Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in Burgess Hill
Hardens guides have spent 34 years compiling reviews of the best Burgess Hill restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 42 restaurants in Burgess Hill and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Burgess Hill restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Burgess Hill Restaurants
1. Terre à Terre
Vegetarian restaurant in Brighton
71 East St - BN1
“Simply the best vegetarian food for miles around”, say fans of this “charmingly staffed” veteran of the Lanes whose reputation extends beyond Brighton to the capital and beyond: “with food like this you really don’t miss meat or fish”, thanks to the “creative dishes that you just can’t get anywhere else”. “Only slightly negative: is the menu smaller than it used to be?”
2. English’s
Fish & seafood restaurant in Brighton
29-31 East St - BN1
“The terrace is fabulous on a sunny day at this traditional seafood operation” – a feature of the Lanes since the 1890s and owned by the Leigh-Jones family since 1945 (and as such, one of the UK’s most venerable restaurants). Diners differ, though, on its overall performance although even fans concede tables are “squeezed in”. To its biggest fans its straightforward menu of oysters, crab, caviar lobster and other fish and seafood (plus items like steak and a handful of non-fish dishes) is “not the cheapest, but provides the best value in Brighton as it’s always reliable and doesn’t try to do too much”. Sceptics “expected more from this long-term fish specialist”, either judging it “plain and old fashioned” or even an “(expensive) tourist trap”. Perhaps the best overall verdict is that “quality varies and it’s best to stick to the standards”. Top Menu Tips – “fish pie is still the star for me…”; “love it for its very fresh oysters”.
3. The Chilli Pickle
Indian restaurant in Brighton
6-8 Meeting House Lane - BN1
“A favourite Indian restaurant in Brighton” – “although its modern Indian street-food based cooking and bright flavours are now widely copied, it’s still one of the best specimens”. “The decor is bright and friendly, but there’s no disguising the canteen-like vibe of the huge dining room so it’s not the place for a long and relaxed or romantic meal”. “Consistently good quality food” though means more reporters “love this place!” (“despite increasing local competition”). After 14 years as part of the MyHotel, owners Dawn & Alun Sperring have announced their intention to move premises after the summer is over: no news as yet on the new site.
4. The Set
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
50 Preston Road - BN1
“An absolutely stunning concept (14-16 mini plates) with great creativity and execution” – Dan Kenny aims to provide ‘a tasting menu of big-flavoured, umami- and fat-led food’ at his 12-16 cover venue, not far from Preston Park and underneath the viaduct: an experience you are advised to allow about two and half hours for. All who comment are fans, although it can appear “interesting but expensive”. On the plus side, one fan notes: “I have recommended it to everyone I know, and everyone who has been so far has always booked again”.
5. The Bristol Bar
British, Modern restaurant in Kemptown
Paston Place, - BN2
“Still amazed it’s not made it into Harden’s – this seafront and vaguely art deco gastropub offers some of the most glorious views in Kemptown and the food is great. Owners Simon and Alan are characters and add real personality”, delivering “good-quality home-cooked pub food in pleasant surroundings and an excellent Sunday lunch”. Top Menu Tips – “seabass with a chorizo cassoulet; lamb is the best roast. Make sure you‘re hungry though – portions are large!”
6. Ockenden Manor
British, Modern restaurant in Cuckfield
Ockenden Ln - RH17
“A lovely setting overlooking the gardens towards the South Downs” helps set up a “top-class experience” at this Elizabethan country house spa-hotel: “decor… ambience… service… food all are first rate”. Mind you, “there‘s nothing flash/super-creative about any of this: they know their market and it’s just really well executed”.
7. The Ginger Fox
British, Modern restaurant in Albourne
Muddleswood Road - BN6
This “lovely thatched country boozer” with a pretty beer garden and great views of the South Downs is highly popular in our annual diners’ poll as an “absolute go-to place for the most excellent, innovative and delicious pub food”, in “a lovely quiet spot”. It’s the country cousin of the high-quality Gingerman group in Brighton, seven miles away – and does a roaring Sunday lunch trade.
8. The Pass Restaurant, South Lodge Hotel
British, Modern restaurant in Lower Beeding
Brighton Road - RH13
“Ben Wilkinson, previously of ‘Cottage in the Woods’, Linklater, has brought his fabulous clean cooking south” with the “very inventive” seven-course menu for £145 per person that he delivers at this well-known chef’s table experience within a boutique hotel set in 93 acres with views of the South Downs, which he joined in late 2022. In short order it has become one of the more accoladed restaurants in the UK, having won a Michelin star and 4 AA rosettes (the latter actually being the rarer accolade) and all of the feedback that we receive rates the experience as very good or better.
9. The Griffin Inn
British, Modern restaurant in Fletching
“In a delightful village”, this “scenic” gastroboozer-with-rooms continues to please, two years after longtime owners the Pullan family handed the keys to the Young’s group; the “best atmosphere is in the bar” (as opposed to the annexe), though the “great garden” remains the standout here, offering lovely views of the Ouse countryside.
10. MEATLiquor
Burgers, etc restaurant in Brighton
22-23 York Place - BN1
“Ambience is not key when you just want to stuff your face!” – you “just get a great dirty burger” at these tongue-in-cheek diners, whose signature offering is the ‘Dead Hippie’. Founded 16 years ago from the back of a truck by Scott Collins and Yianni Papoutsis, at the time a technician with the English National Ballet, it now has 15 London outlets and a national delivery operation.
