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Manchester, United Kingdom

Adam Reid at the French

CuisineModern European
Executive ChefAdam Reid
LocationManchester, United Kingdom
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining
The Good Food Guide
Star Wine List

Occupying the Belle Époque dining room of Manchester's grade II-listed Midland Hotel, Adam Reid at The French translates northern English culinary tradition into a focused multi-course set menu. Reid's cooking draws on regional provenance — Sladesdown Farm duck, day-boat cod, Stichelton blue cheese — within a darkly romantic, mirrored interior that frames the meal as occasion. Holders of a 2025 Michelin Plate and ranked 604th in the Opinionated About Dining Europe list.

Adam Reid at the French restaurant in Manchester, United Kingdom
About

A Room That Sets the Terms

Arriving at The French means first passing through the Midland Hotel, a grade II-listed railway hotel on Peter Street whose stone facade has anchored central Manchester since the late Victorian era. The hotel was built to serve the Midland Railway, and the dining room that now bears Reid's name was conceived in the Belle Époque style: mirrored walls, rococo detailing, a high oval ceiling, and two outsize globular chandeliers that diffuse the room's inherent formality without dissolving it. The high central booths create something closer to a private dining experience within a larger room, a quality that makes the space work for both celebratory occasions and quieter, more considered evenings. The room has a moodiness to it, but the modern soundtrack and casually attired service team keep it from tipping into ceremony for ceremony's sake.

Manchester has a handful of rooms with this kind of embedded social history. The French has been part of the city's dining life long enough that its name functions as a reference point rather than simply a restaurant. What Adam Reid has done since taking over as chef-patron in 2016, following Simon Rogan's departure, is redirect that inherited prestige toward something more specifically Mancunian.

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Northern Roots in a French Room

The name references the past; the cooking does not. Reid's multi-course set menu draws its ingredients and cultural references from the north of England, a deliberate editorial position that places the cooking in a local tradition rather than a continental one. This approach has become increasingly common across British fine dining over the past decade, as a generation of chefs trained in classical or international kitchens have turned back toward regional identity as a more honest point of departure. Reid's version of this is specific enough to be legible: dishes carry concise, often cryptic menu descriptions — 'Fungi', 'Fish' — that the tableside chefs expand and, where appropriate, complete in front of the guest.

The menu is structured as a set, not a tasting menu in the conventional sense. Reid draws a distinction between the two, and it matters practically: the sequence is fixed, the pacing is considered, and the balance across courses is part of the kitchen's creative argument rather than a passenger list of technique demonstrations. Playfulness is present but disciplined. A cheese course reimagined as a salad of Stichelton blue cheese, green apple, walnut, prune and celery arrives as a theatrical recasting of a familiar format. Dishes described as 'not an average cheese and onion pie' or 'cold cut of honey-glazed ham, milk bread and mustard' reference northern 'teas' through a vocabulary of sophisticated technique. The whimsy is structural, not decorative.

Sourcing anchors the menu in verifiable geography. Day-boat cod arrives with Cheshire leeks and smoked roe sauce. Salt-aged Sladesdown Farm duck is paired with stewed offal and cabbage pickle. The provenance is consistent with what the Michelin Plate recognition and the Opinionated About Dining ranking (604th in Europe, 2025) imply about the kitchen's operating standard: this is cooking that takes its raw materials seriously and builds around them rather than despite them.

The menu closes with the now-established tipsy cake, served with whipped cream, rum, cream and black tea, a pairing that functions as both dessert and a characteristically northern signoff. Alongside coffee from ManCoCo, a Manchester-based roaster, the kitchen sends out a choc ice dusted with shards of Uncle Joe's Mint Balls, a local confectionery reference that lands with the same knowing specificity as the savoury courses.

Where The French Sits in Manchester's Fine Dining Picture

Manchester's top tier of restaurants is smaller and more concentrated than London's, but it has a clearer identity. The city's premium dining scene has been shaped by a sequence of chefs who have treated the north as a starting point rather than a limitation. mana, progressive and British-rooted, and Skof, creative and tightly focused, represent the more modern end of this current. Another Hand, Bell, and Climat each occupy distinct positions within a mid-to-upper price band that has grown more confident in its identity over the past several years.

The French sits in a different register from most of these: older in lineage, more formal in its physical setting, and more explicitly tied to a particular hotel and its history. Within the national range of British fine dining, the closest peer comparisons are restaurants that have taken on the weight of a significant building or institution and used it productively rather than apologetically. L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, and The Fat Duck in Bray each carry their settings as part of the proposition. The Ledbury in London, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow share a similar relationship between setting and culinary identity. Internationally, Modern European kitchens working in historically significant spaces , La Rei Natura by Michelangelo Mammoliti in Serralunga d'Alba and Oak in Gent among them , demonstrate how the category handles the tension between heritage architecture and contemporary cooking. Reid's approach at The French is to make that tension productive rather than resolved.

Planning Your Visit

The kitchen operates Wednesday through Saturday, with service from 6 to 9 pm. Monday, Tuesday, and Sunday are closed, which keeps the operation tight and the team focused. The format is a fixed multi-course set menu with no à la carte alternative, so arriving with that expectation settled avoids any friction. Two wine flights are available, alcoholic and non-alcoholic, and the sommelier operates as an active guide rather than a passive list-holder, which is worth noting if your wine knowledge is either limited or specific. The room is within the Midland Hotel at 16 Peter St, central Manchester, which is accessible by foot from Piccadilly and Victoria stations. Google reviews sit at 4.7 across 308 ratings, a score that is consistent with the Michelin Plate recognition and the OAD ranking and that reflects the room's reliability as a special-occasion destination over time.

For broader context on what Manchester offers at this level, our full Manchester restaurants guide covers the full range. Those planning a longer stay will find further orientation in our Manchester hotels guide, our Manchester bars guide, our Manchester wineries guide, and our Manchester experiences guide.

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