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    Restaurant in Beaumont, United Kingdom

    Mark Jordan at the Beach

    415Pearl Points

    Michelin-recognised seafood, terrace views, book ahead.

    Mark Jordan at the Beach, Restaurant in Beaumont

    About Mark Jordan at the Beach

    Mark Jordan at the Beach is a Michelin Plate-recognised brasserie on Jersey's south coast, rated 4.7 from 440 reviews, serving locally caught seafood and hearty British dishes with bay views from a glassed terrace. At £££, it is the right booking for a weekend lunch on the island — strong produce, attentive service, and a setting that earns its destination status.

    Verdict

    Mark Jordan at the Beach earns its Michelin Plate recognition and its 4.7-star Google rating (440 reviews) on the back of a direct proposition: quality seafood and hearty meat dishes served in a setting that makes the most of Jersey's south coast. If you are visiting Jersey and want a brasserie-style lunch with a genuine sea view, bay-caught produce on the plate, and service that actually looks after you, this is the right booking. It is not a destination for tightly composed tasting menus or a minimalist fine-dining experience — think accomplished Modern British cooking at £££ rather than the rarefied territory of L'Enclume in Cartmel or Moor Hall in Aughton. For what it is — a polished, generous seaside brasserie, it delivers.

    The Setting

    The restaurant sits almost out of sight from the coast road east of St Aubin, which means most people arrive with intent rather than on impulse. That positioning shapes the experience: the room feels like a destination rather than a passing stop. Inside, heavy wood tables, modern seashore paintings, and animal ornaments give the dining room a considered but unfussy character. The glassed terrace, which faces directly onto the beach and St Aubin's Bay, is where you want to sit when the weather cooperates. On a clear Jersey afternoon, the view across the bay is the leading thing the room offers, salt flats, water, and sky doing more work than the interiors alone could manage. The small lounge and bar provide a sensible waiting area for tables or a pre-meal drink, and a paved external terrace adds another option when the wind stays low.

    The split-level layout means different parties get slightly different experiences depending on where they are seated. If you are visiting for a weekend lunch and want the full visual payoff, it is worth requesting the glassed terrace at the time of booking. Views like that are the reason to come here rather than to a good restaurant further inland, and you should not leave that to chance.

    The Food

    Menu is a brasserie card with genuine range. Locally caught seafood anchors it, Jersey skate wing is a regular feature, but the kitchen is equally committed to meat. A 30-hour braised short rib with celeriac purée and truffle oil represents the kind of slow-cooked confidence that balances the lighter seafood side of the menu. Verified visitor accounts name a duck and foie gras pressing with home-cured duck ham, fresh figs, caramelised nuts and fig chutney as a strong opener, alongside an escabèche of Jersey mackerel with Jersey Royals and chive salad that reads as a smarter, more restrained choice if you want the island's produce in a single dish. Cod with mussels in a Thai curry broth with crushed new potatoes shows that the kitchen is not locked into classical framing when something else works better.

    Desserts are where the kitchen swings for spectacle. A crispy thin apple tart with maple syrup and Jersey black-butter ice cream, and a white chocolate and pistachio cheesecake with griottines, are both well-documented by visitors and clearly intended as a finish worth committing to. If you are watching portions, the dessert menu is not where to practise restraint. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms a consistent kitchen rather than a one-season outlier.

    For diners arriving with a brunch or lighter weekend lunch frame in mind, the brasserie format is genuinely accommodating. The menu's breadth, starters that work as standalone plates, fish dishes at varying weights, and the option to eat less formally at the bar, means you are not committed to a full three-course arc unless you want to be. Weekend lunch is the session that most naturally suits the setting: the light over the bay reads differently at midday than it does in the evening, and the terrace feels purpose-built for a long Saturday or Sunday meal that runs into the afternoon.

    The Wine

    The wine list has drawn qualified assessments, competent but not a reason to visit in its own right. The house Champagne, Vazart-Coquart Blanc de Blancs Grand Cru, is a genuine bright spot and a reasonable default if you want something reliable without working through the full list. If wine is a priority for your meal, the list warrants a closer look before you arrive rather than an assumption that it will match the food's ambition. For comparison, The Waterside Inn in Bray and Gidleigh Park in Chagford both carry significantly deeper cellar programmes if wine is central to the occasion.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Moderate booking difficulty, plan at least 2 weeks ahead for weekend lunch, particularly for terrace seating in summer. Budget: £££ per head; a full lunch with wine will sit in the mid-to-upper range for Jersey but remains accessible relative to comparable Michelin-recognised venues on the UK mainland. Dress: Smart casual is appropriate; no formal dress code is documented. Location: La Plage, La Route de la Haule, Jersey JE3 7YD, east of St Aubin on the south coast; arriving by car is the practical option. Getting there: St Aubin is the nearest town; the restaurant is set slightly back from the main coast road and is easy to miss if you are not looking for it. For a broader view of where this fits on the island, see our full Beaumont restaurants guide, our Beaumont hotels guide, and our Beaumont bars guide.

