The Fat Duck

British·
££££
·
Silver Award
·

SquareMeal Review of The Fat Duck

Silver Award

Given the reputation of this iconic, genre-defining three star restaurant, The Fat Duck is remarkably unshowy from the outside. The 16th century facade is almost entirely unmarked, save for a plaque and a wrought iron hanging sign with a duck foot on it. Head through the door and you’re into Heston’s world - a rustic, timber-framed dining room with immaculate white clothed tables on a royal blue carpet. Even during the day, shutters over the windows limit the natural light within, keeping the room moody and dream-like, and bracing you for sensory manipulation.

Much has been written about The Fat Duck over the years. Its legacy and reputation are beyond question, but what of The Fat Duck in 2024? Lunch recalls a mixture of old hits - the Sound of the Sea, for example, where cured fish is consumed to a soundtrack of gulls and breaking tidal waves - and new, like a cheese and pickle course where a washed-rind cheese reveals itself to be a tiny cheesecake with accompanying fruit salad ‘pickle’. Casting aside the sometimes challenging and boundary-pushing nature of the cooking, there’s very little to fault among the eleven courses we ate during lunch, with highlights including a beautifully cooked scallop with leek and a luxurious main of beef fillet, smoked anchovy and veal sweetbread. Faultless is perhaps the least you expect when the full tasting menu removes £395 a head from your bank account, before drink and service.

On price, The Fat Duck presents an interesting conundrum - a restaurant that is totally unique and always full, but charges what some will consider an inexcusable amount of money. Aside from the excellent food, staff are utterly exceptional - perhaps the best we’ve encountered anywhere. They’re tasked with a balancing act of letting you discover the menu for yourself, but providing guidance and help wherever necessary. Nowhere was this more evident than when one guest, confused about which parts of the sweets he could eat, was gently advised not to eat tin foil.

Perhaps more than the food, it is the experience and service that makes The Fat Duck truly special, but as an experience, your mileage may depend entirely on the price. Is The Fat Duck the best food you’ll find in the country? No, but if you can stomach the exorbitant prices, it is unquestionably something you’ll never forget.

Good to know

Average Price
££££ - Over £80
Cuisines
British
Ambience
Fine dining, Fun, Luxury, Quiet conversation, Quirky, Traditional, Unique, Widely spaced tables
Awards
Three Michelin stars
Food Occasions
Dinner, Lunch
Perfect for
Birthdays, Celebrations, Romantic, Special occasions
Food Hygiene Rating

About

The Fat Duck is a three-Michelin-starred restaurant by Heston Blummenthal who is best known for pushing the culinary boundaries with his experimental cooking. Located in Bray, Berkshire, The Fat Duck finds its home inside a 16th-century building, originally opening in 1995 where it used to resemble something a little more similar to a French Bistro. Over the years, Heston has added his special signature touch, with the restaurant receiving its first Michelin star in 1999, its second in 2002 and its third and final star in 2004 – the ultimate culinary accolade. In 2006, Heston received an OBE for his contribution to British gastronomy.  

The first thing to know about eating at The Fat Duck, is that it’s not a meal, but an experience. Heston’s unique approach to cooking is centred around science and experimentation with the aim of changing diners’ perceptions of food. Booking a ticket to experience the restaurant entitles guests to enjoy either The Anthology Menu or The Fable Tree Menu which features plenty of classic Fat Duck dishes. Signatures include Heston’s nitro-poached green tea and lime mousse, red cabbage gazpacho with pommery mustard ice cream, ‘Sound of the sea’ featuring tapioca sand, sea vegetables and foam, while the grand finalee might be a selection of petit fours named ‘Like a kid in a sweetshop’. 

Far from simply a gimmick, The Fat Duck has stood the test of time and is one of Berkshire’s most famous - if not the most famous - dining destination. The restaurant plays on playful memories and adventure from your childhood and the unexpected dishes are designed to bring back that awe and magic you experience as a child. 

The Fat Duck is a fairly intimate restaurant and can only cater for tables of 2, 3, 4 or 6. It recommends that diners allow around three hours in which to enjoy the full dining experience. 


FAQs

Does The Fat Duck have a Michelin star?

The Fat Duck has three Michelin stars.

Helpful? 0

Does The Fat Duck have a dress code?

No, The Fat Duck does not have a dress code. but some diners may opt for a business-casual outfit due to the nature of the restaurant.

Helpful? 0

Who owns The Fat Duck?

The Fat Duck is owned by celebrity chef, Heston Blumenthal.