11. Urchin
Fish & seafood restaurant in Brighton
15-17 Belfast St - BN3
It’s “unexpected for a local, suburban boozer sitting next to a school”, but “Brighton’s seafood gastropub” marches to the beat of its own drum, turning out “exceptional” dishes (“emphasis on shellfish”) plus craft beer “brewed in the premises” downstairs, “which adds to the fun”. Taking into account the “upscale” setting, too, you’ve got all “the ingredients for a Perfect Sunday!” (when the idiosyncratic venue pays tribute to paella).
12. The Cat Inn
British, Modern restaurant in West Hoathly
North Lane - RH19
This “extremely popular” 16th-century free house with four bedrooms, in a hilltop village in the Sussex Weald, has everything you want in a country pub, from “very good cooking” and beamed interiors to “a lovely pint of Harvey’s”.
13. Fatto a Mano
Pizza restaurant in Brighton
25 Gloucester Road - BN1
“Outstanding pizza that’s super-light and oozing Italian style” (“not usually a pizza fan but really enjoyed the food”) has made the name of this “buzzing and hilarious” but also “good- value” Neapolitan joint. It’s now part of a five-strong chain, spanning two London outposts (the most recent in chi-chi Covent Garden), a newly refurbed Hove branch and this, the original, where “sitting outside to people watch is also great – it’s Brighton after all!”.
14. Etch
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
214-216 Church Rd - BN3
“The attention to detail is amazing, with top-notch food and wine pairings” say fans of this “favourite destination restaurant” – Stephen Edwards’s conversion of a former bank arguably “feels like a converted pub”, but “is so unexpected and elevated it fits well with the vibe of Hove”. Choose from either a five-course menu for £50 per person, or a seven-course menu for £75 per person: “flavours are fun and refreshing, from seasonal and playful tasting plates” – “truly spectacular cooking and would be three times the price in a central London restaurant”. Many local diners report their gastronomic highlight of the year here. Top Menu Tip – “the marmite bread is to die for (if only the whole meal could’ve been made of that!)”
15. Wild Flor
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
42 Church Road - BN3
This “amazing neighbourhood restaurant will have you coming back for more” of its “brilliant modern British cooking in a relaxed bistro setting”. Founded five years ago by a trio of local hospitality veterans, Rob Maynard and James & Faye Thompson, it is “very much in tune with modern Hove, but in a very unprepossessing location” – and with “very sensible prices”, including a £22 per person set menu that runs alongside the à la carte. Many diners recommend the wines here (“one of the rare restaurants which do not force you to ‘kill’ red wine too young, offering good mature reds for fair prices”).
16. The Little Fish Market
Fish & seafood restaurant in Brighton
10 Upper Market St - BN3
“Duncan Ray delivers a top seafood menu from a tiny kitchen” at this “wonderful and intimate spot tucked away behind a busy Brighton street”, where just 20 guests enjoy an “unbelievable menu in a single sitting per night”. Even a reporter who felt “the food didn’t quite live up to some sublime experiences in the past” still felt that “there were some great dishes, we love what LFM does, and it’s well worth a visit”.
17. Gingerman
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
21a Norfolk Sq - BN1
Chef Ben and his wife Pamela McKellar’s flagship restaurant (est. 1998) is a “cosy side-street gem” that has “maintained its high standards through all its years, and against a rising tide of local competition”. In fact, some think it has “upped its game again on quality and imagination, although that has come at a (literal) price”. Top Menu Tips – “the bread and the soufflés remain things that cannot be passed over”.
18. Bincho Yakitori
Japanese restaurant in Brighton
63 Preston Street - BN1
“Looks and feels like a proper yakitori place”, and the food is “sooo good” at this 10-year-old “Asian gem” that is “clearly no longer hidden from locals” – so the small space is often packed. Founder David Miney spent three years as a chef in Tokyo developing the expertise he now deploys in “authentic dishes at very reasonable prices” – “sit at the bar and watch the chefs in action”. “The sake selection is also on point and not outrageously expensive, like it is at other locations in this country”.
19. The Ginger Pig
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
3 Hove St - BN3
“A dependable favourite ever since it opened” – this “elevated pub” near Hove seafront is part of a hugely popular four-strong local chain; with its “upmarket take on sausages and mash with kale or a lovely slow-cooked beef pie”, it’s “more akin to a restaurant (with a nice bar attached)” than a boozer, and a “buzzy atmosphere” is guaranteed. Top Tip – stay over in their “quirky rooms” (in either the main building or self-catering mews houses); one reporter who did so “could not think of eating anywhere else” after the first night (resulting in “six meals, including terrific breakfasts, in three days!”).
20. Wahaca
Mexican restaurant in Brighton
160-161 North Street - BN1
“For a large chain, they still do pretty much unbeatable Mexican fusion fare”, say fans of these “busy and atmospheric” street-food cafés, now with 11 London branches and three others around the UK. That said, there are also some niggles in feedback; and the sentiment is widespread that – though “still enjoyable” – the food can seem “a little mass-produced”. Even so, practically all diners still consider them “dependable for a quick, cheap ’n’ cheerful bite”. Top Tip – the new, 150-cover Paddington branch is their first opening in six years and puts a focus on sustainability and a menu including some larger sharing plates (e.g. grilled Achiote Seabass, Lamb Barbacoa and Chimichurri Cauliflower).
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