Restaurant in Bury St Edmunds, United Kingdom
Pea Porridge
800ptsBook ahead. Michelin star, genuine value.

About Pea Porridge
Pea Porridge holds a Michelin star (2024) and has been running since 2009 — a husband-and-wife operation on a residential Bury St Edmunds square, serving daily-changing North African, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean dishes cooked largely over charcoal. At £££, it is the most serious dining booking in Suffolk outside of a trip to London, and worth planning well ahead for a special occasion.
The Verdict
Pea Porridge holds a Michelin star and has been open since 2009 — that longevity in a mid-sized Suffolk market town is itself a signal worth heeding. The charcoal-driven, daily-changing menu of North African, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cooking is the kind of thing you'd expect to find only in London, which makes this one of the more interesting special-occasion bookings in the east of England. At £££ pricing, it sits at the leading end for Bury St Edmunds, but the combination of Michelin recognition, ingredient-led sourcing and a genuinely personal operation justifies the spend. Book it for a celebration dinner, a serious date night, or any occasion where you want food that rewards attention. Booking is hard — plan ahead.
About Pea Porridge
Opening in 2009 on Cannon Street, a residential square in the centre of Bury St Edmunds, Pea Porridge has now been running for over fifteen years , a milestone that matters in a town this size, where restaurants without a clear identity rarely survive a decade. The name references the old town green that once occupied the space in front of the building, which tells you something about the owners' attachment to place. This is a husband and wife operation, and that personal investment shows in how the room feels and how the menu reads.
The kitchen's sourcing philosophy is what defines the menu and, ultimately, what justifies the price. Ingredients arrive from producers aligned with North African, Middle Eastern and eastern Mediterranean traditions, but the cooking method that ties everything together is charcoal. A Grizzly charcoal oven sits at the centre of the operation, and the smoke and char it imparts runs through much of what arrives at the table , from proteins to vegetables. This is not a kitchen that assembles dishes from ambient ingredients; the sourcing choices are the dishes. Pluma Ibérica pork, kid goat, muntjac kofte, and tempura-battered courgette flowers with aged feta are the kinds of ingredients and combinations that require active supplier relationships, not a broadline delivery account. That effort translates directly to what ends up on the plate.
The bread is the most-mentioned element in verified coverage, and it sets the register for the meal. Sourdough flatbreads come from the oven and land early, and they are designed to work with the appetisers that follow , dishes like taramasalata or kashke bademjan, a Persian aubergine dip with garlic and nuts. The scent of bread emerging from a live-fire kitchen into a stripped-back brick interior is the first sensory signal that this kitchen is working to a different standard than most of what surrounds it in Suffolk. From there, the menu moves through gently spiced, fragrant mains , a Moroccan tagine of spiced kid goat, charcoal-oven dishes, and desserts that close the meal with the same sense of considered effort that opened it. Burnt Basque cheesecake with kataifi pastry and rose petals, or cheeses served with Greek mountain honeycomb and frozen Muscat grapes, are the kind of finishes that confirm the kitchen has thought about sourcing all the way to the last course.
Wine list leans into organic and natural producers with a regional focus on the eastern Mediterranean and the Caucasus. For a room of this size in a market town, the list is notably specific , this is not a list assembled to reassure, it is one assembled to educate and to match the food. If natural and orange wines are not your preference, it is worth flagging that when you book, as the conventional options may be narrower than you expect.
Dining room spans three conjoined rooms with exposed brickwork throughout. The atmosphere at dinner runs warm and energised, and it draws a local crowd that clearly returns regularly. This is not a tourist destination in the way that some Michelin-starred restaurants become , it reads as a genuinely local institution that happens to have earned national recognition. That is a meaningful distinction for how the room feels on any given evening.
For context on where Pea Porridge sits nationally: the combination of a husband-and-wife-run operation, a live-fire kitchen and a daily-changing menu with this regional specificity is the same formula that has earned recognition for restaurants like Hand and Flowers in Marlow and hide and fox in Saltwood. At the upper end of that comparison set you have L'Enclume in Cartmel and Moor Hall in Aughton, where sourcing is similarly the defining principle but price and formality are both considerably higher. Pea Porridge sits comfortably between those tiers: serious cooking with a genuine sourcing identity, without the ceremony or the price point of a two or three-star operation. It is also worth noting that within Mediterranean cuisine at Michelin level, the benchmark comparisons shift towards venues like La Brezza in Ascona , Pea Porridge holds its own in that category, while offering a very different register of informality and value.
