• About
    • About Us
    • Assessment Process
    • Contact Us
    • Quotes & Testimonials
    • Awards Presented
    • Awards Received
    • Info for Owners
    • Industry Login
    • My Ireland Login
  • Awards
  • Eat
  • Drink
  • Stay
  • Experience
    • Producers
    • Shopping (Buy Local Food)
    • Cookery Schools, Classes
  • 10 of the Best
    • Eat
    • Drink
    • Stay
    • Buy
    • Learn
    • Producers
  • Features
  • News+Views
  • Recipes
    • By Georgina Campbell
  • Competitions
    • Special Offers
  • More+
    • Our Guides & Cookbooks
    • What's On
    • Tourist Attractions
    • Gardens
    • Golf
    • Self Catering
    • Wedding Venues
    • Industry Login
Ireland Guide
Ireland Guide

- ireland -

Graphics Version | 
Ireland's Leading Independent Food & Hospitality Guide
LOGIN Pinterest Twiter Instagram Facebook  | 
Home > Drink & Eat > ETTO

Drink & Eat

Comments(0) Add Comment

ETTO

Restaurant

Dislike Like
2 votes (100%)
Print page Send to a friend
2 euro

ETTO

A pared-back little wine bar serving rustic Italian fare with flair. Barry Fitzgerald’s dazzling tasting plates with seasonal ingredients have made this one of Dublin’s hottest and most exciting new dining spots.
Seats 24 (+ bar seating). Lunch & Dinner, Tue-Sat 12-3pm & 5.30-10pm abbreviations

The pared back interior (bare tables, plain walls and wood floors) harmonises with the pared back Italian fare on Etto’s wonderfully original menu. Don’t come in search of pizzas and pasta staples here – the menu is delightfully devoid of both. Instead arrive ready to embrace rustic regional specialities that sing with authenticity and flavour.


The small space squeezes in 30-odd covers, some perched on stools by a tiny bar, and bookings are hard to come by. Menus are updated daily, with a lunch, dinner and bar menu. The food is conducive to grazing, with nibbles like smoked almonds, charcuterie plates and signature pork belly and eel croquettes perfect to accompany a glass of wine.


You may just come to sip and snack but we’re certain the main menu will tempt you to order food you may not even think you’re hungry for. After all, it’s hard to resist Small Plate dishes like burrata (pillowy mozzarella) with blood orange and red onion or poached duck egg in smoked eel and bacon broth.


Large Plates, perhaps malfatti (delicate spinach and ricotta dumplings) with chanterelles, egg yolk and fried sage leaves or a more robust plate of tender lamb neck, with turnips and sweet onions, promise to be equally delicious and exciting.


The casual set-up may suggest that Etto isn’t a desserts kind of place, but once you taste something like the sticky red wine prunes with vanilla mascarpone or buttermilk blancmange with pears and toasted nuts you’ll know you made a good call.


The wine list is excellent, with a great choice of grapes and affordable prices, although there are only 5 wines by the glass or carafe, which is disappointing. Service is very friendly, and staff are helpful and knowledgeable, even if they could be a little more efficient.


It’s easy to be greedy at Etto and you’ll pay for the privilege of getting carried away. Show restraint and you’ll still be rewarded with a great casual dining experience.


Chefs, restaurateurs and food writers are already making pilgrimages here on their nights off, and it’s easy to see why there’s so much buzz around this genuine foodie mecca.

Less
Read More
  • Facilities/Features
  • Restaurant/Dining/Pub
  • Location - Town Centre
  • Italian
  • Atmospheric
  • Buzzy Atmosphere
  • Cool Venue
  • Informal
  • Old World / Traditional
Last Updated: 25-01-2014
Author: Georgina Campbell
Click here if you are the owner or marketing manager

Might also like

Drink & Eat

Pearl Brasserie

Dublin 2, Dublin City

Restaurant / Wine Bar
3 euro Denotes genuine Irish food culture, ie special Irish food products/companies/producers, and highlights the best places to shop for regional and artisan foods; the selection excludes obvious 'non-Irish' elements regardless of quality, eg ethnic restaurants and specialists in coffee, wine and other drinks, unless relevant to local production or history. Eat & Stay establishments are chosen for their commitment to showcasing local produce and Irish hospitality. Previous Georgina Campbell Guides Award Winner

The clue is in the name: Pearl Brasserie is just that – a pearl of a place, almost hidden from view and beloved by savvy diners for 16 years. Next door to The Merrion Hotel Sebastien Masi and Kirsten Batt’s chic Dublin restaurants a worthy neighbour to such ...

