Restaurant in Langho, United Kingdom
Northcote
2,165ptsReliable fine dining, worth the Ribble Valley drive.

About Northcote
Northcote is a Michelin-starred country-house hotel restaurant in Lancashire's Ribble Valley, consistently rated among the North of England's best for modern British cooking. With a 635-bottle wine list holding a White Star accreditation and service that earns its ££££ price point, it is a strong choice for a special-occasion dinner or overnight stay. Book four to six weeks ahead minimum for weekends.
Verdict: One of Northern England's Most Reliable Fine-Dining Destinations
Northcote holds a Michelin star, scores 87 points on La Liste 2026, and carries a 4.7 Google rating from over 1,200 reviews. For a country-house hotel restaurant in the Ribble Valley, that consistency across four decades and multiple ownership changes is the single most telling fact about it. If you are considering a special-occasion dinner within driving distance of Manchester or Leeds, this is a serious option. If you are already a Northcote regular, the question is not whether to return but how to use the evolving format to your advantage.
Portrait
Northcote sits just off the A59 near Langho, in Lancashire's Ribble Valley. Executive chef Lisa Goodwin-Allen departed in early 2025 following the sale of the property from The Stafford Collection to new owners Alf and Clare Ellis, then almost immediately confirmed her return. Managing Director Craig Bancroft, known to regulars as Mr B, continued to run operations throughout. The result is that the kitchen's direction and the dining room's service culture remained intact through a period that could have been seriously disruptive.
That service culture is worth examining carefully if you are deciding whether the ££££ price point is justified. Reports from the venue's annual diners' poll, in which Northcote is a top-40 most-commented-on destination outside London, consistently describe staff as friendly and professional rather than formal. The combination of polished service pacing and a deliberate lack of pomposity is not something every country-house restaurant manages. At comparable price points, venues often tip into either excessive ceremony or under-trained informality. Northcote's record suggests it holds the middle ground reliably.
The cooking is anchored in local, biodynamic, and organic produce, with the kitchen garden supplying a proportion of what reaches the table. Dishes are described by reviewers and award bodies as carrying distinct, bold flavours brought together in complementary combinations. La Liste cited rabbit 'pillow' with scorched corn, chilli, and coriander as an example of the kitchen's approach. The dining room itself is an L-shaped space decorated in muted tones, with a fire in the entrance hall that has been lit since the restaurant opened. A glass-walled Chef's Table room overlooks the kitchen and is worth requesting if you want more engagement with the cooking process.
The wine list is one of the strongest practical reasons to book here rather than at a peer venue. Craig Bancroft has built a cellar of 635 selections and approximately 2,540 bottles, with particular depth in France (Burgundy and Champagne), Italy, Portugal, and Spain. Star Wine List awards the venue a White Star accreditation. Wine pricing is in the middle tier: a range of price points rather than exclusively high-end bottles. The corkage fee is £50 if you bring your own. For wine-led occasions, this list is a genuine differentiator against most regional competitors.
Northcote's annual Obsession festival, held in January and February, is how many diners first encounter the hotel. It brings guest chefs from across the UK and internationally, and the format is distinct from the standard tasting-menu experience. If you have done the main restaurant and want a different reason to return, booking Obsession is the logical next step.
Under the new owners, significant physical changes are planned: a new-build dining pavilion for Lisa Goodwin-Allen, conversion of the existing dining room into a more relaxed brasserie, and a full refurbishment. None of these are complete at the time of writing. The current experience still reflects the established format, but it is worth checking the venue's current status before booking if the new pavilion or brasserie is part of your reason for going.
For regional comparisons, Moor Hall in Aughton holds two Michelin stars and operates at a higher technical register, but is harder to book and carries a steeper price. L'Enclume in Cartmel is three Michelin stars and in a different category entirely. Northcote sits between the two in ambition and accessibility, and its hotel format makes it a stronger choice for overnight stays built around dinner. See our full Langho restaurants guide and our full Langho hotels guide for broader context on the area.
Other regional fine-dining options worth knowing: Gidleigh Park in Chagford offers a similar country-house format in Devon; Restaurant Andrew Fairlie in Auchterarder is the Scottish equivalent for hotel-anchored fine dining. For Modern British cooking in London at the same price tier, CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ritz Restaurant are the obvious reference points, though neither offers the overnight context that makes Northcote's format work.
Practical Details
Reservations: Book hard — Northcote's consistent award recognition and limited covers make tables scarce, particularly at weekends. Aim for at least four to six weeks ahead for weekend dinner; midweek has more availability. The Chef's Table requires advance request. Budget: ££££ per head; wine pricing is mid-range relative to the list's depth, with a £50 corkage fee if you bring your own bottle. Dining options: À la carte, tasting menus, and chef's table formats are available; Obsession festival runs in January and February. Getting there: The restaurant is at Northcote Road, Langho, Blackburn BB6 8BE, just off the A59. Also nearby: Langho bars, Langho wineries, and Langho experiences.
Pearl Picks Nearby
- Moor Hall in Aughton , two Michelin stars, the regional step up
- L'Enclume in Cartmel , three Michelin stars, the North's benchmark
- Hand and Flowers in Marlow , two Michelin stars in a pub format
- Midsummer House in Cambridge , comparable country-house register
- Opheem in Birmingham , Michelin-starred alternative further south
- hide and fox in Saltwood , smaller-scale Michelin-starred option
- 33 The Homend in Ledbury , Modern British at a lower price tier
- The Fat Duck in Bray , if theatrical Modern British is the goal
Compare Northcote
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Northcote | ££££ | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ | — |
| The Ledbury | ££££ | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Northcote in Langho?
There is no direct like-for-like competitor in the immediate Ribble Valley area at this award level. For Michelin-starred modern British cooking in Northern England more broadly, L'Enclume in Cartmel and Moor Hall near Ormskirk are the most cited comparisons. Northcote's advantage is its combination of hotel, extensive wine list with 2,540 bottles, and the annual Obsession festival, which neither alternative replicates in the same format.
Can Northcote accommodate groups?
Groups are feasible given Northcote operates as a hotel-restaurant with multiple dining formats, including a Chef's Table room. For larger parties, check the venue's official channels to discuss private dining options. Weekend availability is limited, so group bookings need more lead time than a standard table for two.
Can I eat at the bar at Northcote?
The venue data does not confirm a bar dining option, so assume the standard dining room or Chef's Table are the primary formats. The glass-walled Chef's Table room is the notable alternative to the main L-shaped dining room if you want a different setting. Confirm specifics when booking.
How far ahead should I book Northcote?
Book at least four to six weeks ahead for weekends, and two to three weeks for midweek. Northcote holds a Michelin star, scores 87 on La Liste 2026, and consistently ranks in the top 40 most commented-on destinations outside London in annual diners' polls, which keeps demand steady. The Obsession festival in January and February books up significantly faster.
Is Northcote good for a special occasion?
Yes, straightforwardly. The combination of a Michelin star, a 40-year track record, tableside service described in diners' surveys as polished and properly paced, and the option of tasting menus or a Chef's Table format makes it a reliable special-occasion choice. The hotel setting also makes an overnight stay practical if you want to commit to the wine list.
Is Northcote worth the price?
At ££££ pricing, you are getting a Michelin-starred kitchen with over four decades of consistency, a 635-selection wine list with 2,540 bottles in inventory, and a front-of-house operation that diners repeatedly single out for its quality. For fine dining in Northern England at this level, the value comparison is favourable. If you want a more casual spend in the same region, the forthcoming brasserie conversion under the new ownership may offer a lower entry point, but that is not yet operational.
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