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    Restaurant in Glastonbury, United Kingdom

    Queen of Cups

    350pts

    Bib Gourmand small plates, easy to book.

    Queen of Cups, Restaurant in Glastonbury

    About Queen of Cups

    Queen of Cups holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) and a 4.7 Google score from 511 reviews, making it the most validated restaurant in Glastonbury at an accessible ££ price point. Book the Queen's Feast with sharing ciders for the full experience. Easy to book, best for pairs or small groups wanting West Country produce through a Middle Eastern small-plates lens.

    Should You Book Queen of Cups?

    Getting a table here is easier than you might expect given the accolades — booking difficulty sits at easy, which makes Queen of Cups one of the more accessible Michelin Bib Gourmand recipients in the South West. That alone should factor into your decision: this is a Glastonbury address that rewards effort without requiring a three-week planning operation. If you are visiting the town and want a genuinely considered meal, book it. The question is whether to go solo, as a pair, or as part of a small group — and the answer changes depending on how you approach the menu.

    The Venue

    Queen of Cups occupies a 17th-century inn on Northload Street, a short walk from the town centre. The building has multiple seating areas, including a courtyard that works well on warmer days. The setting is rustic without being self-consciously so , the age of the building adds atmosphere that newer openings in Somerset cannot replicate. For the food-and-travel enthusiast looking for context, this is a room that carries genuine history rather than reconstructed character.

    The kitchen works with West Country produce and applies a Middle Eastern and Mediterranean lens to small plates. That combination is less common in rural Somerset than in Bristol or Bath, which is one reason the Michelin guide took notice. The 'Queen's Feast' , the chef's selection format , is the recommended way to eat here, particularly if you are with someone and want to cover ground across the menu. Small-plate formats at this price tier (££) work leading when you commit to breadth rather than ordering conservatively, and the Queen's Feast removes that decision entirely.

    The Drinks Program

    The editorial angle worth understanding here is that the drinks offering appears to be built around the food format rather than operating as a standalone program. The 'sharing ciders' option sits alongside the Queen's Feast as an explicit pairing recommendation , this is notable in a region where cider culture is embedded in the local identity. West Country cider at this level is not the supermarket category: the Somerset and Glastonbury area sits within one of England's most active cider-producing zones, and a restaurant at this quality tier sourcing locally is likely drawing on single-variety or traditional-method producers. That said, the database does not provide a full drinks list, and specific producer names or cocktail availability are not confirmed. What is confirmed is that the venue actively recommends its ciders as a pairing vehicle, which suggests the drinks program is treated as integral to the meal rather than an afterthought. If cocktails or a deep wine list are your primary interest, verify the current offering before booking. For cider pairing alongside West Country-inflected Middle Eastern plates, the Queen's Feast plus sharing ciders is the defined format and the clearest path through the menu.

    Value and Positioning

    At ££ with a Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024), Queen of Cups delivers a strong value proposition for what it is. The Bib Gourmand designation specifically recognises good cooking at a price that does not strain the budget , Michelin's own framing. A 4.7 on Google across 511 reviews corroborates the quality signal independently. For context, similarly decorated addresses in the South West , such as Gidleigh Park in Chagford or hide and fox in Saltwood , operate at higher price tiers. Queen of Cups sits in a different bracket entirely, closer to the everyday end of considered dining than the special-occasion end. That is not a weakness; it is what makes it consistently worth booking when you are in Glastonbury.

    For Middle Eastern small plates in a broader UK context, the format and quality level here compares well to mid-tier operators in larger cities. Dedicated Middle Eastern programs at fine-dining level , such as Bait Maryam in Dubai or Baron in Doha , operate at a different scale and price entirely. Queen of Cups is making a more intimate, produce-led argument and is not trying to compete on that axis. The cuisine type is the draw here because it is uncommon at this price and in this setting, not because it reaches for fine-dining complexity.

    Who Should Book

    Pairs and groups of three or four will get the most from the Queen's Feast format. Solo diners can eat here , the small-plate format accommodates solo ordering more easily than a set tasting menu would , but the experience is designed around sharing. If you are exploring Glastonbury's restaurant options and want one confirmed booking rather than a contingency plan, this is it. The Michelin recognition and Google score together make it the most credibly validated dining address in the town.

    Special occasions at the higher end of the budget in Somerset would point toward Moor Hall or L'Enclume for multi-course investment dining. Queen of Cups is the right call when the occasion is a good dinner rather than a formal event , relaxed, well-sourced, and reasonably priced. For explorers who want to eat well without the ceremony, it earns its reputation.

    Know Before You Go

    Address
    10-12 Northload St, Glastonbury BA6 9JJ
    Cuisine
    Middle Eastern and Mediterranean small plates, West Country produce
    Price range
    ££ (Michelin Bib Gourmand tier , good value by design)
    Booking difficulty
    Easy , no extended lead time required
    Awards
    Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024
    Google rating
    4.7 from 511 reviews
    Format tip
    Order the Queen's Feast with sharing ciders for the full intended experience
    Setting
    17th-century inn, multiple seating areas, courtyard available for fair weather
    Leading for
    Pairs and small groups; explorers and food-focused travellers

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    Compare Queen of Cups

    Value Check: Queen of Cups and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Queen of Cups££Easy
    CORE by Clare Smyth££££Unknown
    Restaurant Gordon Ramsay££££Unknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library££££Unknown
    The Ledbury££££Unknown
    Dinner by Heston Blumenthal££££Unknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I eat at the bar at Queen of Cups?

    The venue data doesn't confirm a dedicated bar counter for dining. What is confirmed is that Queen of Cups occupies a 17th-century inn with multiple seating areas, including a courtyard. Your best move is to contact them directly before arrival if bar seating is a priority.

    Is Queen of Cups good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with caveats. The Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) gives it enough credentials to feel intentional, and the Queen's Feast sharing format works well for celebratory meals between two people or a small group. At ££, it won't break the bank, but it doesn't have the formal ceremony of a full Michelin star restaurant if that's what the occasion demands.

    Is Queen of Cups good for solo dining?

    It works solo, but the Queen's Feast chef's selection is designed for sharing, so you'll get less value from the flagship format alone. Ordering individual small plates is the better solo approach. For a solo Michelin-recognised meal in a relaxed setting, this is a reasonable choice given the Bib Gourmand standing and the ££ price point.

    What should a first-timer know about Queen of Cups?

    Book the Queen's Feast and pair it with the sharing ciders — that's the format the Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024) recognition reflects. The kitchen uses West Country produce through a Middle Eastern and Mediterranean small-plates lens, so expect dishes built for the table rather than individual plating. Booking is relatively easy compared to similarly decorated restaurants, so last-minute reservations are often possible.

    What are alternatives to Queen of Cups in Glastonbury?

    Queen of Cups is the only Michelin-recognised restaurant in Glastonbury itself, which makes direct local alternatives limited. For comparable Bib Gourmand value in Somerset more broadly, it's worth checking the current Michelin guide listings for the region. If you're driving, Bruton has developed a stronger restaurant cluster in recent years and offers some good options within roughly 30 minutes.

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