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    Restaurant in Bristol, United Kingdom

    Chef's Table

    480Pearl Points

    Open-kitchen fine dining, book two weeks out.

    Chef's Table, Restaurant in Bristol

    About Chef's Table

    Chef's Table in Bristol's Harbourside holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and a 4.7-star Google rating across 378 reviews, placing it firmly in the city's serious fine-dining tier at £££. The format centres on a sequence of hot and cold dishes with expert sommelier pairing and a notable cheese trolley. Book two to three weeks ahead for weekends; midweek slots are more accessible.

    A 4.7-star rating from 378 Google reviews is a strong signal for a Bristol fine-dining room — and Chef's Table earns it

    Chef's Table, at 1a Avon Crescent in Bristol's Harbourside, holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and sits in the £££ price bracket: a meaningful tier that positions it above the city's casual dining options but below the four-symbol commitment of Bulrush. If you've eaten here once and are deciding whether to return, the short answer is yes — particularly if you want to push further into the wine pairing format and experience what the sommelier does with the cheese trolley course.

    The Room and the Experience

    The awards description confirms an open kitchen at the centre of the dining room, tables angled toward the skyline, and a mood described as calm and sophisticated. Visually, this is a composed, considered space , not a room designed for Instagram spontaneity, but one built for the kind of meal where you stay longer than planned. An open kitchen in a fine-dining setting at this price point is a deliberate choice: it creates proximity to the cooking without the performance-theatre excess of some tasting-menu formats. For a returning diner, the room itself is unlikely to surprise you on a second visit, but the cooking sequence , described as a progression of hot and cold dishes , and the sommelier's curation are where the experience deepens.

    The Wine Program: Why It Matters Here

    The sommelier pairing at Chef's Table is the most important practical decision you'll make before you sit down. The Michelin Plate listing and the awards text both point to a program built around two distinct axes: fine imports and artisan produce from a local farm. That combination , international wine depth alongside hyper-local sourcing , is less common in Bristol's fine-dining tier than it might sound. For a returning guest, this is the place to commit to the full pairing rather than ordering by the glass. The cheese trolley, which rounds off the meal according to the venue's own framing, is a specific moment where the sommelier's choices become most visible. A well-matched cheese course pairing in a room at this price point is one of the better-value pleasures in formal dining, and it's worth holding back on the last pour of any bottle to arrive at it fresh.

    For context, the wine-pairing approach here sits in a different register from what you'd find at Wilsons, which operates at a comparable £££ price range with a tighter, more producer-focused natural wine list. Chef's Table appears to cast wider across styles. If wine depth is the primary driver for your booking, the sommelier-led pairing format here is likely the stronger proposition for a conventional fine-dining occasion. Nationally, the pairing model is consistent with what venues like Hide and Fox in Saltwood deploy at a similar tier, though without the vertical cellar depth of operations like Waterside Inn in Bray or L'Enclume in Cartmel.

    Booking and Logistics

    Chef's Table carries moderate booking difficulty, which at the Michelin Plate level in a city like Bristol means planning two to three weeks ahead is sensible for a weekend dinner. Midweek slots , Tuesday through Thursday , typically carry less pressure, and for solo diners or couples this is worth factoring in. The address at 1a Avon Crescent puts the restaurant in the Harbourside area, accessible from Bristol city centre on foot or by taxi from Bristol Temple Meads in under fifteen minutes. No phone number is listed in the current record, so the primary booking route is likely via the restaurant's own website or a third-party reservation platform , checking both gives you the widest availability window.

    For groups, the £££ price range sets expectations clearly: this is a pre-commitment conversation with your party before you arrive, not a flexible-spend evening. Larger groups should contact the restaurant directly to confirm whether private dining or specific configuration is available, as no seat count is currently published.

    How Chef's Table Sits in the Modern British Category

    Bristol's Modern British tier is more competitive than many food cities its size. Bulrush at ££££ is the city's most decorated address in this style; Wilsons and Chef's Table share the £££ bracket but approach the format differently. BOX-E at £€ offers the category's accessible entry point for diners not ready to commit at this level. Chef's Table's Michelin Plate, the sommelier-led pairing, and the cheese trolley give it a specific identity within this group: it's the room to book when you want formal service structure and wine depth without scaling to the leading of the price tier. For a broader view of where it fits in the city's dining options, our full Bristol restaurants guide covers the complete picture across cuisines and price points.

