About Le Champignon Sauvage
Le Champignon Sauvage is the longest single-chef-owned Michelin-starred restaurant in the UK. David Everitt-Matthias and his wife Helen have run the 32-seat room on Cheltenham's Suffolk Road continuously since 1987; the first Michelin star arrived in 1995, a second was held between 2009 and 2017, and the single star has been retained every year since.
Everitt-Matthias cooks service alone. The kitchen is a three-person brigade including him; Helen runs front of house. The menu is written on a single card and rarely changes until the season shifts. The cooking is quietly, stubbornly French — classical bourgeois technique married to foraged British hedgerow ingredients Everitt-Matthias picks himself each morning.
The restaurant offers three formats: a three-course lunch (£60), a three-course dinner (£85), and a five-course dinner (£105). The price-to-technique ratio is the best in the Cotswolds — a Michelin star at lunch for less than £75 all-in is not available elsewhere in the region.
The dining room is resolutely unflashy: cream walls, simple bistro chairs, small bud vases of garden flowers, a handful of modern British prints. The wine list focuses on the Loire, the Rhône, and small Burgundy growers with a serious by-the-glass programme starting at £8.
Why It's Perfect for First Date
Champignon Sauvage is the Cotswolds first-date restaurant. The 32-seat room is small enough that conversation carries, the service is warm and unaffected (Helen runs the room personally), and the £85 three-course format removes the pressure of a three-hour tasting on a first meeting. For birthdays, the kitchen will build a personalised dessert with two days' notice.
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