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Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Café St Honoré

LocationEdinburgh, United Kingdom
The Good Food Guide

A heritage French bistro tucked into one of Edinburgh New Town's quieter lanes, Café St Honoré delivers classic cooking that draws on Scottish produce without announcing the fact. Bentwood chairs, tiled floors, and properly clothed tables set the tone; the kitchen responds with ham hough terrine, roast lamb rump, and raspberry frangipane tart. The fixed-price café classics menu makes it one of the city's more credible weekday lunch options.

Café St Honoré restaurant in Edinburgh, United Kingdom
About

A Lane in New Town, a Room That Reads as Paris

Thistle Street North West Lane sits in the grid of pedestrian passages that thread through Edinburgh's New Town, north of Princes Street — the kind of address that requires a deliberate decision to find rather than a casual drift. What you encounter at number 34 is a room that has settled so completely into its aesthetic that it reads less as designed and more as inherited: bentwood chairs on the substantial side of rickety, a black-and-white tiled floor, dark wood walls, mirrors angled to catch the candlelight, and tables covered in proper cloth. The comparison that arrives without effort is Montmartre, or the kind of neighbourhood restaurant in the 9th arrondissement that Parisians treat as an extension of their own kitchen. In Edinburgh, that register is not especially common outside the more self-conscious end of the dining scene, which makes the lane-bound location feel appropriate — the room earns its obscurity.

Edinburgh's restaurant scene in 2025 sits at an interesting bifurcation. The city's headline tables , Martin Wishart, The Kitchin, AVERY, Condita, and Timberyard , operate at the ££££ tier, with tasting menus, extended wine flights, and format discipline that demands commitment from the diner. Café St Honoré occupies a different register entirely: it is a bistro in the functional sense of the word, a place where the transaction is direct and the room does not ask much of you beyond showing up hungry. That position, sitting between the high-end tasting-menu tier and the city's more casual café culture, is harder to maintain credibly than it might appear. The kitchen holds it.

Scottish Larder, French Grammar

The editorial angle that applies here is not French cooking with a Scottish accent, but rather the reverse: Scottish produce organised by French culinary logic. The distinction matters. Edinburgh sits within reach of some of Britain's most traceable raw materials , East Coast fishing grounds, Borders farms, Perthshire soft-fruit country, game estates within an hour of the city , and the kitchen at Café St Honoré treats access to that supply chain as structural rather than decorative.

On the starter side, ham hough terrine is a practical demonstration of this approach. Hough is the Scottish term for the lower leg or shin of the animal, a cut that requires long, patient cooking to yield anything useful. Its appearance on a bistro menu signals a kitchen that values the whole animal over the convenient portion. St Bride's smoked duck breast with orange, pickled fennel, and radicchio follows the same logic: St Bride's is a Perthshire producer with a specific regional identity, and the acid-led accompaniments , pickled fennel, bitter radicchio , are the French grammar that organises the Scottish ingredient.

Main courses push further into that territory. Roast lamb rump with ratatouille, buttery mash, and tapenade draws a straight line between the Scottish uplands and the southern French pantry; the combination is not innovative but it is considered. East Coast cod arriving with shellfish bisque, heritage potatoes, samphire, and aïoli is a reminder that Scotland's North Sea fisheries produce species worth treating with classical seriousness , the kind of treatment you might find applied to Breton turbot at a provincial French table, or to the fish programme at Le Bernardin in New York City. The ambition is different in scale, but the orientation toward the ingredient rather than the technique is shared.

Desserts stay regional and seasonal in the same way. Raspberry frangipane tart with crème normande, and Perthshire cherry clafoutis with woodruff ice cream, are both French forms applied to Scottish fruit at or near its season. Woodruff is a herb with a short productive window in late spring and early summer; its presence on a menu is one of those small signals , like hough on a starter card , that the kitchen is paying attention to what is available rather than standardising around what is always available. For broader context on kitchens that apply this kind of seasonal discipline across the UK, L'Enclume in Cartmel and Moor Hall in Aughton operate in a related tradition, though at a markedly different price point and format register.

The Fixed-Price Question

The café classics menu , offered at a fixed price for both lunch and dinner , is one of the more considered value propositions in New Town dining. Borders venison cottage pie and smoked haddock fillet with wilted spinach and green sauce are the kinds of dishes that demonstrate technique through restraint rather than complexity: the venison needs to have been braised long enough and with enough care that the pie filling does not taste like bulk mince, and smoked haddock at that level of simplicity will expose the quality of the fish immediately. Neither is a dish that hides behind garnish.

The wine list leads with a French-based selection poured in two sizes , a practical detail for solo diners or those splitting focus between a glass and a carafe , and functions as a serviceable accompaniment to the food rather than a destination in its own right. For those planning an evening that extends into Edinburgh's bar scene, the EP Club Edinburgh bars guide covers the city's drinking options in detail.

Planning a Visit

Café St Honoré sits at 34 Thistle Street North West Lane, Edinburgh EH2 1EA, accessible on foot from the main New Town grid within a few minutes of Hanover Street or Frederick Street. The lane-based address means it does not present as a walk-past discovery; arrive knowing where you are going. Given the room's scale and the bistro format, booking in advance is the sensible approach for dinner, though the fixed-price lunch format tends to turn tables at a pace that makes it more accessible mid-week. For hotel recommendations in the area, the EP Club Edinburgh hotels guide covers the New Town and Leith options across price tiers. Visitors assembling a broader Edinburgh itinerary can consult the full Edinburgh restaurants guide, the experiences guide, and the wineries guide for context across categories.

For reference within the broader UK dining conversation, the classic French-bistro-with-regional-produce model that Café St Honoré applies has analogues at different price and prestige points: Waterside Inn in Bray and Gidleigh Park in Chagford occupy the formal end, while Hand and Flowers in Marlow and Emeril's in New Orleans each show how classical French foundations can be recalibrated for a specific local identity. The Edinburgh version is smaller and less heralded than any of those comparators, which is largely the point.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I order at Café St Honoré?
The menu's strongest through-line is its use of traceable Scottish ingredients organised by French technique. Starters that show this clearly include the ham hough terrine and the St Bride's smoked duck breast with pickled fennel and radicchio. Among main courses, the East Coast cod with shellfish bisque and the roast lamb rump with ratatouille and tapenade represent the kitchen's approach at its most coherent. For dessert, the Perthshire cherry clafoutis with woodruff ice cream is a seasonal option worth ordering when available. The fixed-price café classics menu is a credible option at both lunch and dinner if you want a shorter commitment; Borders venison cottage pie and smoked haddock fillet with green sauce are reliable choices within it.
Do they take walk-ins at Café St Honoré?
The bistro format and fixed-price lunch programme mean walk-ins are possible, particularly mid-week at lunch when table turnover is more consistent. For dinner, the room's scale and the fact that it draws a regular Edinburgh clientele alongside visitors makes advance booking the practical choice. The address , a lane rather than a main street , means you will not stumble across it accidentally, so planning ahead suits the visit regardless. Phone and online booking details are leading confirmed via the venue directly, as current contact and reservation information is not held in this record.

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