British, Modern Restaurants in High Newton
1. Rothay Manor
British, Modern restaurant in Ambleside
Rothay Bridge - LA22
This “beautiful boutique hotel in Ambleside” (with 23 rooms) has been one of the better-known Lakeland hotels for decades and all reports acclaim its “lovely” style, “warm and friendly” service and “really very well-executed and skillful food”. In July 2025, it underwent a major change of gear with the appointment of Cameron Smith as head chef and the launch of a new dining room – Rowan – which aims to fill a perceived gap in the Lakes between cosy gastropub fare and ‘high falutin’ fine dining. The new menu is notably approachably priced and more bistro/brasserie in its level of aspiration. It looks promising, but as the change was well after our annual diners’ poll, no rating seems appropriate till next year.
2. The Punch Bowl Inn
British, Modern restaurant in Crosthwaite
“In the middle of nowhere but worth the journey” – this famous gastropub (originally the village smith) near Windermere “continues to offer excellent pub food and at VFM prices” under owner Richard Rose. “It’s the same menu in either the informal bar setting or restaurant.” Top Menu Tips – “The cheese soufflé starter remains a favourite though the black pudding and crispy egg creates a quandary for starters; guinea fowl is the best main”.
3. Langdale Chase
British, Modern restaurant in Windermere
Ambleside Road - LA23
Built in 1891, this turreted Victorian landmark has a dramatic waterside position and recently emerged from a major upgrade, complete with glass-fronted dining room. The cuisine wins a good all-round rep in feedback: in particular the “amazing afternoon tea, with some lovely interesting touches in dish choices (I didn’t know where to start!), all wrapped up with the most amazing view over Lake Windermere”.
4. Heft
British, Modern restaurant in Newton in Cartmel
“Consistently brilliant!” – Behind the white-washed walls of this rural pub-with-rooms, Kevin & Nicola Tickle’s Lakeland venue has a high level of culinary ambition, especially in the evening when a set lunch (for £49 per person) gives way for a 10-course set dinner for £120 per person. “Surprising ingredient combinations, (sometimes VERY surprising!) are well presented and full of differing flavours and textures, all of them very local and fresh” and there are also “some off-piste wine choices”. “It’s a challenge to serve each course to every table, at the same time, but they manage in a very professional way without any delays” – diners “love the friendly, happy service” style. There’s also “a great dog friendly bar with excellent pies, snacks, and good local beer”.
5. L’Enclume
British, Modern restaurant in Cartmel
Cavendish Street - LA11
“I think the best meal I’ve ever eaten” – Simon Rogan’s converted blacksmith’s workshop in a beautiful village to the south of the Lakes nowadays carries the weight of anticipation brought about by the third Michelin star that it acquired in 2022, and on most accounts “the drive is well worth it” to sample such “ridiculously good” food that “lives up to all expectations”. At the heart of the experience is a fifteen-course tasting menu for £265 per person (at lunch there’s a shorter selection for £125 per person). It’s finely wrought cuisine, with an emphasis on ingredients from Simon’s ‘Our Farm’ project nearby, and “the intimate nooks and crannies to hide away in and the quiet efficiency of the unrushed service makes it a place where time freezes” (“add in a room for an overnight stay and you have the best romantic getaway”). Sommelier Jordan Sutton is “fantastic and the wine pairing really complements the meal beautifully”. Is there a catch? Perhaps. Although ratings are still enviably high, complaints about value are also steadily rising here. (“A real sense that I was paying over the odds for the three stars. For my partner and I to be offered a glass of Champagne on arrival to mark my 50th to then be charged a huge amount per glass was a low point.”)
6. Aulis at L’Enclume
British, Modern restaurant in Cartmel
Cavendish St - LA11
“Exceptional all-round” – Simon Rogan’s development kitchen to fuel his Michelin three-star with new dishes is a super-intimate experience of just 6 covers, and by definition aims for diners whose enjoyment derives from interacting with the chefs; exploring the sourcing (much of it from Simon’s nearby ‘Our Farm’ smallholding; and dissecting new ideas that push culinary boundaries). By its very nature, it doesn’t inspire a huge volume of feedback, but all that we have says it lives up to the renown of one of Britain’s most highly regarded kitchens. At dinner, the price of a meal is £265 per person.
7. Henrock
British, Modern restaurant in Bowness-on-Windermere
Linthwaite House, Crook Road - LA23
“An offshoot of L’Enclume” – the Lake District’s most renowned chef, Simon Rogan, presides over this scenically located dining room – part of one of the best known hotels in ‘The Lakes’ and whose conservatory situation and outside terrace aim to make the best of its superb outlook over the surrounding hills and of Lake Windermere. Chef Mark McCabe provides both a ‘short’ (for £79 per person) and ‘full’ (for £125 per person) menu – both are “well-priced sets considering the quality of the dishes”. The aim is not a replication of L’Enclume; the food is “innovative, but not excessively elaborate” providing “top-quality local produce and excellent service in a beautiful setting”.
