Discover the best restaurant in Tin Can Bay, Australia including Rainbow Beach Sports Club, Frying Fish Cafe, Arcobaleno on the Beach, Marina Bar and Grill, Rainbow Beach Hotel, Rainbow Beach Surf Life Saving Supporter's Club Restaurant, Temptations by the Water, The Pavilion Restaurant & Bar, Tin Can Bay Yacht Club Inc, Royal Palace Indian Cuisine
Things to do in Tin Can Bay
4 based on 145 reviews
3.5 based on 91 reviews
We were returning home from a week on Fraser Island (a must go place) and had crossed to the Mainland on the ferry arriving at Rainbow Beach around lunchtime. We decided to have lunch before continuing, and the Flying Fish Café had been recommended to us, so that's where we headed.
Two double Cheese Burgers...A Steak Burger with real steak, and lots of it.... A Big Barra (barramundi fish) Burger, and a serve of chips...all for less than $40. The Burgers were "BIG" and all very tasty. Friendly staff and service made it a very Peasant Lunch Stop and fuelled us up well for our drive home. A great choice.
4.5 based on 349 reviews
Contemporary Italian/ Mediterranean Restaurant situated in the heart of beautiful Rainbow Beach. Excellent service and gorgeous food, genuine woodfired Italian pizza and pastas, tapas and antipasto. The smoothest coffee in town, daily specials and all served in a unique and charming atmosphere. Open 8am till late, dine in or takeaway. BYO *located at the very end of the alleyway between the pub and the hairdresser*
I had dinner and breakfast here a couple times in my one week stay. It’s the best food in Rainbow beach (no seriously, please don’t eat anywhere else). Sarah the waitress is awesome, she gave great recommendations.
It is kind of pricey, but not out of the range in rainbow beach.
Def get the pappardelle and pesto bruschetta.
4 based on 136 reviews
Had a great breakfast tweeked to my liking and the tea bag came on the side to dunk to my desired strength or weakness ?? Great friendly service and a view over the marina what more can you ask for??
3.5 based on 257 reviews
Rainbow Beach Hotel is a beautiful two story refurbished Queenslander styled hotel. Boasting large outdoor verandahs with open dining areas around The Plantation Bar. A broad range of food is available from the bistro style menu with your classic pub meals to finer foods. Open from 10 am The Rainbow Beach Hotel is the place to visit in Rainbow Beach. Kids are welcome, Live music every Friday night, large function areas and bars on the second floor perfect for weddings or corporate groups. Rainbow Beach Hotel truly is a must in Rainbow Beach
Went for curry night. The chicken curry was excellent but the beef curry was not enjoyed. Childrens meal was freshly cooked with good size portions. Also went for pizza night. They were really nice as we're the chips and garlic bread. All freshly cooked
4 based on 371 reviews
You could not find a more amazing view over Rainbow Beach! Perfect design to capture the ocean view. The service was pleasant. Drink prices reasonable. BUT...MY OH MY!
Paying $54 for killing a beautiful piece of GOLBAND Snapper to death and using compressed chicken for a Parmi? Does this chef have no pride? Such a shame. This place has so much potential.
4 based on 106 reviews
perfect little cafe situated within the confines of Crab Creek in Tin Can Bay, We have a pleasant outlook overlooking the Tin Can Bay inlet. We serve flame grilled burgers, fish and chips, salads Breakfast menu is available all day until cooking stops. Cooking generally stops an hour before we close for the day and that is 4.00 during the weekday and 5pm on weekends. We have introduced Fresh squeezed in store cold pressed juices using nothing but fresh juice. we also make the best milkshakes, thick-shakes and smoothies that you will find anywhere in town
Visited this restaurant for a morning tea to take advantage of the beautiful winter Sunshine on the water. Ordered a glass of pineapple juice and a scone with jam and cream. The pineapple juice was freshly made and the jam served with the scone was also made on site with fresh berries. A taste sensation in itself. Very reasonable and friendly service.
4 based on 44 reviews
Open for dinner 7 nights a week from 5.30pm. Coffee, cakes & muffins from 8am daily.
Sooooo, I had read the previous reviews and was dubious how it would turn out. Given the restaurant we attended in the area the previous night had better reviews, and was ATROCIOUS, I will be honest..... I was worried to say the least.
