Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in St Austell
Hardens guides have spent 34 years compiling reviews of the best St Austell restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 22 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. The Rising Sun
British, Modern restaurant in Truro
Mitchell Hill - TR1
Tom & Kate Hannon’s old pub in the town centre left a couple of London-based reporters mightily impressed all-round this year, particularly with the cooking: restaurant-quality dishes that are “delicious and keenly priced”.
2. The restaurant at Old Quay House
British, Modern restaurant in Fowey
28 Fore Street - PL23
2024 Review: “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”.
3. The Old Mill Bistro
British, Modern restaurant in Little Petherick
The Old Mill House - PL27
“A nice old mill provides the location” for this small (24 covers) outfit in a B&B, set in a cute Cornish village, and with a garden adjacent to a creek feeding the Camel estuary. “Friendly service and good food at the price” complete the picture, with the menu featuring classic bistro fare, such as Cornish steaks, Grilled fish, Confit leg of Creedy Carver Duck, Chocolate Pot, and Sticky Toffee Pudding.
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
“Delightful small restaurant opposite the church, serving delicious food and a carefully curated, fairly priced range of wines” – for fifteen years, Graham & Sally Cuthbertson’s elegant dining room has provided a “really outstanding all-round experience” (“we’ll definitely be back”).
7. Tiny Thai
Thai restaurant in Wadebridge
1a Molesworth Street - PL27
“Don’t underestimate the quality of the food” at this “no-fuss, cosy” spot, serving “perfectly executed” home cooking from southern Thailand (with fiery Malaysian and Sri Lankan influences) – chef ‘Bpuu’ (a nickname meaning ‘crab’) and her partner Paul started out in Wadebridge 10 years ago serving takeaways from a trailer, moving into permanent premises two years later.
8. Hubbox
Burgers, etc restaurant in Truro
116 Kenwyn Street - TR1
“Popular West Country burger chain” offering “simple food, well served from committed staff” – after rapid expansion from its origin in St Ives, the group collapsed into administration in 2024. A rescue package saved most of the jobs, and it now has nine branches as far afield as Cardiff and Portsmouth.
9. 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”.
10. Driftwood Hotel
International restaurant in Rosevine
A “lovely setting” is the obvious draw to this New England-inspired hotel on the Roseland Peninsula, overlooking Gerrans Bay from its clifftop location. Praise came this year for the “well-presented and prepared fine-dining” offered by its restaurant, but change is afoot, hence we’ve left it un-rated for the time being. In July 2024, after our annual diners’ poll concluded, owners for the last 22 years, Paul & Fiona Robinson retired, selling the property to an investor. Plans are afoot for an upgrade with 20 extra bedrooms, improvements to the bar and dining room and the addition of a spa.
11. Watergate Bay
British, Modern restaurant in Watergate Bay
Following Emily Scott’s departure and well after the conclusion of our annual diners’ poll, Chris Eden (the first Cornishman to win a Michelin star in Cornwall, apparently) has – since October 2024 – taken over the stoves at this famous hotel, which enjoys fine coastal views from the dining room.
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. Ugly Butterfly, The Headland
British, Modern restaurant in Newquay
Fistral Beach, Headland Road - TR7
Adam Handling has upped sticks from Carbis Bay and in July 2025 (after our annual diners’ poll had concluded) relocated his mega-ambitious Cornish operation to this monumental hotel: a vast clifftop landmark (built in 1897) with 86 rooms in a commanding coastal position, overlooking Fistral Beach. The newly created space seats 50 covers inside, 20 on the terrace, and 30 in the bar (separate menu) and is supported by a 500-bin cellar. A three-course menu is £100 per person or there’s also a nine-course tasting menu for £175 per person (and afternoon tea for £50 per person). At his former location practically all reports acknowledged the “exceptional” cuisine although occasionally the trade-off was thought to be “ridiculous prices”, not helped by the blandness of the Carbis Bay setting: reports please!
15. 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.
16. Edie’s
British, Modern restaurant in St Austell
10 Beach Road, Carlyon Bay - PL25
“Excellent food, great service, and good value for money” wins attention for this super, small bistro – a bright, casual modern space with open kitchen. Top Menu Tip – “The soufflé for dessert is amazing!”
17. One Polkirt Hill
restaurant in Mevagissey
1 Polkirt Hill - PL26
“A new venture in 2023 in one of this fishing village‘s back streets. It is somewhat hard to find, but worth the effort. Simple decor and menu which features the local fish catch. Nothing fancy, but simplicity is all sometimes” – one reporter says it all regarding this recent arrival a short stroll from the harbour.
18. 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.
19. The Standard Inn
British, Modern restaurant in Truro
Treloan Lane, Gerrans - TR2
“The owners of The Hidden Hut (a real foodie destination just the other side of Portscatho Beach) have branched out into the pub business with the Standard” – an independent freehouse with a south-facing beer garden whose history stretches back to 1793. Inside, “a lovely, cosy dining area awaits you with a log fire”, as well as a “fairly limited” but “high quality” menu including “excellent” fresh fish. Okay, so it “doesn’t have the views of ‘the Hut’, but for a great pub lunch it’s recommended” – Simon Stallard, who took on the project with his partner Jemma Glass, being a “chef whose hand you can trust”.
20. RenMor
British, Modern restaurant in Newquay
The Headland, Fistral Beach, Headland Rd, - TR7
2024 Review: 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”.
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