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Irish Food, Whiskey & Pub Meals

Irish Food, Whiskey & Pub Meals

Home Ireland FoodIrish Food, Whiskey & Pub Meals
Gate8 Global Team

Ireland's food scene has quietly outgrown its old stereotype: genuinely excellent seafood along a very long coastline, a modern restaurant scene concentrated in Dublin and Cork, and a whiskey industry that's exploded from around 4 distilleries in 2010 to more than 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. Don't miss a proper Irish stew, fish and chips, seafood chowder, and a visit to Cork's English Market.

Ireland's food joke ('boiled potatoes and not much else') has been out of date for a couple of decades — the seafood is genuinely excellent, the whiskey scene has exploded, and even the stereotypical comfort dishes hold up on their own merits. Here's what to actually order and roughly what it costs.

Must-try dishes

DishWhat it isApprox. price (USD / EUR)
Irish stewSlow-cooked lamb or beef with potatoes, carrots, and onions$16–24 / €15–22
Fish and chipsBattered fresh fish (often cod or haddock) with fries$14–22 / €13–20
Seafood chowderCreamy soup loaded with local fish, mussels, and shrimp$12–18 / €11–16
BoxtyA traditional potato pancake, often filled with meat or cheese$10–16 / €9–15
Brown soda breadDense, slightly sweet wheaten bread, served with nearly everythingUsually included with a meal

The whiskey renaissance

Irish whiskey is typically triple-distilled, which generally makes it smoother and lighter than Scotch's more common double distillation. The industry nearly disappeared by the late 20th century, down to a handful of distilleries — it's since rebounded dramatically, growing from around 4 working distilleries in 2010 to more than 40 today. Jameson's original Bow Street site in Dublin and the Midleton Distillery near Cork are the two most visitor-ready options for a proper tour and tasting.

Cork's English Market

The English Market in Cork
Fresh produce and seafood stalls inside Cork's English Market

A covered Victorian-era food market running continuously since 1788, and the single best place in the country to see local food culture up close — fresh seafood counters, Irish farmhouse cheese stalls, a spice merchant, and the market's famous (and genuinely divisive) tripe-and-drisheen counter. Graze your way through it for lunch rather than sitting down at one stall.

How much eating out costs

Meal typePrice per person (USD / EUR)
Casual pub lunch$14–20 / €13–18
Sit-down pub dinner$20–30 / €18–27
Mid-range restaurant$30–50 / €27–46
A dram of whiskey at a bar$8–15 / €7–14

Dietary needs

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Vegetarian and vegan options are increasingly strong in Dublin, Galway, and Cork, where most menus now have a dedicated plant-based section — smaller rural towns along the Wild Atlantic Way have thinner options, so it's worth checking ahead if you're on a strict diet and driving through the countryside. Halal food is available in the bigger cities but harder to find rurally. Shellfish allergies deserve extra caution, since seafood shows up in chowder-based soups that don't always read as 'seafood dishes' at first glance.

A note on portion sizes and pub food timing

Pub kitchens in smaller towns often stop serving food noticeably earlier than the bar itself stays open — sometimes as early as 8:30 or 9pm — which catches visitors used to later dinner hours off guard. If you're driving rural roads and plan to eat at your destination pub, don't push dinner past 8pm without checking the kitchen hours first.

Questions people actually ask

Is Irish food actually bad?
That reputation is out of date. Ireland has excellent seafood thanks to its long coastline, a genuinely strong modern restaurant scene in Dublin and Cork, and classic comfort dishes — a proper stew, fish and chips, chowder — that are worth ordering on their own merits.
Is Irish whiskey different from Scotch whisky?
Yes — Irish whiskey is typically triple-distilled versus Scotch's more common double distillation, generally making it smoother and lighter. The industry has grown from around 4 distilleries in 2010 to more than 40 today, so there's a lot more to explore than the handful of big supermarket brands.
Can vegetarians and vegans eat well in Ireland?
Yes in the bigger cities — Dublin, Galway, and Cork all have strong plant-based menus at most restaurants. Rural towns along the Wild Atlantic Way have fewer dedicated options, so it's worth checking ahead if you have a strict diet and a long driving day planned.