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Windsor & Eton

Restaurants in Windsor & Eton

  1. Mozzarella Joes

    For quick eats, this bright and airy pizza joint in the station is a good bet with simple wooden tables, a good choice of tasty pizzas, pastas and salads and a friendly attitude to children.

    reviewed

  2. A

    Crooked House Tea Rooms

    This little black-and-white house looks like it's had too much to drink. Enjoy a light lunch, a Royal cream tea (tea and scones with clotted cream and jam) or dinner (bring your own wine). A member of the Slow Food movement, which advocates healthy eating, this adorable restaurant sources its produce locally.

    reviewed

  3. Waterside Inn

    Voted among the world’s top 50 restaurants, this Michel Roux establishment serves French haute cuisine in a rustic riverside environment.

    reviewed

  4. Riverside Brasserie

    This is Blumenthal’s pitch to the less adventurous (and possibly less loaded) diner, with a more conventionally British menu, though this is still a real experience. Tuck into pork belly, its most famous dish, while overlooking the river, secure in the knowledge that every reservation covers a table inside as well as one by the river, for those unpredictable English downpours. Note that the Brasserie is closed for six months of the year, and booking is advised for the six months it is open.

    reviewed

  5. Fat Duck

    The Fat Duck is the baby of self-taught chef, Heston Blumenthal, and regularly tops various polls of the best restaurants in the world, so eating here is an experience to be cherished, even despite a brief closure in 2009 following a mystery outbreak of illness among diners there (nothing amiss was found with the food). Blumenthal’s fascination with the science of taste means menus include incredible (and sometimes insane) combinations, experimenting with nitrogen (in nitro-green tea and lime mousse) and bizarre taste combinations such as sardine on toast sorbet, oysters and passionfruit, salmon poached with liquorice and smoked bacon and egg ice cream. It’s all delicious…

    reviewed

  6. B

    Tower

    Giant windows with views over the castle give this place an immediate allure, as do the grand chandeliers and high ceilings. The menu is brasserie style with a choice of classic British cuisine, featuring grills, fish and steaks simply and perfectly done. It's also a good spot to sample the finest of English institutions: afternoon tea.

    reviewed

  7. C

    Green Olive

    A great spot for a light lunch, Green Olive dishes up generous portions of traditional Greek mezedhes in bright, simple surroundings, as well as some interesting dessert choices.

    reviewed

  8. D

    Gilbey’s

    Small but perfectly formed, this restaurant is one of the area’s finest. Terracotta tiling and a sunny courtyard garden and conservatory give Gilbey’s a Continental cafe feel, complimented by a superb modern British menu. Expect the likes of chicken with wild mushroom risotto, and roast lamb, the dishes almost surpassed by the extensive choice of wines.

    reviewed

  9. E

    House on the Bridge

    This formal, elegant restaurant overlooks the Thames and the castle.

    reviewed

  10. F

    Gilbey's Bar & Restaurant

    This attractive restaurant has a courtyard garden and good wines.

    reviewed

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  12. G

    Crooked House of Windsor

    This little black-and-white house looks like it's had too much to drink. Enjoy a light lunch, a Royal cream tea (tea and scones with clotted cream and jam) or dinner (bring your own wine). A member of the Slow Food movement, which advocates healthy eating, this adorable restaurant sources its produce locally.

    reviewed

  13. H

    Al Fassia

    An atmospheric Moroccan restaurant with traditional decor and menu.

    reviewed