dining restaurants typically serve dinner 17:30-22:00 with the last seating around 21:00. Sunday roast service finishes earlier, typically 14:00-16:00.

Plan the Rest of Your Dublin Food Trip

Traditional Irish food is one element of Dublin’s rapidly-evolving food scene. Once you’ve tried the classics, pair with our Dublin restaurants & food pillar, our coming guides on best brunch spots, cheap eats, Michelin restaurants and seafood. For Dublin’s pub culture beyond the food, see our Dublin nightlife & pubs pillar.


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