Restaurant in Bristol, United Kingdom
Bulrush
820Pearl PointsBristol's best-value Michelin star. Book ahead.

About Bulrush
Bulrush holds a Michelin star (2024) and sits inside a former greengrocer's with tired lino and zero pretension. Chef-owner George Livesey runs a six-to-nine course tasting menu built on foraged and organic ingredients with Scandi and Japanese technique. The wine flight is worth ordering. Book four to six weeks ahead minimum — this is one of Bristol's hardest reservations.
Don't Judge Bulrush by Its Sign
The muted signage and slightly worn interior on Cotham Road South will make you second-guess the address. Don't. Bulrush holds a Michelin star (2024), a Google rating of 4.7 across 424 reviews, and a recommendation from Opinionated About Dining's Leading New Restaurants in Europe list (2023). Chef-owner George Livesey, a veteran of St John and Club Gascon, has built one of the most serious tasting-menu destinations in the South West inside what used to be a greengrocer's. The room is long and thin, the walls are cream, and the lino is tired. None of that matters once the food arrives.
If you are planning a special occasion in Bristol and want a meal that competes with what you would get at L'Enclume in Cartmel or Moor Hall in Aughton at a lower ambient pressure, Bulrush is the answer. If you want a casual dinner with no tasting-menu commitment, go elsewhere — this is a dedicated format and the kitchen is built around it.
What You Are Actually Booking
Bulrush runs tasting menus of six to nine courses, with seatings limited to a tight last-entry window: 6 PM to 7:30 PM Tuesday through Thursday, and a lunch sitting (noon to 1:30 PM) added Friday and Saturday alongside the evening service. Sunday and Monday are closed. The format is fixed. You come for the full experience or you don't come at all, which is exactly the right call for a kitchen operating at this level.
Livesey's cooking draws on Modern British foundations with clear Scandinavian and Japanese influences. Preserving, pickling, and fermentation run through the menu as techniques rather than trends — they are structural to how the kitchen builds flavour. Seasonal and foraged ingredients are the starting point, and the tasting menu is recalibrated around what is actually available, not what looks good on a printed card. Dishes cited in awards coverage include a chawanmushi infused with Jerusalem artichoke, a crab tart in crisp brik pastry, a pink-peppercorn macaron filled with duck liver parfait, and a bowl of kuri squash with fermented barley, yuzu, pumpkin-seed foam, and BBQ cabbage sauce. Meat courses, when they appear, tend toward nose-to-tail thinking. Dessert courses are multiple and range from direct to challenging , a pairing of candied shimeji mushrooms, dark Manjari chocolate, and fig-leaf ice cream has drawn specific praise for the precision of its flavour logic.
Downstairs seating puts you directly in view of the open kitchen, which is the right choice if atmosphere matters to you. The warm, knowledgeable service style is frequently cited in reviews and fits the occasion-dining brief without tipping into formality.
The Drinks Program
The wine flight at Bulrush is described in awards coverage as surprisingly good value and astutely chosen , a pairing built to match the complexity of Livesey's cooking rather than simply provide accompaniment. The underlying wine list is shorter and more focused. If you are on the fence between ordering by the bottle and opting for the flight, the flight is the more considered choice for a first visit: the kitchen's flavour combinations are specific enough that self-selecting pairings requires real knowledge of the menu in advance.
Bulrush is not a destination bar and does not claim to be. The drinks program exists in service of the tasting menu, and the wine flight is where the real thought has gone. If a strong standalone cocktail program is what you are after, our full Bristol bars guide will point you to better options for that purpose. For occasion dining where wine pairing is part of the experience, Bulrush handles it well.
Know Before You Go
- Price range: ££££ , this is a full tasting-menu commitment at the leading end of Bristol's restaurant pricing
- Booking difficulty: Hard , book as far ahead as possible; Michelin-starred seatings at this size fill quickly
- Hours: Tuesday to Thursday, evenings only (last entry 7:30 PM); Friday and Saturday, lunch (last entry 1:30 PM) and dinner (last entry 7:30 PM); closed Sunday and Monday
- Address: 21 Cotham Rd S, Bristol BS6 5TZ
- Format: Tasting menu only, six to nine courses , no à la carte option
- Seating tip: Request downstairs for kitchen views; the open-kitchen counter is where the atmosphere concentrates
- Wine: The flight is recommended over self-selection for first-time visitors
- Dietary needs: Contact the restaurant directly ahead of booking , no booking method is listed in our database, so check the venue's own channels
How Bulrush Sits in the Wider Context
Among UK Michelin-starred Modern British restaurants, Bulrush occupies a distinct position: serious cooking in an explicitly unserious room, at a price point that undercuts London comparables significantly. Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in London and Waterside Inn in Bray offer more polish and formality at considerably higher cost. CORE by Clare Smyth in London and hide and fox in Saltwood are useful comparisons for similar tasting-menu ambition in different settings. Within Bristol, Wilsons is the closest peer at £££ , good, and easier to book, but operating at a lower level of technical ambition. Chef's Table and COR round out Bristol's upper end and are worth considering if Bulrush is fully booked. For broader planning, see our full Bristol restaurants guide, our Bristol hotels guide, and our Bristol experiences guide.
