Feature
The Clink – The top-rated northern restaurant where your meals are prepared by prison inmates
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The Clink is a very extraordinary restaurant in its own right, serving impeccable dishes in a beautiful setting.
But what makes it even more extraordinary is that it stands in the grounds of HMP Styal – an active women’s prison in Cheshire – and is staffed by inmates.
Everything you eat is cooked and served by these students in training, helping them to get a foot in the door of the hospitality industry when their sentence ends.
By the time they finish their shifts at The Clink, they’ll have worked towards their City & Guilds NVQs in Food and Beverage Service, Professional Cookery and Food Hygiene.
It is, as the charity says, ‘their first steps towards a new life’.
So this spot definitely does good for the women here at HMP Styal – but it is also an absolute treat for members of the public too, regardless of its wholesome roots.
The Clink is based inside a converted chapel in a beautiful and leafy corner of Cheshire, with the National Trust’s Quarry Bank just on the doorstep.
Inside, beneath a towering wooden ceiling and colourful stained glass windows, the restaurant itself boasts a simple, historic grandeur.
![Inside The Clink restaurant in Styal. Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-21-scaled.jpg)
![The Clink restaurant in Styal. Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-22-scaled.jpg)
![The Clink restaurant in Styal. Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-17-scaled.jpg)
There are parquet floors underfoot and you can even still see the remains of the chapel’s organ, now standing proudly above the doorway into the kitchen.
The leather upholstery and boardroom tables inside have all been made by prisoners at HMP Frankland.
During the day the menu breaks down into all-day brunch dishes, small plates and hearty larger ones.
For brunches that includes a delightfully spicy shakshuka served with a flatbread, and one of the hand-on-heart best French toasts I’ve found, laced with a smattering of cinnamon and a warming winter berry compote.
Small plates come in the form of pork belly on a bed of red chilli jam and Asian slaw; and a highly-technical plate of beetroot served roasted, in gel form, and pickled, alongside little towers of goats cheese mousse and candied walnuts.
![Beetroot and goats cheese, and pork belly small plates Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-6-scaled.jpg)
![A spicy shakshuka on The Clink brunch menu. Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-8-scaled.jpg)
![French toast. Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-2-1200x1600.jpg)
There are special evening sittings at The Clink too, where you can feast on four exceptional courses for just £40.
That menu currently includes a slow-cooked beef that falls apart as soon as it so-much as looks at a knife and fork, and a fillet of roast cod perched atop spinach puree and roasted leeks, topped with a bacon crumb.
And then come desserts that wouldn’t look out of place in a Michelin-level restaurant – all the flavours of the beloved Manchester tart, this time reassembled and elevated with raspberry gel, chocolate crumb, a coconut tuile, and coconut ice cream.
![A deconstructed Manchester tart. Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-14-scaled.jpg)
![Slow-roasted beef. Credit: The Manc Group](https://themanc.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/the-clink-styal-011024-DH-themancgroup-10-scaled.jpg)
There’s another British classic in Eton Mess, which has barely an inkling of ‘mess’ to it, a prettily-presented plate of meringue, fresh fruit and macerated berries.
The Clink consistently sits towards the top of the best restaurants in Cheshire. On TripAdvisor, it currently ranks first in Wilmslow and fourth in all of Cheshire overall.
After one brief lunchtime visit, it’s easy to see why.
And that pudding really does taste better knowing how much good work is going on behind the scenes.
To find out more, make a donation, or book your table at The Clink, head here.
They’re also hosting a charity night with Sacha Lord soon, who’ll be talking all about his life working in Manchester’s nightlife industry while guests tuck into a three-course dinner.
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Featured image: The Manc Group