British, Modern Restaurants in Worthing
1. 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!”
2. The Lamb at Angmering
British, Modern restaurant in Angmering
The Square - BN16
This “lovely” Georgian pub-with-rooms in a “great location” for the South Downs provides “good-quality elevated pub food” with “friendly and attentive service”. It has been restored and run by the Newbon family over the past 14 years.
3. 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”.
4. East Beach Cafe
British, Modern restaurant in Littlehampton
Sea Road - BN17
In a “great situation on the beach” and in an even greater, Heatherwick Studio-designed building – comprising long, undulating ribbons of raw steel that are akin to driftwood – this is “more of a hybrid” than your standard seaside caff: whether you want a snack or a three-course meal, “the menu always has something for everyone, with delicious fish dishes” a feature.
5. The Ginger Pig
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
3 Hove St - BN3
“There is no better place in Hove to have a lovely long lunch” than this elevated boozer, with a “changing and appealing menu” of supercharged British pub classics. If you want more ginger, its three local siblings are equally fun places to be (and if you want to overnight in one of their quirky rooms or self-catering mews houses, you can do that too).
6. The Parsons Table
British, Modern restaurant in Arundel
2 & 8 Castle Mews, Tarrant Street - BN18
It’s “always a pleasure to eat” at this “charming location with equally charming owners and staff” – chef-patron Lee Parsons and his wife Liz have clocked up ten years at this “absolute favourite family-run restaurant”, which is particularly notable for its “über-fresh and expertly cooked fish” among other “delicious and imaginative dishes”. There’s a “lovely, friendly atmosphere”, and you “leave with a feeling of money well spent (unusual these days!)”. Top Tip – “if you’re driving, allow 15 minutes to find somewhere to park”.
7. Etch
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
214-216 Church Rd - BN3
“Definitely worth the trip to the seaside for this cool place” – Stephen Edwards “seems to have thought through the all-round experience” at this converted former bank in Hove, which he opened in 2017: “from the wait staff, to the feeling in the room and of course the food and drink” it is “hard to put your finger on exactly why, but it all just felt effortless and satisfying” and it’s one of the most commented-on destinations in our annual diners’ poll. The food offering revolves around a five-course menu for £55 per person: “refined dishes with a number of options to play with” and “with clear (and justifiable) pride in the food coming out of the kitchen”. There’s also “a comprehensive and far-flung wine list”. Top Menu Tip – “The Marmite bread is worth the hype”.
8. Fourth and Church
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
84 Church Road - BN3
“Creative but delicious unfussy food and excellent wines” set the tone at this wine bar/restaurant opposite Hove Town Hall from industry veterans Paul Morgan and Sam Pryor, which has developed steadily over the past decade. About 30 bottles (including sparkling wines and sherries) usually available by the glass, along with a wide range produced nearby in Sussex. Top Tip – “Sunday sessions, set menus with wine tasting, are a particularly good way to spend an afternoon here”.
9. Wild Flor
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
42 Church Road - BN3
The founder/owners “never put a foot wrong” at this British bistro in Hove, providing “outstanding food and service in attractive and comfortable surroundings”. Local hospitality trio Faye & James Thompson and Rob Maynard launched the venue in 2019 and it “has gone from strength to strength”, with innovations like the monthly ‘Sunday Lunch Club’, showcasing ingredients at their peak. Last summer American actor Kyle MacLachlan – Dale Cooper in cult classic ‘Twin Peaks’ – was a surprise visitor, as a thank-you to James for putting his Pursued by Bear wine on Wild Flor’s list!
10. Bailiffscourt Hotel
British, Modern restaurant in Climping
Climping St - BN17
“This 1920s-recreation of a medieval country house scores highly on atmos’”, having been designed for a scion of the Guinness brewing family by antiquarian and architect Amyas Phillips. Feedback on the tapestry-clad dining room was up-and-down last year, but there was nothing but praise in this year’s poll for its “professional” cuisine and “superb” service, with the “good value set lunch” (two courses £33, three courses £38) excellent value given the setting. It’s particularly recommended as somewhere “good to impress the in-laws”, and if you’re ready to pull out all the stops, bag them a room in one of the hotel’s cottages or houses that wind down to the Climping Coast.
11. Gingerman
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
21a Norfolk Sq - BN1
“Still Brighton’s best for a straightforward, beautifully cooked but unpretentious meal” (albeit “at a price”), Ben & Pamela McKellar’s “little gem tucked down a side street off the seafront” is “as good as ever” after 25 years in business and “lovely for date night”. Even those who feel they’ve “clearly decided to go for something ‘finer’” of late (“the bread has become extremely fancy, as have the canapés”) don’t regret that upward turn, praising the “superb” food and service (“especially the Sunday lunch”).
