Midlands - West Restaurants
1,513 restaurants in Midlands - West
Restaurants in Midlands - West:
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1 Bridge Street, Stratford-upon-Avon, CV37 6AB [Map]
The Encore in Stratford-upon-Avon is a splendid coming together of the conventional and the contemporary, an eclectic fusion of styles which has marvellous visual appeal and creates a welcoming and relaxed atmosphere. Bright zebra prints grace some of the chairs, while deep brown leather on others shows how the old and the new can exist in harmony, while stone fired ovens and log burning fires alongside the open kitchen and floor plan produce the same results.
Located in an 18th century building, The Encore is also quite close to the world famous Royal Shakespeare Theatre. The pub downstairs has a friendly ambience and offers a good selection of excellent beers and real ales, while the restaurant upstairs provides an unusual mix of traditional British food with continental touches. Following a refurbishment, they have emerged as an excellent dining destination in the town, while their attention to detail and friendly service ensures a thoroughly enjoyable experience.
The simple but up-to-the-minute menu offers lots of comfort appeal, with homely choices like pizzas, steaks and pasta, with some more global dishes to keep things lively. To set the right note of fashionable sociability there are sharing plates, box baked Camembert with onion jam and bread, Greek mezze with taramasalata, red pepper hummus, tzatziki, feta and flatbreads, or a pizzette with garlic, rocket, sun-blushed tomatoes and Parmesan.
Amongst the starters, there is always freshly made soup of the day, sake cured salmon, pickled ginger and wasabi crème fraîche, and fennel with chilli crusted squid, pineapple and coriander salsa are also to be found.
The salads offer pang pang chicken, Asian greens, satay, cashew nuts and cucumber, while pastas range from linguini with chorizo, king prawns, crab, chilli and tomato to tagliatelle bolognaise with slow cooked beef, bacon and Chianti.
These days no self-respecting gastropub can afford to be without its pizza range; look for a classic margherita of tomato, mozzarella, oregano and basil, or a Siciliana with Serrano ham, roast artichoke, olives and mozzarella. Those who love rotisserie fare will enjoy the different variations of chicken, with roast garlic, lemon and thyme and aioli. Persian spiced lamb chops are an interesting addition to this list and are served with tzatziki, tomato and red onion salad.
Proper main courses could include sea bass fillets, stuffed Romano pepper, caponata, pesto and baby new potatoes; Scottish salmon with Asian greens, chilli salsa and tempura sweet potato fritters; calves liver with sweet potato and beetroot gratin and watercress, or lemon sole with prawn and scallop butter. A wide range of supporting dishes includes tomato, rocket and mozzarella, and cabbage, leeks and peas. Desserts are some of the best you'll encounter with apple and frangipane gallette and Cognac ice cream, and there is also a selection of local cheeses to set the buffs alight.
To complement the food, there is a well chosen wine list that traverses across the old and New Worlds to bring fine wines and champagnes.
More information, including full menus, is available on their Website. Please note that the E-Mail Contact is for enquiries only, not for bookings.
English, Gastropub, Modern British
£18.00£28.00
25 Church Street, Birmingham, B3 2NR [Map]
We hear a great deal about recycling these days - du Vin recycles attractive but occasionally un-loved buildings to restore real gems in the best tradition of British understated style.
Complement that with all that is best in the French bistro ethos, bars that reach out to please, and you have a setting that provides an inspirational background for people to meet, do business, get married, provide a base for golf or fishing, somewhere you can call your own for a private celebration, a spa or - most engagingly - a wine school that breaks the mould.
In Birmingham du Vin has taken on the former Birmingham Eye Hospital, a handsome building in the best style of Victorian public buildings, strategically placed in the newly revitalised Jewellery Quarter, but close enough to the city centre to make a liver-livening stroll in the morning a real pleasure.
Equipped with a spa and gym, the hotel has 66 bedrooms and boutique sites round a central courtyard that is blessed with many of the building's striking original features, including the grand sweeping staircase and granite pillars. Every room has handsprung mattresses, fine Egyptian linen, deep baths, power showers and high speed wireless internet access.
