Restaurant in Dublin, Ireland
Michelin-starred set menu, actually worth booking.

Bastible is the strongest case for ingredient-led fine dining in Dublin: a Michelin star since 2024, back-to-back OAD Top 400 Europe rankings, and a decade of focused cooking under Barry Fitzgerald. The set menu format and open kitchen keep the experience grounded, but the cooking is among the most technically precise in the city. Book weeks ahead — this is a hard reservation.
At the €€€€ price point, Bastible is one of the most defensible dinner decisions in Dublin. A Michelin star since 2024, a place in the Opinionated About Dining Top 400 European restaurants for two consecutive years (#373 in 2024, #397 in 2025), and a decade of consistent cooking under chef Barry Fitzgerald: the credentials are there, and the room delivers on them. This is not a splurge for splurge's sake. The set menu format means you are paying for a complete, considered experience built around Irish seasonal produce, not assembling something from a long à la carte. If ingredient-led cooking with real precision is what you want from a Dublin dinner, book here.
Bastible sits on the South Circular Road in Portobello, in what was originally Leonard's Corner Bar. The room does not try to impress you with luxury signalling. There is an open kitchen, stripped-back interiors, and the kind of atmosphere that feels deliberately low on pretension. What you see first is the kitchen itself: chefs working a tight, focused service in full view of the dining room. The visual experience here is not a designed backdrop — it is the cooking happening in front of you, which is the point.
That framing matters because it tells you something about what Bastible is trying to do. The cooking is austere in presentation and concentrated in flavour. Stripped-back dishes built around a single main ingredient, supported by a small number of precisely judged accompaniments. Sourced ingredients such as Wicklow sika deer smoked over charcoal, cod paired with seaweed kosho, and seasonal produce at its peak are the raw material. The technique is Nordic in its discipline, but the identity is entirely local. OAD has made the comparison explicit: like Cork's Paradiso or Ballymaloe House, this is cooking that could only exist here, shaped by a specific team over a specific period of time.
That team has now been at it for ten years. The temporal frame is worth holding onto. Bastible earned its Michelin star in 2024, but the kitchen was already being ranked among Europe's leading restaurants the year before. The star confirmed what regular guests already knew: this is not a restaurant that opened with a bang and then steadied into reliability. It has evolved, and the evolution is ongoing. The wine list is a genuine strength — described by OAD as funky and fascinating, which in this context means natural, producer-focused selections that reward curiosity rather than defaulting to the safe international list you get at most starred restaurants in this city.
The set menu format is worth understanding before you book. You are not choosing dishes; you are choosing to eat what the kitchen is cooking with the leading available produce that week. That requires a degree of trust in the chef, and Fitzgerald has earned it. For diners who prefer to control their order, or who have significant dietary restrictions, it is worth confirming the format and options before arrival. For explorers who want to see what a committed kitchen is doing right now with Irish ingredients, it is the right structure.
Service at Bastible operates at a register that matches the room: attentive without being formal, knowledgeable without being performative. The open kitchen means you are never entirely separate from the people cooking your meal, which changes the dynamic of the evening in a way that more formal dining rooms cannot replicate. Portobello is a residential neighbourhood, not a hotel district, which means the clientele on any given night is a mix of locals who eat here regularly and visitors who have done their research. Both groups tend to be there for the food rather than the scene.
For context against the wider Irish fine dining picture: Liath in Blackrock, Aniar in Galway, and dede in Baltimore are operating in a similar register of ingredient-led, produce-first Irish cooking with serious critical recognition. Within Dublin itself, Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen and Glovers Alley are the closest comparisons at the starred level. Bastible is the most casual of that group in room feel and the most singular in cooking identity. Variety Jones is the nearest comparison in terms of neighbourhood atmosphere and set menu discipline at a lower price point. Further afield in Ireland, Terre in Castlemartyr, Bastion in Kinsale, and Campagne in Kilkenny represent the same commitment to Irish produce in destination-dining formats.
Google reviews sit at 4.6 across 615 ratings, which for a Michelin-starred set menu restaurant is a meaningful signal: the gap between critical recognition and guest satisfaction is minimal here, which is not always the case at this level.
Bastible is open Wednesday through Friday from 5:30 PM, and Saturday from 1 PM. It is closed Sunday through Tuesday. The Saturday lunch sitting is the one to know about: it is the only midday service of the week and tends to be slightly easier to book than Friday or Saturday dinner. If you are travelling specifically for this meal, Saturday lunch gives you the full experience with a better chance of securing a table.
Booking is hard. With Michelin recognition and a small room, demand significantly outpaces supply. Book as far in advance as the reservation system allows , several weeks minimum, more if your dates are fixed. There is no listed booking method in the public record, so check the restaurant's website directly for the current reservation process.
Bastible is at 111 South Circular Road, Portobello, Dublin 8. It is reachable by public transport and is a short taxi or rideshare from the city centre. For more on where to eat, drink, and stay around your visit, see our full Dublin restaurants guide, our full Dublin hotels guide, our full Dublin bars guide, our full Dublin wineries guide, and our full Dublin experiences guide.
Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star (2024) | OAD Top 400 Europe | Wed–Fri dinner, Sat lunch + dinner | Closed Sun–Tue | €€€€ | Booking: hard, reserve weeks ahead.
See comparison section below.
There is no formal dress code listed for Bastible, and the Portobello setting in a converted corner bar signals a relaxed but considered room. Come put-together rather than dressed up — the food is Michelin-starred, the atmosphere is not a black-tie affair. Think the kind of clothes you would wear to a serious dinner with friends, not a hotel gala.
Book at least three to four weeks out, particularly for a Wednesday-to-Friday dinner slot. Saturday lunch opens up a second sitting that can be slightly easier to land, but Bastible's Michelin star and OAD Top 400 Europe ranking mean demand is consistent. If you have a fixed date, book the moment the reservation window opens.
Yes, if ingredient-led, set-menu cooking is your format. Bastible has held a Michelin star since 2024 and ranked #373 in Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Europe the same year, climbing to #397 in 2025 — the kind of peer recognition that reflects a consistent kitchen, not a one-season spike. The cooking is focused on Irish produce at peak season, and the award write-ups single out dishes like butter-poached cod with shellfish bisque and Wicklow sika deer smoked over charcoal as examples of what that approach delivers. If you want à la carte flexibility, this is the wrong room.
The open kitchen format at Bastible makes solo dining a reasonable option — counter or bar seating at open-kitchen restaurants typically gives solo diners something to engage with rather than an empty table. At €€€€, the set menu spend is the same per head regardless of group size, so solo diners should go in knowing the full price applies. Worth calling ahead to confirm solo seating availability given no booking policy is published.
At the €€€€ price point, Bastible is one of the stronger cases for fine dining spend in Dublin. A Michelin star, two consecutive years in OAD's Top 400 in Europe, and ten years of consistent kitchen identity under Barry Fitzgerald put it in a different tier from most Dublin restaurants charging similar prices. The comparison most often drawn is to Cork's Paradiso or Ballymaloe House — restaurants where the cooking exists nowhere else and reflects a kitchen with a genuine point of view. If that matters to you, it is worth the price.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.