Adelaide’s new dining guide
Glam Adelaide released a comprehensive guide to every new dining spot that opened in Adelaide over the last 12 months so readers can plan nights out. The social post aggregates openings and makes it easier to scan recent options. (x.com)
Glam Adelaide has published a running guide to Adelaide restaurants that opened in the past 12 months, giving diners one place to scan recent arrivals across the city. (glamadelaide.com.au) The guide was posted on March 15, 2026 and updated in April 2026. It says the list covers venues that “have all opened within the last 12 months,” spanning restaurants and some late-night cafes. (glamadelaide.com.au) Early entries in the guide include Pantry on Prospect, North Kitchen and MalayaLane, all listed as April 2026 openings, plus Eccomi and Haddad’s Shawarma as March 2026 openings. Glam Adelaide presents each venue with a short description and a link for more information. (glamadelaide.com.au) The list arrives as Adelaide’s dining media ecosystem has become more crowded with rolling “new restaurant” roundups from outlets including Broadsheet and Gourmet Traveller, both of which updated Adelaide guides in April or February 2026. (broadsheet.com.au) (gourmettraveller.com.au) Those competing guides show the same pattern: a fast turnover of openings, a mix of central business district and suburban venues, and a market where diners are being asked to keep up with frequent launches. Broadsheet’s April 7 update highlighted venues including Esmay, Vasili’s Table and Tarantino’s, while Gourmet Traveller’s February 24 list pointed to Esmay, Omada and Yakisan. (broadsheet.com.au) (gourmettraveller.com.au) Glam Adelaide frames its version as a utility product as much as a food story. Its homepage says the publisher covers South Australia across news, events, food and wine, and its app listings describe guides as a core part of that offering. (glamadelaide.com.au) (play.google.com) That helps explain the format: the article is less a ranked best-of list than a directory of openings, meant to reduce the friction of deciding where to go next. For readers planning a night out, the value is the aggregation itself. (glamadelaide.com.au) In a city where new venues can open in Prospect, Munno Para, Norwood, Woodville South and the central business district within weeks of each other, a single updated list is doing the work of a map. (glamadelaide.com.au)