Google: 4.8 · 338 reviews
Bass and Lobster
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A former pub on the Jersey coast road that has settled into its role as one of Gorey's most reliable bistros. The daily set menu draws regulars with strong value and a broad selection of island-sourced fish, meat, and vegetables. Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions (2024 and 2025) confirm its standing in the Channel Islands dining scene.

The approach to Bass and Lobster along the Gorey coast road sets the frame before you reach the door. Sea air, the low profile of a converted pub, the kind of building that accumulates regulars over years rather than seasons. Jersey's east coast has a particular quality of light on clear afternoons, and the restaurant sits close enough to the beach that the connection between what arrives on the plate and where it came from feels less like a marketing claim and more like an observable fact.
Jersey's Produce Story, Told Through a Daily Menu
Jersey has long occupied an unusual position in British food geography. Small enough that supply chains are short, coastal enough that the fish trade retains its traditional rhythms, and agricultural enough that island vegetables — Royal Jersey potatoes among them — carry genuine provenance weight. Bistros that actually use this material, rather than simply invoking it, tend to show the difference in the daily menu board rather than the website copy.
Bass and Lobster works from a daily set menu format, which is the structural choice that matters most here. A fixed daily menu, updated to reflect what came in that morning, is a harder operational model than a static printed card changed seasonally. It keeps the kitchen in close contact with suppliers and forces a flexibility that shows up as freshness on the plate. The kitchen window allows diners to watch island meats, vegetables, and seafood being prepared , a detail that functions as both transparency and confidence signal. Kitchens that invite observation tend to be kitchens that have nothing to hide about sourcing.
The fresh fish selection changes with what the boats bring. That variability is the point. Diners accustomed to fixed menus at comparable price points , Bass and Lobster sits at the ££ tier, a position also occupied by Table Forty One and The Duck in Gorey , sometimes find the daily format disorienting. Here, it is the whole proposition.
The Faggots Question
In a restaurant whose headline ingredients are bass and lobster, the faggots function as a deliberate statement. Faggots , offal-rich, pork-based, deeply regional in their English and Welsh associations , have no natural place on a coastal fish menu unless the kitchen is making a point about where it stands on the question of local and traditional. At Bass and Lobster, the faggots are the Michelin-noted must-try, which tells you something about how the inspectors read the room. This is not a restaurant interested only in premium seafood optics. The full range of island produce, including the less glamorous cuts and preparations, has a place on the menu.
That breadth positions Bass and Lobster differently from the more aspirational end of Gorey's dining offer. Sumas, at the £££ tier with a Modern Cuisine approach, occupies a different competitive register entirely. Bass and Lobster makes its case on value, volume of daily specials, and honest execution rather than on refinement or ambition.
Michelin Recognition in Context
The Michelin Plate, awarded in both 2024 and 2025, sits below the star tiers but represents a meaningful signal: the Guide's inspectors considered the food worth eating and worth returning to assess. In the Channel Islands, where the dining scene is smaller and less scrutinised than mainland UK equivalents, Plate recognition carries reasonable weight. It places Bass and Lobster in a category of restaurants that meet a threshold of quality rather than merely serving food to tourists.
For context, the star-level benchmark in British regional dining runs through properties like L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford. Bass and Lobster operates at a different altitude and, to be clear, is not competing with those rooms. Its peer set is the mid-market bistro category in small coastal towns: places like hide and fox in Saltwood or the traditional pub-dining model demonstrated at Hand and Flowers in Marlow, though at a more accessible price point than either. The Auberge Grand'Maison in Mûr-de-Bretagne and Auga in Gijón represent how similar coastal-traditional approaches play out in Brittany and northern Spain , useful reference points for understanding what the category can achieve when it is firing at full stretch. At the highest end of British dining, CORE by Clare Smyth, The Fat Duck, and Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons define a ceiling that Bass and Lobster has no interest in reaching toward. That is not a criticism. The restaurant's 4.8 Google rating from 326 reviews indicates that its own audience reads the proposition correctly.
Planning Your Visit
Bass and Lobster sits on the Gorey coast road (A3, Jersey JE3 6EU), close to the beach and accessible from Gorey village. The ££ price range and daily set menu format make it a practical choice for a longer stay on the island, where eating the same fixed menu twice would feel repetitive but returning across several days to track the daily specials would not. Given the regulars-heavy clientele the format attracts, booking ahead is sensible, particularly through summer months when Jersey's visitor numbers climb. The converted pub format means the room has a certain scale , this is a substantial bistro, not a small counter operation , but popular coastal restaurants with strong value propositions fill quickly regardless of size.
For a fuller picture of what Gorey offers beyond this address, the EP Club Gorey restaurants guide covers the broader dining scene. Those extending a Jersey trip across other dimensions can find planning resources in our Gorey hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.
At-a-Glance Comparison
These are the closest comparables we have in our database for quick context.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bass and Lobster | Traditional Cuisine | ££ | A former pub close to the beach houses this substantial bistro, where you’ll fin… | This venue |
| Table Forty One | Classic Cuisine | €€ | Classic Cuisine, €€ | |
| The Duck | International | €€ | International, €€ | |
| Sumas | Modern Cuisine | £££ | Modern Cuisine, £££ |
At a Glance
- Cozy
- Lively
- Date Night
- Family
- Casual Hangout
- Open Kitchen
- Craft Cocktails
- Local Sourcing
- Sustainable Seafood
- Waterfront
Pleasant, airy, unpretentious with comfortable open-plan dining and terrace for summer.










