Restaurant in Plymouth, United Kingdom
Barbican Kitchen
290ptsSolid brasserie inside Plymouth's gin distillery.

About Barbican Kitchen
Barbican Kitchen sits inside Plymouth's Black Friars Distillery — one of England's oldest working gin distilleries — and earns a Michelin Plate at an accessible ££ price point. The brasserie menu skews toward classic comfort food with good vegetarian coverage. Easy to book, strong on gin-led drinks, and a more considered room than the casual setting implies.
The Gin Distillery Dining Room Plymouth Actually Needs
Most people who visit Barbican Kitchen assume the location is the point — a novelty dinner inside a historic gin distillery, gin and tonics obligatory, food secondary. That framing undersells the kitchen and misleads the diner. The food here earns its Michelin Plate recognition on its own terms, and the drinks program — rooted in one of England's oldest working distilleries , is more considered than the brasserie price tag suggests. If you have been once and filed it away as a pleasant enough heritage experience, it is worth revisiting with sharper expectations.
Barbican Kitchen sits inside Black Friars Distillery on Southside Street in Plymouth's historic Barbican quarter, the same building where Plymouth Gin has been produced since 1793. That context matters for the bar more than the dining room: this is not a restaurant that happens to have gin on the back shelf. The distillery surrounds the room, and the spirit produced here , a softer, slightly earthier style than London Dry , shapes what the drinks list does well. Plymouth Gin holds a geographical indication in the same way that Champagne does, meaning the name is legally protected and the spirit can only be made in this city. If you are returning after a first visit, the gin-led cocktails are where the bar program earns its keep, and ordering something built around the house spirit rather than defaulting to wine or beer will give you a more complete read on what the venue does distinctively.
The kitchen runs brasserie menus with a leaning toward classic comfort food , simply cooked, reliably executed, with solid options for vegetarians. This is not the register of Àclèaf, Plymouth's fine-dining benchmark at ££££, nor is it trying to be. At ££ per head, Barbican Kitchen sits in a sensible middle position: more considered than a pub kitchen, less formal than a tasting-menu room. The Michelin Plate , awarded in 2024, signalling food worth stopping for without the full star apparatus , confirms the kitchen is doing something right within that register. For returning visitors, the value question answers itself: you are getting documented quality at an accessible price point, in a setting that most cities would struggle to replicate.
The aroma of the distillery is present in the room in a way that is hard to describe without sounding like a press release, so the practical version: the botanical scent from the production side of the building drifts through, particularly on days when the stills are active. It is a background note rather than an overwhelming presence, but it does orient the space in a way that a conventional restaurant room cannot. If scent-forward environments bother you, worth knowing. If they do not, it adds to the sense that the building is genuinely working rather than costumed as a heritage attraction.
Booking is easy by Plymouth standards. No weeks-long waiting lists, no elaborate reservation systems. Walk-ins are plausible at quieter periods, though booking ahead removes any uncertainty. For a city where Àclèaf requires planning and Fletcher's has its own demand curve, Barbican Kitchen is the accessible option that does not ask you to sacrifice quality for availability. That accessibility makes it particularly well-suited to repeat visits , you can come back without the logistical overhead that surrounds the city's more formal rooms.
For solo diners, this works well. The brasserie format does not demand group conversation to make sense of the menu, and the distillery setting gives the room enough visual interest to make eating alone feel purposeful rather than conspicuous. Groups are manageable too, given the brasserie layout, though the venue's intimate character means very large parties should confirm arrangements in advance.
On occasion-suitability: if you are looking for a room with ceremony and theatre, Àclèaf is the answer. If you want something that feels genuinely special without the formality or the ££££ bill, Barbican Kitchen's location inside a 230-year-old working distillery does carry weight. Birthdays, low-key anniversaries, a meal that feels considered without requiring a booking two months out , the venue fits that brief neatly.
Dress code is relaxed, in keeping with the brasserie positioning. Smart casual covers it comfortably; there is no expectation of formality. The Barbican as a neighbourhood trends toward a mixed, unpretentious crowd, and the restaurant reflects that. Come in what you would wear to a good neighbourhood restaurant rather than a destination dining room.
Ratings at a Glance
- Google: 4.6 out of 5 (635 reviews)
- Michelin: Plate (2024)
- Price: ££
- Booking difficulty: Easy
How to Book
Booking is direct. The venue is located at Black Friars Distillery, 60 Southside St, Plymouth PL1 2LQ. Walk-ins are possible at quieter times, but reserving ahead is advisable if you want a specific session. No complex booking infrastructure required.
