
Restaurant
A Michelin Bib Gourmand-recognised Franco-Yorkshire bistro in Horsforth, Bavette delivers keenly priced Gallic classics — pâté en croûte, bavette steak, shellfish bisque — with the kind of convivial neighbourhood energy that makes the journey from anywhere feel worthwhile. Deep green walls, book-lined shelves, and a wine list that ventures into Jurançon and Gaillac set the tone for something more considered than its suburban postcode might suggest.
<h2>The Scene in Horsforth</h2><p>Suburban Leeds is not where most people expect to find a room that could comfortably sit on a Paris side street. Yet Horsforth's dining offer has quietly developed a personality distinct from the city centre, with neighbourhood restaurants drawing regulars who have no interest in the commute into town. Bavette, on Town Street, occupies this local-loyalist tier while simultaneously attracting visitors from well beyond the West Yorkshire postcode — one Michelin reader famously wrote that the bistro was worth the journey from London, a testimonial that says something about what a well-executed neighbourhood French restaurant can achieve outside the capital.</p><p>For context on what surrounds it, <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/horsforth">our full Horsforth restaurants guide</a> maps the broader scene. The suburb also has its own character in bars and hotels: see <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/horsforth">our Horsforth bars guide</a> and <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/horsforth">our Horsforth hotels guide</a> for the fuller picture. If you're curious about what else the area offers beyond restaurants, <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/experiences/horsforth">experiences</a> and <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/wineries/horsforth">wineries</a> round out the local guides.</p><h2>Walking In</h2><p>The dining room at Bavette does something that many purpose-designed restaurant interiors fail to do: it feels inhabited. Shelves of books line walls painted in deep green, creating an atmosphere closer to a well-kept private dining room than a commercial operation. The service, led by Clément Cousin, is described consistently as chatty and convivial — a tone that fits the setting without tipping into the kind of performative informality that reads as studied. The room earns its bistro designation not through décor shorthand but through the way it functions on a weekday evening, when regulars appear to know the drill and first-timers settle quickly into the rhythm.</p><h2>The Cut That Names the Place</h2><p>Bavette , the French term for flank or skirt steak, cut from the lower abdominal muscles , is not the steak that dominates British restaurant menus. Ribeye holds that position. Sirloin comes second. The bavette sits in a different category: a working cut with pronounced grain, higher connective tissue content, and a flavour intensity that rewards correct cooking and slicing against the grain. It is the cut of the French brasserie tradition, the steak that appears on zinc-counter menus in Lyon and Bordeaux priced for regular consumption rather than occasion dining.</p><p>That positioning is exactly what the restaurant claims for itself. The signature bavette arrives with French beans and frites , a preparation that imposes nothing on the cut and lets the meat's character lead. This is not the approach of the steakhouse segment that orbits tomahawks and dry-aged côte de boeuf at theatrical price points. It is the bistro approach: a cut chosen for flavour density over spectacle, priced within a range (££) that makes repeat visits plausible for a local customer base. The choice signals both culinary literacy and commercial intent simultaneously.</p><p>For comparison, the steakhouse tier that trades on premium cuts and extended dry-aging operates at a fundamentally different price point and customer proposition. Venues like <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/the-ledbury-london-restaurant">The Ledbury in London</a> or <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/lenclume-cartmel-restaurant">L'Enclume in Cartmel</a> occupy a different bracket entirely , fine dining at ££££ with tasting menus rather than à la carte bistro plates. Bavette's peer set is the neighbourhood French bistro, not the destination restaurant circuit. Its Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025 confirms exactly that positioning: the Bib Gourmand designation is specifically awarded for good cooking at moderate prices, not for luxury or complexity.</p><h2>What the Menu Is Actually Doing</h2><p>The Franco-Yorkshire alliance that the menu represents is more than a marketing phrase. Cousin's family connection to Anjou on the Loire feeds directly into the wine list, which includes the Cousin family's own Anjou Cabernet Franc and Grolleau Gris alongside less-travelled French appellations like Jurançon Sec and Gaillac. This is the kind of wine list that a restaurant builds through genuine producer relationships rather than by pulling from a distributor's French category page , and it distinguishes Bavette from the generic brasserie format that leans on Burgundy and Bordeaux as safe defaults.