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Lydford, United Kingdom

The Dartmoor Inn

Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacitySmall
The Good Food Guide

A 16th-century inn on the edge of Dartmoor National Park, The Dartmoor Inn has been running a kitchen of carefully sourced, seasonally driven food since the Barker-Jones family took over in 2019. The drinks list spans local Dartmoor Ale, classic cocktails, and a compact Old World wine selection, making it a credible stopping point whether you arrive off the moor or from further afield.

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Address
Moorside, Lydford Nr, Okehampton EX20 4AY, United Kingdom
Phone
+44 1822 820221
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The Dartmoor Inn bar in Lydford, United Kingdom
About

Walking into the Moor's Edge

Lydford sits at the western edge of Dartmoor National Park, close to some of the park's most rewarding trail routes. The village is quiet enough that the presence of a pub with genuine cooking ambition registers immediately. Oak beams, slate floors, and hand-painted photographs on the walls place The Dartmoor Inn somewhere between working country pub and considered dining room, a combination that Devon's more visitor-facing pubs often attempt but rarely execute with this degree of finish.

The drinks programme here follows a pattern that has become increasingly common in well-run British country pubs, though it is executed with more range than most. The list moves laterally across formats: local cask ales anchor the bar, a varied classic cocktail menu provides an alternative register, and a wine list built around Old World producers rounds out the options.

The Drinks Programme

Dartmoor Ale is the local reference point at the bar, and its presence on the list is not incidental. Devon and Cornwall have developed a network of small producers, and pub bars that commit to those producers give drinkers a more accurate sense of place than those restocking from national distributors. Dartmoor Brewery, based in Princetown, has a long record in the region, and its ales carry the weight and character that suits both the pub's interior and its food.

The cocktail side of the drinks list marks The Dartmoor Inn out from its immediate peers. Classic cocktail programmes in rural British pubs often mean a short list of high-margin basics executed without much technique. Here, the range is described as wide rather than cursory, which positions it closer to the approach you see in destination bar programmes at venues like 69 Colebrooke Row in London or Schofield's in Manchester, where the drinks list is treated as a programme rather than an afterthought. A village pub in Lydford will not be competing directly with those rooms, but the editorial ambition of offering a broad, carefully assembled drinks selection in this setting is notable.

The Dartmoor Inn operates at a different scale and register but shares the conviction that the drinks list deserves as much attention as the food.

The wine list is small and described as varied, with a lean toward Old World producers. In a pub context, this is often the right call: a tighter, more focused selection from France, Spain, and Italy tends to hold up better with food-driven menus than an overextended list spread across too many regions. The pairing logic between the wine list and a kitchen working with fennel, samphire, mussel velouté, and cider-braised pork is coherent. Other bars elsewhere approaching drinks with similar range include L'Atelier Du Vin in Brighton and Avon Gorge by Hotel du Vin in Bristol, both of which position wine as a central programme element rather than a secondary consideration.

What the Kitchen Delivers

The editorial framework for pubs like this one has shifted in the past decade. The Dartmoor Inn operates in this newer mode. Warm home-baked bread with Netherend butter, pea soup with seasonal ramsons, Jail Ale-battered haddock with triple-cooked chips, cider-braised West Country pork fillet, stone bass with Teignmouth mussels: the sourcing geography is local and the technique is direct in the leading sense, delivering what one reporter described as "deep full-on flavours" without overcomplication.

Sunday lunch draws particular praise, with roast moorland sirloin among the centrepiece options. This is standard in ambition but above average in execution from what the record suggests. Desserts such as panna cotta with rhubarb and shortbread, and treacle tart with confit orange, candied zest, and crystallised ginger ice cream, demonstrate a kitchen that applies the same sourcing discipline to the end of the meal as to the beginning.

Inside the Room

The interior renovation since 2019 has been managed without stripping the building of its age. A 16th-century inn on the edge of Dartmoor is a different proposition from a Victorian city-centre pub, and the design instinct at The Dartmoor Inn has been to add detail rather than subtract it. The hand-painted photographs on the walls are the most frequently noted addition, and they read as personal rather than decorative, which is harder to achieve than it sounds. Service is described consistently as professional and welcoming, the kind of combination that rural pubs either get right from the start or fail to sustain as visitor numbers grow.

Planning Your Visit

The pub sits in Lydford village, within easy reach of Lydford Gorge and the Dartmoor trails. The address is Moorside, Lydford Nr, Okehampton EX20 4AY. Arriving by car is the realistic option for most visitors given Lydford's limited public transport connections. The drinks list, Sunday lunch tradition, and kitchen consistency make advance planning worthwhile, particularly if visiting as part of a larger group.

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Rustic
  • Intimate
  • Classic
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Casual Hangout
  • Group Outing
Experience
  • Historic Building
Format
  • Lounge Seating
  • Booth Seating
Drink Program
  • Classic Cocktails
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacitySmall
Service StyleUpscale Casual

Cozy shabby-chic with oak beams slate floors roaring log fire in the bar and warm intimate dining spaces.