In the classy bistro a choice of six starters could include lamb's kidneys and wild mushrooms on toast with mustard crème, Serrano ham and celeriac remoulade, or Uig Lodge smoked salmon and traditional garnish. Tournedos Rossini remains one of the great dishes of all time, served with garlic roast potatoes and red wine jus. Poached smoked haddock is served with bacon and pea risotto, crispy leeks and chive veloute.
Whilst one might argue that the whole point of being in a du Vin is to snuggle up to the wine list, this list is designed to march with the food and can only be described as superb. With a team of four sommeliers, headed here by François Bourde, there is no room for anything but the best. Service is telepathic in the best possible sense.
Click on their Website for full information and rates. Hotel du Vin, with fourteen options throughout Britain, awaits your call.
Bistro, French, Modern European
£25.00£35.00
15 Dormer Place, Leamington Spa, CV32 5AA [Map]
Queans was taken over in 2005 by Laura Hamilton, who was formerly a chef-manager in Warwick, she offers a selection of dishes that are both inventive and tempting to a pleasing degree, and as a result she is now enjoying well-deserved popularity in Leamington Spa. Laura has been a chef locally for the best part of 20 years during much of which she was Head Chef at The Grand Union Restaurant, before her three years at Robbie's in Warwick.
As might be expected her menus are pleasantly challenging with starters such as crab and spring onion fishcake served with a lemon and lime dressing; artichoke and asparagus tart with a toasted almond salad, or broccoli and smoked brie soup.
Main courses move along with the likes of pan-fried wild duck breast served on a bed of wilted spinach and baked Portobello mushroom, served with a whiskey and ginger gravy; medallion of pork served on a bed of chive and lemon rice, finished with a yellow pepper cream, or supreme of chicken stuffed with a basil and mascarpone mousse, poached in a creamy garlic sauce.
For those of a seaward inclination there may be grilled whole black bream glazed with orange and sweet mustard and finished with a watercress dressing. Vegetarians will surely rejoice in the delicious tarragon pastry basket filled with a layer of chickpea mousse, braised courgette and leeks, topped with roasted beetroot.
Laura's homemade ice creams are legendary and arrive at the table with fresh baked cookies. Wildly popular is the peach and raspberry suet pudding served with custard, cream, or ice cream, and sometimes, we are told, all three. The rich chocolate and orange cheesecake is a clever blend of flavours, but for many the simple sharp tang of a fresh fruit cocktail, well laced with cointreau has familiar appeal. To play safe go for the banoffee pie, an international favourite that never fails to please.
From all of which it will be obvious that Laura is certainly no slouch in the kitchen and explains why those with an eye for food that has been prepared with care and imagination are beating a path to her door.
The wine list is equally full of character with some nice Burgundy and really daring reds from South Africa, Chile, Spain and Italy. Two dessert wines are listed, including an intriguing rich Black Muscat from California.
As one might expect the general layout and presentation is cool and elegant, in keeping with the service. This is a restaurant that would hold its own well in London, and in Leamington Spa it is indeed a gift sent from on high. They were the proud winners at the Coventry and Warwickshire Food and Drink Awards 2006 for Best Restaurant and Excellence in Quality and Customer Service.
If you want to know more about this superb restaurant, then their Website should prove to be a mine of information.
British, Modern British, Modern European
£27.00£37.00
99 Station Street, Burton-upon-Trent, DE14 1BT [Map]
Burton on Trent has a classy looking brasserie that it should be proud of, a place where you can visit with friends or family and have some well prepared modern British food, all in a most relaxed setting. It's quite easy to tick off all your objectives for dining out at 99 Station Street, as they concentrate on using only fresh, local and seasonal produce, their cooking is simply superb.
A warm welcome from the friendly front of house team sets the ball rolling and you could soon be seated in the comfortable restaurant, perusing the concise menu that is not overburdened with items, so choosing your meal becomes a pleasurable and simple activity. Lunch time rumblings can easily be assuaged by starters of homemade pâté with dill pickled cucumber, followed by fillet of salmon with soft herb crust and wild garlic oil and orange, lemon and lime cheesecake.