</p><p>The kitchen, under Sandy Jarvis, works within classic Gallic frameworks without treating them as museum pieces. Pork and prune pâté en croûte with house mustard is a technically demanding preparation that appears on the menu as a starter, not a centrepiece showpiece. Crab tartelette with fennel, pea shoots, and saffron aïoli uses seasonal shellfish within a structured format. The dessert list moves between the French canon , St Emilion au chocolat, raspberry frangipane with sorbet , and seasonal Italian fruit varieties like Candonga strawberries on Basque cheesecake with yoghurt sorbet, a slight pivot that shows the kitchen isn't locked into dogma.</p><p>For those interested in where British French cooking sits at its most ambitious end, <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/le-manoir-aux-quat-saisons-a-belmond-hotel-great-milton-restaurant">Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton</a> and <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/midsummer-house-cambridge-restaurant">Midsummer House in Cambridge</a> represent the formal fine dining expression of the tradition. <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/hand-and-flowers-marlow-restaurant">Hand and Flowers in Marlow</a> sits closer to Bavette's register , a pub setting with serious cooking credentials , while <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/moor-hall-aughton-restaurant">Moor Hall in Aughton</a> represents the northern England fine dining tier. <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/hide-and-fox-saltwood-restaurant">hide and fox in Saltwood</a> and <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/restaurant-andrew-fairlie-auchterarder-restaurant">Restaurant Andrew Fairlie in Auchterarder</a> extend the regional picture across the UK. For the highest formal French tradition in a global context, <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/le-bernardin">Le Bernardin in New York City</a> and <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/atomix">Atomix in New York City</a> anchor the international comparison set, though the register is entirely different. <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/the-fat-duck-bray-restaurant">The Fat Duck in Bray</a>, <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/gidleigh-park-chagford-restaurant">Gidleigh Park in Chagford</a>, and <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/the-ledbury-london-restaurant">The Ledbury</a> complete the picture of where British fine dining operates at its most formally recognised tier.</p><p>Bavette belongs to none of those categories, and that is the point. Its 4.8 Google rating across 221 reviews reflects the satisfaction of a customer base that found exactly what a neighbourhood bistro should deliver: consistent cooking, a room worth returning to, and a bill that doesn't require a separate decision to justify the visit.</p><h2>Planning Your Visit</h2><p>Bavette opens from 4pm Monday through Thursday with last orders at 10:30pm, and from 3pm on Fridays and Saturdays (closing 11pm on Fridays, 11pm Saturdays) and Sundays from 3pm through 10:30pm. The address is 4-6 Town St, Horsforth, LS18 4RJ , a short distance from Horsforth train station on the Harrogate Line, which connects directly into Leeds city centre in under fifteen minutes. The price range sits at ££, consistent with the Bib Gourmand positioning. For Mediterranean alternatives in the immediate area, <a href="https://www.enprimeurclub.com/restaurants/forde-horsforth-restaurant">Forde</a> on the same Horsforth circuit offers a contrasting set of reference points.</p><h2>What to Order at Bavette</h2><div class="faq-block"><h3>What should I order at Bavette?</h3><p>The pork and prune pâté en croûte is the most technically specific thing on the menu and a reliable indicator of the kitchen's classical training , start there. The signature bavette with French beans and frites is the obvious main course, and the preparation exists to show the cut rather than obscure it. For wine, the Anjou Cabernet Franc from the Cousin family's own domaine is a direct connection to the Franco-Yorkshire partnership that built the restaurant, and the list's Jurançon Sec and Gaillac selections offer genuine discovery value for anyone who defaults to Burgundy or Bordeaux. Seasonally, the Candonga strawberry Basque cheesecake represents the dessert list at its most interesting , worth the detour when available.</p></div>
Pricing at Bavette is listed as ££.
Bavette has received recognition including: From baguettes to bavettes, there’s something so overtly French about this terrific neighbourhood bistro that it’s a wonder they don’t have the tricolore flag hanging outside. Its unlikely location in the Leeds suburb of Horsforth is a resu….
The pork and prune pâté en croûte is the clearest signal of the kitchen's classical French training and worth ordering on every visit. The bavette steak itself — served with French beans and frites — is the dish the restaurant is named for and the one that draws repeat bookings. Michelin's Bib Gourmand recognition in both 2024 and 2025 points to the kitchen's consistency across the menu, so seasonal specials such as the crab tartelette or Basque cheesecake are worth factoring in depending on what's running. The wine list covers lesser-travelled French appellations including the Cousin family's own Anjou Cabernet Franc, which pairs directly with the bistro cooking.
Bavette is categorized in our database as French Steakhouse, French.
4-6 Town St, Horsforth, Leeds LS18 4RJ, United Kingdom
Horsforth
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