8. Source (fka Hrishi), Gilpin Hotel
British, Modern restaurant in Windermere
Crook Rd - LA23
“A real treat for overly stressed adults looking to unwind!” – the “high class” dining room of this “lovely” Lakeland hotel provides a very accomplished all-rounder. “Food is very well-prepared by a big brigade” under the watchful eye of chef Ollie Bridgewater who joined in 2023 after a ten-year stint at the Fat Duck. The front of house team are “genuine and caring” and present the “innovative cuisine, with key foundations in sourcing and tradition” and producing a “great balance of dishes”. There’s also a “very good wine list with some not overly expensive, extremely good wines”.
9. Midland Hotel
British, Modern restaurant in Morecambe
Marine Road West - LA4
This striking Art Deco building was brought back to its former glory in the late 2000s after falling into disrepair and today its dining room is “one of the loveliest places to enjoy a romantic dinner over tables facing out to the sea”. While most attention goes to the exemplary afternoon tea (comprising “perfect sandwiches, delicious scones and cakes”), there was also praise this year for some other “delicious” cooking.
10. Drunken Duck
British, Modern restaurant in Ambleside
Barngates - LA22
This famous Lakeland watering hole, a 17th-century inn at a remote crossroads with views to distant Windermere, has long been a favourite for hikers, tourists and locals (including Tom Barnes, former executive chef at L’Enclume, who has been quoted tipping its “cosy” interiors, “beautiful food and amazing beers” – the latter from its own microbrewery). The robust meals are priced to a pleasingly straightforward formula: at lunch, starters are all £15, mains £25, sides £7 and puds £14; dinner is £45 for two courses, £65 for three courses, coffee and petits fours.
11. Holbeck Ghyll
French restaurant in Windermere
Holbeck Lane - LA23
2022 Review: Ratings weakened this year at this luxurious Lakeland hotel, whose wood-panelled, traditional dining room provides a splendid vantage-point for gazing over Lake Windermere. One reporter felt that the “competent, but potentially excellent, cooking was not value for money, due to willing but overstretched service” – perhaps signposting that the blip was due to the tribulations of the times?
12. The Samling
British, Modern restaurant in Windermere
Ambleside Road - LA23
2023 Review: Set in 27 acres, this country house hotel is one of the better-known luxury destinations in the Lakes and boasts a dining room whose floor-to-ceiling windows provide magnificent views of Windermere and the surrounding peaks, where chef Robby Jenks presides over the kitchen. It inspired very upbeat (but relatively little) feedback again this year, with nominations as an ideal romantic choice or for its impressive afternoon teas. For a full meal in the dining room, lunch is a four-course affair for £60 per person, and in the evening the sole option is a seven-course tasting menu at £115 per person.
13. Lake Road Kitchen
British, Modern restaurant in Ambleside
3 Sussex House, Lake Road - LA22
“A stunning favourite” – James Cross consistently produces “absolutely faultless cooking” at his well-accoladed but “very friendly” destination in this Lakeland town, whose distinctive if sparse, wood-lined interior hints at the Nordic influences of his CV, which included a stint at Noma. The entry level option is five courses for £80 per person, but you can push the boat out with more elaborate eight-course and twelve-course selections (“so much food!”). “Each dish is carefully crafted with the best ingredients… don’t forget to mention the amazing bread that you get to take home!”
14. Old Stamp House
British, Modern restaurant in Ambleside
Church St - LA22
“As a certain tyre company might say, worth a journey!” – Ryan & Craig Blackburn’s “hidden gem” in the Lake District provides “award-winning dining in a former Post Office” (where a certain William Wordsworth was once the local stamp distributor) and their eight-course tasting menu for £105 per person is some of “the best value fine dining to be encountered in the UK with an unfussy, relaxed ambience” to match. Its six-course lunch menu for £65 helps also make it “a brilliant local” too. Top Menu Tip – “The rabbit cannelloni is good, the steamed halibut superb, the hogget full of flavour and the rhubarb dessert delicious”.
15. The Lunesdale Arms
British, Modern restaurant in Tunstall
Main Street - LA6
A 17th-century hostelry in a “very attractive setting”, with a “popular bar” and “well-furnished restaurant” serving a “straightforward menu” which offers a British take on Mediterranean food. Long-serving landlords Andrew & Belinda Wilkinson retired in 2024 after 43 years running establishments in the Lune Valley, and thus far the standards they set have been maintained. Top Menu Tip – “excellent Boeuf Bourguignon”.
16. Merchants 1688
British, Modern restaurant in Lancaster
29 Castle Hill - LA1
In its current format since 1984 (and originally built in, er, 1688), this pub and restaurant won renewed interest and good all-round feedback in our annual diners’ poll, in part down to a favourable December 2023 visit from The Observer’s Jay Rayner: he praised a listed building that’s “deliciously seasoned with history” and “seriously impressive”, proper “cheek-slapping, belly-pleasing” food – notwithstanding being massively let down by its décor and “eye-achingly awful” website.
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