Helpful? 0

The Fat Duck is featured in

Location

1 High Street, Bray, Berkshire, SL6 2AQ
Website

Opening Times

Lunch
Mon Closed
Tue 12:00-13:15
Wed 12:00-13:15
Thu 12:00-13:15
Fri 12:00-13:15
Sat 12:00-13:15
Sun Closed
Dinner
Mon Closed
Tue 19:00-20:15
Wed 19:00-20:15
Thu 19:00-20:15
Fri 19:00-20:15
Sat 19:00-20:15
Sun Closed

Reviews

Share your thoughts with other diners

Write a review


31 Reviews 
Food/Drink
Service
Atmosphere
Value

Al Rayah Bank

23 January 2023  
Food & Drink 0.5
Service 0.5
Atmosphere 0.5
Value 0.5
No Bollywood Activity

No Worst Rating Bollywood Activity Not Going At Not No The Fat Duck

Zanni S

24 November 2022  
Food & Drink 5
Service 5
Atmosphere 5
Value 5

Incredible!  SIX stars.  From the moment you enter The Fat Duck you are taken away from the everyday and enter a world of gastronomy that lives up to the hype.  Yes it is expensive but the care and attention to detail make it an experience to savour and delight.  The staff were incredible, knowledgeable, interesting and interested in their guests and we were delighted with it all.

Linda W

10 April 2019  
Lives up to the hype, remarkably. Entertaining, delicious food. Eye watering prices especially the wines but glad I did it.

Graeme C

09 April 2019  
Innovative menu and exemplary service.

PETER M

05 April 2019  
Simply extraordinary in terms of quality of food and a genuine experience which leaves you elated.

Sarah M

29 March 2019  
Attention to detail with incredible extravagantly creative food and such a sweet humble location. Food is combined with all the senses. Need to leave plenty of time but it is like not like eating anywhere else - so unique.

Paul A

03 June 2018  
Food & Drink 3
Service 4
Atmosphere 3
Value 2
Style over substance
Okay, so we’ve now been to the Fat Duck. Michelin by Bookatable (or the other way round) gives it three stars and it is an experience that is not possible to compare with anywhere else we’ve eaten. But after seventeen fairly generous courses, an equivalent number of technical and visual gimmicks, sometimes over-the-top presentation, partly compensated for by the superb wines and the very accommodating and generous approach of the front of house staff and a visit to the kitchen, where Edward Cooke was running everything with much precision, not to mention the expressions of delight issuing from surrounding tables, we found ourselves disappointingly ‘unwowed’ at the end of this four hour stint of theatricality. The journey concept is perhaps a good starting point for establishing a fine dining ‘itinerary’ but even just paying lip service to each diner’s memories is impossible given the range of age groups and backgrounds, especially with the variety of nationalities in the restaurant the evening we were there. So basically what is presented is presumably Heston Blumenthal’s imagining of what might have been experienced by as many of the diners as possible and his appliance of science in the kitchen. Our impression was that once the initial conceptual stage had been accomplished, minor adaptations could be made, but, rather like our judgement of Dinner by HB, this seemed to have resulted in almost a formulaic approach, both with the dishes and the repeated and audible spiel by the waiting staff, which produced what could be likened to a production-line effect, despite the attempt to surround it all with an almost fairy-story atmosphere, the latter not really working for us given the uniform drabness of the dining room, even though we realised that this was probably deliberate so as not to have any distractions from the presentation. The thing was that, apart from the ‘Table d’hôte menu’ served as part of one of the seven imaginings of eats at various times of the day, not much resembled “real food”, with the result that one ended up trying to identify the various elements involved in the composition of the tastes discovered in the items on the stick, on the plate, on the hovering pillow and so on at any one time and consequently being quite distracted from any of the memories we might have had of our childhood holidays. And where were the fish and chips? The myriads of elements making up the production are well documented, in the Good Food Guide inter alia, but it is still worth mentioning the memories we brought away - the tongue-tingling Campari and prosecco ice lolly, the whipped butter with the coffee-tasting jam, the variety pack containing flakes and crunchy bits giving a faint taste of a full English, the school lab experiment of simultaneously hot and cold coffee which reminded us of an instant brew, the “sound of the sea” dominated by screeching seagulls and one of the fishy components being kingfish from Japan, the brilliant crab and passion fruit “99”, the super strong crab (too strong for my wife) in the Rockpool with extra crab for me in place of cucumber, the multiplicity of tastes and textures in the “boroughgroves”, a puzzling mock mock turtle, then the dishes in the evening meal sequence with tasty cuttlefish cannelloni and scallop, coq au vin, the chicken for which was from the Loire to guarantee a full texture but with rather soggy skin, the alphonso mango dessert, the whisky bottle gums digestif which was lost on us non-whisky drinkers, the floating pillow, and finally the model Fat Duck premises with sweeties. So was it value for money? Let’s just say that if it’s theatre you want then Fat Duck can’t be beaten, but for less than the total we coughed up here we could have had three meals, one at each of three restaurants within 12 miles of Bray, each of which deserves a star, and we would have come away from each one vastly more content than we were on this evening.

Sam S

24 April 2018  
The grandeur of the room at St. Pancras never fails to impress. This is the place to take out of town guests. The bar makes some mean cocktails too.

Deanne

27 March 2018  
Cooking by an accomplished chef. Setting that defines bucolic chic. Decent ales. Upscale locals and a few nomadic tourists.

MOLLY H

27 March 2018  
Beautifully fresh seafood, fantastic wine list and gorgeously quirky design makes this a fantastic places for events or weekends away.
Book a table

Visit their website

Sorry, you cannot spend SquareMeal vouchers here yet.

Other restaurants we like near The Fat Duck

Check availability