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    Restaurant in Wansford, United Kingdom

    Prévost @ Haycock Manor

    440pts

    Tasting menus worth the A1 detour.

    Prévost @ Haycock Manor, Restaurant in Wansford

    About Prévost @ Haycock Manor

    Prévost at Haycock Manor is the strongest fine-dining option in the Peterborough corridor, holding a Michelin Plate in a light-filled orangery inside a restored 16th-century coaching inn. Set menus of up to eight courses showcase precise, ingredient-led cooking. Note the kitchen team changed in 2024 — book ahead regardless, as tables are hard to secure.

    Verdict

    Prévost at Haycock Manor is the strongest fine-dining option in the Peterborough corridor and deserves serious consideration from anyone driving the A1 between London and the North. The Michelin Plate recognition (2024) reflects cooking that punches well above what you'd expect from a village-hotel restaurant: technically precise sauces and consommés, honest sourcing, and a set-menu format that delivers real value at the ££££ price point. Book it for a long lunch or a destination dinner — and book early, because getting a table is harder than the rural postcode suggests.

    Why Wansford?

    Prévost matters to Wansford in a way that goes beyond one good restaurant in a nice hotel. The village sits just off the A1 near Burghley House, one of England's great Elizabethan estates, and the Haycock Manor itself is a restored 16th-century coaching inn that has served travellers on this road for centuries. When Lee Clarke relocated Prévost from Peterborough city centre in 2021, he turned Wansford into a genuine food destination rather than just a pretty stop. The move upgraded both the setting and the cooking — early visitors noted they were 'blown away by the slickness of it all' and that the restaurant felt 'extremely exciting' for a venue of its size and location. For food-focused visitors to the Burghley House area, or anyone based within an hour's drive, Prévost now anchors the region's serious dining options in a way that few rural restaurants manage. See our full Wansford restaurants guide for the broader picture, and if you're staying overnight, our Wansford hotels guide covers accommodation options including the Haycock Manor itself.

    The Restaurant

    The dining room sits in the hotel's orangery, a light-filled space with French windows opening onto gardens. The decorative scheme , birdcage chandeliers, pergolas, a faux olive tree dressed in fairylights , is theatrical without being overbearing, and the stone-walled hotel interior leading to it gives the progression from arrival to table a sense of occasion. This is not a stuffy formal dining room, but it is a considered one.

    The menu format gives you real choice: three courses or a tasting menu of up to eight courses, both seasonally adjusted. The three-course option has historically represented strong value given the extras brought to table , multiple snacks, excellent sourdough from Oxfordshire's Ampersand Dairy, freely replenished. The cooking shows clear technical confidence: sauces and consommés in particular have drawn consistent praise, with dishes like a runner bean and elderflower consommé and a roast-beef jus standing out as examples of kitchen focus on the fundamentals rather than decorative complexity. Sourcing is specific and traceable , King's Lynn shrimps, Jersey Royals, Longhorn short rib , which signals kitchen investment in ingredient relationships rather than commodity buying.

    One important note for 2024 onwards: the kitchen team has changed. Lee Clarke and head chef Sam Nash (formerly of L'Enclume in Cartmel) have moved on. The kitchen is now led by Rikki Hughes, formerly head chef at 263 Preston before it became Aven. A Michelin review update is pending. This is relevant to your booking decision: the Michelin Plate currently reflects the previous team's cooking, and the new direction is unreviewed. If you are booking specifically to track the Michelin trajectory, you are booking into a transition. If you want to experience the room, the format, and the sourcing philosophy under a new chef, that is a different and arguably more interesting proposition , particularly for food explorers who enjoy catching a kitchen mid-evolution. For comparison on what an established chef-driven rural restaurant looks like at the next level, see Moor Hall in Aughton or Gidleigh Park in Chagford.

    Service under the previous regime was described as abundant and eager , young staff who animated rather than stiffened the room. The drinks list is lengthy with good by-the-glass options, though the wine list annotation is minimal, so confident navigators will find more here than hesitant ones. If wine depth matters to you, it is worth asking for guidance rather than relying on the list's own signposting.

    How It Compares

    Know Before You Go

    • Price range: ££££
    • Awards: Michelin Plate (2024) , under the previous kitchen team; new review pending
    • Kitchen: Now led by Rikki Hughes; Lee Clarke and Sam Nash have departed
    • Format: Set menus only , three courses or tasting menu up to 8 courses
    • Setting: Orangery dining room within the Haycock Manor Hotel, Wansford
    • Address: The Haycock Manor Hotel, Wansford, Peterborough PE8 6JA
    • Google rating: 4.8 (257 reviews)
    • Booking difficulty: Hard , reserve well in advance
    • Nearest landmark: Burghley House, just off the A1
    • Also in Wansford: Bars · Wineries · Experiences

    FAQs

    What should a first-timer know about Prévost @ Haycock Manor?