Read more
Drink & Eat & Stay

Conrad Dublin & The Coburg

Dublin 2, Dublin City

Hotel / Restaurant
4 euro Deluxe Accommodation Serious About Seafood Previous Georgina Campbell Guides Award Winner

Situated directly opposite the National Concert Hall and just a stroll away from St Stephen's Green, this fine city centre Dublin hotels celebrated its twentieth anniversary in 2005 with the completion of a €15 million refurbishment programme which saw the entire ho ...

Read more
Drink & Eat

Davy Byrnes

Dublin 2, Dublin City

Pub
1 euro

Just off Grafton Street, Davy Byrnes is one of Dublin's most famous pubs - references in Joyce's Ulysses mean it is very much on the tourist circuit. Despite all this fame it remains a genuine, well-run place and is equally popular with Dubliners, who find it a handy me ...

Read more
Drink & Eat & Stay

The Marker Hotel

Dublin 2, Dublin City

Hotel / Restaurant
4 euro Deluxe Accommodation Outstanding Location, building or atmosphere

In a key position on Grand Canal Square, Dublin city’s most striking modern hotel opened in 2013.  With its unusual geometric white exterior - and despite its location beside the attention-grabbing Grand Canal Theatre - this Manuel Aires Mateus designed hotel ...

Read more
Buy & Drink & Eat & Producer

The Woollen Mills

Dublin 1, Dublin City

Baking/Bakery / Restaurant
3 euro Denotes genuine Irish food culture, ie special Irish food products/companies/producers, and highlights the best places to shop for regional and artisan foods; the selection excludes obvious 'non-Irish' elements regardless of quality, eg ethnic restaurants and specialists in coffee, wine and other drinks, unless relevant to local production or history. Eat & Stay establishments are chosen for their commitment to showcasing local produce and Irish hospitality. Outstanding Location, building or atmosphere

Sad as Dubliners were to see the 2012 closure of one of the city’s most iconic businesses, the Dublin Woollen Mills (where James Joyce, no less, once worked), it is cheering to see Elaine Murphy and the team from the equally iconic Winding Stair next door serving u ...

Read more
Drink & Eat

The Legal Eagle

Dublin 7, Dublin City

Pub
3 euro Denotes genuine Irish food culture, ie special Irish food products/companies/producers, and highlights the best places to shop for regional and artisan foods; the selection excludes obvious 'non-Irish' elements regardless of quality, eg ethnic restaurants and specialists in coffee, wine and other drinks, unless relevant to local production or history. Eat & Stay establishments are chosen for their commitment to showcasing local produce and Irish hospitality.

The Legal Eagle pub has been part of the life of the legal community around the Four Courts for many years, with barristers, solicitors and appellants all to be found within. It was shuttered for many years, but now Dublin restaurateur Elaine Murphy and business partner ...

Read more

Contact details

+353 1 678 8872
EMAIL
PLEASE MENTION IRELANDGUIDE.COM WHEN ENQUIRING

Address

ETTO
18 Merrion Row, Dublin 2
Show me where this establishment is on the map.
Directions About Dublin 2 Trip Planning Tools
Just off St Stephens Green on Merrion Row
  • Add to my Favourites +
  • View my Favourites
  • Local Recommendations
  • Hospitality
  • By Distance
    • All
      • Eat
        • Drink
          • Stay
            • Buy
              • Learn
                • Producer
                • By Category
                  • Comments

                  There are currently no comments

                  Leave a comment

                  You must be logged in to leave a comment
                  Not a member? Register for your free membership now!
                  Or leave a comment by logging in with:
                  Sign up with Twitter
                  Georgina Campbell's ireland-guide.com
                  Tweets by @IrelandGuide Tweets by IrelandGuide
                  © Copyright Georgina Campbell Guides 2026
                  • Disclaimer
                  • T & C
                  • Privacy Policy
                  • Site Map
                  • Links
                  • Advertise
                  • Ireland Hotels |
                  • Northern Ireland Hotels |
                  • B&B Ireland |
                  • Accommodation Ireland |
                  • Dublin Airport Hotels |
                  • Dublin Hotels |
                  • Dublin Restaurants |
                  • Belfast Hotels |
                  • Belfast Restaurants |
                  • Cork Hotels |
                  • Cork Restaurants |
                  • Galway Hotels |
                  • Galway Restaurants |
                  • Killarney Hotels |
                  • Killarney Restaurants |
                  • Kilkenny Hotels |
                  • Kilkenny Restaurants |
                  • Limerick Hotels |
                  • Limerick Restaurants |
                  • Sligo Hotels |
                  • Waterford Hotels |
                  • Westport Hotels
                  • My Ireland Guide - Log in
                  • My Favourites
                  • My Itineraries
                  • My Comments
                  • Special Offers
                  • Hire Cars
                  • Ferry Tickets
                  • Competition
                  This website uses cookies to help provide you with a better online experience. By continuing to browse this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Cookie Policy