Subscriber OnlyFood

Three of the best steaks in Ireland, and where to eat them

Our food experts Corinna Hardgrave, Lisa Cope and Ali Dunworth reveal their favourites

Super steak: West Cork Angus rib-eye at Pilgrim’s, in Cork
Super steak: West Cork Angus rib-eye at Pilgrim’s, in Cork

"What's your favourite restaurant?" is a question food writers are asked regularly. We'll reveal our top 100 here on Friday, November 12th. But what about our favourite dishes? We're answering that question in this series. Today: steaks. Here are the ones that Lisa Cope, Ali Dunworth and I will travel for, and will order regardless of what else is on the menu.

Côte de boeuf at Etto
€72 for two people; 18 Merrion Row, Dublin 2; 01-6788872; etto.ie

Côte de boeuf at Etto
Côte de boeuf at Etto

It is, I'd imagine, little surprise that the dry-aged côte de boeuf at Etto tops the list for me when it comes to steak. Grilled on the bone, then carved into slices – charred on the outside and cooked to just the right level of rareness inside – all it needs is the Bordelaise sauce, crispy garlic potatoes and watercress salad. Corinna Hardgrave

Rib-eye at Featherblade
€20; 51B Dawson Street, Dublin 2; 01-6798814; featherblade.ie
When I fancy steak I want all the trimmings, too, and Featherblade delivers that and more. First, choose from a concise menu of well-priced, well-sourced meat. I usually go for the rib-eye, which comes from JJ Youngs in Kildare and is dry-aged in a salt chamber. Then add from the enticing sides menu, including béarnaise, truffle mac and cheese, creamed spinach, and beef-dripping chips, and you're fit for a feast. Ali Dunworth

READ MORE

West Cork Angus rib-eye with whatever's seasonal at Pilgrim's
€26; 6 South Square, Roscarbery, Co Cork; 023-8831796, pilgrims.ie

Steak at Pilgrim’s Cork
Steak at Pilgrim’s Cork

Pilgrim's in west Cork might be better known for doing beautiful things with vegetables, but for most of the year you'll find local Angus rib-eye treated with respect, served with wild and wonderful things from nearby. The first time it was slow-cooked courgettes, cherry tomato, capers and a garlic-nasturtium smoked butter I can still taste 18 months later. The last it was calabrese broccoli and Caherberg black pudding sesame rayu. I try to eat less meat of better quality, and this is somewhere I save my steak tokens for. Lisa Cope