Greek Contemporary

Nobelos Seaside Lodge

Zakynthos' most refined dining experience — a clifftop restaurant at Agios Nikolaos with Ionian Sea views, inventive Greek cuisine, and a wine list worth planning your evening around.

★★★★★ 4.6 €€€€ Greek Contemporary North Coast Daily 19:00–23:30 (May–October)

Nobelos Seaside Lodge — Zakynthos at Its Most Refined

Not every meal on a Greek island needs to be plastic chairs and paper tablecloths. Some occasions call for something more considered — a real wine list, attentive service, and food that treats local ingredients as something to be celebrated rather than just assembled.

Nobelos is where Zakynthos does this. The restaurant sits within a boutique hotel complex above the village of Agios Nikolaos on the island’s northern coast, and the views alone — across the Ionian towards Kefalonia, with the limestone cliffs of the Blue Caves headland visible on clear evenings — would justify the drive from anywhere on the island.

The Kitchen

Chef Alexandros Petrakis spent years working in Athens before coming home to Zakynthos. He cooks with the clarity of someone who has both formal training and a genuine attachment to the island’s produce. The menu changes with the season, but the philosophy stays constant: Zakynthos ingredients, Greek technique, European restraint.

The seafood risotto is made with Verdea — Zakynthos’ ancient indigenous white grape wine — giving it an earthy, slightly oxidised depth that cuts through the richness of the sea urchin and prawn. The lamb is sourced from a shepherd in Alykes whose animals graze on thyme and wild herbs; you taste it in the meat. The local cheese board features four varieties including a semi-aged goat cheese from the Vassilikos peninsula that you won’t find in any shop.

End with the loukoumades. Alexandros drizzles them with black truffle honey sourced from a small producer in Arcadia — a detail that sounds like it shouldn’t work but absolutely does.

The Wine List

For a restaurant this size in a location this remote, the wine list is remarkable. Around eighty labels, strong on Greek producers, with particular depth in Assyrtiko, Agiorgitiko, and Malagousia. The Verdea section — showcasing Zakynthos’ own variety across several producers — is the best curated selection on the island. The sommelier, who prefers to remain anonymous (“It’s not about me, it’s about the wine”), will talk you through it without the usual condescension.

The Atmosphere

Tables are spread across two terraces — a lower one closer to the water, and an upper terrace set back among olive trees with a more dramatic view. The lower terrace catches the sea breeze; the upper catches the stars. Both are candlelit after 20:00. The dining room inside is a cool, whitewashed space with arched ceilings for when the Ionian wind becomes too companionable.

Service is formal enough to feel considered, relaxed enough to feel Greek. Nobody will rush you.

Practical Info

Best time to go: Dinner from 20:00. Arrive at sunset (around 20:30–21:00 in summer) for golden light on the water.
Typical spend: €65–90 per person with wine; €45–55 without.
Reservations: Essential in July–August. Book 3–5 days ahead and request table 12 on the upper terrace. The restaurant can arrange taxi transfers from anywhere on the island.
Dress code: Smart casual. Linen is fine; flip-flops are not.
Getting here: 20–35 minutes drive from Zakynthos Town depending on your starting point, or 10 minutes from Alykes.