Restaurant in Bristol, United Kingdom
COR
475Pearl PointsTwo Michelin nods. ££ prices. Book it.

About COR
COR in Bedminster holds back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards and a 4.8 Google rating at just ££ per head — one of the strongest value propositions in Bristol right now. Chef-patron Mark Chapman's Mediterranean-influenced small plates are technically precise without being formal. Book a table or walk in for counter seats; either way, this is where to eat on North Street.
COR, Bristol: The Verdict
A Google rating of 4.8 from 445 reviews is a meaningful signal in a city with no shortage of places to eat. Backed by back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand awards in 2024 and 2025, COR on North Street in Bedminster has earned its reputation quickly since opening in October 2022. At ££, it delivers Michelin-recognised cooking without the financial commitment of a tasting menu. If you want to understand what Bristol's neighbourhood dining scene is capable of right now, this is the right place to start.
First Visit: What to Expect
COR sits at the hip end of North Street in BS3, a stretch that has become one of Bristol's more interesting eating destinations over the past few years. The room is spare and white, with large plate glass windows that let in a lot of natural light. Shelves stacked with cookery books and wine give it a lived-in feel that sits somewhere between a Mediterranean trattoria and a relaxed wine bar. It does not try to impress you with dark moody interiors or designer furniture. The visual effect is clean and open, which sets the right tone for a menu that favours clarity over complexity.
Chef-patron Mark Chapman developed his small-plates approach at Bravas and Gambas, two of Bristol's well-regarded tapas venues. At COR, he has brought that format into a more personal context, adding fine-dining technique to accessible, shareable plates. You'll notice that precision on the plate: a salad of chicory, fennel, blood orange and almond that arrives looking more like an arrangement than a side dish, or a scallop served on the shell in miso and caper butter with crispy deep-fried roe. The cooking is confident without being showy.
The Counter: Why It Changes the Meal
COR offers both table booking and counter seating, and for a first visit, the counter is worth considering seriously. The countertop stools put you directly in or adjacent to the action, which suits the small-plates format well. You can drop in without a reservation and take one of the counter spots if they're available, making it one of the more flexible options on North Street for a solo diner or a pair wanting something spontaneous. For groups of three or more, a table booking will give you more room to spread dishes across the table — but solo diners and couples will find the counter a genuinely good way to eat here, not just a fallback when tables are full.
The walk-in option at the counter also makes COR accessible in a way that some of its Bristol peers are not. Booking is rated Easy, which is accurate for midweek and earlier sittings, but North Street gets busy on weekends, so if you have a specific date in mind, booking ahead is still sensible.
The Menu and Drinks
The menu takes clear Mediterranean influence without committing to any single cuisine. Boquerones and burrata sit alongside scallop and handmade tagliatelle in a cavolo nero sauce with confit egg yolk, ricotta salata and a kick of lima chilli. Slow-cooked pork cheeks come in treviso leaves with pickled fennel. These are not small-plates in the tapas-bar sense of the word — they show range and technique. Save room for pudding: the crème caramel is consistently mentioned, and the orange, nutmeg and pistachio tiramisu or dark chocolate and salted caramel tart with crème fraîche and almonds are the kind of desserts that test whether a table is actually willing to share.
Drinks list is built around sustainability and local producers. Psychopomp gin (distilled in Bristol), Iford cider and Wiper & True craft beer feature alongside a mainly European wine list, nearly half of which is available by the glass. That wine-by-the-glass range matters for a small-plates format , it makes pairing through a meal practical rather than a commitment to a single bottle.
Ratings and Trust Signals
- Michelin Bib Gourmand: 2024 and 2025
- Google rating: 4.8 (445 reviews)
- Price range: ££
How It Compares
For broader context on the Bristol dining scene, see our full Bristol restaurants guide. COR sits in the same ££ tier as Root, which focuses on vegetable-forward modern cuisine, and BOX-E, another small-format neighbourhood spot with a strong following. If you want a step up in formality and are prepared to spend more, Wilsons at £££ and Bulrush at ££££ both offer Modern British cooking with greater tasting-menu depth. COR's Bib Gourmand puts it in the same recognition tier as some of the country's more celebrated neighbourhood restaurants , for a wider view of what that award means across the UK, venues like hide and fox in Saltwood and Hand and Flowers in Marlow illustrate the range of cooking it can cover.
Booking and Getting There
COR is at 81 North St, Bedminster, Bristol BS3 1ES. Booking is direct and rated Easy. You can book a table in advance or walk in for counter seating when available. For weekends or specific dates, booking ahead is advisable given the volume of interest the restaurant has built since 2022. No website or phone number is currently listed in our database , check Google or a booking platform for current reservation details.
If you're planning a wider Bristol trip, see our Bristol hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide and experiences guide.
Quick reference: ££ | Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 & 2025 | Google 4.8 (445) | Easy to book | Counter walk-ins available | 81 North St, Bedminster, Bristol BS3 1ES
Frequently Asked Questions
Can COR accommodate groups?
