Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in Midsomer Norton
Hardens guides have spent 33 years compiling reviews of the best Midsomer Norton restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 80 restaurants in Midsomer Norton and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Midsomer Norton restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Midsomer Norton Restaurants
1. BANK
International restaurant in Bristol
107 Wells Road - BS4
Limited but positive feedback, including from a London-based reporter, on this revamped former branch of Lloyds in Totterdown, which opened in 2021 and relaunched in spring 2023 with a menu based around open-fire cooking.
2. Green Park Brasserie
Burgers, etc restaurant in Bath
Green Park Station - BA1
“A good, no-nonsense place to eat, with outside heaters” – this local landmark is housed in an old 1870s station on the fringe of the city centre (next to the old Ironbridge railway line) and is celebrating over 30 years in business. Billing itself as a steakhouse and jazz bar – and they also do a good line in pizza – it doesn’t aim for foodie fireworks, but is well-rated across the board.
3. The Scallop Shell
Fish & seafood restaurant in Bath
22 Monmouth Place - BA1
“Think you know what a fish ’n’ chip restaurant is like? Think again” – this “buzzy and informal” venture (est. 2015) has really raised the bar for the genre; the “incredible” catch (“choose from the regular menu or the extensive specials board”, or profit from the bargain ‘Fisherman’s Lunch’) is “stunningly cooked” and includes “delicious alternatives to the usual cod”. On the first floor, overlooking Bath’s rooftops, is indoor-outdoor dining space The Little Scallop, while the owners also oversee popular takeaway The Oyster Shell, near the Theatre Royal.
4. Flute
restaurant in Bath
9 Edgar Buildings, George Street - BA1
Flute is a distinctive all-day seafood destination in the heart of Bath offering Cornish seafood, an extensive selection of wines and cocktails with a kick. Flute consistently sources the freshest fish from Devon and Cornwall and...
5. Robun
Japanese restaurant in Bath
4 Princes Building, George Street - BA1
This upscale Japanese three-year-old near the Assembly Rooms draws its name from the 19th-century author Kanagaki Robun, who introduced barbecued food to Japan – and is all about the robata grill. Not everyone is convinced of its authenticity, but the “good-value” and “beautifully presented fish bento box lunch” won raves, with “every element carefully crafted in the best Japanese tradition” (the full menu including sushi and sashimi, tempura, gyoza and a dainty afternoon tea).
6. Harbour House
British, Traditional restaurant in Bristol
The Grove, Harbourside - BS1
There’s no doubting the amazing location of this riverside restaurant: one of the South West’s last remaining 19th-century transit sheds (and FKA the Severnshed), it was designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, designer of the city’s impressive suspension bridge, and later hosted the first exhibition of a then-unknown artist by the name of Banksy. These days the attractive space, also with terrace seating, attracts praise (including from Jay Rayner, who found it “shipshape and Bristol fashion”) for its “varied menu” of “hearty dishes” (burgers, pork chops, fish ‘n’ chips); the worst anyone had to say about this year was that dishes range from “excellent to ok” – and the same reporter would “definitely go back”, so hey!
7. The Olive Tree, Queensberry Hotel
British, Modern restaurant in Bath
Russell St - BA1
“The only Michelin star restaurant in Bath and it certainly stands out from the rest” – Chris Cleghorn has been at the stoves of this celebrated cellar for over 10 years now and it continues to inspire high praise, with “inventive and delicious” cuisine and tasting menus “much better than the ubiquitous versions that are around today” (although they are a significantly greater investment than the à la carte price shown, at £160 and £190 per person). Opinions differ on the cellar location in a period property: to some tastes it is “only let down by the lack of atmosphere in the basement”, but to others “the setting is relaxing and the service just the right level of attentive”, making it “a romantic venue in the heart of a very romantic city”.
8. Clifton Sausage
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol
7 Portland St - BS8
“Why isn’t there a quality sausage restaurant like this in every town?” – Simon & Joy’s descriptively named feature has thrived for over twenty years on “quintessential English grub done really well”.
9. The Granary & The Granary Club
British, Modern restaurant in Bristol city centre
32 Welsh Back - BS1
The Granary is a buzzy, neighbourhood all-day eatery near Queen Square in central Bristol, with a great vibe and striking interiors and has been featured in The Telegraph, The Times & Condé Traveler.Think unique, period windows flooding the space with light, ...
10. The Pig near Bath
British, Modern restaurant in Pensford
Hunstrete House, Hunstrete - BS39
2023 Review: “Fantastic for a foodie weekend” – this comfortably boho country-house hotel in the Mendip Hills from the Pig group owes its vibe to the shabby-chic interior designed by Judy Hutson, wife of Robin Hutson (ex-Hotel du Vin and Soho House) who founded the chain a dozen years ago with backing from Ineos billionaire Jim Ratcliffe. The 25-mile kitchen sourcing regime results in some “amazing local ingredients” on the table.
