Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in St Austell
Hardens guides have spent 33 years compiling reviews of the best St Austell restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 19 restaurants in St Austell and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing St Austell restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured St Austell Restaurants
1. Driftwood Hotel
International restaurant in Rosevine
“Wonderful views of the cliffs, beach and sea” help inspire fans to this boutique hotel dining room, which occupies a clifftop Georgian building on the Roseland Peninsula. Opinions on the operation were a little up-and-down this year, citing “slightly erratic service” or food that’s “OK but variable”; but on the plus side, serious concerns were absent and ratings remain healthy all-round.
3. The restaurant at Old Quay House
British, Modern restaurant in Fowey
28 Fore Street - PL23
“Continuing to be a reliable place for a quality meal in a lovely riverside setting” – the dining room and outside deck of this Victorian hotel provide wonderful estuary-side vantage-points for a meal. There are two-course and three-course menu options for about £40, and all-in-all it makes “an affordable special treat”.
4. Sam's on the Beach
British, Modern restaurant in Polkerris
2023 Review: “A gorgeous spot to eat tasty food while watching the sea”, this former Victorian lifeboat station has been transformed under Sam Sixton, who launched his local dining empire at the age of 17, back in 1988 (his son Noah is now part of the team). The “casual” menu runs from “wonderful fresh fish and seafood” to “tasty pizzas with both traditional and unusual toppings”.
5. Fitzroy
Fish & seafood restaurant in Fowey
2 Fore Street - PL23
2023 Review: Associated with London foodie hits Primeur and Westerns Laundry, this three-year-old favourite, which occupies a former bank, continues to inspire high ratings for its food. It’s a seasonal operation, which closes each year between late Autumn and mid Spring.
6. Asquiths
British, Modern restaurant in Lostwithiel
19 North Street - PL22
2023 Review: “A small and intimate restaurant” – opposite an old church in Cornwall’s antiques capital – Graham Cuthbertson’s wood-panelled spot “serves great modern European and local dishes and the dining room is really comfortable”. “I went there with all my family and they were really accommodating with young children”.
7. Trevibban Mill Bar
Organic restaurant in Padstow
Dark Lane - PL27
2021 Review: “Windows overlooking the vineyard” afford views onto this peacefully located spot – run by Andy Appleton (a graduate of Jamie Oliver’s Fifteen Cornwall) although the “huge barn” it occupies can feel a tad “quiet” at less busy times. Numerous “excellent” meals are reported last year from its Med-slanted modern British menu.
8. Tiny Thai
Thai restaurant in Wadebridge
1a Molesworth Street - PL27
2021 Review: “At last a decent… well, actually quite a bit more than decent, Thai restaurant in North Cornwall!” – this “pretty tightly packed” café “lives up to its name, but this just adds to the fun” and its spicy scoff comes highly recommended.
9. Hubbox
Burgers, etc restaurant in Truro
116 Kenwyn Street - TR1
Richard Boon’s “slowly expanding West Country chain” – which emerged from his original venue, the Hub in St Ives, which opened 21 years ago – owes its success to doing simple things properly: namely “good burgers” from grass-fed Cornish beef. “Cheerful staff” and “fabulously crunchy onion rings” add to the appeal and it inspired a good degree of feedback in this year’s annual diners’ poll.
10. Tabb’s
British, Modern restaurant in Truro
85 Kenwyn St - TR1
2022 Review: “Interesting food in an intimate dining room” makes Nigel Tabb’s former pub a “favourite local fine-dining venue”, making “great use of local Cornish ingredients”. It also helps that there’s a “small but well-constructed wine list which offers exceptional value”. It’s “a little difficult to find, away from the centre of Truro, but worth the effort”.
11. Watergate Bay
British, Modern restaurant in Watergate Bay
One of a handful of restaurants in this famous hotel, this ultra-romantic outpost was born as a beachside pop-up, and is ably overseen by Scott, a fast-rising Cornish chef and cookbook author; whether opting for the lobster lunches or six-course seafood menus, you’re in for some “fantastic food” (although one or two regulars feel it comes at a cost).
12. The Scarlet Hotel
British, Traditional restaurant in Mawgan Porth
Tredragon Rd - TR8
2023 Review: This “modern spa hotel with views out to sea” from its clifftop vantage point is fully geared-up for the eco tourist, with a solidly rated kitchen serving up sustainable meals from breakfast via lunch and afternoon tea to dinner, when there is a choice of tasting menus including vegetarian and vegan. Non-residents are now welcome to book, but it remains child-free.
13. Penrose Kitchen
British, Modern restaurant in Truro
Penrose Water Garden, Tregavethan - TR4
2023 Review: This “hidden gem just outside Truro” from husband-and-wife team Ben & Sam Harmer features “impressive” cooking, “exceptional service” and a “splendid outdoor eating area” for warmer weather. Ben’s classical training took in the kitchens of The Savoy and Le Gavroche – hence “the soufflé is impressive”.
14. Fish House
Fish & chips restaurant in Newquay
Unit 5 International Surf Centre, Headland Road - TR7
2023 Review: “Never fails to bring joy to my heart” – Paul Harwood’s “lovely, intimate, high-quality seafood restaurant” right “by the sea” on Fistral Beach again wins a big thumbs-up in reports: “super fresh fish” is the big deal you’d hope, for somewhere with top views of the surf and sands.
15. The Tartan Fox
restaurant in Newquay
Carvynick Farm, A3058 - TR8
Opening 4 June in 16th-century listed Carvynick House, in woodland between Newquay and Truro, a pub and restaurant from Adam Handling, of Frog in London and Ugly Butterfly in St Ives. Expect 'sustainable local luxury', using Cornish ingredients – including produce grown in its own garden.
16. The Blue Peter Inn
British, Modern restaurant in Polperro
Quay Road - PL13
2023 Review: Down by the quayside, this cute pub is tipped for “fish that’s obviously as fresh as you can get, and an excellent seafood platter” from amongst its other more typically pub grub offerings.
17. RenMor
British, Modern restaurant in Newquay
The Headland, Fistral Beach, Headland Rd, - TR7
Costing £3 million and aiming to provide a ‘world class experience’, the new flagship destination at this landmark five-star hotel – a gigantic Victorian pile overlooking Fistral beach – opened in May 2023, too late for any feedback in our annual diners’ poll. The Headland offers tremendous sea views, and the new menu aims to showcase the best of Cornish fish and farm produce (RenMor means ’restaurant by the sea’ in Cornish). Maybe scope it out with a visit to one of the adjoining lounges for sarnies and cakes first – “afternoon tea looking out to sea couldn’t be more perfect”.
18. The Sardine Factory
Fish & seafood restaurant in Looe
Quay Road West - PL13
“Excellent fresh fish” landed from day boats on the quay opposite is the mainstay of the menu at the restaurant chef-patron Benjamin Palmer opened in his hometown six years ago. “The Sunday lunch is perfect, too – so tasty”.
19. Fern Pit Cafe
Fish & seafood restaurant in Newquay
19 Riverside Crescent - TR7
2022 Review: A family-run café whose “terraced garden is in a gorgeous location overlooking the Gannel Estuary and Crantock Beach in Newquay” (you approach via a footbridge at low tide, or a paid ferry at other times). It's “the best place for Cornish crab and lobster sourced the same day from their own fishing boat” and then “eaten on-site at picnic-style tables (best served with a side of chips and cold beer!)”.
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