12. The Ginger Fox
British, Modern restaurant in Albourne
Muddleswood Road - BN6
“Everything looks and tastes wonderful” at this rural pub with views of the South Downs, where “the menu is a little bit different” and “friendly service with a smile just adds to the enjoyment”. The country cousin in Brighton’s Gingerman group, it focuses on “high-quality” ingredients from within Sussex, including local ales and wine from the Ridgeview estate a couple of miles away.
13. The Salt Room
Fish & seafood restaurant in Brighton
106 Kings Road - BN1
“Excellent fish cookery” showcased in a “very atmospheric dining room” which is “one of the surprisingly rare places with sea views in Brighton” – “the quality here is unwavering and the menu always evolves slightly”. Even one local who considers it “a tiny-bit-less superb than the Coal Shed and Burnt Orange” (its stablemates in local restaurateur Raz Helalat’s Black Rock group), feels that “when it’s good, it’s very good”.
14. Amberley Castle
British, Modern restaurant in Amberley
“The castle is situated in a picture postcard setting” – down a long drive through gardens with the portcullis still working – and “in the upstairs dining room of this luxury establishment you could imagine a long dining table and the nobles sitting round and having a feast”. No surprise that it always induces feedback, particularly as a “romantic choice”. But there’s general agreement that the “traditional British cuisine” is somewhere between OK and “nothing too special” (“The food doesn’t live up to the stunning setting and the predictability of the menu means we visit much less often these days”).
15. The Coal Shed
Steaks & grills restaurant in Brighton
8 Boyces St - BN1
“Raz (Helalat, of the Black Rock Restaurants group) does it again!” with this open-flame specialist, reborn in “deliberately flash” new city-centre premises, on North Street, in late 2024, and now sprawling over five distinct dining areas and a dedicated cocktail bar. By all accounts the new venue is “fabulous in every way”: “the beef (28-day Irish steaks cooked over hot coals) remains of the highest quality, but there is now a bigger menu with plenty of fish and vegetarian choices” to go with it, and the high stakes relocation has “real atmosphere” too (“almost like a London restaurant”).
16. Burnt Orange
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
59 Middle Street - BN1
“Delightful and surprising” small plates of “delicious Middle-Eastern-influenced food”, most of it cooked over fire, is matched with tasty cocktails and “fairly-priced wines” (“we had an excellent bottle from Turkey”) in this “lovely setting” close to the Brighton seafront from Razak Helalat’s Black Rock group (alongside Coal Shed, The Salt Room, Tutto). Open until 10pm for meals (9pm on Sundays) and even later for drinks (“great fun at the bar”), it is tipped by several reporters as “a new favourite”.
17. Riddle & Finns
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
12b Meeting House Ln - BN1
For “classic fish/seafood amid traditional décor”, you can’t beat this long-running oyster bar (est. 2006), in a prime location on the buzzing Lanes – just ask fan Gordon Ramsay, who has sung its praises on TikTok! The “imaginative menu” includes “amazing” market fish of the day, and there’s also “great seafood risotto and tempura prawns to keep the younger members of the party happy”. If you’d like your catch with a view, see also their newer branch, located right above Brighton beach.
18. Flint House
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
13 Hannington’s Lane - BN1
“Still the most sought-after seats in town (although less mobbed than it was)” – this modern small-plates operation from Pamela & Ben McKellar’s Gingerman group is predominantly counter-seating with an open kitchen, so “it’s always interesting to sit and watch the chefs at work”. “There’s a nice roof terrace for summer days” and “they’ve introduced a proper Sunday roast, which is wonderful”. Top Menu Tip – “irresistible blue cheese crumpets, or the sweetcorn fritters”.
19. Kindling
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
69 East Street - BN1
2022 Review: Opened just before Christmas 2019, a brightly decorated establishment where everything is cooked over open fire in the central open kitchen. It’s from the Food for Friends team with chefs Holly Taylor and Toby Geneen. Limited initial feedback, but ratings are strong and reports are of a “carnivore’s delight”.
20. Isaac@
British, Modern restaurant in Brighton
2 Gloucester Street - BN1
2023 Review: Isaac Bartlett-Copeland’s ambitious and ultra-local operation in Brighton’s boho North Laine is “so original and never the same twice”, with its ‘taste of Sussex’ menus and an all-English list of wines. The “NYC vibe” goes too far for some tastes (“well-meaning front of house told us everything, and I mean absolutely everything, about every dish…”)
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