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Irish Food, Whiskey & Pub Meals

Beyond the stereotypes — what Irish food and drink actually taste like, and what it costs.

Irish food's reputation as 'just potatoes and stew' is outdated — the country has genuinely excellent seafood (thanks to a very long coastline), a serious modern-restaurant scene in Dublin and Cork, and a whiskey industry that's grown from 4 distilleries in 2010 to over 40 today. A pub meal runs $16–26 (€15–24), a sit-down restaurant $25–45 (€23–42), and a dram of good Irish whiskey $8–15 (€7–14) at a bar. Cork's English Market is the best single place to see what local food culture actually looks like.

Ireland's food reputation lags a couple of decades behind its food reality — the seafood is excellent, the whiskey renaissance is real, and even the stereotypical dishes (a proper Irish stew, good fish and chips) are worth trying on their own merits, not as a joke. Here's what to actually order, what it costs, and where whiskey fits into all of it.

Questions people actually ask

Is Irish food just potatoes and stew?
That reputation is out of date. Ireland has excellent seafood (fresh oysters, mussels, and chowder along the coast), a booming modern-restaurant and craft-food scene especially in Dublin and Cork, and the classics — a proper Irish stew, brown soda bread, fish and chips — are genuinely good, not just a stereotype.
Is Irish whiskey different from Scotch?
Yes — Irish whiskey is typically triple-distilled (Scotch is usually distilled twice), which generally makes it smoother and lighter. The industry has grown dramatically, from around 4 working distilleries in 2010 to more than 40 today, so there's far more to try than just the big supermarket names.
Can vegetarians and vegans eat well in Ireland?
Increasingly well, especially in Dublin, Galway, and Cork, where most restaurants have a dedicated plant-based section. Halal food is available in the bigger cities but thinner on the ground in small rural towns — plan ahead if you're driving the Wild Atlantic Way. Always flag nut and shellfish allergies directly, since seafood shows up in unexpected places like chowder-based soups.