Food & Cooking

Mr Fox review: Will a new chef deliver on Michelin ambitions at this beloved Dublin 1 spot?

Adam Jordan arrives in Parnell Square with significant Michelin experience and there will be much interest in how he applies it

AAdmin
July 9, 2026
4 min read
Mr Fox review: Will a new chef deliver on Michelin ambitions at this beloved Dublin 1 spot?

“A new chapter begins at Mr Fox.” That was the heading on the email that landed in my inbox, and it was enough to pique my interest. It had been a long time since my last visit – years, in fact – and the chef taking over as chef patron alongside founder Anthony Smith – who opened the restaurant almost a decade ago, and more recently D’Olier Street in Dublin 2 – has an impressive CV for somebody many of us might not have heard of.

Backstories generally lead with the highlights rather than following a strict chronology, but for Jordan, it’s a fine-dining trajectory from the get go, starting with three years at the K Club in Co Kildare before moving to The Greenhouse in Dublin 2 under Mickael Viljanen , a period he describes as the most influential of his career. From there he joined Ross Lewis at Chapter One in Dublin 1 for three years before heading to Vancouver to work at AnnaLena, where the restaurant earned a Michelin star.

Back in Ireland, he worked in D’Olier Street under James Moore, again when the restaurant was awarded a Michelin star, before moving to Terre in Castlemartyr in Co Cork. A return to Dublin saw him join Library Street in Dublin 2 while he waited for the right head chef opportunity. Then Anthony Smith came knocking.

The diningroom is in the Georgian basement of this Parnell Square, Dublin 1 restaurant, divided into two connected spaces with a convivial bar to the left of the entrance. It has changed little over the years: sage-green walls, charcoal timber panelling, navy velvet curtains and a patterned tiled floor that gives way to timber floorboards in the second room, where we’re seated at a square oak table. There are no tablecloths, just white linen napkins.

Mr Fox has offered a tasting menu for some time – €73 for five courses – but an a la carte option returned last summer, offering a broader choice. Despite that, most of the people in the room appear to be on the tasting menu, tourists and locals enjoying a pre-theatre dinner before Oscar Wilde’s An Ideal Husband at the nearby Gate Theatre.

Opting for the a la carte, we start with three very good slices of 48-hour sourdough (€7) accompanied by a generous mound of cep butter and a piped ribbon of Parmesan custard, scattered with crispy pieces of onion and pickled onion.

A langoustine tail wrapped in golden toast (€4) is fresh and sweet, with dots of yuzu koshō adding a whisper of citrus heat. The toast, however, is softer than I would have liked. An open-faced snack would allow the crustacean to shine. A bottle of trebbiano from the Falerio region of Italy (€48), from a wine list that in effect starts at €50, works well with our meal.

Moving on to the starters, I’m expecting the macerated tomatoes (€17) to bring a fresh burst of summer, but the inclusion of semi-dried tomatoes takes the dish in a sweeter and slightly dated direction. Crispy croutons add texture and smoked Gubbeen brings contrast in flavour, but the slivers of Iberico ham are too fine to register.

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Kicking up the fun quotient is the buttermilk fried chicken (€16), a juicy piece of chicken inside a craggy, crispy coating. Togarashi mayonnaise adds a gentle warmth, while large curls of pickled carrot bring acidity.

Rabbit (€32) is not a dish you see too often on menus, and here it arrives rich and deeply savoury, tossed with girolles, house-made trecce pasta and grapes in a buttery, tarra…