Bunsen's relish-drenched, chunky patties are unapologetically messy

Look, we couldn't knowingly send you to Temple Bar. Instead, local rapscallion James Hendicott drags us through the real Dublin - drink, drugs, debauchery and all.

Booze

Best old man boozer
Trad bar O’Donoghue’s Bar (15 Merrion Row), home to iconic musicians The Dubliners, is all ramshackle wonky floors and Victorian school benches. It barely feels post-revolutionary.

The cocktail you’ll tell all your mates about
With its red boudoir seats and wacky on-site distillation bar, Lillie’s Bordello (1-2 Adam Court) serves up a melon vodka and berry concoction, named The Mellow Side, which numbs the tongue and soothes the oesophagus.

Greatest happy hour
Happy Hours were made illegal in Ireland in 2003, but lively traveller hub, Dicey’s Garden (21-25 Harcourt Street), has bevvies at far below the going rate.

Best Guinness, obviously
Try Dublin’s best-kept secret, The Open Gate Brewery (James Street), which requires a booking, but serves experimental St James’ Gate brews alongside the original black stuff on Guinness property.

Where the locals drink
The area between Aungier Street and Dame Street is Dublin nightlife’s heartland: try Dame Lane in summer, or Fade Street for leftfield hipster chic.

The Open Gate Brewery: you won't find a better GuinnessThe Open Gate Brewery: you won't find a better Guinness
The Open Gate Brewery / Diageo

Grub

Best hangover breakfast
A Full Irish will soak up the harshest of sloppy stomachs, and Violet’s Restaurant (80 Lower Dorset Street) offers arguably the best fry-up in the city. With swollen sausages and phenomenal portions of thick-cut bacon, it's a stomach-settling scoff.

Best street food stall
The sumptuous oyster stall in Temple Bar Food Market (Meeting House Square) is probably the best thing about the locally loathed tourist hub.

Best ‘I’ve run out of cash’ meal
Govinda’s (4 Aungier Street), a Hare Krishna kitchen, offers Indian curries, piles of vegetarian fare and other slightly sloppy comfort nosh that fills a hole for a few euros.

Best flashy restaurant
They’ll let you choose from a plate of juicy steaks at F.X. Buckley (2 Crow Street), where butchers turned ambitious restaurateurs excel at local cuisine.

Best burger in Dublin
Bunsen (36 Wexford Street) serves relish-drenched, chunky patties that are preciously, unapologetically messy.

Most hipster coffee shop
With communal seating, mounds of falafel, vegetable juices and a high Apple laptop quotient, The Fumbally (Fumbally Lane) is both hipster central and serves the best latte in town.

Most Instagrammable dish
Go traditional: the special ‘coddle’ at Gallagher’s Boxty House (20-21 Temple Bar), a steaming stew of bacon, pork sausage and potato, is served with a flourish and couldn’t be more Irish.

The Fumbally serves the best latte in townThe Fumbally serves the best latte in town
The Fumbally

Party

Where to pull a cougar or a silver fox
Copper Face Jack’s (29-30 Harcourt Street) has a national reputation as a meat market. It’s full-on sleaze at the weekend: enter at your own risk!

Where to snog a student
Chilled out P. Mac’s (30 Stephen Street Lower) has become the drunken student party hub of a city crammed with lash-loving academics.

Where to go headbanging
The Pogues' own Gypsy Rose Rock and Blues Bar (5 Aston Quay) is a bouncing, sticky-floored, tattoo-loaded rocker that will have you in the doctors Monday morning with neck stiffness.

Where to pick up naughties
Though Parnell Street can get a little rough around the edges later in the evening, it’s the best place to pick up.

Where to dance your tits off
Dublin is not big on clubs, but hazy warehouse joint Hangar (St Andrew’s Lane) is where the electronic circuit’s bigger names pull up and party. Expect everything from underground techno to deep house.

