Ox Club
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Ox Club earns its Michelin Plate recognition through a disciplined wood-fire program at the heart of Leeds city centre. The menu runs from a 1kg côte de boeuf to gochujang-glazed crispy pig tails and grilled sardines, all cooked over an American-imported grill. Housed in a former mill on The Headrow, it draws a lively crowd with approachable prices and well-informed service.

Fire as the Point, Not the Backdrop
Open-fire cooking in the UK has split between two registers: the theatrical destination format, where smoke is a premium signal, and the neighbourhood-anchored version, where it's simply the most honest way to cook. Ox Club, on The Headrow in Leeds city centre, operates firmly in the second category. The moment you cross the threshold, the smell of burning wood sets the register before a single dish arrives. This is not performance — it's the operating principle around which the kitchen organises everything else.
The room itself reinforces that logic. A former mill building supplies the bare bones: exposed brick, concrete, industrial bones. Mid-century furniture and houseplants absorb some of that rawness, and considered partitioning breaks the space into sections that feel contained rather than cavernous. A beer hall and cocktail bar share the building, which means the crowd on any given evening is genuinely mixed — groups moving between formats, solo diners at the bar, tables of four splitting a côte de boeuf. The average age skews young, the noise level skews upward, and the whole thing works because the kitchen is confident enough not to need hushed reverence.
The Grill: Technique Over Temperature Theatre
The grill at Ox Club was imported from the United States , a deliberate choice that says something about the seriousness of the program. American wood-fire equipment is typically built around sustained, controllable heat and the ability to manage different cooking zones simultaneously. That infrastructure matters, because the menu asks a lot of it.
Steak offering is focused by design. A 400g sirloin and a 1kg côte de boeuf sharer are the anchors, sourced from Yorkshire-based R&J; Butchers, who supply regular cuts as well as specialist stock for the kitchen's recurring chop nights. The narrowness of the steak list is a signal: this kitchen is not trying to cover every format, it is trying to execute a shorter one well. The côte de boeuf, priced at the higher end of the menu for those prepared to spend, functions as the centrepiece of the experience when shared between two.
But the more instructive dishes are the ones that apply fire to ingredients less obviously suited to it. Watermelon is grilled slowly until the rind tenderises , a process that demands patience and temperature management. Beef tartare gets a pass over smoke, arriving with gherkin ketchup and a layer of shoestring potatoes. Sardines blister on the grill and come with fennel, black olive, and blood orange, a combination that channels influence from Tom Hunter's time as sous-chef at the now-closed Reliance. Each of these dishes shows how a wood-fire program earns its keep beyond the obvious: it changes the character of produce that would otherwise default to rawness, acidity, or cold preparation.
Bold Flavours, Not Safe Ones
What separates Ox Club from the more austere end of the UK grill scene is a willingness to add heat and spice where a lot of comparable operations would stop at char. Nduja arrives with oysters. Crispy pig tails carry a gochujang glaze. Rare-breed pork , grilled to produce what the kitchen describes as near-impossible crackling , is served with tajin, chipotle, and pineapple ketchup, a combination that reads as a direct reference to Mexican taco flavour logic rather than any attempt at fusion. A sour cherry-glazed kofta uses lamb from the Harewood Food and Drink Project, a local initiative with a documented connection to the restaurant's own kitchen alumni.
These are not cautious additions. They suggest a kitchen that is using fire as a foundation and then building upward with combinations that would read as bold in any format, not just a grill house. For context, other fire-forward restaurants in Europe , from Carcasse in Sint-Idesbald to Damini Macelleria and Affini in Arzignano , tend to let the quality of the meat carry the full narrative. Ox Club's approach is more layered, and it is more interesting for that.
Vegetarian options are built into the menu rather than added as an afterthought, which in a grill-forward context requires actual commitment. The fire program does not discriminate by protein source, and the kitchen demonstrates that clearly.
Drinks and Service
The wine list runs to around 20 bottles, most of them organic, starting from approximately £28. Wines by the glass begin at roughly £8, which keeps the format accessible for those not committing to a bottle. The selection is not encyclopaedic, but it is coherent and it matches the register of the food: direct, with a clear point of view and no particular need to impress on paper. The beer hall component of the building broadens the drinks options beyond what the restaurant floor alone provides.
Service is described as laid-back but well-informed , a combination that can be difficult to achieve in a lively, high-volume room. It means the practical knowledge is there when you need it, but the interaction does not tip into formality. That balance fits the space and the crowd.
Recognition and Where Ox Club Sits
Ox Club holds a Michelin Plate for both 2024 and 2025, a recognition that indicates quality cooking without the formal elevation of a star. Within the Leeds dining scene, that positions it alongside a set of restaurants that are taken seriously by the guide without operating in the white-tablecloth tier. It is a different competitive set from destinations like L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, or The Fat Duck in Bray , and deliberately so. Ox Club is priced at £££, which in the Leeds context means accessible for a considered dinner out without requiring the kind of forward planning that starred restaurants in the region demand.
Google reviews sit at 4.7 across 565 ratings , a dataset large enough to carry statistical weight. That score, alongside the Michelin Plate, suggests the kitchen delivers consistently rather than occasionally.
Leeds has a broader dining scene worth knowing before you plan an evening around Ox Club. Casa Susanna covers Mexican cooking, Dastaan Leeds takes a different regional approach entirely, and emba represents another strand of the city's current restaurant energy. For those staying or exploring further, our Leeds hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the wider city. The full Leeds restaurants guide maps the broader eating picture if you're building an itinerary. For completeness, our Leeds wineries guide is available for those interested in the wider drinks circuit.
Planning Your Visit
Ox Club sits at 19a The Headrow, LS1 6PU, in central Leeds , accessible on foot from the main train station and within the city's central dining cluster. The £££ price point, multi-format building (restaurant, beer hall, cocktail bar), and the informality of the room mean it works as a full evening across several hours rather than a single-sitting dinner. Sunday roasts have a reputation of their own and draw a distinct crowd from the mid-week grill program.
Frequently Asked Questions
A Minimal Peer Set
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Ox Club | This venue | £££ |
| Casa Susanna | Mexican | |
| emba | ||
| Dastaan Leeds |
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