CityBrutonCountryUKWebsiteosiprestaurant.com

People come for the twelve courses. Upstairs, the mood continues in oak and whitewash.

When Merlin Labron-Johnson moved his Michelin-starred restaurant to a white-limewashed coaching inn outside Bruton, he didn’t just build a new Osip, he added four rooms above it, each as meticulously composed as the twelve-course menu downstairs.

The ceilings are low, the spiral staircase is stone, the headboards are carved from local oak, and there’s homemade cider in the fridge and canelés on the nightstand. Underfloor heating warms the bathrooms, where the brass taps are handsome enough to pause over.

No espresso machine, no cooked breakfast, no TV. Just granola, blackcurrant fig leaf jam, and a preserved tomato martini you’ll probably think about for weeks. It all adds up to something very specific, very quiet, and very hard to leave.

Book here

Photos: Dave Watts

CityBrutonCountryUKWebsiteosiprestaurant.com

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