Practical Details
Reservations: Book well in advance , this is a hard booking, particularly for Friday and Saturday dinner. Wednesday and Thursday sittings may have more availability. Hours: Closed Monday, Tuesday and Sunday. Wednesday dinner only (6:30–8:30 PM). Thursday, Friday and Saturday lunch (12–1:30 PM) and dinner (6:30–8:30 PM Thursday; 6:30–9:30 PM Friday and Saturday). Budget: £££ , expect to spend at the upper end for Bury St Edmunds; the lunch menu is flagged in verified coverage as offering strong value relative to the evening. Dress: No dress code published; the room is informal but not casual , smart-casual is appropriate and fits the neighbourhood-restaurant register. Address: 28–29 Cannon St, Bury St Edmunds IP33 1JR.
Ratings
- Michelin: 1 Star (2024)
- Google: 4.6 from 392 reviews
More to Explore in Bury St Edmunds
If you are planning a trip around this booking, Pearl has full guides to restaurants in Bury St Edmunds, hotels in Bury St Edmunds, bars in Bury St Edmunds, wineries near Bury St Edmunds and experiences in Bury St Edmunds. For Michelin-level comparisons further afield, see CORE by Clare Smyth in London, The Fat Duck in Bray and Gidleigh Park in Chagford. For Mediterranean cuisine at a comparable level, Arnaud Donckele & Maxime Frédéric at Louis Vuitton in Saint-Tropez represents the category's upper ceiling.
Compare Pea Porridge
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Pea Porridge | £££ | — |
| Lark | ££ | — |
| Maison Bleue | £££ | — |
| Bellota | — | |
| 1921 Angel Hill | — |
Comparing your options in Bury St Edmunds for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Pea Porridge handle dietary restrictions?
The daily-changing menu at this Michelin-starred restaurant spans North African, Middle Eastern and Mediterranean cooking, which naturally accommodates vegetarian and pescatarian preferences across much of the menu. The format is flexible enough that dietary needs can generally be addressed, but given the menu changes daily and the kitchen is small, contacting ahead of your visit is the practical move. Do not leave it to the door.
Is lunch or dinner better at Pea Porridge?
Lunch is the stronger value call: the £££ price range is more accessible at midday, and the Michelin recognition applies to the full operation regardless of sitting. Dinner on Friday or Saturday runs later (until 9:30 PM) and is harder to book, which suits a more extended occasion. If budget is a consideration, Thursday or Friday lunch gives you the same kitchen for less pressure on the wallet and the diary.
Is Pea Porridge good for a special occasion?
Yes, straightforwardly. A Michelin star held in 2024, a husband-and-wife-run room with personal service, and a charcoal-fired menu that draws on North African and Middle Eastern traditions makes this a credible choice for a birthday, anniversary, or celebratory dinner. Book Friday or Saturday evening for the fullest sitting window (until 9:30 PM), and secure your table well in advance — this is a hard booking.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Pea Porridge?
The venue database does not confirm a fixed tasting menu format; the menu changes daily and the style is described as a range of dishes rather than a set tasting progression. What is confirmed is that the cooking draws on charcoal techniques and the bread alone is singled out repeatedly in the Michelin notes. At £££, the value case is solid relative to comparable Michelin-starred restaurants in the region.
Is Pea Porridge good for solo dining?
It is a reasonable solo option: the restaurant operates across three conjoined rooms in a neighbourhood setting, and the personal, owner-run service tends to make solo guests feel less like an afterthought than in larger formal rooms. Wednesday and Thursday sittings are likely easier to book as a single cover. That said, much of the menu is designed around sharing dishes, so be ready to either order selectively or ask for guidance.
What are alternatives to Pea Porridge in Bury St Edmunds?
For French-leaning fine dining with a more formal register, Maison Bleue on Churchgate Street is the closest local comparison at a similar price point. 1921 Angel Hill offers a modern British menu in a townhouse setting and is somewhat easier to book at short notice. Lark on Guildhall Street takes a more relaxed small-plates approach and suits groups who want flexibility without the advance planning Pea Porridge requires. Bellota is a good call if you want a wine-forward evening with a lighter food commitment.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- closed
- Wednesday
- 6:30 PM-8:30 PM
- Thursday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 6:30 PM-8:30 PM
- Friday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 6:30 PM-9:30 PM
- Saturday
- 12 PM-1:30 PM 6:30 PM-9:30 PM
- Sunday
- closed
Recognized By
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