The Verdict
Bulrush is the answer to the question: where do I take someone for a genuinely memorable meal in Bristol without flying to London? The Michelin star is deserved, the wine flight is worth ordering, and the format is non-negotiable , if you are not in the mood for a tasting menu, book somewhere else. For occasion dining in the South West, it is one of the hardest tables to get for good reason. Book at least four to six weeks out, take the flight, and sit downstairs.
Also Worth Considering
- 1 York Place , European, Bristol
- BOX-E , Modern British, Bristol (££)
- Gidleigh Park in Chagford , for occasion dining in the South West
- Hand and Flowers in Marlow , relaxed-room, serious-kitchen comparison
- Our Bristol wineries guide , if the drinks program has you curious about the region
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Bulrush in Bristol?
Wilsons is the closest comparison — a similarly ingredient-led, low-key room with serious cooking and a committed natural wine list. Root is better if you want a vegetable-forward à la carte rather than a set tasting menu. BOX-E suits couples after an intimate neighbourhood meal at a lower price point, while Little Hollows Pasta is the right call if someone in your group isn't in the mood for multi-course commitment.
How far ahead should I book Bulrush?
Book at least four to six weeks out, especially for Friday or Saturday sittings. Last-entry is 7:30 PM Tuesday through Saturday, which creates a narrow window and fills quickly. The Tuesday–Thursday slots are marginally easier to secure if your dates are flexible.
What should I wear to Bulrush?
The room is described in Michelin coverage as modest — cream walls, worn lino, an open kitchen — and the atmosphere is explicitly relaxed. Smart-casual fits the tone, but there is no evidence of a dress code. Overdressing would feel out of place given the deliberately unstuffy environment.
Is Bulrush worth the price?
At ££££ for a tasting menu, Bulrush sits at the top of Bristol's price range, but the Michelin star (2024) and Opinionated About Dining recognition confirm the cooking backs it up. The wine flight is flagged in awards coverage as surprisingly good value relative to the food's complexity. For a set-menu format in a non-London city, the price-to-quality ratio is genuinely strong.
Is lunch or dinner better at Bulrush?
Lunch is only available Friday and Saturday, making it the harder slot to plan around but a useful option if you want the full experience at a potentially lighter pace. Dinner runs Tuesday through Saturday with the same 6–7:30 PM last-entry window. If flexibility is your priority, a Tuesday or Wednesday dinner sitting will be easiest to book.
Does Bulrush handle dietary restrictions?
The database does not document specific dietary restriction policies. Given the tasting-menu-only format and a kitchen built around seasonal, foraged, and organic ingredients, contacting the restaurant directly before booking is the practical step — tasting menus generally require advance notice for any meaningful substitutions.
Is Bulrush good for a special occasion?
Yes, with a caveat on setting expectations: the room is deliberately modest and the vibe is relaxed rather than formal. If the person you're taking expects a grand dining room, they may be surprised. If they care about the cooking — George Livesey trained at St John and Club Gascon, and the Michelin star speaks for itself — Bulrush delivers a genuinely memorable meal.
Location
21 Cotham Rd S, Bristol BS6 5TZ, United Kingdom
Bristol, United Kingdom
Compare Bulrush
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bulrush | Modern British | Hard | |
| BOX-E | Modern British | Unknown | |
| Little Hollows Pasta | Italian | Unknown | |
| Wilsons | Modern British | Unknown | |
| Blaise Inn | Traditional Cuisine | Unknown | |
| Root | Modern Cuisine | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- BOX-E, Modern British, ££
- Little Hollows Pasta, Italian, ££
- Wilsons, Modern British, £££
- Blaise Inn, Traditional Cuisine, ££
- Root, Modern Cuisine, ££
Bulrush is Bristol's most technically ambitious tasting-menu restaurant, and the Michelin star (2024) is the clearest signal of where it sits relative to peers. The next closest in terms of cooking ambition is Wilsons (£££), which offers a similar commitment to seasonal sourcing and a more relaxed booking window. Wilsons is a strong choice if Bulrush is full or if you want a slightly shorter, less formal experience. The quality gap between the two is real, but Wilsons is not a consolation prize.
If the ££££ price point is the sticking point, BOX-E (££) delivers serious Modern British cooking at a fraction of the cost and is significantly easier to book. COR sits in Bristol's upper tier and is worth checking availability alongside Bulrush for occasion dining. For something outside the Modern British lane, Little Hollows Pasta (££) is a reliable Italian option at the accessible end, and Root (££) brings genuine creativity to a lower price point for vegetable-forward modern cooking.
The decision framework is straightforward: if this is a significant occasion and budget is not the primary constraint, Bulrush is the correct booking. If you want quality without the tasting-menu format or the full ££££ commitment, Wilsons is the closest alternative. If you are after something easy to book at short notice, BOX-E or Root will serve you better than waiting for a Bulrush slot.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- 6 PM-7:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-7:30 PM
- Thursday
- 6 PM-7:30 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 6 PM-7:30 PM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 6 PM-7:30 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
Explore Bristol
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