    • Prévost operates on a set-menu format only , there is no à la carte. Come prepared to commit to either a three-course or multi-course tasting menu.
    • The restaurant is inside the Haycock Manor Hotel in Wansford, a small village just off the A1 near Peterborough. It is a destination venue, not a walk-in option.
    • The kitchen team changed in 2024: the previous chef (who earned the Michelin Plate) has moved on, and new head chef Rikki Hughes is now in charge. The Michelin review has not yet been updated.
    • At ££££ pricing with a Google rating of 4.8 across 257 reviews, the room and experience track well even in transition. First-timers should factor in the kitchen change when setting expectations.
    • Book well ahead. Tables are hard to secure despite the rural location.

    Is Prévost @ Haycock Manor worth the price?

    • At ££££, Prévost delivers a Michelin-recognised experience in a hotel-restaurant format that historically offered strong value for its tier , particularly on the three-course menu, where extras and snacks substantially increased the perceived value.
    • The current kitchen is unreviewed by Michelin following the chef change, which introduces some uncertainty. If you are calibrating the price against a guaranteed Michelin standard, wait for the updated review.
    • If you are comparing ££££ rural fine dining in the UK, Prévost sits below the price floor of London equivalents like Restaurant Gordon Ramsay in London or Waterside Inn in Bray, which makes the price-to-experience ratio more favourable if you're travelling from outside London.
    • The 4.8 Google score across 257 reviews suggests consistent satisfaction at the current price point.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Prévost @ Haycock Manor?

    • The tasting menu (up to 8 courses) is where the kitchen's technical range is most visible , sauces, consommés, and the progression of courses have been cited as highlights in Michelin's own notes.
    • The three-course option has historically been the value play, with multiple snacks and extras bringing it closer to the tasting menu experience than the price difference suggests.
    • For food explorers specifically interested in seeing a new kitchen team find its voice, the tasting menu is the better lens. For a lower-commitment first visit during the kitchen transition, three courses is the pragmatic choice.
    • For comparison on what a full tasting-menu commitment looks like at the next tier, see Midsummer House in Cambridge, which is the nearest two-star benchmark for this region.

    Can Prévost @ Haycock Manor accommodate groups?

    • The awards text does not specify private dining capacity or group booking policies. Contact the Haycock Manor Hotel directly for group arrangements.
    • Given the set-menu format and the intimate orangery setting, large groups may find the space less flexible than a restaurant with à la carte options. Smaller groups of four to six are likely better suited to the format.
    • Wansford's location off the A1 makes it accessible from multiple directions for groups travelling from different points , a practical advantage over city-centre venues where parking is limited. See our Wansford experiences guide for pre- or post-dinner options in the area.

    Does Prévost @ Haycock Manor handle dietary restrictions?

    • The set-menu format , with seasonal adjustments built in , suggests the kitchen has some flexibility, but specific dietary accommodation policies are not confirmed in the available data.
    • Contact the Haycock Manor Hotel directly before booking if dietary requirements are central to your visit. Given the precision of the cooking and the sourcing specificity noted in Michelin's review, the kitchen is likely capable of adaptation, but confirmation is essential at this price point.
    • The Modern Cuisine classification and seasonal ingredient focus suggest a kitchen that works with natural flavours and specific produce , which can sometimes make substitutions more complex than in less ingredient-focused formats.