When I rang to make the booking well in advance on the day, they did say it was quiet and worth arriving prior to 7pm. Well done for managing expectations!
When we arrived and were seated, they immediately advised what meals were not available (only two, but the one I wanted was on the list ) but points for being upfront.
We chose alternate meals and were VERY impressed!. The steak, seafood, sauce, vegies etc were all cooked to PERFECTION!. Nothing out of step on plate or pallette. Staff were pleasant, down to earth and engaging.
Size of portions and price were spot on!
Would definitely go again if in the area!
3 based on 52 reviews
Prominent Yacht Club in this area
Spent a week in Tin Can Bay on our way north, looking for a nice seafood meal so we called in here, my crumbed reef fish was left over from the previous day and reheated and burnt, my wife's garlic scallops were INEDIBLE, we brought it to their attention and were offered a refund which we accepted, considering the location of this venue it's a joke, with beautiful seafood on their doorstop, close the doors before you kill someone.
4 based on 75 reviews
An old Indian doctor once told me that if you want to order the best on the menu in an Indian restaurant, ask where the chef is from.
Indian food is tremendously diverse geographically, with hundreds of locales that go back to the dawn of time. The food of each locale is influenced by what's available and local tradition - the people close to the Deserts in the north lean heavily on spice in their food and their food is economical on sauces etc, while other regions may have richer sauces and creamier flavours. So while there may be consistent dishes on the menu of each restaurant you dine at, there will almost certainly be a cultural and geographical lean on what you order. A customer who has only experienced Indian food from one restaurant may be alarmed when they order the same dish from another restaurant as the flavour profile can be dramatically different. Some misinterpret this as unauthentic or just wrong and for the less adventurous who are already somewhat confronted by what they are eating this is an unexpected and at times unwelcome change in direction. Go straight to the chef's specials page and Google what you see on your phone to get an idea of where the dinner may be heading. The biryani suggests the chef may be cooking from the style of the southern sub-continent.
It's a very small restaurant next to a bottle shop, modest on the inside but immaculately clean. Effort has gone into creating two beautiful table settings. They employ a young local Aussie girl to create a welcoming first impression although I found the young Indian lady working there articulate and very aware of the needs of her diners. A small girl is peeking from behind walls while two young Indian men work the kitchen in what is a very narrow space that can be seen on the other side of a small dividing wall. They use traditional earthen ovens which explains the low volume of cooking sounds in such a tight space which is both clever and authentic. The owners, despite the limited canvas they have, are working hard to paint something.
We are an Indonesian lady with a very high tolerance for heat, an eleven year old girl, an elderly lady raised on true blue Aussie cooking and myself so finding something on the menu that will please all is a challenge. We order a mild butter chicken and a medium chicken korma. We are served with complimentary pappadums while we wait which are perfectly cooked and lightly flavoured with lightly cumin seeds. We also order garlic naan.
We were impressed by the generosity of the portions, the texture of the sauces, the bold but clever flavours and the aromas. Heat is clearly by western standards (I've learned to ask 'when you say heat do you mean by Aussie standards or your own?'). Rice is free before 7pm. The sauce is perfect for mixing through rice and eating with naan and there is a delicious raisin taste in the butter chicken from the slight burn in the sauce which is intentional and masterful. Our elderly guest is cleaning up the chicken Korma which has a beautifully smooth texture and has lovely cinnamon notes mixed with an almost butternut pumpkin taste. Four of us - fed to the gills for $50 and change. After dinner we decide to walk home two blocks away.
Two nights later we order the Korma again with a rogan josh for our Indonesian lady and we ask for it hot. We take advantage of their BYO license, opening a bottle of Tooheys extra dry. The rogan josh has a wonderful depth of flavour which is contrasted by hits of fresh cut coriander and interestingly, when you follow the Rogan Josh with Korma the cinnamon is strongly emphasised. The balance and understanding of spice is impressive.
Our elderly guest has other visitors staying with her in a few days and she excitedly says she'll bring them to The Royal Palace. This little restaurant would thrive in the city in a culturally diverse or food savvy suburb like Brisbane's West End or Underwood/ Sunnybank.
To find it here in Rainbow Beach is an unexpected pleasure.
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