SOLSTICE BY KENNY ATKINSON




Solstice by Kenny Atkinson is a 14-seat tasting counter on Newcastle's Quayside, operating Wednesday through Saturday with a no-choice menu of up to 19 courses priced at £175 per head. Holding a Michelin star since 2024 and scoring 83 points in La Liste's 2026 ranking, it sits above its sibling House of Tides in ambition and price, with locally sourced seafood and Northumberland produce forming the backbone of a technically precise menu.
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- Address
- 5-7 Side, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 3JE, United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 191 222 1722
- Website
- solsticencl.com

A Split-Level Room with Outsized Ambition
On the Side, one of Newcastle's older lanes running parallel to the Quayside, a 14-seat dining room operates in near silence four nights a week. The room is subdued in tone, deliberately so, with sunburst wall lights echoing the restaurant's logo providing most of the visual punctuation. There is a limited view into the kitchen. Seating is split across two levels. The effect is one of deliberate compression: the space is sized to match the format, not the other way around.
That format is a no-choice tasting menu of up to 19 courses, priced at £175 per diner. At that entry point, the meal opens with a kind of implicit contract. Guests receive a bare-bones printed menu on arrival, dish names stripped to a single ingredient, caviar, cod roe, mackerel, and the full architecture of each dish is communicated verbally, by the chefs themselves, plate by plate. A detailed written account follows at the end of the meal.
Where Solstice Sits in Newcastle's Fine Dining Picture
Newcastle's formal dining tier has expanded materially over the past decade. House of Tides (Modern British, Modern Cuisine), also Atkinson-owned and a Michelin-starred address in its own right, occupies a converted 16th-century merchant's house a short walk away on the Quayside. Solstice is positioned as a step above that operation, smaller, more expensive, and more formally structured. At Solstice, the differentiation is clear enough to justify the distinction.
The city's broader dining range runs from 21 at the £££ tier and the neighbourhood precision of COOK HOUSE to newer arrivals like Nest and Rebel. Solstice operates in a different register entirely: a 14-cover room at £175 per head, open only Wednesday to Saturday, The relevant comparisons are L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and, on format and ambition if not geography, CORE by Clare Smyth in London.
The Ingredients and What They Signal
The menu's ingredient sourcing makes a consistent regional argument. Lindisfarne oysters, Craster kipper, Northumberland heather honey, langoustine: these are not decorative gestures toward provenance but the structural material of the cooking. Lindisfarne, on the Northumberland coast, is one of England's most recognised shellfish addresses. Craster is synonymous with smoked herring to a degree that makes it shorthand for a certain kind of North Sea kitchen tradition. Using both within a £175 tasting menu at this level of technical precision locates Solstice firmly within the Modern British idiom, specifically the strand of it that treats regional ingredient identity as a serious compositional tool rather than an origin-story footnote.
This places Solstice alongside a broader national pattern. The tasting menus at The Fat Duck in Bray, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow each manage a version of this tension between technical ambition and ingredient legibility. At Solstice, the reported dishes suggest the balance tilts toward complexity, oyster with bonito beurre blanc and oscietra caviar finished tableside with walnut oil; langoustine with yuzu koshu butter and fennel flower; pollock wrapped in nori with a Craster kipper sauce, but the regional anchors remain legible throughout.
Kenny Atkinson's Trajectory and What It Built
Atkinson's career is marked by accumulated technical credibility expressed through a physical restaurant. The path from television visibility on the Great British Menu to operating a Michelin-starred counter at £175 per head represents a deliberate upward repositioning, and one that relatively few UK chefs complete without institutional backing. That Solstice received its Michelin star in 2024, and scored 83 points in La Liste's 2026 ranking, suggests the transition has been completed on its own terms.
Head chef Scott Hodgson runs the kitchen day-to-day. At Solstice, the La Liste assessment notes the chefs present dishes personally and provide detailed menu explanations, a structural choice that places them in direct accountability with the guest. That interaction model is a marker of seriousness in small-format tasting rooms: it replaces front-of-house intermediaries with direct culinary authorship at the table.
Format, Pacing, and Portion Logic
Nineteen courses is a number that raises questions about pacing and fatigue. The reported experience at Solstice addresses this directly: the final four dishes are petits fours, served together rather than sequentially, which recalibrates the sense of accumulation. Portions throughout are calibrated to the count. The structure, seafood-led middle courses, a venison main, dessert anchored by a Northumberland heather honey parfait, chocolate with sansho pepper ganache as part of the closing four, follows a broadly classical arc while the individual dishes operate with considerably more technical complexity than that arc implies.
At the £175 per head food price, adding the £95 wine pairing brings a per-head spend to £270 before any supplements, positioning Solstice in the same bracket as the UK's most expensive tasting rooms outside London.
Planning a Visit
Solstice operates Wednesday through Saturday only, with a single sitting Thursday through Saturday evening (last entry 7:30 PM) and a Friday and Saturday lunch sitting at noon. Monday, Tuesday, and Sunday are closed. The address is 5-7 Side, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 3JE, in the Quayside district, walking distance from the Tyne Bridge and the central rail and Metro network. The £175 per head charge is collected upfront at booking. Given the 14-seat capacity, lead time for reservations is considerable; booking well in advance is the practical reality of any room at this scale.
Recognition Snapshot
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SOLSTICE BY KENNY ATKINSONThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | |
| House of Tides | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin 1 Star | Quayside |
| COOK HOUSE | Modern British Small Plates | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Ouseburn |
| Six | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Quayside |
| Nest | Modern British Tasting Menu & Sunday Roast | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Heaton |
| Lovage | Modern Mediterranean Bistro | $$$ | Michelin Plate | Jesmond |
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