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CuisineAsian Influences
Executive ChefJustin McMillen
LocationEdinburgh, United Kingdom
Michelin

Noto at 47a Thistle Street is Stuart Ralston's small-plates restaurant with Asian-influenced cooking and a Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025. Dishes range from duck bao buns to chocolate and miso dessert, pitched at a ££ price point that makes it one of Edinburgh's more accessible entries in the Ralston stable. Under chef Justin McMillen, it delivers considered, globe-spanning flavours in a format built for sharing.

Noto restaurant in Edinburgh, United Kingdom
About

A Street-Level Counter in the New Town's Shifting Dining Order

Thistle Street sits one block north of George Street's main commercial drag, and for years it occupied a comfortable middle ground in Edinburgh's dining hierarchy — approachable, neighbourhood-adjacent, but rarely the destination that drew people across town. That has changed incrementally as the street accumulated a denser cluster of independent restaurants, and Noto's arrival at 47a helped anchor a shift in what the area is known for. The room itself is compact, the kind of space where the distance between tables collapses any pretence of formality. You hear other conversations. The kitchen is close. The light runs warm in the evenings. It is a setting that communicates its own purpose before the menu arrives: this is a place for eating well without theatre.

From Aizle to Thistle Street: The Logic of Noto

Edinburgh's restaurant scene in the mid-2010s was building a reputation for destination fine dining, anchored by long-established houses like Martin Wishart and The Kitchin, and newer voices like Timberyard, AVERY, and Condita staking out serious tasting-menu territory at ££££ price points. Stuart Ralston's aizle was part of that conversation. Noto represents a deliberate step in a different direction: smaller plates, lower prices, and a culinary framework drawn from Asian traditions rather than the Scottish larder-led modernism that defines much of the city's premium tier.

The name itself signals the departure. Ralston named the restaurant after Bob Noto, his former New York roommate, and the reference to a period spent in that city points to how Asian-influenced small-plates dining had evolved in places like the Lower East Side and the East Village before the format reached deeper into British provincial cities. Edinburgh, by comparison, has had fewer permanent addresses in this register, which gave Noto a relatively open field when it opened. The evolution from a chef known for high-concept tasting menus to a format built around accessible, globe-spanning small plates was not a retreat but a recalibration — one that found its audience quickly.

The Cooking: Asian Influences as Framework, Not Decoration

The category label of Asian Influences can cover a lot of ground, from superficial garnish-level borrowing to genuinely integrated cooking. At Noto, the latter appears to be the operating principle. Duck bao buns represent one anchor point: a format that has become a contemporary shorthand for accessible Asian-inflected cooking in British cities, but that still requires the kind of execution , the balance of fat, texture, and acidity , that separates a considered kitchen from a trend-chasing one. The chocolate and miso dessert sits at the other end of the menu's arc, a pairing that has become a test case for whether a kitchen understands umami integration or is simply listing fashionable ingredients. The Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025 suggests the balance is being maintained.

Chef Justin McMillen now leads the kitchen, a transition that sits inside a broader pattern across the city: as Edinburgh's dining scene has matured, the model of the founder-chef running every service every night has given way to a more structured succession, with second-generation kitchen leads carrying forward a restaurant's identity. That Noto has sustained consecutive Bib Gourmands across this transition says something about the coherence of the underlying format rather than dependence on a single personality.

What the Bib Gourmand Actually Means Here

In the context of Edinburgh's Michelin-recognised restaurants, the Bib Gourmand occupies a distinct tier. The city's starred addresses , operating at ££££ and built around longer tasting sequences , represent one kind of ambition. The Bib Gourmand is awarded for notable cooking at a moderate price, and its recurrence at Noto in both 2024 and 2025 places the restaurant in a peer set that stretches across the UK: places like Hand and Flowers in Marlow have built durable reputations at this intersection of quality and accessibility, even as the starred tier draws most of the critical oxygen. The comparison is not about scale but about the category of achievement: doing something well within constraints of price and format, consistently, year on year.

Within Edinburgh specifically, the ££ price point at Noto creates a meaningful gap between it and the tasting-menu houses. For reference, the comparison venues in the city's premium register , Martin Wishart, The Kitchin, AVERY, Condita, and Timberyard , all sit at ££££. Noto is not competing in that tier, and the Bib Gourmand confirms it is not trying to. The restaurant has found a position that the city's dining map genuinely needed: Michelin-recognised quality at a price where the format (shareable small plates, no long tasting sequence required) allows for more spontaneous use.

For broader context on what Asian-influences cooking looks like at different price points and in different cities, Kazuo in São Paulo and MAIN TOWER Restaurant and Lounge in Frankfurt sit in the same broad category, though the specific traditions and local contexts differ considerably.

Planning a Visit

Noto is at 47a Thistle Street, EH2 1DY, a short walk from Edinburgh's New Town core and within easy reach of the central train station. The ££ price range and Google rating of 4.5 across 693 reviews point to a restaurant that draws a consistent local following rather than relying on tourist traffic, though the Bib Gourmand recognition has widened its radius. Given the small-plates format and compact room, booking ahead is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings. The sharing format makes it practical for groups of varying sizes, and the relatively moderate price point means it sits comfortably as an entry point into Edinburgh's recognised dining scene without the commitment of a full tasting menu.

For a fuller picture of where Noto sits within Edinburgh's eating, drinking, and staying options, see our full Edinburgh restaurants guide, our full Edinburgh hotels guide, our full Edinburgh bars guide, our full Edinburgh wineries guide, and our full Edinburgh experiences guide. If you are building a wider UK itinerary around recognised kitchens at different price points, The Fat Duck in Bray, The Ledbury in London, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford each represent different registers of the same ambition.

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