Evenings warrant a more elaborate service and starters such as thin slices of home oak maple smoked venison saddle with sweet and sharp hedgerow fruits and port caviar, or warm Cornish crab in Chapel Down Flint cream sauce on a toasted spring onion, cream cheese and chive pancake drizzled with herbed Staffordshire rapeseed oil are right on the mark. This could be followed by main courses along the lines of baked loin of halibut topped by a soft herb crust with poached mussels in a white wine and roasted garlic velouté finished with double cream, or roast rack of Stockley park lamb on a spring onion and Staffordshire cheese potato cake with a sharp mint puree and red wine sauce.
Those not on a calorie counting spree will enjoy a glance at their dessert menu listing delicious confections ranging from a rather unique bread and butter pudding, layered with single malt soaked raisins on creamy custard, to warm apple crumble tart with homemade cinnamon ice-cream. Chocoholics will love the blissful combination of coconut Cambridge cream topped with a chocolate crust and served with short bread biscuit whilst those who prefer savoury endings can opt for the cheese board.
99 Station Street has a few local wines, some classics as well as some New World creations including cava and champagne, which are eminently suitable for different courses of the meal. They also have private dining options and cater for special occasions with specifically prepared menus and they positively welcome add-ons such as hand made place settings and cakes to infuse that distinctive touch to your party.
They have garnered some prestigious accolades already, and judging by their popularity some more are surely bound their way. For information about menus, wine list and upcoming events, do check their Website.
Modern British
£10.00£35.00
2 courses £13.50 and 3 courses £16.95. Book
Parabola Road, Cheltenham, GL50 3AQ [Map]
We hear a great deal about recycling these days - du Vin recycles attractive but sometimes un-loved buildings to restore real gems in the best tradition of British understated style.
Complement that with all that is best in the French bistro ethos, bars that reach out to please, and you have a setting that provides an inspirational background for people to meet, do business, get married, provide a base for golf or fishing, somewhere you can call your own for a private celebration, a spa or - most engagingly - a wine school that breaks the mould.
In Cheltenham, a sacred spot when it comes to horse racing in Britain, du Vin has transformed the former Carlton Hotel into a luxury boutique hotel located in the trés chic Montpellier district of this elegant Regency spa town, strategically placed for exploration of some of the best of the nearby Cotswolds.
The Hotel is noted for its spacious public areas centred on a magnificent spiral staircase. The trademark Hotel du Vin Bistro is but one of these areas. Each of the 49 bedrooms and suites room has handsprung mattresses, fine Egyptian linen, deep baths and power showers in great en-suite bathrooms, and high speed wireless internet access is standard throughout.
Classic bistro fare is served and dishes such as chicken liver parfait, red onion marmalade and toasted brioche or ribeye steak with pommes frites are commonplace on the menu. Other dishes of note are the fillet of salmon, buttered leeks, mussels, and curry cream and the whole grilled lemon sole, tomato and caper beurre noisette.
Whilst one might argue that the whole point of being in a du Vin is to snuggle up to the wine list, this list is designed to march with the food and can only be described as superb. With a team of two sommeliers, headed here by Victor Amaro, there is no room for anything but the best. Service is telepathic in the best possible sense.
If you want to be ahead of the crowd at race times do be sure to book early - there can be few better places in Cheltenham than du Vin from which to conduct an attractive day's racing and celebrate afterwards, or to base yourself for some leisurely touring in the heart of England.
Click on their Website for full information and rates. Hotel du Vin, with fourteen options throughout Britain, awaits your call.
Bistro, French, Modern European
£25.00£35.00
83 Wergs Road, Tettenhall, Wolverhampton, WV6 9BP [Map]
Behind the traditional façade of The Crown lies a surprisingly modern interior with people coming in to enjoy the pub's peaceful atmosphere and tasty cooking. The dining area is smartly attired with comfy sofas, artistic lampshades and spot lighting, and there's al fresco seating for those who'd like a breath of fresh air.
The Crown has a real buzz on any day of the week, providing tourists and locals with a friendly welcome and satisfying food. Relaxed in appeal and modern in style, you'll find a convivial place for any occasion, from a celebratory dinner and breakfast with clients, to lunch with the family or friends.
To set the right note of fashionable sociability there are sharing plates; garlic pizzette with sun-blushed tomatoes, rocket and parmesan, a box baked Camembert with red onion jam and bread, or Greek mezze with taramasalata, red pepper hummus, tzatziki, feta and flatbreads.
