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    Restaurant in Port Isaac, United Kingdom

    Outlaw's New Road

    1,410pts

    Book now: it closes 28 March 2026.

    Outlaw's New Road, Restaurant in Port Isaac

    About Outlaw's New Road

    Outlaw's New Road is closing on 28 March 2026, making this the final window to experience Nathan Outlaw's eleven-course seafood tasting menu (£195 per person) in Port Isaac. La Liste ranked it at 87.5 points in 2025. A three-course lunch at £85 is the better-value entry point. Book immediately — availability will not last.

    Book it now — Outlaw's New Road is closing on 28 March 2026

    If you have been waiting for the right moment to visit Outlaw's New Road, that moment is now. The restaurant is closing permanently after its final service on 28 March 2026. Throughout February and March, Nathan Outlaw's kitchen is serving a retrospective seafood tasting menu drawing on favourite dishes from the past decade — making this genuinely the last window to experience what La Liste has ranked among the leading restaurants in the world (87.5 points in 2025, 86 points in 2026). Book immediately; availability at this price point and with this profile will go fast.

    What Outlaw's New Road actually is

    Outlaw's New Road sits at the leading of the approach into Port Isaac, a small Cornish fishing village on the North Cornwall coast. The room is informal , tablecloths are long gone , and the front tables look out over the Atlantic. The setting matters, but the food is the reason to make the trip. Nathan Outlaw has spent years building a reputation as the most technically precise seafood chef working in England, and the cooking here reflects that: daily-catch menus, pared-back classical combinations, and almost nothing that distracts from the quality of the ingredient itself.

    The centrepiece offering is an eleven-course tasting menu at £195 per person. For the final weeks of service, that menu becomes a retrospective celebration of a decade of cooking at this address. Alongside the tasting format, a three-course à la carte option is available at lunch (Wednesday to Saturday) and at dinner Tuesday through Friday at £85 per person , a considerably more accessible entry point for the same kitchen. Sunday and Monday are closed.

    Dishes from verified sources give a clear picture of the style: scallops free-dived off Salcombe dressed with lemon, olive oil, and salt; cured horse mackerel layered with pistachio and basil oil; sea bass in a velvet crab broth with Cheddar and rosemary bread; turbot in a late-summer vegetable nage lifted with pink peppercorn and cumin. The progression is deliberate , dishes build in richness as the meal advances, and smart acidity is a recurring structural choice throughout. This is not cooking that relies on spectacle. It is precise, ingredient-led, and consistently purposeful.

    The drink pairings are worth noting separately. The list is compact but the selections are inventive: a Japanese shochu alongside treacle bread, a rare Portuguese Viognier, a Morgon with turbot. If you are arriving with a list of specific trophy bottles, the wine offering may feel limited , this is documented feedback from multiple sources. If you are happy to trust the pairing, it works well.

    Service has been consistently described across multiple independent sources as the right balance of professional and personal. Regulars are on first-name terms with the team. The room is small enough that the atmosphere depends heavily on who is in it, but the general tone is relaxed and unstuffy for a restaurant at this price point.

    A note on the editorial angle: this food does not travel

    Outlaw's New Road is explicitly not a takeaway or delivery proposition. The entire premise of the cooking is ultra-fresh catch, served immediately, in a room with an Atlantic view. The scallops are free-dived that morning. The broth for the sea bass is constructed to order. Nothing about this menu is designed to survive a journey. If you are looking for Nathan Outlaw's food in a more casual, accessible format, Outlaw's Fish Kitchen in Port Isaac operates separately and is worth considering for a lower-commitment visit to the same chef's world. But the New Road experience is table-only, time-sensitive, and ends in March 2026.

    How to book

    Booking difficulty is high. With a closing date now confirmed, the remaining February and March services will fill quickly. Book as far in advance as possible. The restaurant opens for lunch Wednesday to Saturday from 12 PM and for dinner Tuesday to Saturday from 6 PM, with last orders at 9 PM. Sunday and Monday services are not available. Bedrooms in the Guest House across the road can be booked separately, which removes the logistics of finding accommodation in a village with limited options.