    Further afield, the Modern British format at this tier connects to a national conversation that includes CORE by Clare Smyth in London, Moor Hall in Aughton, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford , all operating at higher price points and award levels, but useful as reference points for what the format looks like at full extension. Chef's Table sits below that tier in investment terms, which is part of its case for the returning Bristol diner who wants a formal-format meal without the full-day financial and logistical commitment of a destination restaurant. You can also explore Bristol bars, Bristol hotels, and Bristol experiences to build a fuller evening or weekend around the meal.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Chef's Table good for solo dining?

    The open kitchen is the focal point of the room, which makes solo dining a reasonable option — you have something to watch and a natural conversation anchor with front-of-house. At £££, the sommelier pairing programme also gives a solo diner structured progression through the meal. That said, the venue data does not confirm a counter or bar seat specifically for solo diners, so check the venue's official channels before booking to confirm seating arrangements.

    What should a first-timer know about Chef's Table?

    The Michelin Plate (2025) signals technical precision rather than casual grazing, so arrive knowing this is a sequenced, course-driven experience with an open kitchen at the centre. The sommelier pairing is a meaningful part of the format and worth taking seriously at this price point. First-timers comparing options in Bristol should know that Bulrush at ££££ is the more decorated address in this style, but Chef's Table at £££ offers a credible Michelin-recognised alternative at a lower spend.

    How far ahead should I book Chef's Table?

    Two to three weeks ahead is the practical minimum for a Michelin Plate restaurant at this level in Bristol. Weekend slots and special-occasion dates will go faster. If your date is firm, book as soon as it opens rather than testing the two-week window.

    Can I eat at the bar at Chef's Table?

    The venue record does not document a bar or counter seating option. The room is described around the open kitchen and angled tables rather than a bar format, so assume a full table booking is required. Contact the restaurant to confirm before making plans around walk-in or bar dining.

    Can Chef's Table accommodate groups?

    The venue data does not confirm private dining or a maximum group size, so larger parties should check the venue's official channels. At £££ with a sommelier-led format and an open kitchen setup, this reads as a venue better suited to groups of four to six than to large celebrations. For a private-room format in Bristol, check availability at Bulrush or other Harbourside addresses before assuming Chef's Table can accommodate your party size.

    Location

    1a Avon Cres, Bristol BS1 6XQ, United Kingdom

    Bristol, United Kingdom

    Compare Chef's Table

    Booking Options Near Chef's Table
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Chef's TableModern British£££Moderate
    BulrushModern British££££Unknown
    BOX-EModern British££Unknown
    Little Hollows PastaItalian££Unknown
    WilsonsModern British£££Unknown
    Blaise InnTraditional Cuisine££Unknown

    A quick look at how Chef's Table measures up.

    Also Consider

    Within Bristol's Modern British bracket, Chef's Table and Wilsons occupy the same £££ price tier but serve different priorities. Wilsons is the tighter, more producer-driven room, strong on natural wine and a minimal-intervention cooking philosophy. Chef's Table leans toward formal service structure, sommelier-led pairings across a wider range of styles, and the set-piece of a cheese trolley to close. If wine pairing depth and a composed formal-dining experience are your reasons for booking, Chef's Table is the stronger choice at this price. If you want a more personal, idiosyncratic room with a focused wine list, Wilsons edges it.

    For diners weighing whether to step up to Bulrush at ££££, the decision comes down to how much the extra spend matters on the night. Bulrush is Bristol's most decorated Modern British address and justifies the higher price for a special occasion. Chef's Table at £££ is the more practical choice for a monthly or quarterly treat where you want the formal format without the full Bulrush commitment. At the other end of the scale, BOX-E at £€ is the accessible entry point into Bristol's Modern British quality tier, worth knowing if the party isn't aligned on spending at the £££ level, or if you want a warm-up meal before committing to Chef's Table on a return visit.

    If your group includes people less interested in a multi-course tasting format, 1 York Place offers a European format with more flexibility, and COR brings a different register entirely. Chef's Table is the right booking specifically when you want the full fine-dining sequence, courses, wine pairing, cheese, in a calm room at a price point that doesn't require the occasion to be a once-a-year event.

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