
The 2025 Irish Restaurant Award winners for county Cork
- Overall: Dede at the Customs House Baltimore
- Café: Praline Pastry & Chocolate Café
- Casual Dining: Son of a Bun
- Chef: Brian Murray of The Glass Curtain
- Contemporary Irish Cuisine: Saint Francis Provisions
- Customer Service: Restaurant Chestnut
- Employee Excellence Award: Allen Daly of Goldie
- Gastro Pub: O’Mahony’s of Watergrasshill
- Hotel and Guesthouse Restaurant: Rare 1784 at Blue Haven Hotel
- Innovator: Trawler Boyz Ballycotton
- Local Food Hero: Donal & Virginia O’Gara, My Goodness
- Newcomer: Baba’de
- Pub: Sin É
- Restaurant Manager: Ronan Sharpe of Elbow Lane
- Sustainable Practices: The Town Coffee Company
- Use of Social Media: Paladar
- Wine Experience: L’Atitude 51 Wine Bar
- World Cuisine: The Dosa Spot
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Restaurant awards
Antrim – Armagh – Carlow – Cavan – Clare – Cork – Derry – Donegal – Down – Dublin – Fermanagh – Galway – Kerry – Kildare – Kilkenny – Laois – Leitrim – Limerick – Longford – Louth – Mayo – Meath – Monaghan – Offaly – Roscommon – Sligo – Tipperary – Tyrone – Waterford – Westmeath – Wexford – Wicklow
Cork:
Introduction – Adventure – Anthem – Archaeology – Attractions – Awards – Birdwatching – Camping – Castles – Churches – Contact list – Cycling – Dining – Equestrian – Festivals – Fishing – Folklore – Gardens – Golf – Graveyards – Happening – Haunted – Highest – Hiking – History – Holy Wells – Hotels – Hotels8 – Instagrammable – Itineraries – Largest town – Luxury – MICE – Movies – Musicians – New – Name – Novelists – Off the beaten track – Poets – Pubs – Quotes – Random Facts – Restaurant Awards – Sacred Places – Saints – Spas – Sports – Sunsets– Sustainable – Things to do – Towns – Video – Villages – Walking – Wanderlist – Weddings – Wild swimming – Writers – 1837– 1846 – 1852 – 1909 – 1955 – 1980 –
Cork blends historic sites with scenic beauty, with Cork City’s English Market and St Fin Barre’s Cathedral offering cultural and architectural depth. Blarney Castle, home to the famous Blarney Stone, provides historic allure, while the coastal town of Kinsale offers sailing and seafood. Other attractions include the Beara Peninsula’s rugged trails. Cork is Ireland’s largest county by size (7,460 sq km) and third largest by population (584,156). Population peaked at 854,118 in 1841 (when Cork was Ireland’s most populous county) and reached its lowest point, 330,443 in 1961. In terms of hospitality, Cork is Ireland’s second most visited tourist county with around 1,228,000 international visitors per year.
Link to 2024 Cork award winners
2025 Irish Restaurant awards by county:
Antrim – Armagh – Carlow – Cavan – Clare – Cork – Derry – Donegal – Down – Dublin – Fermanagh – Galway – Kerry – Kildare – Kilkenny – Laois – Leitrim – Limerick – Longford – Louth – Mayo – Meath – Monaghan – Offaly – Roscommon – Sligo – Tipperary – Tyrone – Waterford – Westmeath – Wexford – Wicklow