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    Restaurant in Milborne Port, United Kingdom

    The Clockspire

    590Pearl Points

    Michelin-noted cooking; £30 lunch is the play.

    The Clockspire, Restaurant in Milborne Port

    About The Clockspire

    The Clockspire holds a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025) and a 4.8 Google rating from 355 reviews, making it the most credentialled restaurant in its part of Dorset. Housed in a converted 1864 Victorian schoolhouse with a striking interior, it delivers creative Modern British cooking at £££, with a £30 three-course set menu available at lunch and early evening. Book two to three weeks ahead for weekends.

    The Verdict

    The Clockspire is the most architecturally arresting restaurant in its part of Dorset, and the cooking matches the setting more often than not. Holding a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, with a Google rating of 4.8 from 355 reviews and a Star Wine List White Star recognition, this converted 1864 schoolhouse in Milborne Port is a credible destination for Modern British cooking at a £££ price point. If you are already familiar with The Clockspire and are deciding whether to return, the answer is yes — the kitchen has enough range and the set-menu value is strong enough to reward a second visit on different terms.

    The Setting

    The building does the first work before any food arrives. The Clockspire occupies a vast gabled Victorian schoolhouse, complete with stone arches, a cloistered frontage, and the ornate clockspire that gives the restaurant its name. Inside, the dining room runs to soaring raftered ceilings and ornate chandeliers, offset by pastel shades, polished concrete floors, and considered floral displays. It is a deliberate juxtaposition: ecclesiastical grandeur and contemporary restraint. Few rooms in the South West deliver this kind of visual impact without lapsing into pastiche, and this one earns its drama honestly, given the building dates to 1864 and the refurbishment has been executed with visible care. If you came the first time for the room, the room will hold up.

    The Cooking

    Chef Luke Sutton works in an intelligent, seasonal register that sits comfortably in the upper tier of regional Modern British cooking. The approach is creative without being restless: BBQ English asparagus paired with wild garlic sauce in a mushroom raviolo starter, Cornish stone bass with spring vegetable chowder, sprouting broccoli, caramelised apple and vermouth sauce, and Creedy Carver duck breast with pickled radish, haricot bean purée and spiced sauce. These are dishes that show technique and sourcing discipline. On the more classic end, sirloin steak with portobello mushroom, tomato chutney and triple-cooked chips holds its place on the menu with confidence. Desserts receive the same attention: a crème brûlée custard tart with poached pear and caramelised white chocolate is the kind of execution that separates a Michelin Plate kitchen from a capable but unremarkable one.

    Sunday roasts have drawn particular notice, with cider-brined pork loin and rump of beef with slow-cooked ox cheek among the reported options. If you have only eaten here mid-week, Sunday lunch is worth the return visit on its own terms.

    Value and Booking

    The clearest value signal here is the £30 three-course set menu, available at lunch and early evening. At that price point, with Michelin Plate-level cooking and a wine list that earns a White Star from Star Wine List, this is strong value by any comparison to similarly credentialled restaurants. The à la carte pushes into fuller £££ territory but remains positioned well below London equivalents at a comparable award level. For a first return visit, the set menu is the rational choice; for a celebratory occasion, the full à la carte with the wine list is where the restaurant's ambition is most visible.

    Booking difficulty is moderate. This is not a restaurant you can expect to walk into on a Saturday evening, but it does not require the three-month lead time of the most pressurised Michelin-listed rooms. Two to three weeks ahead is a sensible planning window for weekends; weekday tables are generally more accessible.

    Service

    Service is described consistently as slightly formal but efficient, with a personal quality that feels genuinely attentive rather than rehearsed. For a returning diner, this matters: a room this size with this level of architectural theatre can sometimes feel impersonal, but the team appears to calibrate well. The wine list is globe-straddling in scope and includes a decent selection by the glass and half bottle, which is practical for those who want range without committing to a full bottle at each course.

    How The Clockspire Sits in Its Location

    Milborne Port sits in the Somerset-Dorset border country, close to Sherborne, in a part of England that has historically lacked the restaurant density of the South West's more visited corners. The Clockspire is the kind of restaurant that gives a small town genuine culinary credibility: it draws diners from the wider region, not just the village, and it does so on the basis of consistent cooking and an extraordinary building rather than marketing. For visitors staying in Sherborne or passing through on the way to the Jurassic Coast, this is the obvious dinner booking. For those exploring what Modern British cooking looks like outside London and the obvious destination villages, it is a useful data point that quality at this level is achievable in places that rarely make the shortlist. Pair it with a stay in the area and use our full Milborne Port hotels guide to plan accordingly. You can also explore the wider area through our full Milborne Port restaurants guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Book two to three weeks ahead for weekends; weekdays are more accessible. Booking difficulty is moderate. Budget: £££ per head; a £30 three-course set menu is available at lunch and early evening. Dress: No stated dress code, but the room's formality and the level of cooking suggest smart casual is appropriate. Address: Gainsborough, Milborne Port, Sherborne DT9 5BA. Awards: Michelin Plate (2024, 2025); Star Wine List White Star. Google Rating: 4.8 from 355 reviews.

