10 best gourmet hotels in the UK

These hotels are worth visiting as much for their food offering as their thread count
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27 October 2015

Gourmet hotels used to be thin on the ground. How times have changed. Today, there are hundreds of chefs across the UK cooking with astonishing flair. Here, the Good Hotel Guide has picked its edit of stand-out hotels for its 2016 edition across the UK from Derbyshire to Kent, which will delight trravelling foodies.

1. Fischer’s at Baslow Hall, Baslow, Derbyshire

Max and Susan Fischer are welcoming hosts at this Peak District stone manor house, where Max and head chef Rupert Rowley serve an inventive Michelin-starred menu based on carefully sourced local, home-grown and foraged ingredients. For instance, tempura of Norfolk quail, pine nut purée, toasted seeds, mirin, aspic; pork jowl caramelised in maltose, piccalilli, scallop beignet, honey roast scratchings. There is a tasting bench in the kitchen for four diners to watch the brigade at work.

Doubles £150-£270 (D,B&B £294-£414 per room, Fri, Sat), Classic Dinner £72 for three courses, fischers-baslowhall.co.uk

2. Read’s, Faversham, Kent

Dishes at Rona and David Pitchford’s Georgian manor house are served up with quotations. David has a Michelin star for his seasonal menu, which includes fish from Whitstable and produce from the walled kitchen garden. Typically, Ellie’s dairy goat curd with pickled beetroot terrine, candied Cox; pan-fried halibut, crushed new potatoes, cep puree, confit lemon, champagne and chive velouté. A seven-course tasting menu is 65 a head. ‘Never eat more than you can lift’ – Miss Piggy.

Doubles £165-£195, lunch £26, dinner £60, reads.com

Read’s at Faversham, Kent

3. Mr Underhill’s, Ludlow, Shropshire

Ludlow Castle has a turbulent history, but beneath the ramparts all is sweetness at Chris and Judy Bradley’s riverside restaurant. Self-taught chef Chris gained a Michelin star for his nine-course, daily-changing ‘market menu’, making everything possible in house. Choices might include white fish velouté, marmalade ice cream, shellfish wafer; slow roasted fillet of Marches beef, braised beef sausage roll, ‘necessary’ sauce, roasted parsnip purée, spinach cream.

Doubles £245-3360; dinner £69,50, mr-underhills.co.uk

4. Morston Hall, Morston, Norfolk

Chef-proprietor Galton Blackiston has come a long way from selling ‘Galton’s Goodies’ in Rye market, to Michelin stardom at this 17th-century country-house restaurant with rooms, run with his wife, Tracy. A seven-course set dinner from a daily-changing menu includes such dishes as long-shore cod, girolles, pork crackling, warm egg yolk dressing, pork and Calvados jus; confit loin of Norfolk horn lamb, pearl barley, swede puree, curly kale, sage oil, pine nut lamb jus.

D,B&B £155-£200 per person, set dinner £66, Sunday lunch £37, morstonhall.com

Morston Hall at Morston, Norfolk

5. The Yorke Arms, Ramsgill-In-Nidderdale, North Yorkshire

Bill Atkins is the perfect host at this beamed, creeper-clad, 18th-century coaching house. His wife, Frances, one of a handful of Michelin starred British female chefs, brings heart, soul, confidence and classical expertise to her seasonal changing menus. The quality of ingredients shines through such dishes as pheasant, pomegranate and date; saddle of venison, oxtail, puffed rice, celery, sloe and cherry – served in the beamed dining room.

D,B&B £345-£430 per room, tasting menu £85, yorke-arms.co.uk

6. The Albannach, Lochinver, Highland

Self-taught chef-proprietors Lesley Crosfield and Colin Craig hold a Michelin star for their cooking at this restaurant-with-rooms in a walled garden between moorland and sea. Fish and shellfish, landed daily, with fruit and vegetables from their croft and local produce, are staples of their five-course seasonal menus, which might include mousseline of wild halibut, lobster sauce, langoustine, lobster; roast free-range Moray beef fillet, garden celeriac and baby turnip, amontillado sauce.

D,B&B £280-£385 per room, thealbannach.co.uk

The Albannach at Lochinver, Highland

7. Ynyshir Hall, Eglwysfach, Powys

Queen Victoria would retreat to this peaceful country house between mountains and estuary, now a Relais & Châteaux hotel. The walls are hung with the works of artist and co-owner Rob Reen, while the artist in the kitchen is Gareth Ward, who holds a Michelin star for his modern cooking. Ingredients are local, home grown and foraged. Expect such dishes as mackerel, black sesame fermented cabbage; duck liver, smoked eel, spelt; partridge, celeriac, elder.

Doubles £215-£650, lunch £35 and £89, dinner £55-£100, ynyshirhall.co.uk

8. Tyddyn Llan, Llandrillo, Denbighshire

Susan Webb welcomes guests to this grey-stone Georgian former shooting lodge with mountain views, where husband Bryan has a Michelin star for his highly creative use of local ingredients. For instance, Crubeens (stuffed pigs trotter), piccalilli, Wirral watercress salad; Cefnllan Farm duck breast, duck faggot, confit potato, cherry and cinnamon sauce. There are regular wine dinners at £90 a head with reduced rates if you want to sleep over.

Doubles £180-£320, lunch à la carte £50, dinner £40-57, tyddynllan.co.uk


9. Plas Bodegroes, Pwllheli, Gwynedd

Readers are enchanted by Chris and Gunna Chown’s restaurant with rooms – a Georgian house in secluded gardens, not a mile from the beach, on the remote Llŷn peninsula. There is Michelin-starred cooking from Chris Chown and Hugh Bracegirdle, who cook traditional dishes with a modern spin, using prime local ingredients. Say, seared Nefyn Bay scallops, Carmarthen ham, cauliflower panna cotta; chargrilled ribeye of Welsh black beef, glazed shallots, oxtail sauce.

Doubles £140-£180, set dinner £48.50, bodegroes.co.uk

10. The Whitebrook, Whitebrook, Monmouthshire

Chris and Kirsty Harrod have created a stylish restaurant with rooms at this 17th-century former drovers’ inn. Chris uses local produce, flowers from the garden, and such unusual foraged ingredients as bitter cress, wild onion and hogweed, to create the extraordinary dishes that have won him a Michelin star. For instance, hake, radish, sea aster, buttermilk; Ryeland lamb shoulder, kale, wet garlic, dragon spinach – and for vegetarians nasturtium tubers, turnip and port puree, morels, radish, pennywort.

D,B&B £250-£292, tasting menu £67, thewhitebrook.co.uk

The Good Hotel Guide 2016 is available to buy now

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