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Delahunt Dublin Victorian grocer's shop Modern Irish restaurant

Delahunt

#15 in Dublin Modern Irish Camden Street Lower $$$ Michelin Guide

A Victorian grocer mentioned in Ulysses. Michelin-plated, unfussy cooking in a setting that feels both literary and alive — Dublin's most romantically storied table.

8Food
9Ambience
8Value

About the Restaurant

Delahunt occupies a corner site on Camden Street Lower in a building that once housed a grocer's shop of the same name — a detail so perfectly suited to Dublin's literary appetite that it might have been invented for dramatic effect. It was not. The original Delahunt's was real, and real enough that James Joyce mentioned it in Ulysses, which means this restaurant now inhabits the kind of footnote that most dining rooms would mortgage their wine list to acquire. That it earned a Michelin Bib Gourmand distinction from 2016 through 2019, and now appears in the 2025 MICHELIN Guide for the Republic of Ireland, feels like the natural continuation of a story that began in early twentieth-century Dublin and found its second chapter in the present.

The building's Victorian bones have been preserved with the kind of restraint that is often harder to achieve than any form of opulence. The ground floor retains its original shopfront proportions — large windows, a modest entrance, the kind of scale that suggests service rather than spectacle. Interior design has resisted the temptation toward overwrought nostalgia. Instead, the mood is one of collected thoughtfulness: timber fixtures from the original shopfront, contemporary art that breathes, candlelight that flatters without performing. The Clerk's snug — that peculiarly Irish architectural feature, a small private booth once used by clergy to consume alcohol while maintaining discretion — has been enclosed in glass and transformed into a private dining room. It is the only architectural intervention of significance, and it is made in the spirit of utility rather than theater.

Chef Brian Fitzgerald leads a kitchen focused on Modern Irish technique applied to the produce that Ireland offers. Home curing, smoking, slow braises, and preserved ingredients feature prominently. The menu changes regularly, which means there is no single dish that defines the restaurant, but rather a consistent philosophy: take what is best from Irish suppliers, treat it with technical precision, and allow the ingredient itself to become the hero. A single Irish cod will become something memorable. A rare-breed pork shoulder, braised for hours, will justify the philosophy. The wine list is deliberately selected rather than impressive by volume — a quality that matters here, where precision and proportion count more than parade.

The dining room seats approximately fifty covers. Service is attentive without being overbearing, professional without formality. Reservations are recommended and easily secured through OpenTable. The restaurant respects the occasion without requiring black tie as a condition of respect, which means both first-time daters and couples returning for anniversaries will find themselves equally at home. Prices sit at €45–€75 per head, a range that positions Delahunt somewhere between the accessible and the aspirational — the band where some of Dublin's most genuinely interesting cooking now happens.

For those seeking a table that feels less like an event and more like a discovery — a place where literary heritage and contemporary craft have merged into something both personal and assured — this is a restaurant that rewards making a reservation and keeping quiet about it afterward.

Why It Works for a First Date
Delahunt succeeds as a first-date venue because it occupies a narrow band of excellence: impressive without being intimidating, romantic without being obvious. The dining room has an intelligence to it — the kind of place where someone's choice to take you there signals not just taste but care. The food arrives in a succession of careful plates that provide natural conversation breaks; each dish is interesting enough to talk about, but neither so challenging nor so elaborate that it dominates the evening. The intimate scale of the restaurant means the room itself feels like it is conspiring with you rather than observing you. Dress code is smart casual; there is no requirement for formal wear that might add pressure to an already delicate occasion. Reserve a table by the window if possible, and allow the evening to unfold at its own pace. This restaurant expects you to stay for two hours minimum.
Why It Works for a Proposal
The combination of literary resonance, intimate scale, and careful attention to detail makes Delahunt exceptional for a proposal. Contact the restaurant when you book and mention the occasion — the kitchen and service team will work with you to create small moments of recognition without requiring you to orchestrate anything visibly. The progression of courses creates natural pauses; the sommelier can be briefed to present a bottle you have selected at the optimal moment. The building itself has weight and history, which means the moment feels like it is happening in a place worth remembering, not a room hired for the occasion. The Clerk's snug private dining room is available if you prefer to propose in a more enclosed setting. The restaurant will accommodate any dietary requirements and will work around any logistical detail you bring to them, but they will not sentimentalize the moment itself. Everything here is executed with the kind of unsentimental grace that makes people remember occasions clearly.

Community Poll

Best occasion for Delahunt?
First Date
40%
Proposal
32%
Birthday
18%
Anniversary
10%

Cast your vote — register or sign in to participate.

Guest Reviews

Cormac O'Sullivan February 2026
Occasion: First Date
Took someone I had been hoping to take to dinner for two years, and this was the place I chose. The Dover sole — which sounds simple but was technically executed with obvious care — gave us something to talk about. The waiter appeared at exactly the moment I was about to signal for something, which meant the whole evening felt effortless. We came back three weeks later. That was the point at which I knew I had made the right choice the first time.
Aisling Doherty March 2026
Occasion: Proposal
I proposed to my partner here on a Saturday evening. The manager had been discreetly briefed and arranged for flowers and champagne to arrive with the dessert course. The moment was entirely our own, but the restaurant made sure everything around it was invisible and flawless. The braised beef short rib was extraordinary. But what I remember most is how the room itself felt like it was part of the moment — the candlelight, the careful spacing of other tables, the sense that this was a place where important things happened quietly.

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Restaurant Details
Address39 Camden Street Lower, Dublin 2
NeighbourhoodCamden Street, South Dublin
CuisineModern Irish
Price Range€45–€75 per head
Michelin RecognitionBib Gourmand 2016–2019; 2025 Guide
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ReservationsRecommended — book via OpenTable
Private DiningClerk's Snug available
ChefBrian Fitzgerald
Reserve a Table →

Reservations via OpenTable

Occasion Suitability
First DateExceptional
ProposalExceptional
BirthdayExcellent
AnniversaryExcellent
Business DinnerGood
Solo DiningLimited
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