Amongst the starters is freshly made soup, devilled mushrooms with chilli and mint on rustic toast, and Japanese fish cakes, pickled ginger, yuzu and spring onion dipping sauce with radish slaw. Look, too, for scallops of the day. The salads - sorry, that should read 'leaves' - offer crispy duck, mouli, carrots and plum sauce, and for the seafood fiends some pastrami cured smoked salmon, Caesar, cos, parmesan, anchovies and croutons is received with enthusiasm.
These days no self-respecting gastropub can afford to be without its pizza range; expect to find margherita, a classic medley of tomato, mozzarella, oregano and basil, Siciliana with Serrano ham, roast artichoke, olives and mozzarella or rustica with roasted Mediterranean vegetables, goats? cheese, cherry tomatoes and rocket.
Pastas include bucatini carbonara with smoked haddock, pancetta and cream, or tagliatelle bolognaise with slow cooked beef, bacon and Chianti. For the big event there is Venetian calves? liver with onions, wilted spinach, parsley mash and balsamic jus. The classic burger, which has risen from the confines of fast food chains, carves a niche for itself on the menu and comes with gherkin, mustard mayo, cheese, relish and frites. For hearty eaters there are rib-eye and fillet steaks, and lemon sole with prawn and watercress butter and baby potatoes.
A wide range of supporting dishes include creamed potatoes, Belgian frites and mayo, and cabbage, leeks and peas. Desserts are some of the best you'll encounter with apple and frangipane gallette and Cognac ice cream, and there is also a selection of local cheeses to set the buffs alight.
Their wine list contains well-known favourites, alongside little numbers from around the world.
More information, including full menus, is available on their Website. Do note that the e-mail address is for enquiries only, not for making bookings.
English, Gastropub, Modern British
£18.00£28.00
The Mail Box, One Wharfside Street, Birmingham, B1 1RD [Map]
The Malmaison group of hotels has established throughout Britain a collection of centres of excellence where nothing but the best will do. As a concept alone this is exciting, but the reality is brilliant, so that at last there is a hotel group where uniformity of standards is of the same high calibre.
Malmaison Birmingham follows the well-established Malmaison trend in establishing their hotels in buildings of interesting styles and location, and is located in The Mail Box, once a Royal Mail sorting office, that has been transformed into a heaven on earth for big style retail therapists, nightlife hedonists and exhibitionists in a class of their own.
The bedrooms are all that one would expect from a hotel that has genuine regard for its guests and is concerned with every aspect of their wellbeing. Decorated in chocolate, ecru and cream colours, the rooms are large, calm and airy exuding a real sense of style.
Amidst elegant surroundings, with spotless gleaming glassware and shining cutlery, an essentially brasserie menu is offered, where lovers of seafood will be delighted to note at once that their particular needs are well heeded, starting with a delightful smoked ham hock, potato and shallot salad.
Head chef Brian Neath and his team offers excellent brasserie dishes, such as warm open faced Italian plum, tomato and anchovy tart and grilled swordfish that are a few popular choices. Other starters include Maldon hot smoked salmon with toasted sourdough and salad of goats' cheese with slow roasted golden beetroot and pickled walnut.
From the 'field to plate in no time flat' philosophy of the organic farmers of Hopwood, to the succulent pheasant and partridge of Willogame on the Welsh border, they have them all and more on their home-grown and local menu. Inspired choices that include beef cheeks bourguignon and pork chops are perfect for those seeking by this time a slightly more carnivorous approach. Which leads us neatly to the, wait for it, Mal burger, a 250 gram burger made from ground beef tucked into a floured bap to join bacon and gruyere, served with homemade relish and some fries.
Over the years the number of outriders surrounding a good honest steak on the plate has grown to unacceptable dimensions. At Malmaison the thought and care is centred on the 35 day aged rump steak frites and that's it - except for the chips. If you want all the rest go for the side dishes, but steak and chips on its own takes some beating. Vegetarians are well looked after - the pumpkin and gorgonzola filled gnocchi sounded appealing.
