International Restaurants in Clydebank
1. Stravaigin
International restaurant in Glasgow
28 Gibson St - G12
“Continuing its outstanding reputation in the West End, Stravaigin has been given a recent facelift, which adds greatly to the ambience” – this thirty-year-old landmark of the West End was sold to new owners the Metropolitan Pub Company in 2022 and their investment is breathing new life into this Glaswegian foodie icon. Both The Scotsman and The Times reviewed it after the change and according to Rosalind Erskine of the former, “the food and drink… is a lot like the new look, it’s a refresh but still recognisable for what it always was, which will be a comfort to regulars and new visitors alike”.
2. Ox and Finch
International restaurant in Glasgow
920 Sauchiehall St - G3
“Really wholesome and imaginative food with no fuss and frills” has won a solid reputation over the past 10 years for Jonathon MacDonald’s modern European small-plates specialist in Kelvingrove. It shut up shop for six months last autumn to allow for major renovation works while the team switched its attention to opening a new sister venue, Margo, in the city centre.
3. Six by Nico
International restaurant in Glasgow
1132 Argyle Street - G3
“A six-course themed taster menu, that changes every six weeks!” is the “playful idea” at Nico Simeone’s national chain, whose two London branches (in Fitzrovia and Canary Wharf) are “great for special occasions, but also affordable for a regular monthly meal out to experience the different cuisines”. At such keen prices, it’s unreasonable to expect perfection and most diners acknowledge this: it’s “a clever, and obviously very popular, concept, albeit one where the experience can seem a bit manufactured”; “although it doesn’t always live up to expectations, when you get the right menu everything clicks into place”; so while inevitably it’s “hit and miss, it’s also great value”, and “for a fun evening it does the job well”.
4. Café Gandolfi
International restaurant in Glasgow
64 Albion St - G1
Born way back in 1979, this pioneering Merchant City legend was the first to introduce Glasgow to cappuccino machines, and its custom-made Tim Stead furniture has long been of note among aesthetes. The loft was converted into Bar Gandolfi relatively recently by their standards (2002), while the cosy panelled downstairs space turns out “simple” but “good- quality” grub (sourdough open sandwiches, haggis, neeps and tatties) that’s fair value too.
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