DINERS POLL HAILS SAT BAINS AS UK’S #1 CHEF

  • Restaurant Sat Bains in Nottingham tops Harden’s 100
  • Midlands a powerhouse of culinary achievement this year
  • Edinburgh is second restaurant city
  • Top restaurants look to bounce back after Covid lockdowns

A chef who started up a curry kit delivery service with his mother to keep himself and his staff busy under lockdown has seen his restaurant declared the best in Britain in a leading poll of diners.

In its 31st year, Harden’s Best UK Restaurants 2022 (ISBN: 978-1-9160761-3-6, price £16.99) places Restaurant Sat Bains in Nottingham at the top of its ‘Harden’s Top 100’ list of the UK’s best dining destinations.

Ratings and reviews in the guide are based on 30,000 reports from Harden’s annual survey of 3,000 regular diners. The guide is the most comprehensive print guide to UK restaurants with approaching 3,000 entries. (Content is also available online and as apps for iOS or Android.)

Opened by Sat Bains and his wife Amanda 20 years ago in the unlikely setting of a converted red-brick motel tucked away under a flyover off the A52, Restaurant Sat Bains attracts food-lovers from near and far to sample his adventurous 10-course tasting menus – and young chefs from around the world seek work in his kitchens.

The Harden’s guide says:

Just outstanding in every way. It is testament to Sat Bains and wife Amanda’s hospitality that they have created one of the country’s best-rated gastronomic destinations in a former motel on the outskirts of an industrial estate. Once you find it, you will keep going back for more – superb cuisine and correspondingly varied wine list, full of surprises.”

For all the refinement of his menus featuring caviar and other luxury ingredients, Bains – who grew up in Derby in a Punjabi Sikh family – describes his venture as a “working-class restaurant”. During lockdown he launched a home-delivery curry-kit service with his 72-year-old mother, Tarsem, called Momma Bains. Bains said: “The curries have been flying out. They’re what she cooks at home and what I grew up eating – nothing like what you get in your local curry house.”

Peter Harden, the co-founder of the guide, commented:

Sat Bains has been a leader of the national restaurant scene for more than a decade now, and his lockdown curry service is a superb example of the resilience and creativity demanded of the sector to survive the pandemic –qualities the best restaurants still need as we emerge from this national trauma.”

Purnell’s, under an hour’s drive away in Birmingham, is No 2 on this year’s ‘Harden’s 100’, evidence of the Midlands’ high level of culinary achievement. Alchemilla also in Nottingham, Adam’s and Opheem in Birmingham and Hambleton Hall in Rutland are also ranked in the top 100.

Edinburgh takes the crown as the UK leading city beyond London for general culinary excellence, with 14 listings in the top 500, followed by Brighton with 11, Birmingham with 9 and Manchester with 7, while North Yorkshire tops the list for counties with 17 top 500 listings.

Greater London counts for roughly half the total entries in the Harden’s guide, and a similar proportion of the ‘Harden’s 100’, reflecting both the wealth and population of the national capital and its status as a centre for international business and tourism.

About a third of the establishments in the guide list their cuisine as “modern British”, a catch-all description that reflects the fact that techniques and ingredients from every corner of the globe may be found in the contemporary restaurant kitchen.

Among significant changes since the last Harden’s survey in 2020, the number of “fish & seafood” specialists rose from 151 5o 158, possibly reflecting an interest in lighter and healthier cooking; likewise, “Japanese” establishments increased from 73 to 85.

In the London section, the guide hails the rise of African cuisine as a new basis for fine dining restaurants in the capital, hailing a trend similar to the rise of the ‘nouvelle Indian’ at the end of the 1990s. It notes: “… it feels like London may again sit at the forefront of a trend to take a family of cuisines mostly celebrated for their humble, homespun qualities… and reposition their flavour palette as the basis for luxury openings globally.”

The Harden’s 100 ranking of the UK’s best restaurants in full

The top 100 restaurants derived from the 30,000 reports with ratings submitted by 3,000 diners who contributed to the Harden’s annual survey.

