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    Restaurant in Oxford, United Kingdom · Inside Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons, A Belmond Hotel, Oxfordshire

    Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons

    2,185Pearl Points

    Serious cooking for milestone occasions only.

    Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons, Restaurant in Oxford

    About Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons

    Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons is Raymond Blanc's country-house estate near Oxford, now operating under executive head chef Luke Selby with a lighter, garden-led French tasting menu. Credentials include Les Grandes Tables du Monde (2025), a 95-point La Liste ranking, and the top-ranked UK wine list. Currently closed for major redevelopment; expected to reopen in 2027.

    Who Should Book Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons

    Le Manoir is the right choice for a milestone occasion dinner where you want cooking at a serious level, a hotel setting that supports a full-day experience, and service that justifies a significant spend. If you have been once and ate well, the arrival of executive head chef Luke Selby in January 2023 gives you a concrete reason to return: the menu has shifted toward lighter, garden-led cooking that reads differently from the Blanc-era classics, without dismantling what made the place worth the trip in the first place.

    One important planning note: Le Manoir is currently closed for major redevelopment and is not expected to reopen until sometime in 2027. If you are planning ahead for a special occasion, hold the date — but do not try to book yet.

    The Cooking Under Luke Selby

    Selby's six-course menu is where the recent evolution is most visible. The approach is French in its technical foundation but lighter in execution than the house's heritage would suggest. Garden produce drives the menu: tiny peas on a ricotta tartlet, beetroot served as a tartare base beneath a mousse dome with pickled mooli, a potato basket of carrots, asparagus and radish alongside roasted guinea fowl. These are not minimalist dishes, but the flavour logic is clean rather than baroque.

    A morel filled with chicken and mushroom mousse, set in Gewürztraminer foam with poached white asparagus, is described in reviews as a Blanc classic updated for the current menu. Confit chalk stream trout with oscietra caviar, compressed cucumber and horseradish represents the kind of produce-led luxury the kitchen favours: the price signal comes from the quality of the raw material, not from gilt-edged plating. Desserts hold their own, with fresh gariguette and wild strawberries over a feather-light mousse with pistachio biscuit base finishing the meal on precise, unfussy terms.

    If flavour-led cooking from a named garden programme matters to you more than theatrical tableside service or elaborate sauce work, this kitchen is well-matched to that preference. For comparison, The Fat Duck in Bray and L'Enclume in Cartmel operate at a similar price tier but with markedly different cooking philosophies. Le Manoir sits closer to classical French discipline, while Moor Hall in Aughton and CORE by Clare Smyth in London are relevant alternatives for diners who want comparable rigour without the hotel-estate context.

    Service and the Wine List

    Service at Le Manoir is the clearest argument for the price point. Reviews describe it as professionally smooth without being stiff, with sommeliers attentive enough to guide a wine list that is long and France-heavy. The paired wine flight is priced at £95 at lunch. A premium selection sits at £999 per person for dinner (£799 at lunch), anchored by wines including a 2015 Chambolle-Musigny Premier Cru from Burgundy's Cecile Tremblay. The list won Star Wine List's leading UK ranking in both 2021 and 2022, which gives the sommelier recommendation genuine authority if you are inclined to follow it.

    The conservatory dining room is described as comfortable. For guests staying on the estate, the service extends across the whole property, which changes the value calculation: you are not just paying for a dinner, you are paying for the full day and overnight experience. That framing makes the spend easier to justify if a country-house escape is what you are after, and harder to justify if you only want the food.

    Credentials

    Le Manoir holds a Les Grandes Tables du Monde award (2025) and appears on La Liste's leading restaurant rankings for 2025 with 95 points. Opinionated About Dining ranked it 89th in Classical European restaurants in both 2023 and 2024. Google reviewers rate it 4.5 from over 1,300 reviews, which is a useful data point given the price sensitivity of the audience likely to leave a review. These credentials position it clearly in the top tier of country-house dining in the UK, comparable in reputation to Gidleigh Park in Chagford and Hand and Flowers in Marlow, though different in format and price architecture.

    Practical Details

    Le Manoir is located at Church Rd, Great Milton, Oxford OX44 7PD — roughly 30 minutes southeast of central Oxford by car. It is not a city-centre venue. Given the current closure for redevelopment, there is nothing to book at this point. When it reopens (expected 2027), booking difficulty has historically been rated as manageable, but high-demand dates around garden season in late spring will fill quickly. Plan well ahead for May and June visits.

