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Bristol’s top 10 vegan places

Where are the best vegan and vegan-friendly places in Bristol? We’ve shared our list of the top 10 vegan spots, chosen by the experts behind the Vegan Bristol book, to showcase the best places the city has to offer.

Where are the best vegan and vegan-friendly places in Bristol? We’ve shared our list of the top 10 vegan spots, chosen by the experts behind the Vegan Bristol book, to showcase the best places the city has to offer.


Root, Gaol Ferry Steps (photo: Helena Murphy)

Best for Special Occasions...

Root

  • Unit 9, Cargo 1, Gaol Ferry Steps, BS1 6WP | rootbristol.co.uk

  • Elevated small plates in the heart of Wapping Wharf


Best for Lunch...

Yafo

  • 238 North Street, BS3 1JD | yafo.co.uk

  • Laid-back Middle Eastern-inspired cafe serving seriously good food all day


Best for Brunch...

Bristol Loaf

  • 96 Bedminster Parade, BS3 4HL • Beacon, Trenchard Street, BS1 5AR • 213 Church Road, Redfield, BS5 9HF | thebristolloaf.co.uk

  • A bustling community hub serving bread, cakes and much more


Kibou Kitchen & Bar, King’s Road (photo: Helena Murphy)

Best for a Date Night...

Kibou Kitchen & Bar

  • 16 King’s Road, BS8 4AB | kibou.co.uk

  • Elegant Japanese dining with a large selection of vegan sushi, ramen and more


Best for Grab and Go...

Eatchu

  • 1 Queens Row, Triangle, BS8 1EZ • Exchange Avenue, BS1 1JQ • City Business Park, St Jude’s, BS5 0SP | eatchu.co.uk

  • Delightful dumplings, rice boxes and noodles to go


Best for Big Groups...

Thali Montpelier

  • 12 York Road, BS6 5QE | thalirestaurant.co.uk

  • Thali curries and tiffin takeaways made to family recipes


Ahh Toots, Christmas Street (photo: Helena Murphy)

Best for Sweet Treats...

Ahh Toots

  • 17, Christmas Street, BS1 5BT | ahhtoots.co.uk

  • A mountain of sweet treats housed in a fairy-tale Tudor building


Best for Families...

Tobacco Factory Café Bar

  • Raleigh Road, BS3 1TF | tobaccofactory.com

  • Amorphous, vibrant space that serves the whole community


Best for Dogs...

The Old Bookshop

  • 65 North Street, BS3 1ES | theoldbookshopbristol.com

  • European-inspired neighbourhood bar in the heart of North Street


Best for Delivery...

Cheung’s Vegan Kitchen

  • 89 St. Marks Road, BS5 6HY | cheungsvegankitchen.com

  • Long-standing Chinese takeaway with a fully plant-based menu


Vegan Bristol
£12.95

Vegan Bristol, by Ben McCabe and Helena Murphy is a guide to the most tantalising spots to discover amazing vegan food in Bristol. In Vegan Bristol, you’ll find:

• An introduction to Bristol’s extensive vegan food scene

• More than 40 locations carefully researched and chosen for their quality and atmosphere

• Detailed information about each location, as well as useful insights such as takeaway options

• Provision listings and ‘Best places for...’ guide

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Joe Burt Joe Burt

Meet the Author: Jackie Strachan

We speak to guidebook author, Jackie Strachan, about her new book Days Out Around Bristol, Bath & Somerset and find out more about the book, her inspiration for writing it and some of her local highlights.

We speak to guidebook author, Jackie Strachan, about her new book Days Out Around Bristol, Bath & Somerset and find out more about the book, her inspiration for writing it and some of her local highlights.

Author Jackie Strachan

Author, Jackie Strachan

1. What inspired you to write the guide?

It began with my customary jog along the beach at Weston-super-Mare and thinking that Weston deserved a proper guidebook. Then it seemed to make sense to add on nearby places within a short drive from Weston, and it just mushroomed from there.

2. How long did it take you to go from idea to finished book?

Too long, my normal work kept getting in the way. I am not sure exactly how long it took in the end, but probably at least five years, with various stops and starts, and then a great deal of checking and revising toward the end to make everything as up to date as possible.

3. What experience did you have in the world of publishing prior to writing this book?

I have always worked in publishing, having fallen into it by accident post college. I graduated from account administration to selling the foreign rights to books on gardening, history and so on, which was great for broadening travel horizons, and then moved onto the editorial side of things as a publishing director in non-fiction (including travel) books.

4. How did you choose which locations to include?

From personal knowledge, checking the places covered by other books to make sure I didn’t miss out anything important, being a leaflet hound and always on the lookout for local information, but especially from getting out and about and just being nosy, following any ‘brown signs’ that indicated a gap in my knowledge.

