Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in Rawtenstall
Hardens guides have spent 34 years compiling reviews of the best Rawtenstall restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 12 restaurants in Rawtenstall and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Rawtenstall restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Rawtenstall Restaurants
1. Eight at Gazegill
British, Modern restaurant in Gisburn
Dancer Lane - BB7
Eight at Gazegill is a farm-to-fork restaurant located on our organic farm, offering a unique fine dining experience with a focus on seasonal produce. Situated at the foot of the iconic Pendle Hill within the Ribble Valley, our restaurant showcases the best of seasonal produce...
2. The Three Fishes
British, Traditional restaurant in Whalley
Mitton Rd - BB7
“It’s good to have Nigel Haworth back in a kitchen” and his 2022 return to this country inn, down the road from Northcote where he made his name (and in a pub that he originally helped run as part of the now-defunct chain, Ribble Valley Inns, 20 years ago) has put it firmly on the foodie map: it’s one of the top-100 most commented-on destinations in our annual diners’ poll. There is a ‘Choice’ menu (mains are typically £30-£40 per plate) or a ‘Farm to Fork’ tasting menu with five courses for £55 per person or eight courses for £85 per person. One local reporter “had a bit of a disappointing experience when Nigel was on holiday”, but most accounts here are of “fabulous” British cooking and “exceptional value” (“this is a regular for us although it’s a 70-mile round trip!”). Top Menu Tip – “highlight for me was the blood orange soufflé with chocolate milk ice cream and honeycomb”.
3. Northcote
British, Modern restaurant in Langho
Northcote Rd - BB6
“Just awesome every time we go. The team… the food… the place. It’s been brilliant for 30 years” – constant expansion, innovation and reinvention has characterised the steady growth in profile and physical size of this Ribble Valley operation, just off the A59: nowadays one of the more recognised foodie destinations in the UK, certainly amongst those ‘up north’. Lisa Goodwin-Allen runs the kitchens with “stunning presentation and incredible light and purposeful cuisine, with her personality coursing through the menu”. MD Craig Bancroft leads “a front of house team with a real sense of character”. “Wine pairing at Northcote is almost as much part of the experience as is the food and head sommelier Magdalena Sleziak is a real asset, presiding over a tremendous wine list (offering both value and extravagance), well thought through with choices from all over the wine globe”. All the above are on display each year during the annual Obsession festival early each year, which the property has turned into a part of the annual social calendar for very many well-heeled diners throughout the North West. And yet more change is now afoot, as in October 2024, the owners for the last five years, Britannia Hospitality Limited (owners of The Stafford in London), put the property on the market with Savills. It comes with planning permission for a swanky new dining room at the rear of the property which may yet further transform the dining experience here. We presume any new buyer will keep the existing team in place, and carry out the planned extension. But who knows? So there is likely some change afoot in the next 12 months, but it's not yet 100% clear exactly how this one will roll.
4. White Swan at Fence
British, Modern restaurant in Fence
300 Wheatley Lane Rd - BB12
“How lucky are the good folk of Fence and thereabouts to have such a wonderful restaurant on their doorstep – a go-to when in this neck of the woods”. Fans say chef Tom Parker offers “possibly the best-value Michelin Star food in the country”, served in a proper pub from a nine-course menu (in the evenings) for £85 per person.
5. Freemasons at Wiswell
British, Modern restaurant in Wiswell
8 Vicarage Fold Clitheroe - BB7
“Fantastic food… fantastic value for money… and you can even take the dog”: this pub with rooms in a Ribble Valley village has emerged in recent years as one of the area’s top food-led destinations despite – in fact maybe because of – its easygoing and “cosy” style and the fact that what it serves is “so much more than pub grub – clever, no-fuss, local food of the highest order, all served in a relaxed environment”. In June 2024, after our annual diners’ poll had concluded, chef Steve Smith departed, and chef Matt Smith (who had previously worked at the pub) returned. Exactly how the dust will settle on this switcheroo is still not definite but we have rated it on the optimistic assumption that it retains its high quality.
