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CuisineMediterranean Cuisine
Executive ChefPete Dantanus
LocationBrighton and Hove, United Kingdom
Michelin

A Michelin Bib Gourmand holder for 2024 and 2025, Burnt Orange occupies a remodelled 16th-century coaching inn in Brighton's Lanes, serving wood-fired small plates with Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and North African influences. Part of the Black Rock Group, it draws a loyal crowd for sharing plates, late-night cocktails, and a consistently warm room that works as well for a weeknight dinner as a weekend occasion.

Burnt Orange restaurant in Brighton and Hove, United Kingdom
About

Wood Fire and Shared Tables in the Lanes

Middle Street cuts through the oldest part of Brighton's Lanes district, a web of narrow passages where the buildings lean close enough overhead to blot out much of the sky. Arriving at Burnt Orange, the sensory cues arrive before you're fully through the door: the low thrum of retro music, the faint char from a wood-burning fire in the kitchen, the amber warmth of a room that reads immediately as a place people intend to stay in for a while. Flint stone walls, open kitchen sightlines, a dining counter, and deep burnt-orange banquettes set the register — informal enough for a solo early dinner, composed enough for a proper occasion. In good weather, an enclosed courtyard extends the footprint and absorbs the overflow.

The room sits inside a remodelled 16th-century coaching inn, though you'd only know that from the bones of the building rather than any heritage-themed decoration. The Black Rock Group, which also runs Cin Cin and other Brighton venues, has kept the space feeling current without stripping it of character. On weekend nights, the kitchen operates until 1am, positioning Burnt Orange as one of the few places in Brighton where a late-night dinner remains a serious option rather than a fallback.

The Logic of Sharing Plates and Live Fire

Brighton's mid-market dining scene has moved decisively toward the sharing-plate format over the past decade, and Burnt Orange sits at the sharper end of that category. The format here is not incidental to the experience — it shapes it. Small plates circulate from the wood fire across a table, and the sequencing, the pace, and the negotiation over what to order next become part of the meal itself. That communal dynamic is what separates a genuinely considered sharing menu from one that simply portions down standard mains.

The menu draws its reference points from Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and North African traditions, and the wood-burning fire acts as a unifying technique rather than a gimmick. Smoke, char, and heat from live fire have a long history across all three culinary regions, so the technique and the influences cohere rather than pull in separate directions. Chef Pete Dantanus changes the list regularly, which keeps the menu from calcifying and rewards return visits. Certain dishes have become fixtures precisely because they work: the skillet-baked potatoes in herb cream with hard sheep's cheese gratings appear to have been on the menu since the restaurant opened, and that kind of long-term staying power tells you something about how well they land with a table.

The Middle Eastern and North African thread shows clearly in preparations like the leek and spinach pastilla , a dish with deep roots in Moroccan and Andalusian cooking , where the golden, layered pastry signals care and technique. Mussels cooked with Urfa chilli butter draw on a Turkish ingredient, the dried pepper from Şanlıurfa, which has a gentler, more raisin-like heat than other dried chillies. Wood-fired aubergine with miso, pomegranate, crispy shallots, and pine nuts reads as a dish that knows its Mediterranean-to-Levantine arc and lands in a coherent place. These are dishes in which the influences are specific rather than vaguely global, and that specificity is part of what makes the menu worth paying attention to.

Kitchen is not infallible. The signature wood-fired flatbread with sesame brown butter has been noted as doughy and greasy, and a charred grey mullet with buttermilk crab curry was served tepid in a grainy sauce. Minor mishaps in a long and generally capable menu , but worth noting as a reminder that wood-fire cooking requires consistency, and not every plate will be at the same level on every night.

Cocktails, Wine, and the Late Hours

Burnt Orange is unusual in Brighton's restaurant scene for how seriously it treats the drinks side of the operation. The Burnt Orange Martini is the signature serve, and the Margarita list has enough range to suggest someone is paying genuine attention to the format. Cocktails here are not a supplement to the food , they run parallel to it, which is appropriate for a late-night room where the bar crowd and the dinner crowd overlap in the final hours of service. The wine list is described as reasonably priced, which in this price bracket (££) is a meaningful signal: it suggests the margins aren't being clawed back through the bottle list in the way many casual dining venues do.

For those building a night around Brighton's drinks scene, our full Brighton and Hove bars guide covers the broader range of what's worth your time in the city.

Where Burnt Orange Sits in Brighton's Dining Context

Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards, in 2024 and 2025, position Burnt Orange clearly within Brighton's dining tier structure. The Bib Gourmand designation, Michelin's marker for good cooking at a moderate price, places it in a different competitive set from the tasting-menu rooms such as etch. by Steven Edwards or Embers, but also above the generalist bistro tier. It competes most directly with places like Amari and Dilsk , venues where a strong culinary point of view operates at a price point accessible to a regular night out rather than a special occasion outlay.

The Google rating of 4.8 across more than 2,000 reviews is unusually high volume for a venue of this scale and price range, and it suggests a breadth of satisfaction rather than a narrow following among food-focused diners. That's consistent with a room that functions across different occasions , Sunday lunch, a casual midweek dinner, a late Friday night , without feeling compromised in any of them.

Brighton's Mediterranean and fire-focused dining category is getting more crowded. For comparison further afield, La Brezza in Ascona and Arnaud Donckele and Maxime Frédéric in Saint-Tropez show where the Mediterranean format operates at a different price and ambition ceiling. Within the UK's broader fine dining context, The Fat Duck, The Ledbury, L'Enclume, Moor Hall, Gidleigh Park, and The Hand and Flowers represent the upper tiers against which Burnt Orange makes no claim to compete , its pitch is different, and it's better for knowing that clearly.

Planning Your Visit

Burnt Orange is at 59 Middle Street, deep in the Lanes, which means arriving on foot from the seafront or from Brighton station is direct, though the address is easy to miss in a stretch of street that doesn't announce itself. The mid-range pricing (££) and the 4.8 Google rating across over 2,000 reviews suggest high demand, making advance booking advisable, particularly on weekends when the kitchen runs until 1am and the room fills in multiple waves. The format suits groups of two to six who intend to order widely across the menu; the sharing-plate structure is at its most rewarding when the table commits to it rather than treating it as individual ordering in smaller portions.

For the wider picture of eating and staying in Brighton, see our full Brighton and Hove restaurants guide, our hotels guide, our wineries guide, and our experiences guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the must-try dish at Burnt Orange?

The skillet-baked potatoes in herb cream with hard sheep's cheese gratings are the most reliable long-term fixture on the menu , they have appeared since the restaurant opened and continue to draw consistent praise. Among the dishes that demonstrate the kitchen's range most clearly, the wood-fired aubergine with miso, pomegranate, and pine nuts shows how Chef Pete Dantanus layers Mediterranean and North African influences with wood-fire technique. The leek and spinach pastilla, with its roots in Moroccan-Andalusian cooking, is worth ordering when it appears. Cocktails, particularly the Burnt Orange Martini, are a core part of what this Michelin Bib Gourmand venue does well , not an afterthought.

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