Practical Details
| Detail | Barbican Kitchen | Fletcher's | Àclèaf |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price range | ££ | ££ | ££££ |
| Cuisine | International / Brasserie | Modern British | Modern Cuisine |
| Booking difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Plan ahead |
| Michelin recognition | Plate (2024) | Check Pearl | Check Pearl |
| Setting | Historic distillery | Restaurant dining room | Fine-dining room |
| Vegetarian options | Well catered for | Available | Available |
Explore More in Plymouth
- Our full Plymouth restaurants guide
- Our full Plymouth bars guide
- Our full Plymouth hotels guide
- Our full Plymouth experiences guide
- Our full Plymouth wineries guide
Elsewhere in the UK
If Barbican Kitchen's Michelin Plate puts you in the frame for exploring further, the UK has a strong regional dining scene worth knowing. Gidleigh Park in Chagford is the Devon benchmark for formal fine dining. Hand and Flowers in Marlow does pub-format food at Michelin two-star level. L'Enclume in Cartmel and Moor Hall in Aughton are the northern England reference points for serious tasting menus. hide and fox in Saltwood and Midsummer House in Cambridge round out the regional picture for Michelin-tracked rooms outside London. For London itself, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay and Waterside Inn in Bray represent the formal end of the spectrum.
Compare Barbican Kitchen
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barbican Kitchen | International | ££ | An informal eatery in the Plymouth Gin Distillery (where gin was once distilled for the Navy). Brasserie menus offer a good choice of simply cooked dishes, with classic comfort food to the fore; vegetarians are well catered for.; An informal eatery in the Plymouth Gin Distillery (where gin was once distilled for the Navy). Brasserie menus offer a good choice of simply cooked dishes, with classic comfort food to the fore; vegetarians are well catered for.; Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Fletcher's | Modern British | ££ | Unknown | — | |
| Àclèaf | Modern Cuisine | ££££ | Unknown | — | |
| Salumi | Unknown | — |
How Barbican Kitchen stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Barbican Kitchen accommodate groups?
The distillery setting at Black Friars, 60 Southside St, gives the room more floor space than most Plymouth city-centre restaurants, which makes it a reasonable call for groups. The brasserie format — with a broad menu including comfort dishes and strong vegetarian options — means mixed groups with varied tastes are well served. Book ahead rather than risk a walk-in with a large party.
What are alternatives to Barbican Kitchen in Plymouth?
Àcleaf at Boringdon Hall holds a Michelin Star and is the serious fine-dining choice if budget allows. Fletcher's is worth considering if you want something closer in price and formality to Barbican Kitchen. Salumi is a better fit if you specifically want Italian-leaning charcuterie and smaller plates rather than a full brasserie menu.
What should a first-timer know about Barbican Kitchen?
The location inside the Plymouth Gin distillery — Black Friars, one of England's oldest working gin distilleries — adds genuine atmosphere without the venue leaning on it too hard. The menu is brasserie-style: approachable, comfort-forward, and broad enough that you're not locked into a single cuisine direction. It holds a Michelin Plate (2024), which signals consistent, competent cooking rather than destination-level ambition.
What should I wear to Barbican Kitchen?
This is an informal eatery — that description comes directly from the venue's Michelin listing. Casual clothes are appropriate. There's no indication of a dress code, and the brasserie format at ££ pricing means you won't feel out of place without a jacket.
Is Barbican Kitchen worth the price?
At ££, this is mid-range Plymouth pricing and the Michelin Plate (2024) confirms the kitchen is cooking to a recognised standard. For the price bracket, a well-executed brasserie menu in a historic distillery building represents fair value. It's not a cheap eat, but it's not asking you to spend fine-dining money either.
Is Barbican Kitchen good for a special occasion?
It works for a relaxed birthday dinner or a low-key anniversary if you want a step above a pub without the formality or expense of Àcleaf. The distillery setting gives the room a distinct character that registers as an occasion. If the event calls for tasting menus and serious wine service, this isn't the right venue at ££ and an informal brasserie format.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Barbican Kitchen?
No tasting menu is documented in the available venue data for Barbican Kitchen. The format here is a brasserie menu with à la carte choice, which is a different proposition from a set tasting experience. If a tasting format is what you're after in the Plymouth area, Àcleaf is the more appropriate choice.
Recognized By
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