Heading the puddings is the sticky toffee pudding with butterscotch sauce, a triumph of timing and co-ordination, supported by other choices amongst which expect to find the baked Bramley apple with caramel sauce and a chocolate orange fondant. Their renowned cheese trolley has a selection of British and French farmhouse cheeses served with biscuits.
Their wine list is a symphony of its kind, clearly compiled by an enthusiast who knows his wines well enough not to disappear into a world of hyperbole when describing them.
Their Website is a wealth of information that will, I predict, only serve to increase your resolve to make Malmaison your next stop in Birmingham. It is worth noting that you can also make reservations Online on their Website.
Brasserie, British, Grill
£20.00£34.00
226 Lichfield Road, Sutton Coldfield, B74 2UD [Map]
True to its name, The Green House on Lichfield Road offers guests airy, spacious and well-lit interiors with an outside seating area for al fresco dining in the summer. In the heart of the affluent suburb of Sutton Coldfield, the Green House is a short drive from Birmingham city centre, and with easy access to the M6 is just a 20 minute drive from Tamworth and Lichfield.
With an appetizing mix of refreshing Mediterranean dishes and British classics on the menu, the Green House is a country pub with a difference. It has been transformed into a premium dining space with a chic setting; banquettes you can sink into, comfortable bar stools and faux fur covered benches as well as a chandelier or two to add an elegant touch. Friendly efficient service and distinctive touches elevate the experience to another level altogether.
The seasonally changing à la carte uses the finest market fresh ingredients and delivers a range of sharing platters and starters such as winter bruschetta of asparagus, gorgonzola, prosciutto, balsamic on stirata Romana bread and red onion and gorgonzola tart with roasted apple and mustard seed dressing to whet the appetite.
Diners also have the choice of a lighter option with salad of grilled goat's cheese crostini, roasted sweet potatoes, borlotti beans and blush tomato dressing or a classic seared tuna Niçoise served with green beans, olives and baby potatoes. A stone baked pizza with toppings of crispy duck, spring onions, watercress, hoisin and plum sauce is more international in flavour.
While the excellent à la carte can deliver the goods anytime a two-course prix fixe menu is available for a quick lunch with compromising the quality. Look out for Steak and Wine Supper Wednesdays with superb steaks and a whopping 50% discount on a bottle of red wine or the equally tempting Fabulous Fish Fridays which offer a range of superb fish and shellfish specials and a bottle of white wine for half the price.
The Rothschild Supper Club menu is perfect for that special occasion with a gourmet two-course menu and a bottle of the prestigious Rothschild champagne, personally selected by a team of wine experts. Starters of pan fried English kidneys on stirata Romana with wholegrain mustard sauce could be followed by a delicious dish of slow roast pork lasagna with roast peppers and roast garlic.
To finish on a sweet note, consider orange and almond cake with marmalade and orange blossom mascarpone; bourbon and raisin pudding with vanilla ice cream; banana cheesecake with toffee sauce and chocolate ice cream or limoncello posset with langues de chat biscuits.
The drinks list includes classic cocktails such as Cosmopolitan and Pina Colada and other palate pleasers such as Martini Blush with strawberries and apples; and Flirtini with vodka and champagne. Guests can also choose from a range of unique cask ales and bottled beers, non-alcoholic drinks and a carefully selected wine list available by the glass and bottle.
Have you been to The Cock Inn on Bull's Lane? It's a sister pub to The Green House. You could also consider The Crown in Wolverhampton, if you're close by.
More information can be found on their Website.
English, Gastropub, Modern British
£18.00£28.00
1-3 Riley Street, Coventry, CV1 4AJ [Map]
Eden Bar and Restaurant, conveniently placed just off the Coventry ringway in an 18th century cottage, offers smartly produced stylish and contemporary Modern British dishes within an interior setting to match. Outside, against the red brick background of the cottage, a garden with heating and water feature and a courtyard, partly covered by a heated marquee, provides the ideal setting for alfresco dining.
Those looking for a friendly and relaxed atmosphere will take to Eden very easily. Music is totally background and non-competitive, allowing guests to enjoy their evening and feel at home, but without the washing up. Meals are served on two floors in spaces that lack clutter and distraction. Corporate functions, staff parties, weddings and birthdays all find that Eden can provide a convenient and welcoming place in which to do their thing.