Latest last orders
Generic 3am closing times mean the almost mythical Irish lock-in is the way to a late one: try The Thomas House (Apartment 8, 86 Thomas Street).

Most scenic spot for a sunrise spliff
The Great South Wall is a lighthouse-tipped jut into the Irish Sea that is both quiet and absolutely glorious in the early hours.

Poolbeg Lighthouse is a great place to spark upPoolbeg Lighthouse is a great place to spark up
j0sh78 / Thinkstock

Sleep

Best budget hotel – without bedbugs
Lively Generator Hostel (Smithfield) is a flashpacker hub situated next to the borderline-legal warehouse raves that occasionally break out. They host cultural festivals and keep a hot tub hidden in one of the women’s dorms.

That ‘if only I could win the lottery’ hotel
Madonna and Bruce Springsteen choose The Merrion Hotel (27 St Stephen's Green) when they’re in town, and with a world-class spa, a two-starred Michelin restaurant, sublime garden courtyards and a cavernous, classy cellar bar, who are we to argue.

Dublin’s best Airbnb listings
Couples can channel Joyce in a seaside Martello Tower in plush suburban Dalkey, while groups should hit up Drumcondra’s distillery penthouse, complete with pool table and chunky bar area. For solo travellers, Temple Bar’s listings are surprisingly sedate, but this cheap, en-suite room is bigger than your average options.

Quirkiest digs in Dublin
The Clontarf Castle Hotel (Castle Avenue) has thick, wonky walls and bedrooms tucked in towers, yet they’re still working on a futuristic, flavour-loaded fusion tea concept to go with the suits of armour.

The Martello Tower in Dalkey is ideal for couplesThe Martello Tower in Dalkey is ideal for couples
Airbnb

What to do

If you try one thing…
The super-sized Croke Park stadium (Jones' Road), complete with dark history and interactive sporting museum, is always great. Now there’s a city-view skywalk and the live hurling matches (jokingly known locally as stick fighting) can be breathtaking.

 

Join the locals in some stick fighting at Croke ParkJoin the locals in some stick fighting at Croke Park
Creative Commons / Florian Christoph

What to see

The obligatory cultural stop
A ceremonially buried Viking skeleton and freaky bodies pulled from bogs in the National Museum of History and Archaeology (Kildare Street) offers history served with a side of “what the hell is that?”

The oddest museum
The National History Museum (Merrion St Upper), also dubbed the ‘Dead Animal Zoo’, is nothing but row after row of spectacular taxidermy.

A tour with a difference
The Viking Splash tour drops into Dublin’s waterways in an amphibious vehicle, in between exploring the city’s standards, and makes a lot of noise doing it.

The coolest ‘hood
Stoneybatter is the city’s hipster heartland, where everything seems to be served with avocado or kale and the music of choice is obscure jazz. It’s gloriously chilled too.

What to miss
Skip tours of the popular museum piece The Old Jameson Distillery (Bow Street) which reopens after a refurb in March 2017, and hand your entry fee to award-winning new boys Teelings (13-17 Newmarket) instead. They’re the only whiskey maker actually manufacturing in the capital.

Swerve The Old Jameson DistillerySwerve The Old Jameson Distillery
Creative Commons / Neil Turner

Shopping

Best charity shops
Oxfam (86 Francis Street) have a massive warehouse-like outlet that will have you rummaging away for hours. In fact, the whole street is an Aladdin’s Cave of antique stores and charity shops.

Best place to pick up vintage threads
The Grand Social
’s Saturday markets (35 Lower Liffey Street) are hard to top for anything lovably dated, be it Bob Dylan vinyl, dresses grans used to hide from their mothers or toys not seen since the 1980s.

Best market
The rotating Sunday markets in The Dublin Food Co-op (12 Newmarket) touch on something different every weekend, from a global fusion of obscure imports to a health-food love-in – even leftfield classes run on the side.

The Grand Social sells everything from vintage clothes to cakesThe Grand Social sells everything from vintage clothes to cakes
The Grand Social Facebook


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