Restaurant in Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Spry
640ptsNatural wine bar that earns its price point.

About Spry
A Michelin Plate-recognised wine bar and kitchen on Leith Walk, Spry is Edinburgh's strongest wine-shop-plus-restaurant combination at the £££ price point. The five-course set menu at £60 (wine pairing +£50) delivers serious value compared to the city's ££££ tier. Book at least two weeks ahead; the à la carte lunch is the best entry point for first-timers.
Should You Book Spry?
Getting a table at Spry requires some forward planning — this is not a walk-in kind of place, particularly for lunch on weekends or for the five-course set menu in the evening. Book at least two weeks ahead to be safe, and consider midweek if flexibility allows. The effort is worth it: Spry holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and was ranked #1 by Star Wine List in 2024, a combination that places it firmly among Edinburgh's most credible wine-led dining destinations. A Google rating of 4.7 across 253 reviews reinforces that this is not a fleeting moment of hype.
The Space
Spry occupies the ground floor of a Georgian tenement on Leith Walk, close enough to Leith to pick up its neighbourhood energy without the full walk. The room is deliberately spare: a wall of natural wines to one side, a central oak-topped island bar that doubles as the kitchen, a sofa, a few well-chosen chairs, and stool seating around the bar itself. There is nothing decorative for its own sake here. The restraint is the point. For a special occasion, the bar counter offers proximity to the food as it is prepared, which makes it one of the more involving dining positions in Edinburgh. For a quieter date or a business lunch, one of the tables gives more conversational privacy. The basement holds a coffee shop and bakery, worth knowing if you arrive early or want a lower-key visit before committing to a full meal upstairs.
Lunch vs Dinner: Where the Value Sits
This is the decision that matters most at Spry. Lunch is the sharper value proposition. The à la carte menu of rotating small plates — built around seasonal produce, with options spanning cold and hot dishes , gives you flexibility to spend at your own pace in a relaxed setting. The five-course set menu at £60 per head is available at both lunch and dinner, with wine pairings available for an additional £50. If wine pairing is central to your visit, the £110 all-in is competitive for the quality of the natural wine programme on offer, particularly given the Star Wine List ranking. The wine selection spans global producers with a clear preference for small, additive-free producers , organic and natural across the range. Bottles can be purchased to take away, with a modest corkage charge for drinking in-house, which is a genuinely useful option if you want to explore something specific from the shop without committing to a full pairing format.
For a first visit, lunch on à la carte is the lower-risk entry point. You get the space, the wine list, and the kitchen's seasonal sensibility without the full financial commitment. If the lunch lands well, return for the set menu , that is the format where the kitchen shows its full range.
Who This Works Leading For
Spry is well-suited to a date or a low-key special occasion where the experience should feel considered but not formal. It is not a white-tablecloth restaurant; the room is relaxed and the service is personal , owners Matt and Marzena are regularly present and actively involved in guiding wine choices. That owner presence is a genuine asset for anyone who wants guidance on the wine list rather than having to self-navigate a shelf of natural producers they may not know. Solo diners are well-served here: bar seating is sociable without being forced, and eating alone at the counter with a glass from the list is one of the more comfortable solo dining positions in the city. For larger groups, the room's limited capacity and sparse layout means this is better suited to two or three than to a party of six.
Pearl Picks and Practical Context
Spry sits at the £££ price point , meaningfully below the ££££ tier occupied by Edinburgh's Michelin-starred restaurants. If your budget extends further, The Kitchin and Martin Wishart are the natural next step. If you are comparing across Edinburgh's current wave of neighbourhood-focused Modern British cooking, eleanore and The Little Chartroom offer useful comparisons in terms of format and ambition. For a wine-first experience specifically, Spry is in a different category from most of its Edinburgh peers. The combination of a serious natural wine shop, in-house bakery, basement café, and a Michelin-recognised kitchen in a single Georgian address gives it a density of offer that most single-concept venues do not match at this price tier.
If Modern British dining at a higher spend is on your radar elsewhere in the UK, CORE by Clare Smyth in London, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and Moor Hall in Aughton represent the upper end of the category. Spry is not competing at that level of technical ambition or price, but it is doing something genuinely different: a wine-shop-first model with a kitchen that takes seasonal cooking seriously, in a room that feels personal rather than performative.
For more options in the city, see our full Edinburgh restaurants guide, our full Edinburgh bars guide, and our full Edinburgh experiences guide. Also worth knowing: Skua, eòrna, and The Broughton are all worth considering depending on what you are looking for from an Edinburgh meal.
Quick reference: £££ price range | Michelin Plate 2024 | Star Wine List #1 2024 | 4.7/5 Google (253 reviews) | Book 2+ weeks ahead | Five-course set menu £60, wine pairing +£50 | Basement café and bakery also on site.
FAQ
What are alternatives to Spry in Edinburgh?
- For a similar neighbourhood ethos at lower formality, eleanore and The Little Chartroom are the closest comparisons in terms of scale and Modern British focus.
- For a step up in spend and formality, The Kitchin and Martin Wishart are the obvious moves at ££££.
- For a more creative, tasting-menu-first format at ££££, Timberyard and Condita are both credible options.
- If a wine-shop-plus-kitchen format is what you want specifically, Spry is the strongest version of that model currently operating in Edinburgh.
Is Spry good for a special occasion?
- Yes, but it suits relaxed celebrations better than formal milestone dinners. The room is considered and stylish, but not ceremonial.
- The five-course set menu at £60 with £50 wine pairing gives the occasion a clear structure without the pressure of a full tasting-menu format.
