The Restaurant Guide for Wine Lovers
Clachan Grill
Clachan Grill is a relaxed, locally sourced Scottish grill on Royal Deeside with a short, honestly priced wine list. The programme sets out only to be easy company for a grill dinner, and within that limit it succeeds — a crisp unoaked white for the fish, a soft red for the steak, and fair prices throughout. It will most suit the diner who wants an unfussy, good-value glass with a plate of Scottish produce rather than a list to explore.
The full assessment — the wine programme, the pairings that lift a plate, and how the room reads for a wine lover — is for subscribers.
Subscribe for full access Already subscribed? Sign inMore in Aberdeenshire
The Clunie Dining Room, The Fife Arms
Braemar, Aberdeenshire
Scottish country-house hotel dining
The Clunie Dining Room is the fireside restaurant of a luxury Highland hotel, cooking seasonal Deeside produce for a short, focused menu. Its wine programme rests on one of the deepest cellars in Scotland — vast in reach, serious in the buying, and generous enough by the glass that even the difficult plates are genuinely provided for. It will most reward the wine lover who comes ready to explore, leans on the sommelier, and is content to pay luxury-hotel prices for the privilege.
Read the assessmentBanchory Lodge
Banchory, Aberdeenshire
Scottish riverside hotel dining
Banchory Lodge is a riverside country-house hotel in Royal Deeside cooking an Italian-inflected menu on Scottish produce. Its wine programme is a well-organised, plainly-communicated hotel list — banded by taste, generous by the glass, with a premium cellar step-up and vegan, organic and alcohol-free choices — that answers the menu's hardest anchovy and oily-fish plates from the glass pour, even if it lacks a dessert or fortified wine and a merchant's depth. It will most reward the hotel guest who wants to drink well and easily, guided by clear signposting rather than a sommelier's cellar.
Read the assessmentThe Boat Inn
Aboyne, Aberdeenshire
Gastropub
The Boat Inn is a busy all-day gastropub in an eighteenth-century coaching inn on the River Dee at Aboyne, built around brunch, burgers, fried fish and curries. Its short, commercial wine list will not elevate a meal, but it is fairly priced, clearly presented and offers a sensible by-the-glass choice that covers the food honestly. It will suit families and casual diners who want a good, uncomplicated glass with their plate rather than a list to explore.
Read the assessment