Register today! | Already registered? Sign in

traveldk.com

from Eyewitness Travel Guides: the world's bestselling travel guides
  • Personal guide
  • Open
Member image

North and West of Glasgow : Places to eat

Submit an attraction

Make sure your favorite shops, restaurants, hotels and more are listed.

Submit an attraction illustration
WIN WIN WIN

Win an Apple MacBook!

Apple MacBook laptop
Download a podcast

Free podcasts Find free podcasts for Boston, New York & more.

Join our free monthly newsletter

Advertisement

  • The Michelin star first stopped overhead in 1990, and this country hotel restaurant hasn’t looked back since (see Airds Hotel) .

  • Unnoteworthy in appearance or location, but excellent food. Bar menu and à la carte in a cottage atmosphere. Eat outside in summer.

  • Creagan House

    Winning awards left, right and centre, this converted 17th-century farmhouse is a secret about to break. From quail to local lamb, this is good food at a surprisingly low price.

  • Distinguished restaurant showcasing the best of Scottish produce. Small choice, but cooked to perfection.

  • An adjunct of the Kilmartin Museum, this light-lunch café is mainly vegetarian but does excellent venison burgers. Home baking and great coffee.

  • Loch Fyne Oyster Bar

    Long-established in this converted stone cattle byre, the oyster bar offers two vegetarian dishes daily and an ocean of the freshest seafood. Bring a hearty appetite and have a go at the lobster platter.

  • This middle-of-nowhere former coaching inn is now a trendy restaurant well worth crossing the moor to find. Nothing exotic, but good food at good prices.

  • A flagstone floor, cobwebbed walls and a menagerie of stuffed animals to fight your way past – it’s quite an experience. Pub grub and beer flow all day.

  • Voluptuous curtains, deep sofas and blazing fires make this country hotel a delight, and the restaurant excels. Their guinea fowl breast with truffle noodles is a winner.

  • Old-world inn by the famous “Bridge over the Atlantic”. Historic and wonderful, you still expect pirates to breeze in. Real ale and delicious pub grub.

Advertisement

 Latest guides
What’s on now in Scotland
  • St Andrew's Festival
    Where better to celebrate St Andrew's Day than with the people of the city named after him. St Andrew's Day falls on 30 November each year, and the capital of Fife celebrates for a number of days... Read more
  • Glamis Castle
    The stunning architecture and beautiful gardens of Glamis Castle make it one of Scotland's leading visitor attractions. Inexplicably tied to the history and myth of the nation, Glamis has been open... Read more
  • Flambeaux Procession
    The Perthshire village of Comrie is ablaze at New Year when hundreds of locals gather in the village square for a ceremony of eight flambeaux (fired torches) which process around the village before... Read more
  • Stonehaven Fireball Festival
    Every New Year at midnight, the Hogmanay celebrations in the town of Stonehaven centre around a large, fireball-swinging procession which marches through the town down to the harbour and then throws... Read more