COR works best for small groups of two to four. The room combines counter stools and table seating at 81 North St, Bedminster, but the format — sharing plates in a compact, lively space — suits intimate gatherings rather than large parties. If you're planning a group of six or more, call ahead to check availability, as the room size and small-plates format may limit your options compared to larger Bristol dining rooms.
Does COR handle dietary restrictions?
The menu leans Mediterranean with a broad spread of small plates — vegetables, fish, meat, and pasta all feature — which gives reasonable flexibility for mixed-diet tables. That said, COR holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for a reason: the kitchen is precise, not a simple substitution operation. Contact them directly before booking if you have serious allergen requirements, as specific dietary accommodation details are not published.
Can I eat at the bar at COR?
Yes, and for a solo visit or a spontaneous meal, the counter is the right call. COR offers both table bookings and walk-in counter seating on stools, putting you close to the kitchen action. It's a practical option if you haven't booked ahead — though given back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmands in 2024 and 2025, counter spots at peak times will go fast. Walk-ins are more reliably available at off-peak hours.
What is COR known for?
COR is primarily known for Modern British in Bristol.
Location
81 North St, Bedminster, Bristol BS3 1ES, United Kingdom
Bristol, United Kingdom
Compare COR
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| COR | The epitome of a neighbourhood restaurant, COR is imbued with an air of contagious positivity that is a perfect fit for this buzzy area of Bristol. Its look is somewhere between a Mediterranean restaurant and a tapas bar, with some counter dining and shelves bursting with cookery books and wine. The dishes take on a similarly Mediterranean influence, as evidenced by the option of boquerones or burrata to kick things off. Save some room for pudding, because the crème caramel is a real treat.; At the hip end of North Street, this cool but relaxed small-plates diner has created something of a tidal wave of enthusiasm since opening in October 2022. It feels like a breath of fresh air, with a spare, white interior and large plate glass windows that flood the space with light. You can book a table or simply drop in and bag one of the countertop stools if you fancy a quick plate of something delicious – perhaps a fennel salami croquette or a scallop served on the shell in a pool of miso and caper butter, with its crispy deep-fried roe balanced on the side. Chef-patron Mark Chapman honed his small-plate chops at tapas joints Bravas and Gambas in the city. Now he and partner Karen have struck out on their own, he is able to blend his expertise with some fine-dining flourishes – witness a simple salad of chicory, fennel, blood orange and almond, which appears on the plate like a beautiful tangle of blush-hued octopus tentacles. It's also worth tucking into heartier dishes such as slow-cooked pork cheeks, each one nestled in a leaf of treviso and topped with shards of pickled fennel. Or try a plate of handmade tagliatelle bathed in a minerally, deep-green cavolo nero sauce enriched with confit egg yolk and ricotta salata – plus a spicy kick from lima chilli. Your commitment to sharing may be tested by desserts such as orange, nutmeg and pistachio tiramisu or dark chocolate and salted caramel tart with crème fraîche and almonds. Like the menu, the drinks list is big on sustainability and draws heavily on local producers: think Psychopomp gin, Iford cider and beers from the Wiper & True craft brewery in Bristol. Almost half the mainly European wine list is available by the glass.; Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025); Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) | ££ | — |
| Bulrush | Michelin 1 Star | ££££ | — |
| Blaise Inn | ££ | — | |
| Little Hollows Pasta | ££ | — | |
| Root | ££ | — | |
| Wilsons | £££ | — |
A quick look at how COR measures up.
Also Consider
- Bulrush — Modern British, ££££
- Blaise Inn — Traditional Cuisine, ££
- Little Hollows Pasta — Italian, ££
- Root — Modern Cuisine, ££
- Wilsons — Modern British, £££
At ££, COR competes directly with Root for the title of best-value Michelin-recognised dining in Bristol. Root leans more heavily vegetable-forward and has a slightly more structured format; COR is more flexible, with counter walk-ins available and a menu that moves between Mediterranean-influenced small plates and heartier pasta and meat dishes. If you eat everything, COR is the stronger all-round bet. If a vegetable-focused menu suits your group, Root is the closer comparison.
Wilsons at £££ is the natural next step up in ambition and price. It offers Modern British tasting menus with more formal service and a deeper wine programme. Worth it for a special occasion, but COR delivers more spontaneity and better value for a regular evening out. Bulrush at ££££ sits in a different category entirely: full fine-dining with a Michelin Star, longer menus and a higher commitment of time and money. Go to Bulrush when the occasion demands it; go to COR when you want cooking of comparable seriousness without the ceremony.
Little Hollows Pasta is the most direct competitor on format — an informal, small-format Italian at ££ — but COR's range is broader and its Michelin recognition gives it a clear edge in terms of verified quality. The Blaise Inn at ££ serves a more traditional pub-food format and is a different kind of evening entirely. For first-timers to Bristol wanting a single restaurant that represents the city's neighbourhood dining at its current ceiling, COR is the clearest recommendation in this price tier.
Recognized By
Explore Bristol
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