Food & Drink:

  • Type
  • Cuisine
  • Facilities
  • Location
  • Central
    Greasy spoon
    Classic greasy spoon, and none the worse for that.
  • Central
    Restaurant
    Browns serves predominantly English cuisine, with a Mediterranean twist. The gluten-free menu is carefully thought out, and there are also seasonal menus launched at regular intervals. Classic destination for visiting parents taking students out to lunch, business dinners and dates.
  • Central
    Café
    Nice little independent café.
  • Central
    Café
    An inspirational social enterprise providing accredited on the job training and routes to employment for homeless people. The Café is open to the public and there is space inside to showcase artwork from the Skylight Centre. Delicious food photos by Helen Ward.
  • Central
    Café
    Serving breakfasts, coffee, flapjacks etc. & daily meals. Follow signs from Iffley Road entrance, it's near the main reception.
  • Central
    Café
    Café inside the chain bookshop - all the usual teas, coffees and cakes.
  • Central
    Restaurant
    Homecooked pizza, insalata, mezze, tiramisu and more. Breakfast and brunch and afternoon tea menus also available. No gluten-free options.
  • Central
    Coffee shop
    Chain café with nice big sofas and two levels. Can make lattes and such with soya milk if you ask.
  • Central
    Coffee shop
    Comfy sofas. Not very good for wheelchair access, but there is a lift from the floor below. Do a gluten-free very sticky chocolate brownie.
  • Central
    Coffee shop
    Third Oxford branch of the Italian chain café.
  • Central
    Pub
    Pub run by Hook Norton Brewery. Local and regional craft and cask beer and pub grub. Choice of 8 real ales. Children are welcome until 6pm. Available for private hire, with a seated capacity of 30 (can fit more if needed). If you would like to enquire about hiring the space, please contact Brook on thecastleoxfordmanager@gmail.com
  • Central
    Café
    Enjoy a cup of tea and a slice of cake whilst soaking up the atmosphere of our beautiful, historic castleyard. We also have a fantastic selection of sandwiches, with bread courtesy of a local craft bakery. Free Wifi is also available for customers.
  • Central
    Tea room
    Their tea constructions are recognisably elaborate.
  • Central
    Pub
    You will find The Chequers in Oxford within a short stroll of Queen Street, St Aldates and Cornmarket Street - however you won't find another like it. Step in to discover a traditional pub of unique character, revered for its eclectic range of real ales and its quality pub food, which are served, as they should be, with a generous measure of famous British hospitality. Much of the interior of our pub dates from the 1500s when an old tenement belonging to a moneylender was rebuilt as a tavern. The chequerboard was the symbol of the money-changer, having its origins in the checked cloth used by the Romans in their calculations. This pub once exhibited strange animals discovered by 17th Century explorers and technological marvels of the age.
  • Central
    Restaurant
    Beautiful juxtaposition of exquisite Thai food complete with edible orchid-style presentation, in endearingly-wonky Elizabethan half-timbered house.
  • Central
    Restaurant
    The aim is to provide customers with a range of dishes that reflect the diversity of Asia. Taking favourites from Thailand and matching them with recipes from Japan, Malaysia and China. They directly source all the vegetables, herbs and spices used to make the sauces that go with the dishes. The menu is deliberately limited to 8-10 dishes at any one time, enabling Chozen to execute on freshness and quality.
  • Central
    Restaurant
    Chutneys is the oldest surviving Indian restaurant in the Oxford City. Their menus are based on the highest quality produce and fresh seasonal ingredients from all corners of South East Asia. They use 100% vegetarian oil, containing no cholesterol - all ingredients are carefully sourced and they never use artificial colours, flavours or preservatives.
  • Central
    Coffee shop
    Part of a generation of coffee growers in Colombia with a strong focus on delivering high-quality coffee and education, whilst supporting Fair Trade conditions to ensure coffee is sustainable and ethical.
  • Central
    Restaurant
    The food at Comptoir is fresh, healthy, honest and affordable. We wake up early to provide customers with unique Lebanese breakfasts to eat in or take away; offering everything from organic yoghurt topped with pomegranate and orange blossom water, porridge and -our favourite- smoked salmon and scrambled eggs on brioche. Visit us for lunch and dinner as we serve our guests all types of interesting and colourful dishes, including hot and cold mezze – perfectly sized for sharing- wraps, salads, tagines, grills and Mana’esh (Lebanese style pizzas). For dessert, nothing is more authentic than the sweet taste of baklawa – Lebanese pastries in a variety of flavours such as date filled semolina and walnut filled flaky pastry. All products can be packaged up and enjoyed on the go.
  • Central
    Restaurant
    You’ll find COSMO Oxford right in the middle of the city on Magdalen Street, within easy reach of Oxford University. We’re a favourite among locals and visitors alike, so why not pop in and experience our famous live cooking stations and extensive all you can eat buffet menu for yourself?
  • Central
    Bar
  • Central
    Restaurant
    Côte is inspired by the brasseries of Paris, serving authentic French dishes all day in our classically designed restaurants. We are committed to producing authentic French classics, freshly cooked to order, from the highest quality sourced ingredients.
  • Central
    Bar
    Formerly the Bell and Compass. It's still a Marstons pubstaurant with bulk cocktail deals, pub food and an enthusiastic weekend DJ. The menu contains such delights as a burger with pb and raspberry jam, or sweet potato fries with toffee sauce. Plus tons of MacNCheese!
  • Central
    Pub
    The Crown has had a succession of famous landlords. In the year of the Gunpowder Plot it was kept by John Davenant and it was during this time Shakespeare paid his frequent visits to Oxford. The poet used to stop in the University town on his journeys between Stratford and London, and the Crown was his headquarters.
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