    Ideal time to visit

    Weekend lunch in summer or early autumn is the optimal session. The glassed terrace performs leading when the bay light is strong, and Jersey's south coast is at its most useful between May and October when the wind drops enough to make the outdoor terrace a genuine option rather than an aspirational one. Weekday lunch is quieter and easier to book at short notice; weekend dinner requires more planning and loses some of the visual advantage that makes the daytime experience worth the trip. If you are combining the meal with broader Jersey exploration, pairing it with a visit to St Aubin's harbour makes geographic sense. Also worth checking: our Beaumont experiences guide and our Beaumont wineries guide for a fuller picture of what the area offers.

    Pearl Picks Nearby

    • Le Prieuré Saint-Géry, an alternative Beaumont option worth considering for a different register
    • hide and fox in Saltwood, for a comparable coastal Modern British approach on the UK mainland
    • Hand and Flowers in Marlow, if hearty, technically confident British cooking is the draw and you want a mainland alternative
    • Midsummer House in Cambridge, for a step up in formality and ambition within the Modern British category
    • Opheem in Birmingham, if you want Michelin-recognised cooking with a more distinctive kitchen identity
    • Ynyshir Hall in Machynlleth, for food-first travellers who want a destination experience with no concessions to the casual

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Mark Jordan at the Beach accommodate groups?

    The restaurant's split layout — lounge and bar, paved terrace, and main dining room — gives it more flexibility than a single-room operation, but specific group booking policies aren't documented. check the venue's official channels to confirm capacity and seating arrangements for parties of six or more. For terrace seating, book well ahead regardless of group size, particularly in summer.

    Does Mark Jordan at the Beach handle dietary restrictions?

    The brasserie menu has genuine range, covering locally caught seafood, hearty meat dishes, and several lighter options, which gives the kitchen reasonable material to work with for common dietary needs. Specific allergy protocols aren't confirmed in available data, so flag requirements at the time of booking rather than on arrival. The £££ price point makes it worth a direct conversation before you commit.

    What should I order at Mark Jordan at the Beach?

    Locally caught Jersey seafood is the strongest argument for coming here specifically — Jersey skate wing and cod with mussels in a Thai curry broth are documented highlights. The duck and foie gras pressing and Jersey mackerel escabèche with Jersey Royals have drawn strong reader responses as starters. Desserts are a genuine strength: the crispy thin apple tart with Jersey black-butter ice cream has received consistent praise and is worth saving room for.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Mark Jordan at the Beach?

    The format here is brasserie-style à la carte, not a tasting menu, so that decision doesn't apply. The menu offers plenty of choice across seafood and meat, which suits diners who prefer to pick rather than commit to a set progression. At £££ per head, the à la carte route gives you more control over spend while still accessing the kitchen's best output.

    What are alternatives to Mark Jordan at the Beach in Beaumont?

    Within Jersey, the comparison set is thin at the Michelin Plate level — this is one of the island's most credentialled restaurants for modern British cooking with local produce. If you're weighing a trip to Jersey specifically for this meal, it holds up. If you're already in the UK mainland, you'll find more Michelin-recognised options in London or the south-west, but none will give you Jersey skate on the island's south coast.

    Is Mark Jordan at the Beach worth the price?

    At £££, it earns its keep if locally sourced Jersey seafood and a bay-view terrace setting are what you're after. The Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 confirms consistent kitchen quality, and visitor feedback flags excellent ingredients and presentation. The wine list is the one weak point — competent rather than compelling — so factor that in if wine is central to your occasion.

    Is Mark Jordan at the Beach good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. The glassed terrace with bay views, attentive staff, and a kitchen that produces showpiece desserts make it a solid choice for a birthday or anniversary lunch. Weekend lunch in summer is the session that plays to all the venue's strengths. It's a destination restaurant rather than a casual drop-in, and the Michelin Plate recognition gives it the credibility to anchor a special occasion.

    Location

    La Plage, La Route de la Haule, Jersey JE3 7YD, Jersey

    Beaumont, United Kingdom

    Compare Mark Jordan at the Beach

    Mark Jordan at the Beach vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Mark Jordan at the BeachModern British£££Moderate
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    CORE by Clare SmythModern British££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern Cuisine££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional British££££Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in Beaumont for this tier.

    Also Consider

    Mark Jordan at the Beach sits in a different tier and category from the comparison set here. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, CORE by Clare Smyth, The Ledbury, Sketch's Lecture Room and Library, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal are all London £££££-tier destinations operating at the highest level of formal fine dining, with multi-Michelin-star credentials or equivalent prestige. Mark Jordan at the Beach is a £££ Michelin Plate brasserie in Jersey. Comparing them directly on quality would be a category error, but comparing them on purpose and value is useful.

    If you are in Jersey and want the best the island offers in a seaside brasserie register, Mark Jordan at the Beach is the obvious choice. It is not in competition with CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury for a special occasion where the cooking itself is the event. It is in competition with other good regional British restaurants where setting, produce sourcing, and accessible service matter as much as technical ambition. On those terms, it holds up well. The Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 confirms the kitchen is consistent; the 4.7 Google rating across 440 reviews confirms the experience lands for a wide range of diners.

    For diners who are weighing a trip to Jersey against a London fine dining experience, the calculus is straightforward: if you want a marquee tasting menu or the deepest wine programme possible, the London £££££ options in this comparison set are the right answer. If you want genuinely sourced local seafood, a real sea view, and a meal that feels proportionate to a relaxed travel day rather than a formal occasion, Mark Jordan at the Beach justifies the journey on its own terms, and at a meaningfully lower price point than any of the comparison venues.

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