Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in Hythe
Hardens guides have spent 34 years compiling reviews of the best Hythe restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 13 restaurants in Hythe and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Hythe restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Hythe Restaurants
1. The Garden Room Restaurant & Bar
British, Modern restaurant in Hythe
Port Lympne Hotel & Reserve, Aldington Road - CT21
The Garden Room Restaurant & Bar is nestled within 15 acres of landscaped gardens at the historic Port Lympne Hotel, and surrounded by 600 acres of wilderness, dotted with some of the world’s most rare and endangered animals.Originally the stable yar...
2. Hide & Fox
British, Modern restaurant in Saltwood
The Green - CT21
“Delighted with the food matches and the quality of the produce” – chef Allister Barsby and manager Alice Bussi’s are celebrating their fifth year at this “lovely little restaurant… their Michelin star is well deserved”. All reports this year are unanimous on its “consistently fabulous cooking, with service and wines to match” which provided some diners with their best meal of the year. “I might have given it 5/5 for food, service and atmosphere had there been more guests creating a warmer atmosphere”.
3. Steep Street Coffee House
Sandwiches, cakes, etc restaurant in Folkestone
18-24 The Old High Street - CT20
This “great coffee shop on the Old High Street”, amid the galleries and antique shops of Folkestone’s ‘Creative Quarter’, combines yummy cakes with poetry, classics and local books to browse or buy – which “adds another dimension”.
4. Rocksalt
Fish & seafood restaurant in Folkestone
4-5 Fishmarket - CT19
For “brilliant fish” in a “stunning setting by the harbour”, look no further than this curved modern restaurant – opened in 2011 by Sir Roger De Haan, Saga billionaire and Folkestone philanthropist – which has by all accounts recovered from a blip in standards when founding chef Mark Sargeant left a couple of year ago. New head chef Akos Mate’s “delicious” food makes it a “seaside restaurant to seal that deal – business conversations are not distracted but enhanced by the professionalism of the service”. There’s a new upstairs wine bar with its own menu, including a strong oyster selection.
5. The Pig at Bridge Place
British, Modern restaurant in Bridge
Brewery Lane - CT4
This manor house link in the Pig chain, three miles south of Canterbury, continues to elicit notably solid feedback; the dining room (which has the airs of a potting shed, courtesy of its preserve-lined walls) follows the locally sourced ‘25-mile’ menu of the rest of the litter, making the most of the Kentish produce; there were reports this year of some “exceptional” dishes which were also “very good value”. It’s possible to opt for more casual wood-fired snacks in the Garden Oven, while there’s more foodie goodness on offer if you stay overnight in one of their idiosyncratic rooms (“dunno where they get their breakfast pastries from, but wow!”).
6. The Bridge Arms
British, Modern restaurant in Bridge
53 High Street - CT4
“Top-end food in a pub setting” has won plaudits for ex-Clove Club chef Daniel Smith and his wife Tasha, a pastry chef, since they took over this 16th-century former coaching inn just south of Canterbury three years ago: “there’s a nice mix of people just having a drink and those out for a top-notch meal”. Its ratings declined this year, though, due to a couple of diners who feel “prices are ludicrous for good, but far from exceptional food”. The Smiths also run the nearby Fordwich Arms. Top Tip – “the set menu represents terrific value”.
7. The Cook’s Tale (fka The Ambrette Canterbury)
Indian, Southern restaurant in Canterbury
14 - 15 Beer Cart Lane - CT1
“On top form since chef-owner Dev Biswal closed his Margate and Rye outposts to focus on this establishment” in 2022 – and gave it a Chaucerian rebrand, focusing on “fine Indian dining using mostly locally sourced and seasonal produce”. Those who loved it in its Ambrette days say it “never fails to deliver interesting and delicious food at reasonable prices”, be it “savoury toasted sandwiches of spicy potato, chicken tikka finger sandwiches, and fried sweet potato” or “spice-enriched scones with jam and cream” (all with Biswal “present to explain” the dishes’ origins).
8. 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”.
9. Café des Amis
Mexican restaurant in Canterbury
95 St Dunstan’s St - CT2
“Still zinging after all these years”, this colourful Westgate outfit (est. 1988) is not the Gallic eatery you’d expect from the name, but rather a “very popular” and “lively” Mexican. Between the “happy atmosphere” and “scrumptious” cuisine, “a pilgrimage to Canterbury for Café des Amis is a must” (with the option to check out their local sibling Café du Soleil – part of a three-strong mini-empire that surprisingly includes a Hawaiian spin-off).
10. The Goods Shed
British, Traditional restaurant in Canterbury
Station Road West - CT2
This “long-term favourite” in an old railway shed has “certainly put itself on the map” thanks to “solid cooking at reasonable prices using produce from the farmers‘ market with which it shares a home”. It’s a “buzzy” sort of place whose “tasty, wholesome dishes” can be “washed down with some excellent Kentish wine” – all backdropped by candlelight if you visit in the evening as the market winds down.
11. The Dog at Wingham
British, Modern restaurant in Wingham
Canterbury Road - CT3
“We love The Dog” chorus fans of this old village pub just outside Canterbury where “the food gets better and better – it’s easily some of the best gastropub food in Kent these days”. Landlord Marc Bridgen “and the team always give a fantastic welcome” and “work very hard to maintain a high-quality establishment”.
12. 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”.
13. The Pilot Inn
restaurant in Romney Marsh
Battery Road - TN29
“Located on the edge of the shingle beach with Dungeness Power Station dominating the horizon” (part of “Britain‘s only designated desert”, with “RSPB-managed bird reserves” at hand), this gastroboozer certainly has an “unusual setting” – and is itself also “unique”, having been built in 1633 from the wreckage of a Spanish vessel lured aground by local smugglers. Fans “can think of nowhere better for a fish ’n’ chip pub lunch” (“a delight for the taste buds”, with the catch “cooked superbly, hot and steaming, with chips that are golden and crispy”); these days they’re not alone, the owners having “enlarged the dining area and car park substantially to cater to the strong demand”.
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