11. The Pony Chew Valley
British, Traditional restaurant in Chew Magna
2022 Review: After 15 years, the Michelin-starred Pony & Trap gastropub in Chew Magna – owned by chef Josh Eggleton and his sister Holly – is to reopen in a new guise in 2022. The Eggleton siblings have also opened Pony Bistro, in Bedminster (see also) and this, their former HQ, will operate ‘no longer as a gastropub, but as a wedding venue, cookery school and restaurant’.
12. The Queen's Arms
British, Modern restaurant in Chew Magna
Silver Street - BS40
2022 Review: Opened in June 2021, this tastefully revamped old pub is the work of the Eggleton family – the team behind The Pony & Trap (now known as The Pony Chew Magna). The offering, realised by chef Jordan Meagher, “centres around proper ‘pub classics’”.
13. Menu Gordon Jones
British, Modern restaurant in Bath
2 Wellsway - BA2
2023 Review: The “food and wine are always interesting” and are “still as good as ever” at engaging Anglo-Scottish chef Gordon Jones’s former sandwich shop on the southern edge of town. There’s “a single tasting menu available” (the only choice is whether to have 7 or 9 courses) and it comes as a complete surprise, with each dish introduced as it arrives at your table (and no vegetarian or other options).
14. Noya's Kitchen
Vietnamese restaurant in Bath
7 Saint James's Parade - BA1
“The word’s got around that the Vietnamese home-style cooking here is seriously delicious”, so this “terrific Dining Club restaurant presided over by the wonderful Noya” (who “also runs supper clubs menus once a week and classes”) is “usually packed” (it is the most commented-on restaurant in Bath in our annual diners’ poll and one of the top-50 most commented-on destinations outside London in the UK). It’s only a “small” and “unpretentious” venue, but “service is always efficient, friendly and welcoming” and “whilst she is only small in stature, her meals are gigantic in terms of flavour and sophistication”; and also very “affordable”. On the downside, one or two visiting Londoners are “disappointed after the local hype” (“good but nothing super-special, but I grew up in south London where we have dozens of not dissimilar places to choose from…”). But when you visit may also be key (“the simplicity of its Pho and Noodle menus – great for pre-theatre – are juxtaposed with Noya’s five-course fixed supper club menus once a week”). Top Menu Tips – “lovely pork belly noodles are very tender and well spiced”; “herby prawn summer rolls and coconut-rich An‘s chicken curry!”.
15. The White Hart Inn
British, Modern restaurant in Bath
Widcombe Hill - BA2
2023 Review: A “quirky and interesting” local with a “good atmosphere” serving a “creative menu, with cooking of a consistent high standard”. It makes a “fantastic pub for Sunday lunch”, with “outstanding roasts”.
16. Colonna & Smalls
Sandwiches, cakes, etc restaurant in Bath
6 Chapel Row - BA1
“If you like coffee, this is the place to go” – founder Maxwell Colonna-Dashwood, three-times UK barista champion, has “unbeatable coffee knowledge” and his “friendly, engaged” staff also “really know their stuff”, which includes some “unusual” beans!
17. Corkage (Chapel Row)
British, Modern restaurant in Bath
5 Chapel Row - BA1
Their original venue on Walcot Street is no more, but this “friendly and casual” sibling on Chapel Row – indie fine wine shop meets bar and small plates venue – is doing a swift trade, not harmed by its gorgeous heated terrace and garden. Alongside “wines outside the usual suspects” (they run a Wednesday wine club and tasting nights), the food is “a cut above” what one might expect from a booze merchant, even for those who are “usually not a fan of small plates and explanations”.
18. The Pump Room
British, Modern restaurant in Bath
Stall Street - BA1
2022 Review: Taking afternoon tea in this “wonderful Georgian setting with a trio playing during the meal” – and the Roman baths next door – is to wallow in English history, with literary visitors from Jane Austen to Charles Dickens as your guides. The nibbles – “beetroot-cured smoked salmon with homemade blini”, perhaps – are a secondary consideration, “but well worth having!”.
19. The Bath Priory
British, Modern restaurant in Bath
Weston Rd - BA1
Celebrating three decades as part of the Brownsword Hotels stable in 2024, this lavish getaway in two adjoining Georgian houses has much to love about it, from the four-acre gardens to the UK’s only L’Occitane spa. Dining options are split between the dining room, open for afternoon tea or a £98 per person three-course dinner showcasing “skilful cooking of delightful food”; and the more casual ‘Pantry & Terrace’ which also offers breakfast, brunch and lunch.
20. The Elder at The Indigo Hotel
British, Modern restaurant in Bath
2 South Parade - BA2
Set within the Georgian surrounds of the Indigo Hotel, this indie restaurant from Harwood Arms co-owner Mike Robinson has rejigged its formula, with diners treated to cocktails in a vault-set speakeasy, before heading upstairs to the clubby dining room for a seven-course dinner showcasing the best of British wild food. Reports on the new format were limited but what there were proclaimed the food “truly epic, with plenty of slightly off-the-beaten track choices, e.g. hare” (that seem less surprising given Robinson’s reputation as a game guru). The celebrated chef is joined here by exec chef Liam Goldstone, who also runs the hotel’s more casual Brasserie Beau.
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