5. Did any destinations surprise you during your research — perhaps places you hadn’t ever visited before?

So many, it’s very easy to live in a place for years and never really get to know it. The massive medieval castle slap bang in the middle of the tiny village of Nunney; the ponds, paths and lush greenery around the delightful Willsbridge Mill on the outskirts of Bristol; Aller and its dragon and name check in the history of England; the beautiful Arts & Crafts interior of St Hugh’s Chapel in the Mendips; the peaceful Litton Lakes, just 3 miles from the far more famous Chew Valley Lake; the extraordinary life-size-plus carving of a fisherman with leaping salmon at Black Rock picnic site on the banks of the Severn. The list goes on.

6. Which places from the book would you personally recommend for a rainy day?

I’d start with Oakham Treasures just outside Bristol, where you can spend hours spotting the everyday objects we all had around our homes; the Rural Life Museum at Glastonbury which is wonderfully evocative; Weston’s superb Helicopter Museum with over 100 aircraft; the Roman Legion Museum in Caerleon, where you come face-to-face with legionaries in full regalia. But again there are many more.

7. Why did you include garden centres as well as vineyards and artisan cheese and cider makers?

The book is intended to give people ideas for all kinds of things to do in our region. They are a popular choice for popping into en route to somewhere else, and are even a destination in their own right for some people; the larger ones are like mini department stores.

8. Would you do it all over again?

Yes, it has been a joy. I learned so much and realised how ignorant I was about our region. Not that I would ever claim to know it all now by any means, but I will regale anyone who will listen with ‘Did you know that …..?’ Few have escaped so far!


Days Out Around Bristol, Bath & Somerset

This guidebook is packed with ideas for great days out within an hour or so’s drive, with suggestions to suit your mood, schedule and starting point. From the Mendip Hills and Somerset Levels, to South Wales, the southern Cotswolds, the Coast and its resorts. This guide will help you explore what is on the doorstep or to venture further afield along paths less travelled.

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Joe Burt Joe Burt

December Highlights

News and events from Bristol Books this December

News and events from Bristol Books this December


Take the Bristol Miscellany Quiz 2025

This Christmas we have another Bristol-themed festive quiz for you to test your local knowledge. The questions are all inspired by historical facts from the brilliant Manson’s Bristol Miscellany - the perfect gift for a Bristolian this Christmas! Why not share the quiz with your friends or work colleagues and see who scores highest?


OUT NOW!
Self Portrait with Animals
Martin Rieser

In this collection of Ekphrastic verses, Bristol poet, Martin Rieser, reflects on personal identity and agency inspired by pictures that include images of animals by some of the world’s most revered artists. These poems will surprise and delight the reader, and the pictures will never be seen again without the verses echoing long in the viewer’s mind.


Bristol Books in Little Book Stop

Bristol Books have donated a selection of books to the Little Book Stop, located in Redfield’s 3ft 6 Cafe on Lancaster Street. The cafe was chosen as one of 90 locations by Penguin in partnership with the non-profit Little Free Library. The community bookshelves are looked after by volunteer and cafe co-owner Jack Barnett. Find out more about our community impact here.


Get your local Christmas gifts

Looking for gifting inspiration? Take a look at our Christmas book guide. Whether you are buying a Secret Santa for a friend, or choosing a special gift for a family member, we have a huge range of local books to choose from. There’s also a 10% discount code inside!


December events

Bristol Books @ Chew Magna Christmas Fayre

2pm – 5:30pm, Saturday 6th December
St Andrew’s Church, Chew Magna

Visit the Bristol Books stand in St Andrew’s Church, Chew Magna and find the perfect local Christmas gift. Festive events will be taking place across the village including a lights switch-on, plus performances by the school choir and Congresbury brass band.


Book launch: Self Portrait with Animals
Martin Rieser

7:30pm, Tuesday 2nd December
The John Sebastian Lightship, Bathurst Basin

  • Supporting poets include: Sophie Dumont, Lisa Lopresti, Agata Palmer, Naomi Madlock, Pete Weinstock, and David Punter.


The Life & Times of Harry Dolman

Talk by author Clive Burlton on the multi-millionaire, inventor, draughtsman and engineer, Harry Dolman OBE, who’s love of football led him to Bristol City Football Club where he became director, chairman and president.