1 Restaurant Sat Bains, Nottingham (4)  
2 Purnells, Birmingham (52)  
3 Da Terra, Town Hall Hotel, London (308)  
4 Endo at Rotunda, London (18)  
5 Core by Clare Smyth, London (9)  
6 Lympstone Manor, Exmouth (50)  
7 Ynyshir Restaurant and Rooms, Eglwys Fach (63)  
8 La Dame de Pic London, London (47)  
9 Mana, Manchester (3)  
10 The Five Fields, London (2)  
11 Winteringham Fields, Winteringham (24)  
12 Kitchen Table, London (8)  
13 Sorrel, Dorking (38)  
14 Alchemilla, Nottingham (112)  
15 Little Fish Market, Brighton (30)  
16 Moor Hall, Aughton (5)  
17 The Clove Club, London (176)  
18 The Art School, Liverpool (163)  
19 L’Enclume, Cartmel (12)  
20 The Peat Inn, Cupar (41)  
21 Anglo, London (126)  
22 Ormer Mayfair by Sofian, Flemings Mayfair Hotel, London (95)  
23 The Kitchin, Edinburgh (111)  
24 Muse, London  
25 The Small Holding, Goudhurst (100)  
26 Hunan, London (64)  
27 Nobu, Metropolitan Hotel, London (316)  
28 Fraiche, Oxton (1)  
29 Adam’s, Birmingham (29)  
30 The Clock House, Ripley (164)  
31 So LA, London  
32 Hambleton Hall, Hambleton (6)  
33 Aulis London, London (140)  
34 Northcote, Langho (82)  
35 Le Cochon Aveugle, York (33)  
36 The Forest Side, Grasmere (191)  
37 Belmond Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons, Great Milton (15)  
38 Morston Hall, Morston (40)  
39 Waterside Inn, Bray (14)  
40 Adam Reid at The French, Manchester (19)  
41 The Sportsman, Seasalter (78)  
42 Chez Bruce, London (67)  
43 Scully, London (207)  
44 Pied à Terre, London (153)  
45 LPM (fka La Petite Maison), London (59)  
46 Lumière, Cheltenham (20)  
47 Trinity, London (85)  
48 St John Smithfield, London (222)  
49 Outlaw’s Fish Kitchen, Port Isaac (120)  
50 Cornerstone, London (117)  
51 Behind, London  
52 Le Gavroche, London (46)  
53 The Whitebrook, Restaurant with Rooms, Whitebrook (56)  
54 The Fordwich Arms, Fordwich (49)  
55 Le Champignon Sauvage, Cheltenham (147)  
56 Hjem, Wall  
57 House of Tides, Newcastle upon Tyne (37)  
58 The Angel, Hetton (290)  
59 Cail Bruich, Glasgow (151)  
60 Allium at Askham Hall, Penrith (484)  
61 Restaurant Martin Wishart, Edinburgh (31)  
62 Osip, Bruton  
63 The Ninth London, London (86)  
64 A Wong, London (65)  
65 Benares, London (139)  
66 Lyle’s, London (229)  
67 Pollen Street Social, London (99)  
68 Trivet, London  
69 Amaya, London (27)  
70 Raby Hunt, Summerhouse (55)  
71 Skosh, York (88)  
72 Jamavar, London (192)  
73 Portland, London (286)  
74 Outlaw’s New Road, Port Isaac  
75 John’s House, Mountsorrel (98)  
76 Mere, London (214)  
77 Murano, London (134)  
78 Midsummer House, Cambridge (84)  
79 Gravetye Manor, East Grinstead (74)  
80 Wilson’s, Bristol (303)  
81 The Grill at The Dorchester, London  
82 Frog by Adam Handling, London (83)  
83 Kota, Porthleven (215)  
84 Story, London (170)  
85 Paul Ainsworth at No. 6, Padstow (54)  
86 Clarke’s, London (269)  
87 Brat, London (143)  
88 Sollip, London  
89 The Dining Room, The Goring Hotel , London (371)  
90 Myrtle, London  
91 Brat at Climpson’s Arch, London  
92 Grand Trunk Road, London (356)  
93 Lake Road Kitchen, Ambleside (51)  
94 The Dining Room, Whatley Manor, Easton Grey (517)  
95 Club Gascon, London (79)  
96 Sabor, London (158)  
97 Roots, York (168)  
98 Meadowsweet, Holt  
99 Bibendum, London (258)  
100 Opheem, Birmingham (43)  

Geographical Coverage (Top 100)

(London is ranked first)

Favourite types of food

Geographical Coverage (Top 500)

The Top 500 ranking gives a wider feel for the depth of quality to be found within any given town or city, beyond the Top 100 above.

(London is ranked first)

Notes for Editors

1. Harden’s is the UK’s original ‘user-generated content’ restaurant guide, with ratings derived statistically from an annual survey, run on market research principles. The Harden’s survey of regular restaurant-goers is now in its 31st year. It has been national in scope since 1999.

2. Harden’s content is available as an app, in guidebook format, and also at www.hardens.com.

3. Harden’s Restaurant Finder can be downloaded from the Apple or Google App stores. The app is free, but full functionality can be purchased for an annual subscription of £6.99.

4. Harden’s Best UK Restaurants 2022, £16.99, ISBN: 978-1-9160761-3-6, is available in all good bookshops, including Waterstone’s and Amazon.com, and from www.hardens.com.

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