Hearth at Heckfield Place

Set within the grounds of Heckfield Place in rural Hampshire, Hearth operates at the more relaxed end of the estate's dining offer, consistently ranked among Europe's top casual restaurants by Opinionated About Dining since 2023. Under chef Julia Zardo Paterlini, the kitchen draws on the estate's biodynamic farm to produce British cooking grounded in seasonal produce and honest technique.
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- Address
- Heckfield Pl, Hook RG27 0LD, United Kingdom
- Phone
- +44 118 342 0669
- Website
- heckfieldplace.com

A Different Kind of Country House Dining
The English country house hotel and the gastropub occupy opposite ends of a long cultural spectrum. At one end: the formal dining room with its tasting menus, silver service, and sense of occasion, places like Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton or Gidleigh Park in Chagford, where the dining room defines the visit. At the other: the pub with a serious kitchen, where the bar tap still runs and nobody minds if you order just the one course. Hearth at Heckfield Place sits in the space between those traditions, and it does so deliberately. It is the estate's casual dining room, not an afterthought to the grander main restaurant, but a distinct format with its own identity, its own following, and, as Opinionated About Dining's its own standing on the European casual dining circuit.
Arriving at Heckfield Place, the Georgian manor sits at the end of a long approach through Hampshire farmland. The estate spans several hundred acres of working biodynamic land, and that agricultural context is not decorative, it shapes what the kitchen at Hearth actually cooks. The room itself carries the warmth of a working hearth: stone, timber, the suggestion of a building that has been in service for a long time. It reads less like a hotel restaurant than a place you might have driven out to specifically, which, given the numbers on its OAD ranking, many diners do.
The Gastropub Revolution, Reframed
The gastropub as a concept emerged in London in the early 1990s as a response to a specific problem: good cooking had become inaccessible to anyone without either a formal occasion or a generous expense account. The idea, that a pub kitchen could produce food worth travelling for without requiring a jacket or a three-hour commitment, gradually reshaped how Britain ate out. By the 2010s, places like Hand and Flowers in Marlow had pushed the format so far that a pub could hold two Michelin stars without anyone blinking.
What Hearth represents is a further evolution of that logic, applied to the country estate context. The estate format, farm, manor, kitchen, is not new. What has changed is the willingness to treat the casual end of that offer with the same seriousness as the formal. Rather than running a fine dining room as the main event with a bar snack menu as the fallback, Heckfield runs both formats as serious propositions. Hearth is the proof of that commitment.
Chef Julia Zardo Paterlini leads the kitchen, working within a brief shaped by the estate's biodynamic farm. This is the model that has come to define the more credible end of farm-to-table cooking in Britain: the farm is not a marketing device but a genuine supply constraint, meaning the menu follows what is grown and raised on site rather than adapting the farm to fit a fixed menu. The discipline that imposes on a kitchen produces cooking with a different internal logic to sourcing-agnostic restaurants, and it places Hearth in a category closer to L'Enclume in Cartmel, also estate-rooted and biodynamically connected, than to most London gastropubs.
Where Hearth Sits in the Hampshire Dining Picture
Hampshire's fine dining offer is thin relative to its county wealth. The county produces serious produce, game, watercress, chalk-stream trout, early-season vegetables, but the restaurants that have historically made use of it at the highest level have tended to cluster across the border in Berkshire or further west. Heckfield's emergence as a serious dining address has shifted that picture, and Hearth is the more accessible entry point into it. For anyone planning a day or weekend in the area, the practical reality is that Hearth runs Tuesday to Friday from 6 to 9pm, with a longer Saturday service from noon. Sunday and Monday are closed, which is worth noting before making the drive from London, approximately an hour by road from the M3 corridor.
The casual format and setting place Hearth in a different conversation to the high-end destination dining rooms that define British fine dining's firmament, the three-star kitchens like CORE by Clare Smyth or Midsummer House in Cambridge. But the OAD ranking places it alongside the casual operations that serious food travellers actually track. Its Google rating is 4.9 from 14 reviews.
Planning Your Visit
Hearth is open Tuesday through Friday from 6pm, with last bookings at 9pm, and on Saturdays from noon to 9pm. Monday and Sunday are closed. The restaurant is part of Heckfield Place estate in Hook, Hampshire, RG27 0LD, and is accessible by road from the M3 and A30 corridors. Guests staying at the estate have the convenience of both dining formats on site; those driving in for dinner should book ahead, as the OAD ranking has brought consistent attention from food-focused visitors across the south of England.
At-a-Glance Comparison
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hearth at Heckfield PlaceThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Open-Fire Farm-to-Table | $$$$ | 3 recognitions | |
| Disrepute | Cocktail Bar | $$$$ | , | Soho |
| Thirteen | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$$ | Michelin Plate | Poole |
| Gaucho Piccadilly | Argentinian Steakhouse | $$$$ | 2 recognitions | Piccadilly Circus |
| Milos London | Authentic Greek Seafood | $$$$ | 2 recognitions | St. James's |
| Cherwell Boathouse | Modern British Fine Dining | $$$$ | 1 recognition | North Oxford |
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Browse all →At a Glance
- Rustic
- Cozy
- Elegant
- Intimate
- Sophisticated
- Special Occasion
- Date Night
- Open Kitchen
- Hotel Restaurant
- Historic Building
- Courtyard
- Extensive Wine List
- Farm To Table
- Local Sourcing
- Organic
- Garden
Intimate and relaxed with warmth from the open fire, sheepskin-draped chairs, and rustic textures of the converted stable building.
