    Know Before You Go

    • Closing date: Final service 28 March 2026
    • Tasting menu: £195 per person (eleven courses)
    • À la carte (lunch + Tue–Fri dinner): £85 per person for three courses
    • Lunch hours: Wednesday–Saturday, 12 PM–2:45 PM
    • Dinner hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 6 PM–9 PM
    • Closed: Sunday and Monday
    • Booking difficulty: High , book immediately given closing date
    • Accommodation: Guest House available across the road
    • Wine list: Compact; innovative pairings available, limited trophy-bottle options
    • Google rating: 4.7 from 402 reviews
    • La Liste ranking: 87.5 pts (2025), 86 pts (2026)
    • Address: 6 New Road, Port Isaac PL29 3SB

    Port Isaac context

    Port Isaac is not a casual dining destination. It is a small, remote Cornish village that requires deliberate travel , most visitors drive from Bodmin Parkway or Newquay. The village itself is compact and worth a day of exploration around the meal. For a full picture of what to eat, drink, stay, and do in the area, see our full Port Isaac restaurants guide, our Port Isaac hotels guide, our Port Isaac bars guide, our Port Isaac wineries guide, and our Port Isaac experiences guide.

    For comparable destination seafood experiences elsewhere in the UK and Europe, hide and fox in Saltwood offers serious seafood cookery in Kent, while Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica and Alici on the Amalfi Coast represent the Italian counterpart to this style of ingredient-led coastal seafood cooking. For high-end destination dining in rural England more broadly, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow each offer a comparable commitment-of-travel dynamic with similarly strong kitchen credentials.

    FAQ

    What are alternatives to Outlaw's New Road in Port Isaac?

    • The most direct alternative is Outlaw's Fish Kitchen, also in Port Isaac, which operates under the same chef in a more casual, lower-price format. For serious destination seafood dining in the wider UK, hide and fox in Saltwood is the closest equivalent in ambition and style. Port Isaac itself is a small village without a deep restaurant bench , the meal at New Road or Fish Kitchen is the primary draw.

    Does Outlaw's New Road handle dietary restrictions?

    • The menu is built around seafood, and the tasting menu format means substitutions may be limited. With a kitchen this focused on a single ingredient category, guests with shellfish allergies or strong aversions to fish should contact the restaurant directly before booking. No specific dietary restriction data is available in our records, so do not assume flexibility , confirm in advance.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Outlaw's New Road?

    • For value, lunch is the stronger choice. The three-course à la carte at £85 per person (available Wednesday to Saturday) gives access to the same kitchen at less than half the price of the eleven-course tasting menu. For the full, considered experience of the closing retrospective menu, dinner is the format , but it comes at £195 per person. If budget is a factor, book a Wednesday or Thursday lunch.

    What should a first-timer know about Outlaw's New Road?

    • The restaurant is closing on 28 March 2026, which changes the calculus considerably: this is a finite opportunity. The cooking is seafood-only and ingredient-led , do not arrive expecting meat options or elaborate plating for its own sake. The room is informal and the atmosphere is relaxed for a ££££ venue. Port Isaac requires deliberate travel; build a day or overnight stay around the booking. The Guest House across the road removes the accommodation problem.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Outlaw's New Road?

    • At £195 per person for eleven courses, the tasting menu is worth it if you want the full scope of what Nathan Outlaw's kitchen does , and particularly now, when the menu is a retrospective of a decade's work before permanent closure. La Liste placed the restaurant at 87.5 points in 2025. For comparison, L'Enclume in Cartmel and CORE by Clare Smyth in London operate at a similar price tier. The £85 three-course lunch is the better value option if you are price-sensitive.

    What should I wear to Outlaw's New Road?

