5 Best Restaurants in O'Connell Street and Around, Dublin

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We've compiled the best of the best in O'Connell Street and Around - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen

$$$$ | Dublin North Fodor's Choice

When Michelin-starred chef Mickael Viljanen partnered up with this venerable Dublin dining institution, great things were expected. We weren't disappointed. This wonderful, culture-vulture favorite gets its name from its location, downstairs in the vaulted, stone-wall basement of the Dublin Writers Museum; the natural stone-and-wood setting makes it cozily cavelike. The daringly modern French, four-course, set dinner menu is the talk of the town and W. B. Yeats himself would have loved the roast pigeon, brussels sprouts, pear, offal tart all with sauce perigourdine. The only downside is the place is so popular you have to book well in advance.

18–19 Parnell Sq., Dublin, Dublin 1, Ireland
01-873–2266
Known For
  • Polite and attentive staff
  • Offers chef's table experience
  • Flawless food and service
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Sat.
Reservations essential

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Grano

$ | Dublin North Fodor's Choice

Owner Roberto Mungo brings his brand of simple Calabrian cooking to this classy little Italian, family-run joint in hip Stoneybatter. There are touches of other Italian regions on the menu, but standouts are Calabrian classics like deep-fried aubergine with tomato, mozzarella, and green pesto and baked mackerel with potatoes, herbs, red pepper cream, and asparagus. The wonderful nibbles menu (each for around €5) is perfect for a quick bite.

Kimchi Hop House

$ | Dublin North Fodor's Choice

A unique Korean-Japanese standout in the slew of cheap and cheerful Chinese eateries on Parnell Street (the closest Dublin comes to a Chinatown), Hop House is a restaurant and pub in one. Part of the old Shakespeare pub has been transformed into one of the friendliest, best-value restaurants in the city. The dining room is bright and busy, with little table buzzers for service and the sounds of music spilling over from the bar next door. Traditional Korean specialties like kimchi are augmented with a large selection of sushi rolls, including the mouthwatering crunch roll with king-prawn tempura, cucumber, crab stick, and teriyaki sauce.

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L. Mulligan Grocer

$$ | Dublin North Fodor's Choice

This gem of an old Dublin boozer—which was once also the local grocer—has been turned into a gastropub and world-beer emporium, without losing too much of its real Dublin feel. It's the perfect spot for a quick pint of ale and a plate of black pudding (with pear relish and red chard) if you don't feel like a full sit-down meal. Microbrewery beers are hard to come by in Ireland, so the wide selection of small-label ales, lagers, and stouts is reason enough to make the trip to the evocatively named village of Stoneybatter on the Northside. The menu doesn't fuss around with too many choices, but the potted crab with sourdough soldiers is a great starter and the rib-eye steak with whiskey butter and twice-cooked chips is the pick of the hearty mains.

18 Stoneybatter, Dublin, Dublin 7, Ireland
01-670–9889
Known For
  • Huge beer selection
  • Popularity with hipsters
  • Welcoming, friendly staff
Restaurant Details
No lunch weekdays

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Musashi Noodles and Sushi Bar

$ | Dublin North Fodor's Choice

This hot sushi bar on suddenly hip Capel Street has given birth to sister restaurants around the city because it finally made the Japanese staple affordable. Japanese owned and run, the restaurant serves fresh and flavorful dishes—all the sushi standards you'd expect but better than anything else in the city. The interior is simple and unfussy: a long, narrow room with dark wood floors and rows of pinewood tables and seats dotted with red cushions. They also do a mean tempura and gyoza for those who don't fancy raw fish. 

15 Capel St., Dublin, Dublin 1, Ireland
01-532–8068
Known For
  • Attentive and friendly staff
  • Excellent ramen
  • BYOB with a very fair €6 corkage charge

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