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Fine Dining Digital Download

FOODIE

Fine Dining

£2.99

Our 'Digital Download' delivers instant joy and memorable experiences, ready to gift or keep.

Turn your dining gift voucher into a personalised memento. Perfect for luxury dining experiences such as Michelin-starred restaurants and wine pairing evenings.

What you provide

  1. 1.Your experience (e.g. "Michelin Tasting Menu for Two")
  2. 2.Venue, business or location
  3. 3.Name of recipient
  4. 4.Date valid until / expiry

What we create

A beautifully designed personalised keepsake ticket, delivered to your inbox as a print-ready PDF — instant, eco-friendly, and ready to gift the same day.

Please note

This is a commemorative keepsake ticket and does not grant entry to any venue or experience. The experience celebrated must be arranged and booked separately.

Simply download your design and share digitally or print from the comfort of home. In moments, you’ll create a beautifully crafted keepsake to treasure or gift.

You’ll receive a PDF with all the information preloaded based on the details you’ve submitted — designed for ease and convenience. To ensure your keepsake is perfect, make sure all submitted information is accurate and reviewed carefully before completing your order.

Our recommended size for One Ticket is 3x7.2 inches — compact yet versatile, a perfect keepsake for gifting or treasuring. You can print two tickets easily on an A4 sheet of paper.

The Momeo Guide

The art of the long evening

By the Momeo team · Updated May 2026

There are ten three Michelin star restaurants in the UK. Eight are in London or the south of England. Two are in the north: L’Enclume in Cumbria and Moor Hall in Lancashire, the latter promoted to three stars in 2026 after eight years of climbing. Below them sit twenty-eight two-star rooms and almost two hundred one-star kitchens. Together they make the UK the seventh-strongest fine dining country in the world by star count, ahead of every country except France, Japan, Spain, Italy, Germany and the United States.

The difference between a good fine dining experience and a great one comes down to three decisions. Which restaurant. Which season. Which menu.

Fine dining at the highest level isn’t about food alone. It’s about how a building, a room, a service team and a kitchen all align around one evening. The drive through Cumbrian fells before L’Enclume. The walk through Notting Hill streets to The Ledbury. The hush as the first plate lands at Alain Ducasse. The pause after the cheese course when the sommelier appears with something you didn’t order and says trust me. The slow walk to the cab three and a half hours later, full and quiet.

Personalised Momeo Fine Dining keepsake ticket held in hand — UK Michelin star gift

The lineup

Best UK fine dining by experience level

Choose the restaurant that matches the evening you want. Each tier is shaped by stars, room and how complete the experience is.

01

For a first Michelin experience

Kitchen W8

Kensington, London

One Michelin star. Founding partner Philip Howard co-owns The Ledbury. The most accessible introduction to a serious tasting menu in London, with a set lunch around £50 and a tasting menu around £120.

Pied à Terre

Fitzrovia, London

The longest-standing Michelin-starred restaurant in the UK, holding its star since 1991. Modern British with classical French roots, and one of London’s most acclaimed vegan tasting menus alongside the main menu.

02

For a serious tasting menu evening

Trivet

Bermondsey, London

Two Michelin stars. Run by Fat Duck alumni Jonny Lake and Isa Bal, with one of the most intellectually interesting wine programmes in London. Tasting menus £150 to £225.

Bonheur by Matt Abé

Mayfair, London

Two Michelin stars in 2026. Took over the storied former site of Le Gavroche, leaning into elegant French fine dining with a six-cover chef’s table for the most considered visit.

03

For a once-in-a-lifetime journey

L’Enclume

Cartmel, Cumbria

Three Michelin stars. Simon Rogan’s home, the most complete dining experience in the UK. Twenty courses, four hours, and a farm-to-plate philosophy that has shaped British fine dining for two decades.

Moor Hall

Aughton, Lancashire

Three Michelin stars in 2026 after starting at one in 2017. Mark Birchall’s converted Lancashire farmhouse is the No. 1 restaurant in the UK in the most recent Harden’s diners’ poll. Worth the train.

Plated dish at a UK three Michelin star restaurant — Momeo personalised keepsake gift

When to book

Best season to book

Best window

Oct — Dec

Restaurants are at their most confident with autumn produce (game, root vegetables, late truffles), the kitchens have settled after summer staff turnover, and the rooms feel right when it’s dark by 5pm. Christmas tasting menus drop in late November at most rooms and book up within days.

Avoid

Late Dec — Jan

Many top restaurants close entirely between 24 December and 8 January. Those that stay open run reduced staff and reduced menus. Same money, lesser evening.

Underrated

Feb — Mar

The booking lottery has settled, midweek tables open up at restaurants that are normally booked three months out, and chefs are working with the first spring produce, which is genuinely the most exciting moment in the British culinary year.

Field notes

Five tips for the night itself

Practical advice from the Momeo team. Tap any tip to read more.

  1. Book the destination, not just the meal

    A three star evening at L’Enclume or Moor Hall is a journey. Both restaurants offer rooms above the dining room. Take the room. The drive home from Cumbria or Lancashire after a four hour tasting menu and a wine pairing is genuinely not the right end to the evening. Most top UK fine dining destinations now operate as restaurants with rooms specifically because of this.

  2. Take the wine pairing

    A good sommelier earns the markup. The pairing brings out flavours in dishes that are easy to miss otherwise, introduces wines you would never have ordered, and removes the social negotiation of choosing a bottle. At this level, expect £150 to £250 per person for the pairing. Non-alcoholic pairings are now offered at the same standard at most three star rooms.

  3. Mention dietary needs at booking, not on the night

    Fine dining kitchens at this level cook bespoke vegan, vegetarian and allergy menus that genuinely match the standard of the main tasting menu. Pied à Terre has one of the best vegan tasting menus in London. Plates in Hoxton became the UK’s first vegan Michelin-starred restaurant in 2024. Flag dietary needs when you book and the kitchen has time to plan something proper.

  4. Dress slightly above the dress code

    Most UK fine dining restaurants describe their dress code as smart casual or jacket preferred. Read that as: a jacket, smart trousers, considered shoes. The kitchen and front of house have spent twelve hours preparing this evening. Match the level. Trainers and t-shirts read as not understanding the room.

  5. Don’t book anything after

    A three star tasting menu evening is the evening. Plan four to five hours from arrival to coffee. Theatre tickets at 9pm are a category error. The walk back to the car or the room after the meal is part of the experience, not a transition to the next thing.

They provide the experience.
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