    • Smart casual is the practical answer. The room has no tablecloths and the tone is deliberately informal, but at £195 per head this is not somewhere to arrive underdressed. Think of it as a relaxed but considered occasion , no jacket required, but guests generally dress for the meal. No formal dress code is stated, which reflects the venue's laid-back approach to a serious price point.

    Compare Outlaw's New Road

    How Outlaw's New Road Compares
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Outlaw's New RoadSeafood££££“Nathan’s stunning mastery of all things fish-related shines through… and there are stunning views too overlooking the vast expanse of Atlantic Ocean” at the famous Cornish chef’s harbourside HQ, which “sets the standard for the cooking of fresh fish and seafood in England” . “The room is a bit sparse but everyone is looking at the water” and the ambience is further buoyed along by the “pretty damned brilliant” service too. “What’s not to like” is the tenor of all reports which suggest “you really couldn’t have a better dining experience” with “dishes that stay in the mind long after they’ve left the palate!” (although if you are the kind of oenophile who likes to celebrate with famous vintages, you may find the relatively curt wine selection “a little offbeat” ). The centrepiece of the offering is an eleven-course meal for £195 per person, although a much more affordable visit is possible for the à la carte lunch or at dinner Tuesday-Friday, when a very reasonable three courses for £85 per person is served.; La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 86pts; He might not be Cornish by birth but Nathan Outlaw has certainly made Cornwall his home, with this smart yet laid-back offering occupying a great position on the headland. There are few other chefs in the country who understand and execute seafood cookery quite as well; his menus are guided by the daily catch and the refined, pared-back dishes feature classical combinations which keep the focus firmly on the ultra-fresh ingredients. Service strikes the perfect balance of professional yet personable and the signature Porthilly sauce is unmissable. Bedrooms are available in the Guest House across the road.; *Outlaw’s New Road will be closing its doors after the final service on 28 March 2026. Throughout February and March, the kitchen will serve the signature 'seafood tasting menu', celebrating favourite dishes from the past decade of Outlaw’s New Road and Restaurant Nathan Outlaw.* While Nathan Outlaw's Fish Kitchen is deeply embedded in the tight little streets of Port Isaac, New Road sits proud at the top of the approach. Its windows have salty sea vistas, and a gull's-eye view of the car park from the front tables, but the ambience is pleasingly informal. The tablecloths are gone these days, and the number of courses on the taster has grown from nine to eleven, but when regulars are on first-name terms with the staff, it's clear that the titular chef inspires as much tenacious loyalty as he ever did. These are seafood dishes that respect their prime materials, both gastronomically and ecologically, and don't hide their light under a bushel of extraneous accompaniments. The sweet scallops with smoked roe mayo are free-dived off Salcombe by Jamie Kirkcaldy, who can hold his breath for five minutes – longer than it might take you to eat them. They are anointed with judicious applications of lemon juice, olive oil and salt. Simples. Smart acidity is often the key to successful fish dishes, and so it is with the cured horse mackerel that comes layered with crumbled pistachio and basil oil, while its cooked counterpart is sharpened with a green sauce of tarragon and mint. As the menu progresses, dishes become gradually, subtly richer – witness the velvet crab potion that sauces a serving of sea bass (partnered by springy-textured Cheddar and rosemary bread for mopping up the gorgeous liquor) or the regal piece of turbot that appears in a late-summer vegetable nage, the whole lifted with pink peppercorns and cumin. A gooey chocolate ganache bar with biscuit base is enough to win over any choco-sceptic – especially as it comes with whopping raspberries doused in elderflower syrup and minted yoghurt sorbet. Drink pairings are admirably ingenious, from a palate-priming Japanese shochu with the treacle bread to a rare Portuguese Viognier and a daring punt on a silky-light Morgon with that turbot. It's a more compact list than New Road used to offer, but that's no bad thing, and most selections are available by the glass.; La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 87.5pts; He might not be Cornish by birth but Nathan Outlaw has certainly made Cornwall his home, with this smart yet laid-back offering occupying a great position on the headland. There are few other chefs in the country who understand and execute seafood cookery quite as well; his menus are guided by the daily catch and the refined, pared-back dishes feature classical combinations which keep the focus firmly on the ultra-fresh ingredients. Service strikes the perfect balance of professional yet personable and the signature Porthilly sauce is unmissable. Bedrooms are available in the Guest House across the road.; He might not be Cornish by birth but Nathan Outlaw has certainly made Cornwall his home, with this smart yet laid-back offering occupying a great position on the headland. There are few other chefs in the country who understand and execute seafood cookery as well as Nathan; his tasting menu is guided by the daily catch and the refined, unfussy dishes feature classical combinations which keep the focus firmly on the ultra-fresh ingredients. Service strikes the perfect balance of professional yet personable and the signature Porthilly sauce is unmissable. Bedrooms are available in the Guest House across the road.Hard
    CORE by Clare SmythModern British££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern French££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern Cuisine££££Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional British££££Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in Port Isaac for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to Outlaw's New Road in Port Isaac?

