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Edinburgh · New Town · Opened October 2025

Vinette

Wine-Led Bistro·$$$·36 Broughton Street

Stuart Ralston's wine-led bistro on the old Fhior site, opened October 2025 — go for an easy, conversation-led first date.

Photo via Lola Muller · Google
8Food
8Ambience
8Value

Stuart Ralston opened Vinette on Broughton Street in October 2025, weeks after closing Aizle, his debut restaurant of eleven years. This one is wine-led and French-leaning: small plates, a pig's head croquette among the £6 snacks, and a cellar run by head sommelier Stuart Skea built almost entirely on Old World growers. It sits at 36 Broughton Street in the New Town, on the old Fhior site, with the speakeasy Vivien downstairs. Weekend set lunch is £32 for two courses, £36 for three, wine included.

The Kitchen

Stuart Ralston built his reputation at Aizle, the blind tasting-menu restaurant he ran for eleven years until its last service on 21 September 2025, and at the Michelin-starred Lyla, named Best Restaurant in Scotland at the 2025 National Restaurant Awards. Vinette, opened with co-owner Jade Johnston in October 2025, is his loosest room: a Parisian-leaning bistro of sharing plates rather than a fixed menu. The snacks are all £6, among them a pig's head croquette, potato chips with cream cheese and smoked trout roe, and rarebit with marmalade, and the a la carte runs through lunch and dinner. Head sommelier Stuart Skea oversees a by-the-glass list that turns over constantly, weighted to small Old World growers. Weekend set lunch is £32 for two courses or £36 for three with wine. The address, 36 Broughton Street, was Scott Smith's Fhior until 2025; downstairs is Vivien, the team's cocktail bar. The cooking is confident and unfussy, the opposite of Aizle's ceremony.

The Room

Vinette is a small, warm New Town bistro: bentwood chairs, marble-topped tables, a zinc-toned bar and a wall of bottles that doubles as the wine list. The sound level is a lively hum rather than a hush, the lighting is low and candlelit after dark, and tables sit close together in the Parisian way. Around forty covers across the ground floor. There is no dress code; smart-casual is the norm. Vivien, the cocktail bar downstairs, takes the same walk-in-friendly approach for a drink before or after dinner.

Best for a First Date

Book Vinette for a first date because the room is small enough to lean in, the sharing plates give you something to do with your hands when conversation stalls, and the by-the-glass list lets you order a single glass without committing to a bottle or a three-hour tasting menu. Stuart Skea will steer you to something interesting for £9 or £12 a glass. Start with the £6 snacks, share a few plates, and drop to Vivien downstairs for a nightcap if it is going well. As an example: a Thursday at eight, two seats at the bar, three plates and a glass each.

Not For

Not for anyone after a tasting menu or a hushed, formal room — Vinette is a loud, close-packed bistro of sharing plates, not the Aizle format Ralston retired.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Vinette worth it?
Yes, especially if you like wine. Stuart Ralston's Broughton Street bistro delivers Michelin-pedigree cooking at bistro prices, with snacks at £6 and a weekend set lunch at £32, plus a sommelier-led list that is the real draw. It is not a destination tasting menu like his Lyla, and it does not try to be. For a relaxed, wine-led dinner in the New Town, it is among the best-value openings of 2025.
How hard is it to book Vinette?
Moderately. Vinette opened in October 2025 to strong reviews and steady walk-in demand, so weekend evenings book one to two weeks ahead through the restaurant's site. Weekday lunch and bar seats are easier and often available the same week. If you cannot get a table, the cocktail bar Vivien downstairs takes walk-ins, and you can sometimes order the snack menu there while you wait.
What is the dress code at Vinette?
There is no dress code. Vinette is a New Town bistro, not a formal dining room, and smart-casual is the norm, so jeans and a jacket read perfectly. The room is candlelit and close-packed in the Parisian style, so dress for a lively evening rather than a hushed one. The same applies to Vivien, the cocktail bar downstairs.
What should I order at Vinette?
Start with the £6 snacks: the pig's head croquette and the rarebit with marmalade are the signatures. Then build a meal from the sharing plates. Ask head sommelier Stuart Skea to match wines by the glass, because the by-the-glass list is the point of the place. At weekend lunch, the £32 two-course set with wine is the smart order.