We live in an age when the pattern of meal courses are changing, with tapas only one of the pressures being brought to bear. The menu at Eden is at ease with this trend and it is quite possible to create a meal that thinks outside the box, should you so wish. Stove and grill demonstrates around a dozen choices, some of which have a distinct brasserie-ish flavour to them. The English matured ribeye steak served with rustic fries and a rocket leaf salad may not shout its credentials from the menu rooftop, but certainly does on the plate. White fish wrapped in bacon is accompanied by sweet new potatoes and pesto salad, and pesto surfaces again with an accomplished pesto, pine nut and parmesan linguine.
Amongst smaller dishes, two of which could well combine to make a pleasant meal, expect to find fresh deep fried whitebait in Peroni beer batter served with paprika mayonnaise, or Eden's cheese on toast: garlic flatbread with mushrooms, blue cheese and smoked bacon. Thai mussels are, refreshingly, steamed with onions, garlic and coriander, thereby retaining their flavour and consistency more truthfully. Tapas are served on Friday and Saturday evenings until 10pm
A warm chicken Milanese salad served on baby potatoes, with tomatoes, peppers and rocket salad stands well as a dish on its own, and for those who find desserts a little too much, can well make a substitute. But for those who don't, treats await in the form of, for instance homemade cherry Bakewell tart with clotted cream and raspberry coulis, or Belgian waffles served with toffee sauce and caramelised bananas. An English cheese board ably fulfils the needs of those for whom no meal is complete with the entry of cheese at some point.
The wine list at Eden is still at the point of gestation and a recent tasting evening was a useful pointer towards what will undoubtedly be a list from across the world, embracing the fine, well-priced wines such as those emerging from South America and South Africa.
Eden Bar and Restaurant has captured the hearts of locals and visitors and is fast building a diner base of enthusiastic and perceptive followers. For further information reference to their Website will keep you up to date with developments.
Bar, Gastropub, Modern British
£13.00£30.00
Over, Gloucester, GL2 8DB [Map]
Hidden away with the idyllic peace of the banks of the River Severn at Over, the one AA red rosette Wharf House nestles between that and its restored Canal Basin, offering visitors a blend of countryside relaxation with modern, but local, food and drink. The Herefordshire and Gloucestershire Canal Trust designed and built The Wharf House in order to provide a steady stream of funds to restore, maintain and promote the canal which, when completed, will once again wind itself from the River Severn at Over to Hereford.
The Wharf House has six luxury bedrooms, all with their own style and character but with the shared benefit of panoramic views of the River Severn and Canal Basin. With a range going from standard double rooms to two luxury large double rooms with connecting central lounge that can be hired to make a suite for 6 persons, The Wharf House has something for everyone. All rooms are fitted with wide-screen TV, full data link-up, video conferencing, film on demand, DVD and music systems and en-suite facilities.
The restaurant and tea rooms offer a delicious array of dishes to tempt the senses and tear your eyes from the idyllic views surrounding this fantastic location. The lunch and evening menus surprise the diner with such delectable foods as tiger prawns dressed with pineapple, coriander and chilli dressing, or crab and mango salsa with rocket and red chard salad to start, or carpaccio of beef with grated parmesan, fiery horseradish, celery and rocket, or rack of Herefordshire lamb with leek and potato dauphinois, honey and rosemary sauce.
Desserts come in the tempting form of a traditional crème brûlée; orange and brandy cheesecake, or - a customer favourite - a dark chocolate cup infused with orange served with a white chocolate cup permeated with lime and raspberry topped with ginger cream - naughty.
The constantly changing menu can be tasted daily, with lunch served from 12 - 3pm, and evening meals starting from 5pm. Throughout the day one can have a preview of what's on offer with coffee and cake from 10am as well as Modern British dishes with homemade Wharf House favourites.
There are few places in and around Gloucester where such a fine blend of setting and dining can be merged so successfully, but The Wharf House truly achieves this goal, making it a fine destination for a relaxed meal with family, a celebration, or even a wedding reception with a difference; and now a delightful place to say also. Find out more by visiting their Website.
Modern British, Modern European
£20.00£30.00
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