    Nathan Outlaw's Fish Kitchen, also in Port Isaac, is the immediate alternative — it is a smaller, more casual operation focused on the same daily-catch ethos at a lower price point. Outside the village, Paul Ainsworth at No. 6 in Padstow operates in a comparable Cornwall fine-dining bracket. Once Outlaw's New Road closes on 28 March 2026, Fish Kitchen becomes the primary option for Outlaw cooking in Port Isaac.

    Does Outlaw's New Road handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue is a seafood-led operation, and the eleven-course tasting menu is built around daily catch — making it a poor fit for anyone who does not eat fish or shellfish. Specific dietary accommodation details are not available in the venue record; check the venue's official channels before booking, particularly given the fixed-format tasting menu structure.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Outlaw's New Road?

    For value, lunch is the stronger option: à la carte is available Wednesday through Saturday at lunch, which lets you experience the cooking without committing to the £195 tasting menu. Dinner Tuesday through Friday offers three courses for £85 per person — that is a meaningfully lower entry point than the flagship tasting menu, and a practical choice if your schedule is flexible. The full eleven-course tasting menu runs at dinner and is the complete version of what Nathan Outlaw's kitchen is doing.

    What should a first-timer know about Outlaw's New Road?

    Port Isaac is a remote North Cornwall fishing village — plan your travel deliberately, as most visitors drive from Bodmin Parkway. The restaurant closes permanently on 28 March 2026, and February and March services will fill fast, so booking immediately is not an exaggeration. The room is informal with no tablecloths; the focus is entirely on the food and the Atlantic views. Bedrooms are available at the Guest House across the road if you want to avoid a long drive home.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Outlaw's New Road?

    At £195 per person for eleven courses, it is worth it if seafood tasting menus are your format and you can get a booking before the 28 March 2026 closure. La Liste ranked Outlaw's New Road 87.5 points in 2025, reflecting its standing as one of England's most serious fish restaurants. The caveat: the wine list is compact and has drawn criticism from those who want depth on that side; if wine pairing is as important to you as the food, go in with adjusted expectations.

    What should I wear to Outlaw's New Road?

    The room is deliberately informal — tablecloths are gone and the atmosphere is described as laid-back despite the £195 tasting menu price point. Smart casual fits the setting: there is no case for formal dress, but the price bracket and occasion make very casual clothing feel out of place. Think the kind of outfit you would wear to a serious dinner with friends, not a business function.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    6 PM-9 PM
    Wednesday
    12 PM-2:45 PM 6 PM-9 PM
    Thursday
    12 PM-2:45 PM 6 PM-9 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-2:45 PM 6 PM-9 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-2:45 PM 6 PM-9 PM
    Sunday
    closed

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