Cardinal
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Cardinal occupies a moody, black-walled room in Stockbridge, Edinburgh's most food-focused neighbourhood, delivering a seasonal tasting menu that draws on Scottish produce and preservation techniques. Michelin Plate-recognised in both 2024 and 2025, it sits at the serious end of the city's modern dining tier, with a short menu priced at £95 and a full tasting menu at £120. The wine list leans toward natural and low-intervention producers.
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- Address
- 14 Eyre Pl, Edinburgh EH3 5EP, United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 131 305 2049
- Website
- cardinal.scot

A Neighbourhood Room That Punches Well Above Its Address
Stockbridge has quietly become a strong patch of serious cooking in Edinburgh. Walk its residential streets and the density of considered restaurants per block exceeds much of the city centre. Cardinal sits within that district, at 14 Eyre Place, occupying a room that announces itself through atmosphere rather than signage. The interior is done out in black, with orbs of warm golden light punctuating the darkness and abstract canvases arranged without obvious system. Unclothed tables, a considered soundtrack, and a scale that keeps the room intimate rather than cavernous: the effect is closer to a private dining room than a neighbourhood restaurant, which is precisely the tension that makes it interesting.
Where Cardinal Sits in Edinburgh's Tasting Menu Tier
Edinburgh's ££££ modern dining category now includes Condita, Argile, Montrose, Moss, and Number One, alongside longer-established names like Martin Wishart, The Kitchin, Timberyard, and AVERY. Most of these operate tasting menus in the same general price band. What distinguishes Cardinal within that grouping is its scale and its positioning: this is a neighbourhood restaurant in the physical and philosophical sense, not a formal destination dining room. The Michelin Plate recognition places it in a defined quality tier without the ceremony that typically accompanies starred counterparts. For Edinburgh diners, that combination of serious cooking and low-key setting is relatively rare at this price point.
That positioning also means Cardinal operates in a different register from, say, tasting menu formats at The Fat Duck in Bray or L'Enclume in Cartmel, where the room, the ceremony, and the destination mythology form part of the proposition. Cardinal's closer cousins are restaurants like Hand and Flowers in Marlow, a serious kitchen that refuses the white-tablecloth vocabulary its cooking might otherwise justify.
The Menu: Scottish Produce, Preservation, and Contrasting Textures
The kitchen works a modern tasting format built on Scottish and Irish produce, with preservation running as a consistent technique throughout. Carlingford oysters appear on the menu, prepared in ways that layer rather than mask their brine, one preparation finishes the oyster with beef tallow and small cubes of gherkin, the latter providing acidity without overwhelming the shellfish. Smoked Belhaven lobster arrives with pink fir potato, blanketed under a lobster bisque with a restrained chilli note. Hopeton venison comes as a tataki with a blueberry and black peppercorn sauce. Mangalitza pork ribeye closes the savoury sequence with sauerkraut, Pommery mustard, and fennel, accompanied by a house sausage roll with brown sauce, a knowing touch that grounds the cooking in something familiar.
What the menu communicates structurally is a consistent interest in flavour contrast: acidity against richness, smoke against cream, heat deployed as a repeating low note rather than a climax. The seasonal logic is deliberate rather than incidental. A roasted onion broth infused with Douglas fir and wild garlic oil, described in the Michelin record as capturing the theme from the first course, sets that intent early. The cooking does not use technique to obscure produce but to sharpen what is already there.
The wine list moves toward natural and low-intervention producers, a direction that has become a default position for kitchens of this type across the UK and Northern Europe. See, for international comparison, how Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai have handled wine programming at their respective ends of the spectrum. At Cardinal, pairings are treated as near-standard rather than optional, the by-the-glass selection is limited, which means most diners opting for wine will find pairings the most practical route. That choice meaningfully changes the final bill.
What You Actually Pay, and What That Covers
The short tasting menu is priced at £95; the full menu is priced at £120. Both figures sit at the upper end of what Edinburgh's neighbourhood restaurant category has historically supported, and wine pairings push the bill higher, a tension that sits slightly at odds with the room's deliberate informality. That assessment is worth taking seriously when planning. For a table of two with wine pairings at the full menu level, expect a bill that compares with formal dining rooms operating under considerably more theatrical conditions.
More useful pricing signal for regular use is the Wednesday and Thursday lunch: a three-course set format at a price point is significantly more accessible. For anyone living in or regularly visiting Edinburgh who wants to eat Cardinal's cooking without the full commitment of a weekend tasting menu evening, that lunch window is the practical entry point. It also offers the room at its quietest, which suits the atmosphere the space is built around.
On the service front, the small scale of the operation produces a corresponding attentiveness. Engaged service is one of the room's distinguishing characteristics, relevant when considering that the informal, low-key setting could otherwise signal something more casual.
Planning a Visit
Cardinal is at 14 Eyre Place, EH3 5EP, in Stockbridge, a short walk from Edinburgh's city centre. It operates as a companion restaurant to Skua, also in Stockbridge, under Tomás Gormley. The neighbourhood character of both restaurants reflects a broader Stockbridge dining pattern: serious cooking embedded in a residential area that does not depend on tourist footfall. For comparison with other serious modern cooking rooms in the UK, The Ledbury in London, Moor Hall in Aughton, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford represent the range of approaches the UK's ££££ tier currently spans.
Accolades, Compared
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CardinalThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Modern Scottish Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | |
| The Little Chartroom | Modern British | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Leith |
| Purslane | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Stockbridge |
| The Broughton | Modern British Gastropub | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Greenside |
| The Scran & Scallie | Modern Scottish Gastropub | $$$ | Bib Gourmand | Canonmills |
| Skua | Modern British Small Plates | $$$ | Bib Gourmand | Stockbridge |
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Dark, moody, intimate atmosphere with black walls, low lighting, relaxed yet refined vibe.
















