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Harome, United Kingdom

Star Inn at Harome

CuisineModern British
Price£££
Michelin

A Michelin-starred thatched inn in the North York Moors village of Harome, Star Inn sits at the serious end of British gastropub dining. Head Chef Steve Smith builds menus around Yorkshire provenance — Whitby fish, moorland game, kitchen garden vegetables — in a 14th-century building that retains charred beams and Mouseman woodwork. Rooms are available for those who want to stay the night.

Star Inn at Harome restaurant in Harome, United Kingdom
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Where the Gastropub Concept Reaches Its Northern Apex

The gastropub revolution that reshaped British dining over the past three decades has produced a clear hierarchy. At the bottom, the refurbished boozers with laminated menus and a Sunday roast. At the leading, a tight cluster of converted rural inns that hold Michelin stars and draw guests from cities hours away. Star Inn at Harome sits in that upper tier, one of the more convincing arguments that the format, when executed with sufficient rigour, can hold its own against purpose-built fine dining rooms. It has held a Michelin star since 2002, a run of consistency that places it among the longer-standing recipients in the north of England.

The building makes its own case before anyone opens a menu. A 14th-century thatched inn on the main street of a North York Moors village, it carries the physical evidence of a long life: low ceilings, blackened beams left in place after a fire rather than replaced, and furniture by Robert Thompson — the Kilburn craftsman whose signature mouse carving appears on pieces throughout the North Riding. These are not props assembled for atmosphere. They are the original conditions under which the room operates, and the cooking has to measure up to them.

Yorkshire Provenance as Kitchen Logic

Gastropub model, when it works at this level, tends to anchor itself to a specific geography. The supply chain becomes the editorial position. At Star Inn, that means Whitby for fish, the North York Moors for game, and a kitchen garden that feeds the vegetable side of the menu. Head Chef Steve Smith works within a classical framework with modern technique applied selectively — the kind of approach that produces dishes where the provenance is legible on the plate rather than buried under process.

This matters in the context of the wider Modern British category. In London, Modern British at the £££££ level , CORE by Clare Smyth being the reference point , tends toward abstraction and refinement, where ingredient origin is acknowledged but the technique is dominant. At The Ritz Restaurant, the frame is classical French with British ingredients adapted into it. Star Inn operates differently: the Yorkshire supply chain is not a supporting detail but the organising principle. The kitchen garden, the moorland estates, the North Sea coast , these are the structure around which the cooking is built.

That approach connects Star Inn to a broader tradition of destination gastropubs that have made regional identity the core proposition. The Hand and Flowers in Marlow does the same for Thames Valley produce. L'Enclume in Cartmel has made the Cumbrian larder central to its identity to the point of operating its own farm. Moor Hall in Aughton situates Lancashire produce within a technically demanding framework. Star Inn belongs to this cohort , rural, supply-anchored, and operating at a standard that requires guests to make an effort to reach it.

The Room, the Terrace, and the Overnight Option

The interior works in the way that good historic buildings work: it resists modernisation and turns that resistance into character. The charred beams , left rather than replaced after fire damage , are the most direct version of this. They record the building's history without editorialising it. The Mouseman furniture contributes a specifically Yorkshire craft element that connects the room to the broader decorative tradition of the region.

A terrace extends the experience in warmer months, giving guests the option to sit outdoors in a Moors village setting , an arrangement that few urban restaurants can replicate regardless of their star count. The combination of season, landscape, and setting is the kind of thing that draws guests who could eat at comparable Michelin-starred restaurants in Leeds or York but choose to make the journey to Harome instead.

The bedrooms extend that logic into a stay. Individual styling means the rooms differ from one another in character , one includes a snooker table, another a piano , which places the accommodation closer to a country house model than a hotel annexe. For guests travelling from a distance, the ability to stay overnight changes the nature of the visit. Dinner becomes the reason to be somewhere rather than a scheduled stop on a longer itinerary. See our full Harome hotels guide for further options in the area.

Where Star Inn Sits in the North's Fine Dining Conversation

Yorkshire and the North more broadly have developed a credible cluster of Michelin-recognised addresses over the past two decades. The region no longer functions as a footnote to London dining. Moor Hall holds multiple stars. L'Enclume in Cartmel holds three. Star Inn's single star is not a ceiling marker but a position within a competitive regional field.

Its closest peer in format and geography is The Pheasant, which sits in the same village and operates at a comparable level of ambition. The presence of two serious restaurants in a settlement of this size says something about Harome's specific position in the North Yorkshire dining circuit , and about the kind of guests who make the trip to the Moors specifically to eat rather than arriving there by other means.

Compared to the destination restaurants that operate outside pub formats , Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton, Restaurant Andrew Fairlie in Auchterarder , Star Inn prices and positions itself differently. The £££ tier, combined with a thatched inn setting rather than a country house hotel, makes it accessible by the standards of destination fine dining without sacrificing the seriousness of the cooking. That positioning is genuinely unusual in this category.

For further reference points in the Modern British space, hide and fox in Saltwood, Midsummer House in Cambridge, The Ledbury in London, and The Fat Duck in Bray each represent different registers of the same broad conversation about what British cooking does with its ingredients and traditions. Star Inn's answer is the most explicitly regional of the group.

Planning Your Visit

Harome sits just outside Helmsley in the North York Moors, accessible by car from York (roughly 25 miles) or from the A1 corridor. The address , Main Street, Harome, near Helmsley, YO62 5JE , places it in a village with limited public transport, so most guests drive or arrange a taxi from Helmsley. The pricing sits at £££, which in the context of a Michelin-starred kitchen in rural North Yorkshire represents good value relative to London equivalents operating at similar or lower technical levels.

Opening hours run Tuesday through Saturday for both lunch (noon to 2pm) and dinner (6pm to 9pm), with Monday evening service from 3pm to 9pm and Sunday lunch running through to 6pm. The kitchen garden and the seasonal availability of moorland game mean the menu shifts with the calendar, and autumn and winter visits tend to produce the most produce-driven expressions of the kitchen's range. The Google review average sits at 4.7 across 866 reviews, which for a restaurant of this tier indicates consistent execution rather than occasional peaks.

For those building a broader North Yorkshire itinerary, our full Harome restaurants guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the wider options in the area.

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