Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in Herne Bay
Hardens guides have spent 34 years compiling reviews of the best Herne Bay restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 40 restaurants in Herne Bay and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Herne Bay restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Herne Bay Restaurants
1. Samphire
British, Modern restaurant in Whitstable
4 High Street - CT5
Cane back chairs, bare wood tables and blackboard menus signal the approach of this “always busy” ‘Kentish Bistro’ – “a great little place on the high street”. One very long-term fan feels the “menu has become more mainstream” in recent times, but it continues to inspire solid support for its “tasty” cooking. Top Menu Tip – “smoked cod’s roe with rye crackers, followed by a classic samphire fish pie with miso hispi cabbage”.
2. Marc-Pierre's Kitchen
Fish & seafood restaurant in Ramsgate
4 - 5 West Cliff Arcade - CT11
Marc & Anastasiya Campos offer a contemporary take on classic European cuisine. Classic dishes with a fine sprinkling of fusion flair. With the focus on local, seasonal and sustainable ingredients which includes having their very own Ramsgate fisherman and produce from some o...
3. A Casa Mia
Pizza restaurant in Herne Bay
160 High Street - CT6
2022 Review: “A good find”, with “surprisingly good pizza” – although perhaps that would come as no surprise to those who know that this pizzeria was the first in the UK to achieve certification from the Associazione Verace Pizza in Naples. There’s also a full list of starters and pasta dishes, and kids get a three-course meal for £7.50. It can be “very noisy when full”… but have you ever been to a busy pizzeria in Naples?
4. JoJo’s
Mediterranean restaurant in Whitstable
2 Herne Bay Rd - CT5
Nikki Billington and FOH Paul Watson launched this relaxed outfit (‘we don’t do now’t fancy’ is their tagline) in their home in 2000, relocating to larger seafront premises in Tankerton, not far from Whitstable, a decade on. Their “tapas-style food” takes its inspiration from the Med: it’s a “great place to go for fish dishes” (there are also koftas, meze and Greek salads on the menu) in a “lively atmosphere with views over the estuary”.
5. Crab & Winkle
Fish & seafood restaurant in Whitstable
South Quay, Whitstable Harbour - CT5
2022 Review: “Superb, ultra-fresh seafood, including excellent Whitstable oysters” can be enjoyed bang in front of the working harbour at this straightforward café and terrace, with views over the sea as a backdrop.
6. The Lobster Shack Restaurant
Fish & seafood restaurant in Whitstable
East Quay - CT5
2024 Review: Operated by the Whitstable Oyster Company, this shack tucked away at the end of the harbour serves oysters from the beds visible at low tide from its terrace, as well as lobsters and fish from the nearby waters. “We’re lucky to have such a place for fresh quality fish on our doorstep”.
7. Harbour Street Tapas
Spanish restaurant in Whitstable
48 Harbour Street - CT5
There’s no doubting the provenance of the ingredients at this “very buzzy”, simply decorated corner establishment (est. 2016): “very friendly” owner Lee Murray is a staple of Canterbury’s The Goods Shed, where his ‘Murray’s General Store’ supplies locals with Kentish fine foods and speciality goods from further afield. Here the formula is “great, fresh” tapas from a “menu that changes frequently”.
8. Birdies
Fish & seafood restaurant in Whitstable
41 Harbour St - CT5
A Whitstable fixture since 1984 – this “lovely local French-style bistro” run by Philip & Sue Colthup (helped these days by son Rhys) offers a “well-cooked and presented menu” that’s “heavily dependent on seafood, given its proximity to the harbour”. It recently added “a lovely courtyard garden” to help cope with demand at busy times of the year. Top Tip – “very good value set lunch”.
9. Wheelers Oyster Bar
Fish & seafood restaurant in Whitstable
8 High Street - CT5
A “great atmosphere” reigns at the first – and sole surviving – branch of a once-beloved, now-defunct chain: an oyster parlour and seafood bar, est. 1856 by Richard Leggy Wheeler, which also happens to be this town’s oldest restaurant. From scallops, mussels and crab cakes, to a tasting menu on weekend nights, it turns out some “exceptional cooking with refreshing zingy flavours”, all served by “very good, friendly staff”. BYO booze for a small corkage fee or make a pitstop at the literally titled ‘Offy’ just opposite.
10. Whitstable Oyster Fishery Co.
Fish & seafood restaurant in Whitstable
Royal Native Oyster Stores, Horsebridge - CT5
“You just can’t beat a plate of ‘natives’ while sitting at a bench on the seafront in the sun” – and this is the place to do it, just a few feet from the sea where the oysters were bred. “The fish is also fresh, and cooked to perfection” – “just don’t come expecting anything experimental, they just let the quality produce speak for itself”. It’s equally “fantastic” in the winter, eating inside while “overlooking windswept Whitstable beach – it’s warm, it’s yummy; you leave happy and ready to brave the cold again”.
11. Pearson’s Arms
British, Traditional restaurant in Whitstable
The Horsebridge, Sea Wall - CT5
2023 Review: The dining room “upstairs in a rickety old pub, with wonderful views over Whitstable Bay”, offers a “good mix of innovative food” – including “beautifully cooked fish” – “and homemade pub classics, served by staff from the kitchen on the floor below”. “Eaten there many times: the ambience is excellent and always found the food good”.