- Owner presence means the service feels personal, which works well for a birthday dinner or anniversary where you want to feel looked after rather than processed.
- For a more formally dressed special occasion, Martin Wishart or AVERY would be a better fit.
Is Spry good for solo dining?
- Yes. Bar seating around the central island counter is comfortable for solo diners and gives you a direct view of the kitchen.
- The wine list is actively guided by the owners, so you will not feel left alone with an unfamiliar selection.
- The à la carte format means you can eat as much or as little as you want, which suits solo visits at lunch particularly well.
Can I eat at the bar at Spry?
- Yes. The central oak-topped island bar is a core part of the room and a good option for both solo diners and couples.
- Bar seating puts you close to the kitchen action, which makes it the most engaged way to experience the food programme.
- If you prefer a more private setting, request a table rather than bar stools when booking.
What should a first-timer know about Spry?
- Spry is a wine shop first, with a kitchen built around that wine focus. Come with an interest in natural and organic wines and you will get more from the visit.
- The menu changes daily, so there is no fixed dish to seek out. The à la carte at lunch is the leading entry point for a first visit.
- The basement café and bakery operate separately from the main dining room , worth factoring in if you want a coffee before or after.
- It holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and a Star Wine List #1 ranking (2024), so the kitchen is operating at a recognised level despite the relaxed atmosphere.
- Book ahead. Moderate booking difficulty means you will not always find a same-day table, particularly at weekends.
Is Spry worth the price?
- At £££, the à la carte lunch offers genuine value for the quality of both the cooking and the wine programme.
- The £60 set menu is competitive for a five-course format in Edinburgh, particularly with the Star Wine List #1 ranking behind the wine selection.
- Adding wine pairings at £50 brings the total to £110 per head , fair for what you get, but choose this option only if wine pairing is important to you. Buying by the glass or selecting a bottle from the shop is a more flexible and potentially lower-cost approach.
- Compared to Edinburgh's ££££ tier, Spry delivers a closely comparable quality of experience at a lower spend, which is the clearest argument for its value.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Spry?
- The five-course set menu at £60 is the format where the kitchen shows its full range, and it is worth choosing if you want a structured experience rather than grazing through small plates.
- Wine pairings at an additional £50 are worth adding if the natural wine programme is part of why you are visiting. The Star Wine List #1 ranking (2024) means the pairing selections are not an afterthought.
- If budget is a consideration, the à la carte format at lunch gives you access to the same kitchen and wine list with more control over the final bill.
How far ahead should I book Spry?
- Book at least two weeks ahead for weekend lunch or the set menu in the evening. Midweek slots are more available but still worth booking in advance given the room's limited capacity.
- Michelin Plate recognition and a #1 Star Wine List ranking mean demand is consistent year-round, not just during festival season.
- If you are planning around Edinburgh's August festival period, book significantly further ahead than the two-week guideline.
Compare Spry
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spry | £££ | Moderate | — |
| Martin Wishart | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| The Kitchin | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Timberyard | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| AVERY | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Condita | ££££ | Unknown | — |
What to weigh when choosing between Spry and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Spry in Edinburgh?
For a step up in formality and price, The Kitchin and Martin Wishart are the Michelin-starred benchmarks in the Leith area. Timberyard offers a comparable natural-leaning, seasonal format in a different part of the city. If you want something closer to Spry's relaxed wine-bar register but with more of a chef-driven identity, AVERY is worth considering. Condita is the choice for a fully structured tasting-menu experience at a higher price point.
Is Spry good for a special occasion?
Yes, with the right expectations. The five-course set menu at £60 (plus £50 for wine pairings) gives the occasion enough structure to feel considered, and the Georgian setting on Leith Walk adds a low-key elegance. It is not a white-tablecloth restaurant, so if the occasion calls for full formal service, Martin Wishart or The Kitchin will fit better. For a birthday dinner or anniversary where the point is good wine and food rather than ceremony, Spry works well.
Is Spry good for solo dining?
The island bar with spaced stools makes solo dining a practical and comfortable option here. You can eat at the counter while the wine selection is visible on the shelves around you, which gives you something to engage with. The à la carte small plates format also suits solo pacing better than a long tasting menu would.
Can I eat at the bar at Spry?
Yes. The central oak-topped island bar functions as both bar and kitchen counter, with stools spaced around it. It is one of the more practical bar-dining setups in Edinburgh, and it works for solo diners or pairs who want a front-row view of service without a formal table.
What should a first-timer know about Spry?
Spry holds a Michelin Plate and was ranked #1 by Star Wine List in 2024, so the wine selection is serious — all organic and natural, sourced predominantly from small producers, with bottles available to take home with a modest corkage charge. The menu rotates daily and runs across small plates at lunch or a five-course set menu. Book ahead; this is not a drop-in venue, particularly at weekends.
Is Spry worth the price?
At £££, Spry sits below the ££££ tier of Edinburgh's Michelin-starred restaurants, and the Michelin Plate recognition confirms the kitchen is operating above the casual end of that bracket. For the combination of a serious natural wine list and daily-changing seasonal food in a well-designed room, the price is justified. If you are primarily there for the wine, the bottle shop element also means you can spend selectively.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Spry?
The five-course set menu at £60 is the more substantial format and worth it if you want a structured lunch or dinner rather than grazing. Adding wine pairings at £50 brings the total to £110 per head, which positions it against Edinburgh's Michelin-starred options — so only commit to pairings if you are genuinely there for the wine. For a lighter visit, the à la carte small plates are the better entry point.
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