7:30pm, Friday 5th December
Stoke Bishop Local History Group, Stoke Bishop Village Hall

7:30pm, Thursday 11th December
Long Ashton Local History Society, Jubilee Pavilion


PICTURE THIS…
Downend’s memorial to the greatest cricketer

The opening of the WG Grace Memorial Pavilion at Downend Cricket Club on 6th June 1922. Born in Downend, Bristol in 1848, William Gilbert Grace was an English cricketer who is widely considered one of the sport's all-time greatest players. This image is taken from A History of the Bristol & District Cricket Association, by Trevor Crouch and Edwin Morris.

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Martin Powell Martin Powell

The Bristol Miscellany Quiz 2025

This Christmas we’re once again delighted to provide you with a new festive quiz for you and your friends or work colleagues to share.

This Christmas we have another Bristol-themed festive quiz for you to test your local knowledge. The questions are all inspired by historical facts from the brilliant Manson’s Bristol Miscellany - the perfect gift for a Bristolian this Christmas! Why not share the quiz with your friends or work colleagues and see who scores highest?


  1. Who is commemorated with a statue on Narrow Quay, outside Arnolfini?

  2. Which river was diverted in 1239 to expand the Bristol quayside?

  3. Which famous Bath-based architect built Bristol’s Corn Exchange building?

  4. The Nails on Corn Street are made of what type of metal?

  5. Bird’s Eye, Honeydew and Three Castles were the names given to what type of Bristol-made product?

  6. Where would one visit to be cured of ‘hot livers, feeble brains and red pimply faces’ in 17th century Bristol?

  7. What Victorian feature can be found in Mina Road Park, St Werburghs?

  8. The University of Bristol’s Health Research Institute is named in honour of which female doctor?

  9. What is a Bristol Lodekka?

  10. Where is the social campaigner Raja Rammohun Roy buried in Bristol?

  11. What’s the name of Bristol’s specially designed fireboat, often moored outside M Shed?

  12. Dr Paul Stephenson OBE organised a boycott against which company in 1960’s Bristol?

  13. Which square was the site of the Bristol Riots of 1831?

  14. Is the river Severn the longest river in the UK?

  15. The Smyth family were the owners of which Bristol Estate?

  16. Where was the Roman port of Abonae in Bristol?

  17. The Llandoger Trow in King Street is named after what?

  18. What century was the county of Bristol created?

  19. Where in the Bristol Channel did Marconi send his first radio transmission from?

  20. What was the name of the Monastery in the centre of Bristol, dissolved by Henry VIII?


How did you do? All the answers can be found on the link below.


Manson's Bristol Miscellany
£20.00

How much do you know about Bristol? Why does it look the way it looks? What secrets do its streets hide? What stories could its buildings tell if they had a voice?

Michael Manson takes you on a search to find the soul of the city where he has lived for more than 45 years.

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Joe Burt Joe Burt

November Highlights

News and events from Bristol Books this November

News and events from Bristol Books this November


Bristol Christmas book guide out now!

We’ve just launched our Christmas book guide which is packed full of local gifting inspiration. Whether you are buying a Secret Santa for a friend, or choosing a special gift for a family member, why not buy a local book and help support local independent book publishing? You’ll also find a 10% discount code inside!


BACK IN PRINT!
Bristol Music: Sounds of the City

This essential guide to Bristol music is now back in print and has been revised and updated for 2025. Featuring a timeline of the key moments in the city’s music history from 1955 to the present day, with profiles of almost 100 bands, musicians, DJs and producers who have made a significant impact on the sound of the city from Russ Conway to Massive Attack.


COMPETITION…
Win £50 worth of local books!

This month all our existing newsletter subscribers will be automatically entered into a competition. We are giving you the chance to win £50 worth of local books from the Bristol Books website, all of your own choosing. From history and untold stories, to guides, city walks books, art, sport, biographies and more, we've got it all to choose from. One lucky winner will be drawn from our mailing list. Competition closes on 5th December, 2025. Good luck!


Author talk: Clive Burlton
Bristol's Lost City

Tues 11th November, 7:15pm
Shipham, Rowberrow and Star History Society

  • Venue: Shipham Village Hall

  • £4 entry for guests on the night. Refreshments available

Tues 18th November, 7:30pm
Yate Heritage Centre Lectures

  • Venue: Church Road, Yate

  • Book a place here


What if Bristol had a metro railway?

This is an artist’s impression of the proposed 1980s Avon Metro. The scheme was put forward by a company called Advanced Transport for Avon (ATA), with a system modelled on London’s Docklands Light Railway. Routes were considered from central Bristol to Portishead, Filton, Emersons Green, Yate, Bradley Stoke, Hartcliffe and Weston-super-Mare, with costs projected at around £230m.

This image is taken from Eugene Byrne’s Unbuilt Bristol walk, featured in The Bristol Ideas Book of Walks, a collection of 12 unique Bristol city walks.

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