    Compare Prévost @ Haycock Manor

    Award Winners Like Prévost @ Haycock Manor
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Prévost @ Haycock ManorSet in the orangery of the Haycock Manor Hotel, a lovingly restored former coaching inn, this bright, colourful restaurant sports bird cage chandeliers, pergolas and a faux olive tree. Choose from three set menus of up to 8 courses, which demonstrate the precision of the chefs and a keen understanding of their quality ingredients. Natural flavours are allowed to shine and the sauces and consommés are a real highlight, like a rich, appetisingly glossy duck jus.; * Lee Clarke and head chef Sam Nash have moved on. The kitchen is now run by Rikki Hughes (former head chef at 263 Preston, before it morphed into Aven). Watch for a new review coming soon.* During 2021, Lee Clarke moved his restaurant from Peterborough city centre to Wansford, an exceedingly well-kept village just off the A1 near Burghley House. In its new home, the 16th-century Haycock Manor hotel, Prévost has gone up a gear and is quickly attracting plaudits. One fan was ‘blown away by the slickness of it all’, while another concluded ‘this place is extremely exciting’ – Clarke’s head chef, Sam Nash (ex-L'Enclume), has certainly made his presence felt. The Haycock’s stone-walled, softly lit interior leads to a light-filled orangery dining area where French windows look out on to gardens and there’s a birdcage theme to the decorations. The centrepiece, though, is an olive tree sporting myriad fairylights. This setting provides a suitable backdrop for notably accomplished cooking. Choose from three courses or a more elaborate tasting menu – all seasonally adjusted. At inspection, the three-course option offered remarkably good value, given all the extras brought to table. These began with three ‘snacks’, including a standout runner bean and elderflower consommé offering an evocative taste of summer in a little cup. Similarly impressive was a little bowl of buttery smoked Alsace (bacon) custard, dotted with nuggets of toasted sweetcorn and smoked eel – excellent with the first-rate sourdough bread and butter (from Oxfordshire’s Ampersand Dairy), which was freely provided and replenished. Mains offer a choice of two dishes: a brilliant-white portion of salty, succulent cod arrived in a strongly seaweedy kombu dashi sauce dotted with little brown King’s Lynn shrimps, complemented by tiny Jersey Royals and lightly pickled cucumber. The meat option, Longhorn short rib, was almost as good – the generous, tender portion might have been pinker, but the piquant pickled walnut, the little blob of puréed potato and, above all, the roast-beef jus made for a highly savoury treat. After a pre-dessert of whisky fudge (an intensely sweet morsel), the meal ended with an expertly presented pudding of strawberry segments matched with diced apple, offset by tangy sorrel granita (spooned on top at the table) and creamy sheep's curd – another unequivocal success. Abundant service from young, eager staff enlivens proceedings, and the lengthy drinks list offers ample choice by the glass; otherwise, the whistle-stop tour of global vineyards is best left to seasoned drinkers (there's little in the way of annotation).; Set in the orangery of the Haycock Manor Hotel, a lovingly restored former coaching inn, this bright, colourful restaurant sports bird cage chandeliers, pergolas and a faux olive tree. Choose from three set menus of up to 8 courses, which demonstrate the precision of the chefs and a keen understanding of their quality ingredients. Natural flavours are allowed to shine and the sauces and consommés are a real highlight, like a rich, appetisingly glossy duck jus.; Michelin Plate (2024)££££
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    What to weigh when choosing between Prévost @ Haycock Manor and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Prévost @ Haycock Manor accommodate groups?

    Prévost operates within the Haycock Manor Hotel, a converted coaching inn with an orangery dining room, which suggests capacity for groups beyond a typical standalone fine-dining room. For larger parties, contacting the hotel directly is advisable, as the set-menu format will need to be confirmed for group bookings. The structured menu format suits groups where everyone is on board with a fixed progression rather than individual ordering.

    Does Prévost @ Haycock Manor handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue operates set menus with seasonal adjustments, which typically means dietary requirements need to be communicated at the time of booking rather than on arrival. There is no specific dietary policy documented in available records, so check the venue's official channels before booking if you have requirements that go beyond a standard adaptation. Given the ££££ price point and the set-menu format, advance notice is not optional — it is the practical approach.

    What should a first-timer know about Prévost @ Haycock Manor?

    Go in expecting a structured set-menu format: Prévost offers three menus of up to 8 courses, so this is not a walk-in-and-order-à-la-carte experience. The restaurant holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and sits inside the Haycock Manor Hotel in Wansford, just off the A1 near Burghley House — plan for a destination visit, not a spontaneous detour. The kitchen is now run by Rikki Hughes, following the departure of the previous team, so a new review is pending; check recent coverage before booking if consistency is a concern.

    Is Prévost @ Haycock Manor worth the price?

    At the ££££ price point, Prévost delivers credible value for fine dining in this part of England: the three-course option in particular has drawn praise for including generous extras beyond what the price implies. The Michelin Plate recognition backs up the kitchen's technical claims, and the sauces and consommés have been singled out as a genuine strength. If you're comparing it to a trip to London for a similar experience, the answer is yes — the quality-to-price ratio holds up, and you avoid city pricing on top of the food.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Prévost @ Haycock Manor?

    The longer format (up to 8 courses) is where the kitchen's precision is most apparent, based on documented feedback — previous inspection notes highlight standout consommés, well-sourced ingredients, and accomplished dessert work across the full menu. That said, the three-course option has been described as offering strong value with its own set of extras, so it is not a case where you must go long to justify the visit. If you're already making the trip to Wansford, the tasting menu is the stronger case for the Michelin Plate-level cooking.

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