



OX holds Belfast's sole Michelin star and a 2026 La Liste score of 79 points, placing it at the top of the city's contemporary dining tier. Chefs Greg Denton and Gabrielle Quiñónez Denton run a tasting menu that draws on Argentinian, Irish-French, and Modern British traditions, with a wine pairing program notable for its range and precision. Lunch and dinner are served Thursday through Saturday at 1 Oxford Street.

Where Oxford Street Meets the Plate
Step through the door at 1 Oxford Street and the room settles around you with a quietness that feels deliberate. This is not a dining room that performs for you. The atmosphere at OX is composed rather than curated, the kind of space where the cooking and the wine do the talking and the surroundings stay out of the way. For a city that has spent the past decade rewriting its cultural narrative, the restaurant functions as a reliable reference point: what considered, technically ambitious cooking in Belfast looks and tastes like at the leading of its range.
More Than a Decade of Standard-Setting
Contemporary fine dining in British and Irish cities went through a pronounced shift in the 2010s. Across the island, a generation of chefs moved away from classical French formality toward tighter, ingredient-led tasting formats — fewer tables, shorter menus, longer relationships with producers. OX belongs to that wave. For more than a decade, the kitchen has shaped what creative cooking in Belfast means, and twelve years of consistent output is a claim that matters in a genre where restaurants often plateau or fade within five. The Michelin one-star awarded in 2024 confirmed a tier position that regular diners had already placed it in for years.
That longevity also places OX in an interesting comparative position within Belfast's contemporary restaurant tier. The Muddlers Club operates in a similar price register with a modern cuisine approach, while Beau, Cyprus Avenue, and EDŌ work the contemporary and European contemporary spaces at the ££ level. Deanes at Queens holds the Modern British position at a slightly more accessible price point. OX sits at the £££ tier with a Michelin star and a La Liste 2026 score of 79 points — a combination that places it in a national conversation rather than purely a local one.
The Culinary Framework: Three Traditions, One Kitchen
The cuisine classification at OX , Argentinian, Irish-French, Modern British , is less a marketing description than a working account of how the kitchen actually operates. Greg Denton and Gabrielle Quiñónez Denton bring South American and North American training into a room shaped by Irish and French culinary logic. That is not a common combination, and the tension it produces is productive. Where most tasting menus at this level default to either hyper-local provenance signalling or French classical anchoring, OX operates across both while pulling from a third tradition entirely.
The ingredient sourcing is foundational to this approach. The kitchen selects produce with evident care, and in some cases grows it directly, a practice that has become more common in this tier of British and Irish cooking but is still far from universal. Orkney scallop appears as a documented reference point in Michelin's own assessment, paired with curry oil in a pairing described as well-judged in both aroma and flavour. The point that assessment makes is about precision: a curry oil executed without the precision of heat and aroma calibration would overwhelm a scallop at that quality level. That it does not is a statement about technical command.
Wine pairing at OX draws equally specific attention. Savennières and Emilio Hidalgo Sherry are not bottles that appear on wine lists assembled for crowd-pleasing broadness. Savennières, the Loire appellation producing oxidative, mineral Chenin Blanc from volcanic schist, is a wine that rewards engagement and divides opinion even among informed drinkers. Its presence in a pairing menu reflects confidence in the dining room's ability to take a wine somewhere unusual. Hidalgo Sherry is in similar territory: a producer whose range extends from dry Manzanilla into aged En Rama and Amontillado expressions. These are wine choices made by people who know what a pairing is supposed to do beyond matching flavour profiles.
Where OX Sits in the British Isles Fine Dining Tier
Michelin one-star restaurants in the British Isles occupy an interesting middle ground. The star confirms technical credibility but the tier spreads wide: from destination restaurants that draw international travel to neighbourhood rooms that locals visit on significant occasions. OX's 79-point La Liste score in 2026 positions it toward the upper end of that one-star cohort in the UK and Ireland. For reference, restaurants at the highest end of the British fine dining spectrum , The Fat Duck in Bray, The Ledbury in London, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and Moor Hall in Aughton , operate in multi-star territory with different scale, infrastructure, and pricing. Closer to OX's single-star tier but with different geographic and culinary profiles are rooms like Gidleigh Park in Chagford and Hand and Flowers in Marlow. Internationally, the tasting menu format that OX occupies has parallels in rooms like Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City, both of which demonstrate what tightly focused tasting formats can achieve when the kitchen has clear culinary convictions.
Google review data provides a useful crowd-sourced signal: 4.7 across 774 reviews is a consistency score that suggests the dining experience holds up across a wide range of occasions and expectations. At the £££ price level, where a disappointing meal carries real financial weight, sustained high scoring across that volume of reviews means something about reliability.
Service and the Room
The front-of-house approach at OX reflects a longer tradition in serious European dining rooms: service that informs without performing. Alain Kerloch's work in the dining room over more than a decade is noted as a defining element of the overall experience alongside the kitchen output. In fine dining at this level, the floor and the kitchen function as a single system, and the consistency of that pairing over twelve years is notable. Wine knowledge at the service level needs to match a list built around wines like Savennières and aged Sherry, and by all available evidence it does.
Planning a Visit
OX operates Wednesday through Saturday for dinner (6pm to 9:30pm) and offers lunch service Thursday through Saturday (12pm to 2pm). The restaurant is closed Monday, Tuesday, and Sunday. For visitors to Belfast planning an itinerary around the dining scene, the Thursday-to-Saturday window covers both lunch and dinner options. The address is 1 Oxford Street, Belfast BT1 3LA, in the Cathedral Quarter area close to the River Lagan. Given the Michelin recognition and volume of demand, advance booking is advisable. The full Belfast dining picture , including bars, hotels, and experiences , is covered in our full Belfast restaurants guide, our full Belfast hotels guide, our full Belfast bars guide, our full Belfast wineries guide, and our full Belfast experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Recognition Snapshot
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Awards | Cuisine | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| OX | Michelin 1 Star | Argentinian, Irish - French, Modern British | This venue |
| The Muddlers Club | Michelin 1 Star | Modern Cuisine | Modern Cuisine, £££ |
| Deanes at Queens | Modern British | Modern British, ££ | |
| EDŌ | European Contemporary | European Contemporary, ££ | |
| Cyprus Avenue | Contemporary | Contemporary, ££ | |
| Home | Mediterranean Cuisine | Mediterranean Cuisine, ££ |
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