    For other Oxford restaurant options in the meantime, see our full Oxford restaurants guide. For hotels, see our full Oxford hotels guide. You may also find our guides to Oxford bars, Oxford wineries, and Oxford experiences useful for planning around a visit. Internationally, Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and L'Effervescence in Tokyo offer instructive comparisons for diners thinking about this tier of French-influenced cooking in a hotel context.

    Verdict

    Book Le Manoir for a milestone occasion where the combination of serious cooking, authoritative wine service, and estate setting justifies a top-end spend. Wait for the 2027 reopening, monitor the booking window when it opens, and go in late May if the calendar allows. If you have been before and are deciding whether the Selby era warrants a return, the answer from current reviews is yes: the cooking is fresher and the menu is more interesting than it was five years ago.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons?

    Book this as a full-day commitment, not just dinner. The estate at Church Rd, Great Milton includes kitchen gardens, orchards, and grounds worth arriving early to explore. Executive head chef Luke Selby runs a six-course menu that leans French in technique but lighter in execution than the Blanc classics of previous decades. One critical practical note: Le Manoir is closed for major redevelopment and is not expected to reopen until sometime in 2027.

    Can I eat at the bar at Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons?

    The venue database does not confirm a bar dining option at Le Manoir. The dining format is built around the set tasting menu in the conservatory dining room, which is not a drop-in format. If a more flexible, counter-style experience is what you're after in Oxford, Arbequina is a better fit.

    Is Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons good for solo dining?

    Le Manoir is not the natural choice for solo diners. The tasting-menu format, estate setting, and occasion-driven service model are structured around couples and small groups marking a milestone. Solo diners will find the experience works better as a deliberate treat than a casual solo outing, and the price point amplifies that. For solo dining in Oxford, Arbequina or Pompette offer a more relaxed fit.

    Is Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons good for a special occasion?

    Yes, this is the clearest use case. Le Manoir holds a Les Grandes Tables du Monde award (2025), sits at 95 points on La Liste's 2025 rankings, and has ranked #89 in Opinionated About Dining's Classical Europe list. The wine list includes a paired flight at £95 per head at lunch, with a premium selection reaching £999 — the scope matches what you'd expect for a landmark dinner. Just confirm the 2027 reopening timeline before planning anything.

    What are alternatives to Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons in Oxford?

    For serious French cooking at a lower commitment level, Pompette in Oxford handles bistro-register French well and is considerably easier to book. Arbequina suits occasions where you want quality produce-led cooking without the estate formality. If Le Manoir's current closure is the issue and you need a comparable special-occasion venue now, La Liste and Opinionated About Dining both publish ranked alternatives at a similar tier across the UK.

    Location

    Church Rd, Great Milton, Oxford OX44 7PD, United Kingdom

    Oxford, United Kingdom

    Compare Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons

    Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons in Context: Awards and Value
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons
    Doe’s Eat Place
    Arbequina£
    Pompette££
    Ajax Diner
    City Grocery

    Comparing your options in Oxford for this tier.

    Also Consider

    • Doe’s Eat Place, Steakhouse, Steakhouse
    • Arbequina, Spanish, £
    • Pompette, French, ££
    • Ajax Diner, $$ · American, $$ · American
    • City Grocery, $$ · American, $$ · American

    Le Manoir sits in a different category from most Oxford dining. It is a destination estate with serious French cooking credentials, and the correct comparison is not really a local restaurant but other UK country-house tasting-menu venues such as Gidleigh Park in Chagford or Hand and Flowers in Marlow. Within Oxford itself, Pompette is the most logical French alternative, offering Gallic cooking at a fraction of the spend and without requiring a car journey out of the city. For a relaxed, lower-commitment dinner, Pompette is the cleaner choice. Le Manoir only makes sense if the occasion and budget justify the full estate experience.

    Arbequina and Branca occupy the informal end of the Oxford market and are not direct comparisons in cuisine or format, but they are relevant if you want a good meal in town without a tasting menu commitment. Cherwell Boathouse offers a riverside setting for a special lunch at a more approachable price. None of these match Le Manoir's award credentials, but all are open now, which matters given the current closure.

    The practical decision is straightforward: if Le Manoir is open and you have a milestone occasion with budget to match, book it. If you need a great Oxford dinner in 2025 or 2026, build your shortlist from our full Oxford restaurants guide and treat Le Manoir as a future bookmark rather than a current option.

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