The Restaurant Guide for Wine Lovers
Cherwell Boathouse
The Cherwell Boathouse is a riverside dining room in Oxford whose classical modern-European cooking sits in front of a genuinely serious, merchant-grade cellar. The wine programme earns its standing on the depth and maturity of that buying and on a by-the-glass shortlist and half-bottle range that make the depth reachable, held back only by the absence of printed pairings against a menu whose hardest plates — oily fish and asparagus — reward a knowing choice. It will most reward the wine lover who comes to eat well by the river and wants a great list, and the person pouring it, to lead the way.
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OXTWO
Oxford, Oxfordshire
Small plates and charcoal cooking, wine bar
OXTWO is an Oxford small-plates and live-fire wine bar whose easy room fronts a genuinely serious, wide-ranging cellar with a rotating fine-and-rare Black Book. The wine programme earns its standing on that depth and on an unusually generous by-the-glass offer — four pour sizes, Sherry, Port and much of the sweet shelf by the glass — which turns a grazing menu into a chance to drink widely and well. It will most reward the curious wine lover who wants to eat lightly, taste broadly, and let a great list rather than a single bottle lead the evening.
Read the assessmentPompette
Oxford, Oxfordshire
French bistro, low-intervention wine-led
Pompette is a Summertown French bistro whose daily-changing carte is the setting for one of Oxford's most serious and characterful wine lists. Deep in low-intervention France and broadened across Europe, California and the Jura, unusually generous by the glass and complete from Champagne to a full sweet-and-fortified tail, it turns a bistro meal into a wine lover's evening. It will most reward the curious drinker who wants range, discovery and grand bottles by the glass, and who takes the wine as seriously as the kitchen does.
Read the assessmentOrwells
Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire
Modern British fine dining
Orwells is a chef-owned restaurant near Henley serving a concise, produce-led seasonal menu of Cornish fish, chalk-stream trout and single-farm meats. Its cellar is the draw for a wine lover — an unusually deep and personal list that sets the classics of Bordeaux, Burgundy and Tuscany beside grower, natural and skin-contact wines and fine English sparkling, wanting only a published by-the-glass range and a dessert-wine shelf to be complete. It will reward anyone who loves to read a great list and choose for themselves, and anyone happy to lean on a knowledgeable floor team to draw the best from it.
Read the assessmentNo.1 Ship Street
Oxford, Oxfordshire
Modern British brasserie, seafood and dry-aged beef
No.1 Ship Street is a central Oxford brasserie built on seafood and dry-aged British beef, with an AA Rosette kitchen. Its bin-numbered list is the most ambitious in this part of the city — deep, broad and generous by the glass, from an accessible pour to grand cru Burgundy and a full Port, Sherry and Madeira tail — and it answers even the menu's hardest plates. It will reward a curious wine lover who wants range and cellar depth without being forced to the top of the list to drink well.
Read the assessmentArbequina
Oxford, Oxfordshire
Spanish small plates, natural wine
Arbequina is a small Cowley Road tapas restaurant whose all-organic, biodynamic and natural wine list is built around one of Oxford's best dry-Sherry-by-the-glass corners. The wine programme earns its standing on that Sherry range and on how neatly the whole list meets Spanish small plates — the salt-cured, the fried and the vegetable dishes each answered on their own terms — held back only by a narrow, vintage-light offer and no Champagne. It will most reward the drinker who comes to graze Spanish plates, wants to explore Sherry by the glass, and likes their wine made with the lightest possible hand.
Read the assessmentThe Nest at The Feathers
Woodstock, Oxfordshire
Modern European
The Nest is the dining room of a Woodstock townhouse hotel, cooking a seasonal Modern European menu of good British produce. The wine programme reaches well beyond the setting — a deep, wide cellar closing on a serious sweet-and-fortified shelf, with a by-the-glass shortlist that runs across every colour and answers the menu's hardest plates without forcing a bottle. It will most reward the curious drinker who likes a great list to explore by the glass and does not mind reaching for the fine bins when the occasion is worth it.
Read the assessmentGees
Oxford, Oxfordshire
Modern British and Mediterranean, wood-fired
Gees is a long-standing North Oxford restaurant cooking a seasonal, wood-fired Mediterranean and modern British menu. Its compact, France-led list is genuinely curated, strong by the glass and unusually well finished with small-measure Sherries, Port and sweet wines, and it answers the menu's hardest fish plates rather than dodging them. It will suit a wine lover who likes to drink well across the middle of a thoughtful list without paying for trophy labels.
Read the assessmentBranca
Oxford, Oxfordshire
Italian/Mediterranean brasserie, wood-fired pizza
Branca is a long-standing Oxford brasserie cooking Italian and Mediterranean food across pasta, wood-fired pizza and the grill. The wine programme earns its place on a broad, glass-led list that gives a table real flexibility and on a fortified and pudding-wine shelf better than most brasseries bother with, held a little short by buying that is competent rather than pointed and by the absence of any printed pairing steer. It will most reward the relaxed diner who wants to drink widely by the glass across a varied, informal menu without studying a list.
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