Somerset is a Goldilocks county – one of the few places in the UK where you can live in ludicrously pretty countryside, but also eat exceptionally well in dozens of brilliant pubs and restaurants, while enjoying excellent transport links to London, Bath and Bristol. Whether you want hyper-local Michelin-starred farm-to-table (at Osip in Bruton), Middle Eastern small plates served in a 17th-century inn (the Queen of Cups in Glastonbury), or award-winning rosé (at Wraxall Vineyard, near Shepton Mallet), Somerset, especially its eastern reaches, really does have it all.
Jack King, head of city sales for Savills Bath, grew up in the county and has watched its out-of-town food scene transform over the past decade. “If you look at Frome,” he says, “The Telegraph published a piece saying it was the best place to live outside London.”
When nearby Babington House (owned by the Soho House group) opened in the late 1990s, it drew both attention and chefs to the area – and the latter soon discovered the wealth of small producers working in the county. New food venues continue to appear in Frome, including Little Walcot, a sister restaurant to the popular Walcot House in Bath, and @ The Station, a community of small food businesses that includes the much-loved Rye Bakery and its wine bar. A branch of The Pig has also opened in the Mendip Hills.