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Mickleham, United Kingdom

The Running Horses

Price≈$25
Dress CodeCasual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium
The Good Food Guide

A 16th-century coaching house on the old London road through Mickleham, The Running Horses balances pub classics with globe-hopping mains, Sunday roasts with 'epic Yorkshires', and a drinks list that moves confidently from locally brewed ale to zesty cocktails. The interior layers racing memorabilia, dark wood, and a skylight-lit restaurant room into something that feels genuinely lived-in rather than designed for effect.

The Running Horses bar in Mickleham, United Kingdom
About

Where the Old London Road Meets the Epsom Downs

There is a particular type of English country pub that resists easy categorisation: too serious about its food to be dismissed as a boozer, too rooted in its community to be called a gastropub without qualification. The Running Horses, sitting on the old London road through Mickleham in Surrey, belongs to that cohort. The building dates to the 16th century and operated as a coaching house on the route between the capital and the south coast. That layered history is legible in the fabric of the place before you have even ordered a drink.

The name connects directly to Epsom Downs, where the Derby has been run for centuries on the hillside above the village. The racing connection is not a decorative afterthought. The interior is dense with memorabilia — one dining booth features a detailed display of race day badges spanning what appears to be several decades — and the pub's identity is genuinely inseparable from the calendar of the Downs. For visitors arriving from London, Mickleham sits within comfortable reach of Epsom, making The Running Horses a natural stopping point on a day that begins at the races and ends somewhere slower.

The Drinks Programme: Ale, Wine, and Something with More Edge

Surrey's pub drinking culture has historically leaned on regional brewing rather than imported cocktail fashion, and The Running Horses reflects that tradition without being constrained by it. The bar at the front of the building, old-school in both layout and atmosphere, pours locally brewed ale alongside a wine list described as reasonably priced , a signal that the selection is built for regular use rather than occasion spending. That positioning matters in a village pub context: it keeps the bar accessible to the families and dog walkers who fill the front room regularly, while still offering enough range for a more considered evening drink.

The cocktail component of the drinks list is characterised as zesty, which places it in the category of accessible, fruit-forward builds rather than the technical clarification programmes you find at specialist bars like 69 Colebrooke Row in London or the restrained, ingredient-led approach of Schofield's in Manchester. That is not a criticism. A village pub in Surrey is not competing with dedicated cocktail venues; it is serving a different function. The comparable benchmark is closer to the drinks operation at somewhere like Avon Gorge by Hotel du Vin in Bristol , hospitality-led, crowd-pleasing, competent rather than cutting-edge. In that context, a cocktail list that lands as genuinely zesty rather than perfunctory is worth noting.

Across the UK, the most interesting drinking outside dedicated cocktail venues tends to happen at the intersection of food and drinks culture , places where the bar serves the table rather than the other way round. The Running Horses operates in that register. The drinks list earns full marks in the venue's own assessment, which suggests a programme with enough range and quality to hold its own through a meal. For those curious about how the cocktail offer at a country pub compares to the broader British scene, bars like Bramble in Edinburgh, Merchant Hotel in Belfast, and Mojo Leeds represent the specialist end of the spectrum , useful calibration for what full programme depth looks like, even if the formats are entirely different.

The Menu: Pub Classics and Global Detours

British gastropub menus have evolved into a recognisable format over the past two decades: a foundation of familiar dishes built from quality sourced ingredients, layered with more ambitious cooking that signals the kitchen's range. The Running Horses follows that structure with enough specificity to feel considered rather than formulaic.

The opening move is a set of tapas-style small plates that function as starters: Dingley Dell charcuterie, burrata alongside roast pumpkin with crispy buckwheat and hot honey. Dingley Dell is a Suffolk-based producer with a strong trade reputation for free-range pork, and its appearance on the menu is a provenance signal that situates the kitchen in the quality sourcing tradition rather than anonymous supply chains. The burrata combination , roast pumpkin, crispy buckwheat, hot honey , is a format that has become common in metropolitan restaurant kitchens over the past five years, and its presence here reflects how quickly ingredient trends now travel from city to country.

The main course roster is deliberately broad. Slow-cooked lamb shank with chive mash and roasted heritage carrots occupies the comfort end of the range. Five-spice duck breast with cherry gel and corn-fed chicken leg as a confit with girolles, broad beans, and fino sherry sauce represent the more technically ambitious column. The kitchen does not attempt to resolve the tension between these two registers , it simply runs both, which is either confident or sprawling depending on your tolerance for range. Rare-breed steaks, cooked to the kitchen's specification of 'nicely pink', and homemade pies with Dorking sauce round out the classics side. Dorking, the nearest market town, lends its name to a condiment that places the pub firmly in its immediate geography.

Sunday lunch at The Running Horses collapses back into tradition: three roasts served with generous trimmings, Yorkshire puddings described as 'epic', and cauliflower cheese singled out as the standout accompaniment. Sunday roast culture in Surrey villages tends toward the reliable rather than the revelatory, and the language here suggests a kitchen that understands its audience on that particular day. Desserts extend the homely register , apple and blackberry crumble, sticky toffee pudding , without attempting to reframe it.

The Room Itself

The physical separation between bar and restaurant is more than architectural convenience. The front bar operates as a pub; the back restaurant operates as a dining room. The skylight that illuminates the restaurant area does significant work, pulling natural light onto dark wood surfaces and eclectic furniture in a way that prevents the room from feeling heavy. Dining booths offer a degree of enclosure that suits longer meals. The racing memorabilia distributed through the space functions as genuine historical record rather than theming , a meaningful distinction in a building with five centuries of continuous use behind it.

Service receives full marks in the venue record, which in the context of a Surrey village pub covering both bar and restaurant service across different clientele simultaneously is a more demanding achievement than it might appear. Families with dogs in the front, diners working through a three-course menu in the back, Sunday roast crowds at weekends , the operational range is considerable.

Planning Your Visit

The Running Horses sits on the Old London Road in Mickleham, with the address placing it between Dorking and Leatherhead in the Surrey Hills. The village is accessible from the M25 and sits within range of the Epsom Downs racecourse, making it a viable base for race day visits or a stopping point on a wider Surrey itinerary. The pub draws a local clientele of families and dog owners through the week, with Sunday roasts representing the most heavily attended service. For those building a broader picture of pub dining and drinking in the region, our full Mickleham restaurants guide maps the options in more detail.

The drinks list spans locally brewed ale, wine at accessible price points, and cocktails, covering enough ground that a visit need not be planned around a single category. Booking ahead for the restaurant section, particularly on Sundays, is advisable given the combination of a dedicated dining room and a strong local following. For context on how drinks programmes operate across different formats in the UK, the contrast between a village pub like this and dedicated cocktail venues , whether Horseshoe Bar Glasgow, Digby Chick in the Western Isles, Harbour View and Fraggle Rock Bar in Bryher, or further afield at Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu and L'Atelier Du Vin in Brighton , illustrates how differently the same category of hospitality can be configured when the format and setting change.

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Cozy
  • Rustic
  • Classic
Best For
  • Casual Hangout
  • Group Outing
Experience
  • Historic Building
  • Courtyard
Format
  • Lounge Seating
  • Outdoor Terrace
Drink Program
  • Craft Beer
Dress CodeCasual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleUpscale Casual

Cozy and vibrant with inviting fireplaces, warm lighting, and a welcoming traditional pub atmosphere.