12. The Fordwich Arms
British, Modern restaurant in Fordwich
King Street - CT2
A “beautiful old pub on the river” which boasts a large “wisteria-clad” terrace by the water and big garden. Daniel (chef) & Natasha (pastry chef) Smith have run it since 2017 and successfully established it as one of the culinary beacons in the locality: a haven of “all round loveliness, with cosy surroundings, warm staff and delivering excellence on the plate”. (The Smiths also used to run the nearby Bridge Arms, but stepped back from it this year in order to focus their energies here). Numerous best meals of the year were reported here by its dedicated fan club: “it’s on the pricey side but worth it to taste such flavours. While not an extensve menu, every dish is well presented and well thought out. Gripes? From a good number of reports, all acknowledge exemplary cuisine, and the most critical feedback says: “the food, what there is of it, is fantastic. But we found the portions ridiculously small”. Top Menu Tip – “Trout and quail starters, pork and venison main courses”.
13. The Goods Shed
British, Traditional restaurant in Canterbury
Station Road West - CT2
“Situated in the covered market next to Canterbury station, this mezzanine-floor restaurant allows you to enjoy delicious food in an interesting setting”, with its “small menu of local and seasonal things” (wholesome soups, tarts, salad bowls) reducing the food miles to about two feet. While, for the odd longtime visitor, there’s a sense that “prices have shot up” of late, the opposing view is that it’s “still as good as it was twenty years ago”, with “wine from a nearby vineyard” to wash down the “locally sourced everything”.
14. Korean Cowgirl
restaurant in Canterbury
13 Palace Street - CT1
“Trendy meals for university students impressing their visiting parents” are praised at this “fun” contemporary operation. The clue is in the name, when it comes to the menu-focus – “the meaty platters are huge, so come with a healthy appetite as portions are hearty”. On the downside, some see it as “good all-round but overpriced”.
15. Café des Amis
Mexican restaurant in Canterbury
95 St Dunstan’s St - CT2
Long-established, lively Canterbury Mexican – despite the Gallic name – which “never disappoints (must have eaten here over 100 times since it opened in 1988 and it hasn’t lost its sizzling, upbeat vibe: you can’t fail to leave feeling well fed and happy”). Well-travelled founders Bill & Emmanuelle Beetham also own Café du Soleil on the opposite side of the river – and a restaurant in Hawaii!
16. County Restaurant, ABode Canterbury
British, Modern restaurant in Canterbury
High St - CT1
2024 Review: A “real bright light in an otherwise scrappy pedestrian high street”, this polished and “very well-run” hotel dining room takes the original name of the hotel that stood here back in 1892 and brings a rare fine dining option to the centre of Canterbury; add in “wonderful” cocktails, and it’s “a treat” for its many local fans.
17. The Cook’s Tale (fka The Ambrette Canterbury)
Indian, Southern restaurant in Canterbury
14 - 15 Beer Cart Lane - CT1
“Exciting fusion cooking using adventurous ingredients” continues to draw a high amount of more-than-local attention to Dev Biswal’s fine dining venue near the Cathedral, which promotes an ‘Odia dining experience’ based on the cuisine of Odisha in East India. Previously part of a group called ‘Ambrette’, some reporters have followed it for ages on its journey to Canterbury (“we are lucky to live close to this imaginative Indian restaurant which we have been going to since its Margate days. The food is always interesting and delicious and service is friendly and efficient”).
18. The Duke William
British, Modern restaurant in Ickham
The St - CT3
This “lovely gastropub in a pretty Kent village” with “well-kept beer and very good food” – including “unusual dishes such as a celeriac and truffle tart” – is part of Saga heir Josh De Haan’s Pickled Egg group. Top Tip – “enjoyed a drink in front of the log fire while looking at the menu”.
19. The Sportsman
British, Modern restaurant in Seasalter
Faversham Road - CT5
“As always the food at the Sportsman is stellar” but as always it is the fact that it’s “served in a relaxed environment” which “makes a visit unforgettable” to Stephen Harris’s “splendid” hostelry which “has been modernised but still has the ambience of a pub”: a “diner’s delight” situated “by the Thames Estuary on an ancient saltmarsh and true to its location”. But while “the atmosphere is informal, the cuisine is totally serious”, “to the highest of standards” and at very “fair prices”. “The wine list, carefully chosen by the host, is classic, eclectic and great value too”, so, not unsurprisingly, it “gets very booked up” and is nowadays one of the top-10 most commented-on venues outside London in our annual diners’ poll. The normal menu is a five-courser, nowadays for £85 per person, although there is a three-course mid-week lunch for £55 per person served Tuesday-Thursday. Not sure you have sufficient appetite? – “the ideal thing to do is take a good walk along the beach beforehand to get the appetite brimming with anticipation!” Top Menu Tip – “Local fish is obviously a must” – “served flavoured with seaweed butter or caviar” – as are the “Whitstable oysters or marsh-fed lamb presented with flair”. “Fruit and vegetables often come from the pub’s own garden”.
20. The Dog at Wingham
British, Modern restaurant in Wingham
Canterbury Road - CT3
“Definitely worth the drive… always delicious and great to stay over afterwards” – The Bridgen family’s pub with rooms sits in a “lovely village” halfway between Canterbury and Sandwich and wins very consistent praise as “a favorite Kent bolt hole”. There’s a variety of eating options, from à la carte – which incorporates pub classics but where the focus is on more interesting fare – to an eight-course tasting menu for £75 per person – all “innovative dishes, well-prepared and served by the efficient service”. Top Tip – “Their £200 DB&B for two midweek special is exceptional value – as are their Monthly Celebration Dinners”.
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