7 Best Restaurants in Bath and the Cotswolds, England

Background Illustration for Restaurants

Good restaurants dot the region, thanks to a steady flow of fine chefs seeking to cater to wealthy locals and waves of demanding visitors. The country's food revolution is in full evidence here. Restaurants have never had a problem with a fresh food supply: excellent regional produce, salmon from the rivers Severn and Wye, local lamb and pork, venison from the Forest of Dean, and pheasant, partridge, quail, and grouse in season. Also look for Gloucestershire Old Spot pork, bacon (try a delicious Old Spot bacon sandwich), and sausage on area menus.

Olive Tree

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

Since the 1990s, this sleek modern space in the basement of the Queensberry Hotel has served top-notch English and Mediterranean dishes, finally being recognized with a Michelin star (the only one in town) in 2018. Head chef Chris Cleghorn creates a seductive, sophisticated selection of three-, five-, and seven-course tasting menus featuring delights such as smoked Devon eel with Isle of Wight tomatoes and tarragon; Cornish monkfish cooked over coal and served with leek and ginger; and raspberries accompanied by sheep curd and lemon verbena.

Feathered Nest Country Inn

$$$$ Fodor's Choice

A 10-minute drive from Stow-on-the-Wold in Nether Westcote, this popular gastropub is as cozy and comforting as the name would suggest. The sophisticated food here is exceptional, the products are so local that the staff can usually point to the farm from where the meat was sourced, and the beer and wine list is impressive. If you want to try as much as possible, opt for the six-course tasting menu. There is a vegan menu, too. Within the restaurant, a large bay window and terrace offer up views of the valley below, and attention to detail gives the pub some humorous touches such as the saddle-seated stools. If you decide that you are just too comfortable to move, there are four rooms to extend your stay in.

Le Champignon Sauvage

$$$$

The relatively short, perfectly balanced menu here showcases the creative contemporary French cooking of David Everitt-Matthias, who has run the restaurant with his wife, Helen, since 1987. The food is a favorite of the United Kingdom's most famous restaurant critics and includes delights such as chalk stream trout with oyster emulsion and miso glazed monkfish with barley broth and cockles. Fixed-price menus at lunchtime (£40 for 2 courses) help keep the cost down. 

Recommended Fodor's Video

Menu Gordon Jones

$$$$

Step away from the center of town to sample the ingenious cuisine that Michelin-trained chef Gordon Jones conjures up in his open kitchen. There is no set menu, but you choose between seven and nine courses and every dish will be a surprise; choices might include smoked eel with maple syrup and purple potatoes, a crisp haggis, roasted turbot with giant raisins and caper dressing, and blackberry sorbet with marinated cucumber. You can also choose a wine flight to accompany the tasting menus. The location is unprepossessing and the decor plain, enlivened by a few antlers and vials of oil, but the service is friendly and unstuffy; if you want to talk with the chef about your food, he will willingly do so. Book well in advance; lunch is easier to reserve than dinner.

2 Wellsway, Bath, BA2 3AQ, England
01225-480871
Known For
  • Imaginative cuisine mixing British and Asian flavors, served with style
  • Daily-changing tasting menus
  • Reservations required far in advance, and no walk-ins
Restaurant Details
Closed Sun.--Tues.
Reservations essential

Something incorrect in this review?

Pump Room

$$$$

The 18th-century Pump Room, with views over the Roman baths, serves morning pastries and brunch, as well as afternoon tea (from noon until late afternoon), to music by a pianist or string trio who play every day. The stately setting is the selling point rather than the food, but do sample the the house-made cakes and pastries, including scrumptious scones.

Stall St., Bath, BA1 1LZ, England
01225-444477
Known For
  • Gorgeous setting from a bygone era
  • Classic afternoon tea
  • People reserve seating slots for meals, including 90-minute sittings for afternoon tea

Something incorrect in this review?

Purslane

$$$$

Lured by the fresh ingredients and cool, unfussy surroundings, diners come here to enjoy the freshest of Cornish fish, Salcombe Bay crab, and Forest of Dean ham accompanied by unusual but delicious vegetables like borage, wild garlic, and sea cabbage. The accent is on fish, but you will also find hay-baked Cotswold lamb and vegetarian dishes. The menu changes bimonthly so it's always seasonal. The service is friendly and knowledgeable.

Russell's

$$$$

With a courtyard at the back and a patio at the front, this chic "restaurant with rooms" is perfect for a light lunch or full dinner, with menus that concentrate on Modern British dishes and change seasonally. The restaurant, in a former furniture factory belonging to local designer George Russell, is modern, airy, and stylish. The less expensive fixed-price menu is just as tempting, and there's also an attached fish-and-chips shop. You can spend the night in the very sleek, boutique-style rooms upstairs.