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Lincolnshire Pride

Food & Drink

Lincolnshire Restaurants: Restaurant Jericho

It’s a restaurant unlike any other. It offers a dining out experience unlike any other. ‘Unique’ is a term that’s so often overused, but on this occasion, it’s wholly applicable to Richard & Grace Stevens’ tasting menu restaurant on the border of Lincolnshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire

It’s a restaurant unlike any other. It offers a dining out experience unlike any other. ‘Unique’ is a term that’s so often overused, but on this occasion, it’s wholly applicable to Richard & Grace Stevens’ tasting menu restaurant on the border of Lincolnshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire

It’s safe to say that Restaurant Jericho is a place like no other. Located on Richard Stevens’ family farm, which has been in the family for four generations, it’s situated in the village of Plungar in the Vale of Belvoir. 

Before we go any further, we ought to acknowledge that the village is on the border of Lincolnshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire, so technically not in Lincolnshire, but on this occasion it’s worth us playing fast and loose with county borders in order to recommend a dining experience that’s really quite extraordinary in terms of its ambition, scale and creativity.

In fact, we can’t think of a comparable dining experience anywhere else in Britain, never mind in our neck of the woods. Founded by Rich and Grace, it follows a tasting menu format comprising no fewer than 20 courses. 

This is served to just 14 diners on a Friday and Saturday and priced at £140 per person with an optional flight of half a dozen wines for £80.

Rich is self-taught and opened an artisan butchery on the farm in 2017, then a steakhouse called Dickies before Covid sent the whole hospitality sector into torpor.

When it reopened, Rich and Grace had reinvented the place, establishing Restaurant Jericho adjacent to a kitchen garden with a view to producing ultra-seasonal dishes from a single menu that evolves every single week.

Our visit came at the worst time for the couple. It was a Saturday morning with a kitchen team prepping for evening service, when Rich and Grace were due to fly out to Dublin to the Michelin Awards for GB & Ireland 2026. There they were to find out if they would retain their Michelin Green Star, an accolade that was established in 2020 to recognise ‘sustainable gastronomy and eco-friendly practices.’ 

Oh, and did we mention that Grace was due to deliver the couple’s fourth daughter as Pride goes to press? Suffice to say the couple are very busy indeed… as is the restaurant itself, it seems.

In fact, during our visit in early February, the place was booked up until April, with hopeful diners on a waiting list, keen to secure a table in the event of a cancellation.

Walking through the door the place was as we remembered it, but… even better. The door in question is a heavy, weathered Corten steel one, leading to the dining room with an open kitchen at the far end with open flame cooking ranges. There are timber beams, timber and metal cladding, painted timber floors, a turntable with vinyl records, a wood burner and metal topped tables. At the centre of the room is a reclaimed workbench with a Bonsai tree and green moss. It’s all really rustic and really cool.

Next to the restaurant is a bar with a similar vibe; retro seating and chunky furniture with a sort of rustic/Scandi colour scheme.

If you’re used to Michelin-level dining, you’re probably accustomed to white tablecloths, formality and adaptable service. That is the antithesis of what Restaurant Jericho is about, but any perceived inflexibility is simply a reflection on the labour that goes on behind the scenes. The restaurant can’t cater for vegetarians or vegans and can’t accommodate substitutions… it’s just not possible at this level.

Instead, Rich and the team grow their own produce in their kitchen garden or, when quality and consistency necessitate, source produce like potatoes from the farm five minutes down the road. 

As a trained butcher, Rich and his two chefs take whole carcass pig, beef, lamb and venison, using every last bit, ensuring no waste. Meat is hung and dry-aged in-house for as long as possible, far exceeding the usual 28-days quoted by most butchers. Game is sourced from Belvoir and Buckminster.

In addition the team utilises raw milk from less than a mile down the road to make their own cream and butter in-house as well as baking the restaurant’s bread.

Working in such a way means the availability of ingredients changes from day to day and so the restaurant’s menus change every single week, the brigade thinking on their feet and creating new dishes each week.

That fact, and the restaurant’s long lead times have led Rich and Grace to offer Work in Progress evenings, colloquially, ‘WIP’ nights on Wednesday and Thursday. 

The idea is that instead of a 20 course menu at £140, you can enjoy six to eight dishes currently under development. Feedback is actively sought and when diners love the kitchen’s WIP dishes, they make it onto the Friday and Saturday tasting menus.

The couple have certainly raised eyebrows in the industry. After all, so few covers, so many courses, the restaurant’s price point and the fact that it’s only open for diners four evenings a week, not to mention the labour-intensive nature of the dishes would conspire to make even the bravest restaurant owners nervous.

But the couple are smashing it out of the park, not because of the fancy nature of the dishes, or the smart dining environment. The best explanation we can offer for Restaurant Jericho’s demonstrable success is the authenticity and down-to-earth warmth of experience. At its heart, Rich is really down to earth; ‘humble and honest hospitality,’ as it says on the restaurant’s website.

Fundamentally, Rich and the team of chefs understand farming, ingredients, and about bringing a warm welcome to diners. For all its drama and the extensive number of courses, Restaurant Jericho is about local, seasonal ingredients, really good food and a great evening. 

It’s absolutely unique and the couple really do deserve all of the success, having created something very different… but really quite brilliant.

On the Menu: Restaurant Jericho

Artichoke, White Stilton, Damson.
Jericho Charcuterie.
‘Dans Ma Bulle’, Les Enfants Sauvage, Cotes Catalanes, 2021
Lincolnshire Poacher Churros.
Pigs Blood Tart.
Chicken Leg.
Lamb, Blackberry.
Duck Leg Croquette.
Patchwork, La Cuverie, Savoie, 2023
‘Our Bread, Our Butter.’
‘Keep on Pushing’, Baby Bandito, Testalonga, Swartland, 2022
Celeriac, Celery, Apple
Today’s Cheese, Leek, Red Onion
‘Cool Moon’ Les Enfants Sauvage, Cotes Catalanes, 2021
Garden Herb Chawanmushi, 
Ox Liver Bushi.
Squash, Naked Oats, 
Lincolnshire Poacher 50.
Blaufränkisch, Judith Beck, Burgenland, 2023
100 Day Old Chicken,
Tenderstem, Chicken Liver.
Lamb, Date, Turnip.
‘Absteme S’abstenir, ‘Cosse Maisonneuve, Cahors, 2018
Pork, Beetroot, Bramley Apple.
Botterill’s Duck, Fig.
Silage Ice Cream.
‘Blet Tendre’, Les Terres Blanches, Oiron, 2021
Apple, Crown Prince 
Squash, Caramel.
Parsnip, Hazelnut, Molasses.
Stilton Creme Brûlée.

20-course menu £140 per person; Kitchen Bench £160 per person; Paired wines £80 per person.
NB: Menu changes every day, based on what is seasonal and fresh, this is a sample menu only.

Restaurant Jericho:
The Pitch: “A dining experience inspired by humble ingredients and the most honest way to cook; fire. 20-course tasting menu from the kitchen garden and local farms.”
Menus: Work in Progress (WIP) Wednesday, Thursday, £50 per person. Tasting menu of 20 courses
Friday, Saturday £140 per person. Booking essential.
Restaurant Jericho Orchard Farm, Plungar, Nottingham NG13 0JA. Call 01949 869733 or see www.restaurantjericho.com.

See the full feature in the April 2026 version of Lincolnshire Pride at https://www.pridemagazines.co.uk/lincolnshire/view-magazines?magazine=April-2026

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