    If This Is Your Category

    Modern British cooking in converted or architecturally significant spaces is well-represented across the UK. For comparison and context, Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton operates at a higher price tier with multi-Michelin credentials, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford offers a comparable country-house experience in the South West. Hand and Flowers in Marlow is the obvious reference point for serious cooking in a non-metropolitan setting at a more accessible price tier. For Modern British at the highest London level, CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ritz Restaurant operate in a different financial register entirely. hide and fox in Saltwood and 33 The Homend in Ledbury are worth noting for those who prefer a smaller room and tighter menu at a similar price point. Midsummer House in Cambridge, Opheem in Birmingham, Restaurant Andrew Fairlie in Auchterarder, Moor Hall in Aughton, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and The Fat Duck in Bray all represent points on the spectrum above The Clockspire in terms of accolades, but none of them are in Milborne Port, and for what the region offers, this restaurant is the clear benchmark.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How far ahead should I book The Clockspire?

    Book two to three weeks ahead for weekend tables. Weekday availability is easier to secure, and the £30 three-course set lunch at this Michelin Plate venue makes a midweek visit a low-risk way to trial the kitchen. Walk-in chances are limited given the building's fixed capacity in a converted Victorian schoolhouse.

    Is The Clockspire worth the price?

    At £££ per head for dinner, it sits at the upper end for the Somerset-Dorset border area, but the Michelin Plate recognition and the quality of Luke Sutton's seasonal cooking support that pricing. The clearest value case is the £30 three-course set menu at lunch or early evening, which delivers Michelin-noted cooking at a price that removes most of the risk. If you're comparing against a London equivalent at the same award level, The Clockspire is considerably cheaper.

    Is The Clockspire good for solo dining?

    The venue data doesn't confirm a dedicated bar or counter seating, so solo dining depends on table availability and how the room is configured on any given service. The service style is described as personal and attentive, which works in a solo diner's favour. Worth calling ahead to ask about solo table options before booking, particularly for weekend evenings.

    What should I wear to The Clockspire?

    The setting is architecturally grand, with soaring raftered ceilings and chandeliers, but the décor also includes polished concrete floors and contemporary flourishes, which keeps the atmosphere from tipping into stiff formality. The service is described as slightly formal but not starchy. Dressing one step above casual is a reasonable call; you won't be out of place in a jacket, but a tie would be overkill.

    What are alternatives to The Clockspire in Milborne Port?

    Milborne Port itself has limited direct competition at this level, which is part of The Clockspire's appeal for the area. Sherborne and the wider Dorset-Somerset corridor have country pubs and inns offering solid cooking, but none currently hold Michelin recognition at the same tier. If you're willing to travel further, the region opens up more options, but for Michelin Plate Modern British within easy reach of Sherborne, The Clockspire is the clear reference point.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at The Clockspire?

    The venue data doesn't confirm a tasting menu format; the documented options are an à la carte menu and a £30 three-course set menu at lunch and early evening. Luke Sutton's cooking is described as intricate and highly worked, so if a tasting format exists, the kitchen has the technical capability to support it. Confirm directly with the restaurant before booking on that basis.

    Location

    Gainsborough, Milborne Port, Sherborne DT9 5BA, United Kingdom

    Milborne Port, United Kingdom

    Compare The Clockspire

    The Complete Picture: The Clockspire and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    The ClockspireModern BritishModerate
    CORE by Clare SmythModern BritishMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional BritishMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in Milborne Port for this tier.

    Also Consider

    How It Compares

    The Clockspire sits at £££ with a Michelin Plate, which places it several tiers below the ££££ London rooms it is sometimes mentioned alongside. CORE by Clare Smyth and The Ledbury operate at a fundamentally different price and accolade level, both hold multiple Michelin stars and require considerably more advance planning to book. Dinner by Heston Blumenthal shares a Modern British focus but is a large-format hotel restaurant in London with a price tag to match. These are not direct competitors; they are reference points for understanding what the upper ceiling of the category looks like.

    The more useful comparison is what The Clockspire delivers relative to its regional context. Within the South West and comparable destination-village restaurants, it offers a room and a level of cooking that is difficult to match at £££. Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library and Restaurant Gordon Ramsay are ££££ London propositions with a full formal-dining structure that The Clockspire does not attempt to replicate, and does not need to, given the different guest profile and price point.

    If you are deciding between The Clockspire and a London alternative for a special occasion, the calculus is straightforward: London rooms at ££££ will offer more service depth and greater accolade density, but The Clockspire offers a setting that most London rooms cannot match and a price point that keeps the evening rational. For a returning diner weighing up whether to revisit or try something further afield, The Clockspire's £30 set menu and the Star Wine List-recognised wine program make it the stronger value proposition over any of its ££££ comparators unless accolade-chasing is the specific goal.

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