Manchester, Liverpool, and the Peak District Restaurants

Dining options in Manchester and Liverpool vary from smart cafés offering Modern British, Continental, or global fare to world-class international restaurants for all budgets. Manchester has one of Britain's biggest Chinatowns, and locals also favor the 40-odd Bangladeshi, Pakistani, and Indian restaurants along Wilmslow Road in Rusholme, a mile south of the city center, known as Curry Mile.

One local dish that has survived is Bakewell pudding (never called "tart" in these areas, as its imitations are elsewhere in England). Served with custard or cream, the pudding—a pastry covered with jam and a thin layer of almond-flavor filling—is a real joy of visiting Bakewell.

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  • 1. Stones

    $$$

    This charming restaurant with its riverside terrace serves top-notch Modern British food. The tasting menus (with or without a paired wine flight) take regional flavors and infuse them with contemporary flair.

    1C Dale Rd., Matlock, Derbyshire, DE4 3LT, England
    01629-56061

    Known For

    • Bespoke vegetarian dishes
    • Alfresco dining
    • Emphasis on seasonality

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun. and Mon. No lunch Tues.
  • 2. Where the Light Gets In

    $$$$

    Much-loved by food critics, this groundbreaking "New Northern" restaurant in a former coffee warehouse offers a no-choice tasting menu (£95) that depends on “the day’s catch, harvest, and slaughter.” Regular ingredients include Macclesfield trout, cured Middle White pork, and salt-baked beets in delicious combinations; much of the produce comes from the restaurant's own farm.

    7 Rostron Brow, Manchester, Manchester, SK1 1JY, England
    0161-477–5744

    Known For

    • Immense creativity
    • Excellent wine flights
    • Hip atmosphere

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Tues. No lunch Wed.–Fri.
  • 3. Wreckfish Bistro

    $$ | City Centre

    Part of the same crowd-funded group as Manchester’s Hispi Bistro and KALA Bistro, this hip spot serves up seriously good modern global cuisine from an open kitchen in a once derelict building in the Ropewalks district. As with its sister restaurants, think excellent local products taken to the next level through pairings with unusual vegetables including heritage tomatoes and hispi cabbage. Breakfast is great, while Sunday lunch can be as traditional or as inventive as you like.

    Slater St., Liverpool, Liverpool, L1 4BS, England
    0151-707–1960

    Known For

    • Great value lunch and early dinner menu
    • Fantastic service
    • Traditional and more inventive Sunday lunches
  • 4. Campagna at the Creameries

    $$ | South Manchester

    This airy suburban dining room in a former bakery with polished concrete floors, grey walls, wooden benches, trailing foliage, and chalkboard menus is presided over by local chef Mary-Ellen McTague (who cooked under Heston Blumenthal at the legendary Fat Duck for many years). It offers southern European comfort food based on seasonal produce; think the likes of cucumber, fennel, tarragon, and ricotta salata or fazzoletti with walnut sauce.

    406 Wilbraham Rd., Manchester, Manchester, M21 0SD, England
    0161-312–8328

    Known For

    • Italian Sunday lunches
    • Great kids' menu
    • Airy minimalist decor
  • 5. Lerpwl

    $$

    Ambitious and groundbreaking, this restaurant was launched by two brothers who leapt to fame for their award-winning Marram Grass restaurant in the unlikely setting of a holiday park in Wales (the name means "Liverpool" in Welsh). Although you can dine a la carte here, the focus is really on the tasting menus (£90), which embrace sustainably sourced shellfish including Menai Strait oysters, homegrown aged pork from Anglesey, and other prime ingredients from small local producers. The atmosphere is very grown-up, with no children under 10 allowed.

    Britannia Pavilion, Liverpool, Liverpool, L3 4AD, England
    0151-909–6241

    Known For

    • Waterfront location
    • Oyster bar overlooking the shared kitchen
    • Innovative cocktails in Margot’s Bar

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Mon. and Tues.
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

  • 6. Wood

    $$$$ | City Centre

    The first opening by former MasterChef winner Simon Wood, this scene-setting restaurant in the pedestrianized First Street arts and leisure complex serves up high-end, creative British tasting menus from an open kitchen. Think adventurous ingredients such as red deer, Douglas fir, and crapaudine beetroot combined with modern takes on traditional dishes like neeps and tatties (Scottish mash).

    Jack Rosenthal St., Manchester, Manchester, M15 4RA, England
    0161-236–5211

    Known For

    • Meat-heavy menu
    • Multicourse tasting menus
    • Wonderful staff

    Restaurant Details

    Rate Includes: Closed Sun.–Tues. No lunch Wed. and Thurs.

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