Restaurant in Bristol, United Kingdom
Root
550ptsVegetable-led small plates, Bib Gourmand value.

About Root
Root holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2024 and 2025 and delivers vegetable-led small plates at a ££ price point that is hard to match in Bristol. The container setting at Wapping Wharf is casual and the sharing format suits groups well. Service can be inconsistent, but the kitchen's produce-focused cooking remains one of the city's stronger value propositions for food-focused diners.
Root, Bristol — Pearl Verdict
Root is worth booking if you want a vegetable-led small plates dinner that punches above its price point, backed by a Michelin Bib Gourmand (held in both 2024 and 2025) and a 4.8 Google rating across 662 reviews. Book it for a food-forward evening at Wapping Wharf, not for a polished special-occasion meal — the setting inside repurposed shipping containers is fun rather than formal, service has been described as inconsistent in recent accounts, and the founding chef Rob Howell has since relocated to the sister Root in Wells. That said, the cooking still delivers, and at the ££ price point, it remains one of Bristol's stronger value propositions for serious eaters.
Portrait
Root opened in 2017 as part of the Cargo development on Bristol's waterfront, one of the earlier restaurants to establish Wapping Wharf as a dining destination worth seeking out. It sits inside five first-floor shipping containers , compact, informal, and at this point showing some wear, though the terrace remains the leading seat in the house when the weather cooperates. The restaurant is part of Josh Eggleton's Pony Restaurant Group, which gives it operational backing without diluting its identity as a neighbourhood-scale, produce-driven operation.
The menu is built around vegetables, sourced from small local suppliers, with fish and meat appearing as supporting options rather than the main event. Dishes arrive as sharing plates, which suits the exploratory diner better than someone who wants a conventional three-course structure. The kitchen's approach is disciplined: simple combinations, well-balanced flavour, and a clear commitment to letting good produce speak. Verified dish descriptions in the record include gnudi-style ewe's curd dumplings (noted as a Root signature), Wye Valley asparagus with peas, broad beans, radish and cider shallots, and a honey and brown butter tart. Jersey Royals with wild garlic and banchetti truffle and halibut with ginger, orange and leek also feature, giving you a clear picture of the register: seasonal, ingredient-forward, technically considered without being showy.
The wine list runs to 25 options, with eight available by the carafe , a format that suits the sharing-plates structure well. The emphasis is on natural viticulture, with organic and biodynamic options to widen the appeal. For a ££ restaurant, this is a thoughtfully assembled list rather than an afterthought.
It would be misleading to present Root only through its highlights. Recent critical accounts flag that the departure of founding chef Rob Howell for the Wells outpost has introduced some inconsistency, and the interior's age is noticeable. Service has been described as inattentive in more recent visits, which is worth weighing if you're booking for a group that expects attentive pacing through a multi-plate meal. The Bib Gourmand recognition in 2025 confirms the kitchen is still performing at a credible level, but this is a neighbourhood restaurant with neighbourhood-scale service, not a polished destination dining experience.
Groups and the Shared-Plates Format
Root's small-plates format is genuinely better suited to groups than to couples on a quiet date night. Three or four people can cover more of the menu, the sharing dynamic works with the room's energy, and the informal container setting doesn't penalise a louder table. There is no dedicated private dining room listed for Root , this is an open, communal space, and the experience reflects that. Groups looking for a private room or a more enclosed setting for a celebration should consider Bulrush or Wilsons instead, both of which offer a more structured dining environment. Root is the right call when the group wants a relaxed, food-led evening where conversation and dishes can move freely, not a contained occasion-dinner format.
For explorers visiting Bristol and wanting to anchor a food-focused evening in the city, Root fits naturally alongside a walk through Wapping Wharf's other options. The neighbourhood includes a strong concentration of independent restaurants, and Adelina Yard and Bianchis are worth knowing about if Root doesn't fit your schedule. Our full Bristol restaurants guide covers the wider picture, and if you're planning a longer stay, the Bristol hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are useful companions.
Booking and Practical Details
Reservations: Easy , booking a few days to a week ahead is generally sufficient, though the terrace fills faster in good weather so plan further out if that's a priority. Budget: ££ per head, making this one of the more affordable Bib Gourmand options in the South West. Dress: No stated dress code; the container setting is casual. Getting there: Unit 9, Cargo 1, Gaol Ferry Steps, BS1 6WP , on the Wapping Wharf waterfront, walkable from Bristol city centre. Group size: The sharing-plates format works leading for two to four; larger groups should confirm the space can accommodate before booking. Dietary: Vegetables lead the menu by design, making Root a practical choice for plant-forward eaters; fish and meat options are available for those who want them.
How It Compares
See the full comparison section below.
