Coromandel and the Bay of Plenty Restaurants

There are many dining options across the Coromandel and Bay of Plenty. You can buy everything from fruit from roadside orchard stalls and take-out fish-and-chips joints to cafés serving sandwiches and espresso coffee, right through to fine-dining affairs. Even when restaurants are formal in appearance, diners and hosts tend toward a relaxed country-casualness. Restaurant owners make a point of using the region's abundant resources: the fish is likely to have been caught that morning from a nearby bay, and shellfish are from local mussel and scallop farms. A huge community of artists lives in the region and their work is likely to be for sale even though it adorns restaurant walls.

Dinner service begins about 6 pm in the winter and around 7 pm during the summer months, though many places have "all-day menus." In peak season most places keep serving until at least 9 pm. For many restaurants reservations are a good idea, especially in the summer around the Coromandel. In winter, phone ahead to check if the restaurant will stay open.

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  • 1. Oh Sista

    $

    One of Thames's newest cafes, this place comes with a good pedigree (having been opened by the team who previously ran another popular dining spot in town) and has quickly gained a local following. Rainbow vegetarian tart with pesto and ricotta, butterscotch scones, and sticky bao buns are available alongside more traditional offerings such as cornish pasties.

    501A Pollen Street, New Zealand
    07-280-0297

    Known For

    • Hot and tasty soups, including a vegan green velvet variety
    • Handy main-street location
    • Changing blackboard specials

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.
  • 2. Sola Café

    $

    A consistently good community café, Sola offers an all-vegetarian menu but it’s no health food bar. Counter food includes tasty risotto cakes, Florentines, and fresh fruit shortbreads. Try a breakfast of potato-and-fresh-herb frittata or pan-fried polenta with smoked field mushroom, spinach, and feta for lunch. They also cater to wheat and gluten-free diets. Local cheeses and chutneys from the deli counter make great picnic fixings.

    720b Pollen St., Thames, Waikato, 3500, New Zealand
    07-868–8781

    Known For

    • <PRO>excellent vegetarian menu</PRO>
    • <PRO>tasty berry friend (a small, sweet cake made from ground almonds and egg whites, often topped or filled with fruit)</PRO>
    • <PRO>lots of teas</PRO>

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun., Credit cards accepted
  • 3. The Junction Hotel

    $$$

    Within one of the few hotels remaining from the gold rush days, you'll find classy pub grub in a convivial atmosphere. The Grahamstown Bar Diner (GBD) is the main restaurant bar, serving everything from breakfast and lunch to bar snacks and pizzas to evening main courses. On weekends, it gets pretty packed late night thanks to music gigs. Down the back is a more casual bar with pool tables; upstairs, there are some basic but clean and excellent-value accommodations.

    700 Pollen St., Thames, Waikato, 3500, New Zealand
    07-868–6008

    Known For

    • Decent burgers and fish-and-chips
    • Great tapas menu
    • Late night music on weekends
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

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