6. YU
Chinese restaurant in Copster Green
500 Longsight Rd - BB1
Victor Yu’s “top-notch” Cantonese cooking has wowed visitors to his famous roadside converted Ribble Valley pub (with very bling interiors) for 21 years – “What a chef! And what a great team, the front of house is amazing”.
7. Shajan
Indian restaurant in Mellor
Longsight Rd, Clayton-le-Dale - BB1
There’s “always a good eating experience with plenty of choice” of “excellent Indian food” at this Ribble Valley fixture, founded in 1992 by curry industry veteran Mohammad Ali and extended three times since then to cope with its popularity.
8. Osma
Scandinavian restaurant in Prestwich
132 Bury New Road - M25
Dark greige and blond wood abound at this ‘Scandinavian Neighbourhood Bar & Restaurant’ in the boonies of North Manchester, which is celebrating its fifth year in 2025. It’s run by chef Danielle Heron and business partner Sofie Götberg, and even those who say “it’s not in a very prepossessing location and has a fairly plain interior” feel “the food is worth a visit”. That’s the least enthusiastic report! Feedback from locals suggests it does exactly what it sets out to: “with a changing weekly menu, the food at Osma is fantastic. Danielle and her team work really hard to bring creative dishes in taster-style portions to my local area. Front of house service is professional and welcoming, with staff knowledgeable on the food and wine they serve”.
9. The Higher Buck
British, Modern restaurant in Waddington
The Square - BB7
Even in the foodie hotspot that is the Ribble Valley, chef-patron Michael Heathcote’s well-known destination stands out for its “relaxing pub atmosphere, great real ale and copious pub fare at fair prices”.
10. The Spärrows Continental Pasta & Spätzle
East & Cent. European restaurant in Manchester
16 Red Bank - M4
“Don’t judge a book by its cover: hidden away in a railway arch on a dingy street” you’ll find an “unexpectedly beautiful space” serving “incredible food at a great price”. The speciality is spätzle, ‘comforting noodle-like pasta of Schwabian origin’, served in recipes inspired by central European grannies.
11. The Black Friar
British, Modern restaurant in Manchester
13 King Street - M3
“Once a sad sight – an abandoned Victorian pub at a busy crossroads in Salford” – this 19th-century boozer was resurrected in 2021 after lying derelict for over 15 years and now combines a “well-run restaurant in a sympathetic extension at the back” (the Glass Room), plus a proper boozer where you can dine on chef Ben Chaplin’s more casual pub grub. The “convivial, busy” venture’s charms also include a garden and outdoor tavern for the summer months.
12. Skof
restaurant in Manchester
3 Federation Street - M4
“Already the best restaurant in Manchester” according to early visitors, some of whom declare it as “one of the best meals I have ever had!”. This May 2024 arrival is the creation of Tom Barnes – former executive chef at Lakeland legend L’Enclume – who retains close ties with Simon Rogan, his old boss, and which is supplied from L’Enclume’s own regenerative farm. Located in the city centre’s emerging NOMA district, it occupies a “really well designed” former industrial space (an Edwardian drapery warehouse), whose interior is now a style-mag dream of bare brick, tiling, wood floors, leather banquettes and “excellent lighting”. First press critic to visit, on day three of operation, was The Telegraph’s William Sitwell. Not usually a man who is easily impressed, he ran out of superlatives for the 15-course tasting menu at £165 per person (there’s also a cut-down, 12-course version for £120 per person), panting “Skof is the Eiffel Tower, the Pyramids. A monument of pure, victorious conviction”. We’ve rated it on a similarly rapturous series of early reports all deeming it “dazzling on all fronts” – “every dish was very well thought out”, “every mouthful needs to be savoured” as it’s “stunningly executed”. Top Tip – cost conscious? try it first for lunch which is £50 per head for four courses.
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