Pearl Picks , Also Worth Considering in Bristol and Beyond
- Bulrush , If you want a more polished tasting menu experience in Bristol at a higher price point
- Adelina Yard , A nearby Bristol option worth comparing for occasion dining
- 1 York Place , European cooking in Bristol for a different register
- Bank , Another Bristol option to weigh against Root's price tier
- Hand and Flowers in Marlow , For context on what Bib Gourmand-level quality looks like at a different scale
- L'Enclume in Cartmel , If the vegetable-forward approach at Root leaves you wanting to see what the format looks like at Michelin three-star level
- Moor Hall in Aughton , Produce-led British cooking at a higher tier for comparison
- Waterside Inn in Bray and Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in London , Reference points if you're calibrating Root's Bib Gourmand against the upper end of UK dining
- Bristol wineries guide , If the natural wine focus at Root sparks further interest
Frequently Asked Questions
- Does Root handle dietary restrictions? Vegetables are the menu's primary focus by design, so plant-forward and vegetarian diners are well catered for , this is not an afterthought. Fish and meat dishes are available for those who want them. If you have specific allergies or requirements beyond vegetarian, contact the restaurant directly before booking; no specific allergen policy is listed in publicly available data.
- Can I eat at the bar at Root? Root operates in a compact shipping container space in Bristol's Cargo development. No bar seating configuration is confirmed in the available data, but the informal layout of the room means walk-in options may exist at quieter times. For guaranteed seating, a reservation is the safer approach.
- What should I order at Root? The gnudi-style ewe's curd dumplings are noted as a Root signature and a reliable order. Beyond that, the menu changes with the season, so the strongest approach is to order across several vegetable-led plates and one fish or meat dish to calibrate the kitchen's range. The sharing format rewards curiosity over a fixed three-course plan.
- What are alternatives to Root in Bristol? For a similar ££ price point with a different format, BOX-E offers a more intimate Modern British experience nearby. Little Hollows Pasta is a ££ Italian option if you want a more direct menu. If you want to spend more for a more polished room and service, Wilsons at £££ or Bulrush at ££££ are the natural next steps up.
- Is Root good for a special occasion? It depends on what the occasion needs. Root works well for a food-focused birthday or a celebration among friends who value the kitchen over the room , the Bib Gourmand credentials and 4.8 Google rating give it substance. It is not the right call if you need a private space, formal service, or a quiet atmosphere; for that, Bulrush or Adelina Yard are stronger choices.
- Is Root worth the price? At ££, yes , two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmands and a 4.8 rating across 662 reviews indicate consistent quality at a price that is hard to argue with. The caveat is that recent accounts flag some service inconsistency and interior wear; if you want the full return on a special-occasion budget, push up to Wilsons at £££ instead.
- Is the tasting menu worth it at Root? Root does not operate a fixed tasting menu format in the traditional sense. The menu is structured around small sharing plates, which you assemble yourself. This gives you more control and suits exploratory diners well, but it is not the curated tasting-menu experience you would get at, say, Bulrush. If a chef-driven tasting progression matters to you, Root is the wrong format.
Compare Root
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Root | ££ | — |
| Bulrush | ££££ | — |
| BOX-E | ££ | — |
| Little Hollows Pasta | ££ | — |
| Wilsons | £££ | — |
| Blaise Inn | ££ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Root handle dietary restrictions?
Root is well-suited to vegetarians by default — the majority of dishes are plant-based, with vegetables explicitly leading the menu. Fish and meat options exist but are secondary. Vegans should check ahead, as dairy features in some signature dishes, such as the ewe's curd dumplings. Gluten concerns are worth flagging when booking, given the sharing-plate format.
Can I eat at the bar at Root?
Root operates inside five first-floor shipping containers on Wapping Wharf, so the layout is compact. The venue does not advertise a standalone bar counter for walk-in dining. In good weather, the terrace is the best seat in the house — arrive early or plan ahead if you want it, as it fills faster than the interior.
What should I order at Root?
The ewe's curd gnudi-style dumplings are described as a Root signature and a reliable anchor for any meal. Beyond that, the vegetable small plates rotate seasonally, drawing from small local suppliers, so the specifics change — order broadly and let the kitchen's vegetable focus guide you rather than hunting for fixed dishes. The wine list runs to 25 choices with eight available by the carafe, leaning toward natural and biodynamic producers.
What are alternatives to Root in Bristol?
Bulrush is the move if you want a more formal, ingredient-led tasting menu at a higher price point. BOX-E, also on Wapping Wharf, is the closest like-for-like comparison in terms of scale and neighbourhood. Wilsons offers a farm-to-table ethos with deeper sourcing transparency, while Little Hollows Pasta is a better fit if you want a straightforward, carb-forward dinner rather than vegetable small plates.
Is Root good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration — the Michelin Bib Gourmand gives it credibility, and the sharing-plate format suits groups who want to eat well without ceremony. It is not the right call if you want white-tablecloth formality or a set tasting menu as the centrepiece. For milestone occasions where the room and the ritual matter as much as the food, Bulrush is a stronger choice.
Is Root worth the price?
At ££ pricing with a Michelin Bib Gourmand held in both 2024 and 2025, Root consistently delivers above its price point on food quality. The caveat is that the physical space — five shipping containers opened in 2017 — is showing wear, and service can be uneven. You are paying primarily for what is on the plate, which holds up; the room itself is not part of the draw.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Root?
Root does not operate a fixed tasting menu — the format is seasonal small plates that you select and share. You build the meal yourself from the available dishes rather than surrendering to a set progression. That flexibility is part of the appeal at this price range; if a chef-led tasting format is what you are after, Bulrush is the Bristol restaurant to consider instead.
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