Restaurant in Barrington, United Kingdom
Michelin-recognised village pub worth the detour.

A Michelin Plate-recognised stone inn in rural Somerset, The Barrington Boar delivers modern British cooking with genuine local character at an accessible ££ price point. Rated 4.6 across nearly 500 Google reviews, it holds four bedrooms for overnight stays. Book two to three weeks out for weekend tables; easy to secure midweek.
A Michelin Plate-recognised country pub in a Somerset village that most people drive past without stopping — book it before your next rural weekend, because at ££ a head this is one of the most credible value propositions in the South West. The Barrington Boar earns its recognition through honest, modern British cooking that draws on genuinely local knowledge, not on the formulaic gastropub playbook. If you are travelling through Ilminster or staying anywhere in the Blackdown Hills area, this is worth planning around.
Picture a stone-built inn that has been standing since the 18th century, its back garden opening onto the kind of village quiet that makes you want to linger. That setting matters here because it is not decorative — it informs the menu. The chef-owner's familiarity with the locale shapes what goes on the plate, and the result is modern British cooking that reads as balanced and seasonally grounded rather than trend-chasing. Michelin awarded the venue a Plate in both 2024 and 2025, which is the guide's signal that cooking is good enough to note without the full ceremony of a star. At this price point, that credential carries real weight.
The four bedrooms, housed in what was originally the skittle alley, make The Barrington Boar a viable overnight stop rather than just a lunch destination. That matters for the explorer-minded diner: you can eat well, sleep, and spend the following morning in the surrounding countryside without rushing back to a city hotel. For the wine-focused visitor, staying overnight removes the designated-driver calculation entirely, which is worth factoring into how you plan the visit.
On the wine side, the database does not confirm a specific list or by-the-glass range, so any detail on that front would be speculative. What the Michelin recognition and the chef-owner framing do suggest is a kitchen where sourcing is taken seriously , and in Somerset, that typically means proximity to good British producers and a regional bias that can extend to the cellar. Verified specifics on the wine program should be confirmed directly with the venue before you book, particularly if wine is the primary driver of your visit. For comparable rural British venues where the wine list is a documented strength, Waterside Inn in Bray and Moor Hall in Aughton are the benchmark references.
The Google rating of 4.6 across 499 reviews is a meaningful signal for a village pub of this size. That volume of reviews at that score is harder to sustain than a handful of five-star responses from regulars , it suggests the kitchen delivers consistently across a broad range of visits and expectations. For context, many Michelin Plate venues in rural England operate with far fewer reviews, which makes the sample size here reassuring for a first visit.
Booking is currently rated Easy, which is good news if you are planning a last-minute weekend. That said, a Michelin Plate pub in a small village with limited covers and only four bedrooms will fill on Friday and Saturday evenings without much warning, particularly in the spring and summer months when the garden and terrace become a genuine draw. Book two to three weeks out for weekends in peak season; midweek is likely more flexible. For overnight stays, give yourself more lead time , four rooms is a tight allocation.
The chef-owner model is worth noting practically: kitchens run by owner-operators at this scale tend to be more consistent than those where the named chef is rarely present. The Michelin assessors noted the chef's personality and prior kitchen experience as directly informing the menu, which suggests the cooking reflects a real point of view rather than a hired kitchen team executing someone else's vision. That is a meaningful distinction when you are deciding between this and a larger, more anonymous hotel dining room in the region.
For food and wine enthusiasts travelling rural Somerset, the honest comparison set is places like hide and fox in Saltwood or Gidleigh Park in Chagford , venues where the setting and the cooking are genuinely intertwined and the rural location is not a compromise but a feature. The Barrington Boar sits at a lower price point than both, which makes it the easier commitment if you are uncertain about the drive.
Explore more options across the region: our full Barrington restaurants guide, hotels in Barrington, bars in Barrington, wineries near Barrington, and experiences in the area. If you are building a broader itinerary around serious British cooking, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Midsummer House in Cambridge, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow represent the wider peer set for chef-led, destination-worthy British cooking at various price tiers. For London comparisons, CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ritz Restaurant anchor the upper end of modern British in the capital.
Booking is rated Easy. No specialist reservation service is required. Contact the venue directly to confirm availability and to ask about the wine list and any dietary requirements before your visit. For weekend evenings and overnight stays, aim to book two to three weeks in advance. Midweek tables are likely available with shorter notice.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Barrington Boar | Modern British | ££ | Dating back to the 18C, this lovely stone-built inn sits in a picture postcard village and its back garden and terrace is a real jewel. The chef-owner’s personality, his experience in previous kitchens, and his knowledge of the locale, all inform his appealing menu of modern, balanced dishes that are big on flavour and guaranteed to hit the spot. Four bedrooms occupy what was once the skittle alley.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Contemporary European, French | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Modern British | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Modern French | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Modern British, Traditional British | ££££ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Dress as you would for a relaxed country pub lunch or dinner — clean casual works fine. The Barrington Boar is a stone-built village inn with Michelin Plate recognition, not a formal dining room, so there is no expectation of jackets or heels. Comfortable countryside clothes fit the setting.
It is a reasonable solo option for a pub-format meal at ££ in a quiet Somerset village. The inn atmosphere is relaxed rather than cavernous, which helps. If you want guaranteed counter or bar seating to avoid a table solo, confirm availability directly with the venue before you go.
Specific menu formats are not confirmed in available records, so it is worth calling ahead to check what the chef-owner is currently running. What is documented is that the menu is built around modern, balanced dishes informed by local knowledge — and the Michelin Plate recognition across 2024 and 2025 suggests the cooking justifies the ££ price point.
Bar seating specifics are not confirmed in the venue record. Contact the pub directly to ask — it is worth doing so if you want a more informal setting, which suits the ££ country inn format well.
At ££, yes — this is among the more affordable ways to eat Michelin Plate-recognised Modern British cooking in the South West. The chef-owner's menu draws on local knowledge and prior kitchen experience, and the 2024 and 2025 Michelin Plate awards confirm the cooking is consistent. For the price bracket, it over-delivers relative to most village pubs.
Barrington itself is a small village, so alternatives are nearby rather than local. The Somerset area has other Michelin-recognised spots worth considering if you are touring the region. The Barrington Boar's advantage is the combination of village setting, overnight rooms in the old skittle alley, and Michelin Plate cooking at ££ — that specific combination is hard to replicate in the area.
Yes, provided you want a relaxed rather than formal celebration. The 18th-century stone inn with a back garden terrace and four bedrooms on-site makes it a practical choice for a quiet anniversary or birthday where staying the night is part of the plan. For a high-ceremony special occasion with silver service, this is not the format.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.