Dublin chefs are pushing Irish cuisine to new heights

If you think your next trip to Dublin will be fueled exclusively by stews, shepherd’s pie and Guinness, the team at Bog & Thunder — a new food-themed tour operator that focuses on travel to Ireland — wants to blow your mind. 

“Most people have an antiquated idea of what Irish food is,” Kate McCabe, who co-founded Bog & Thunder with her husband Max Sussman, told The Post. “To the extent that they think of Irish food at all when planning their trips, they tend to think that it’s all meat and potatoes.”

That’s changing. McCabe believes that by highlighting the work of Irish chefs, Dublin could become a culinary capital.

“We want to be part of the effort to put Dublin on the map as a global food destination, much like Copenhagen or Mexico City,” McCabe said.

Bog & Thunder pairs tourists with expert-led tasting hubs.
Ben Hon
Exterior of a castle in Ireland.
Local castles of culinary delight are most definitely included in the $500/day itineraries.
Ben Hon

To take you outside the pub, Bog & Thunder crafts custom itineraries, as well as group crawls to give travelers insidery insight into Ireland’s fast-evolving food culture (prices for custom trips start at $500 per day). 

For instance, McCabe recommends taking a Dublin walking tour with Máirtín Mac Con Iomaire, a chef awarded with Ireland’s first doctorate in food history.

As you stroll, he’ll regale you with the history of the city’s restaurant scene.

Aerial shot of Ireland a night.
A new Dublin food tour hopes to put Ireland on eaters’ maps by highlighting the best of Éire’s young chef talent.
Getty Images

Or why not take a cooking class with chefs Jess Murphy and Eoin Cluskey, who recently completed “the United Nation of Cookies,” a cookbook featuring recipes from refugees and immigrants who now call Ireland home.

Better still head out on your own.

Below, McCabe dishes on some of the best Dublin restaurants and bars.

Drive in

Close up of a chef at Allta.
A gifted young chef helms Allta, an unlikely restaurant atop a Dublin parking garage, producing innovative eats.
Al Higgins

At Allta,  perched on the rooftop of a parking garage in the city center, celebrated  chef Niall Davidson is making some of the most inventive dishes in Dublin. 
Dive into a plate of scallops, chicken, morels and wild garlic that wowed McCabe back in May. 

“The textures and flavors — particularly the chicken liver-stuffed morel—  will stay with us,” she raved.

Eating by the book

Exterior of Library Street and its employees.
Sharing is caring at Library Street, where dishes are prepared by chef Kevin Burke.
Ruth Calder-Potts
Close up at plates served at Library Street.
Library Street’s dishes are meant to be shared.
Ruth Calder-Potts

Former Allta chef Kevin Burke has taken over his old restaurant’s former digs to create a low-lit dinner-only hot spot that’s  full of surprises.

Dubbed Library Street and situated steps from Trinity College, the restaurant serves up mini choux logs topped with anchovies, chargrilled turbot over au jus from roast chicken, and the addictive, crispy-on-the-outside potatoes Lyonnaise.

Everything is meant to be shared.

There’s even, including a cocktail featuring a rum made in Ireland. Sláinte!

Pour one out

Interior of table wine.
Table Wine champions the natural kind of juice.
Table Wine

In the hipster neighborhood of Portobello, pop into Table Wine for the fantastic natural vino program, filled with Beaujolais producers and biodynamic bottles from Germany’s Weingut Schmitt.

The kitchen prepares a tasting menu most nights, but you can also drop in for a drop of Pet Nat and some Irish cheese (like a potent, cow’s milk blue from Newtownards in County Down) if you’re just looking for an early evening nosh.

Get baked

Bread 41’s Eoin Cluskey isn’t just considered a pioneer in elevating Ireland’s bread-making standards, but he’s done so while championing sustainability.

The whole-grain sourdough and the rich, flaky pastries are what get people in the door, but according to McCabe, you can’t sleep on the chunky, sesame seed-dusted sausage roll.

“It’s the standard by which we judge all sausage rolls,” she said.

Fishy business

Exterior of Saltwater Grocery.
After hours, seemingly mild-mannered seafoodery pops off.
Saltwater Grocery

During the day, Saltwater Grocery is a cult-favored fishmonger and gourmet store. But on some nights,  chefs Karl Whelan and Niall Sabongi host the city’s most sought-after dinner pop-ups. 

Serving fresh oysters topped with magnolia granita and dry-aged salmon, McCabe says, “These dinners are everything we love about the Dublin food scene: small, intimate, and with an emphasis on responsibly sourced ingredients.”

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