Maximise your Avios, air miles and hotel points

Review: GWR’s Pullman Dining – the last proper meal on Britain’s railways

Links on Head for Points may support the site by paying a commission.  See here for all partner links.

This is our review of Great Western Railway’s Pullman Dining service from Plymouth (in my case) to London Paddington.

I arrived in Plymouth on Great Western Railway’s Night Riviera Sleeper very early – before 6am – and spent the entire morning sightseeing, which is very interesting if you are into all things maritime. I reviewed the Night Riviera Sleeper here and reviewed the Paddington First Class Lounge here.

GWR had booked me on the Pullman Dining train back to London. Tickets for both trips were provided by GWR for review purposes.

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

What is Pullman Dining?

Pullman Dining is virtually the only restaurant-style (and restaurant-priced) meal left on the standard UK rail network.

The only thing that comes close, if you don’t count the Caledonian Sleeper, is the Premier Service offered by Transport for Wales on trains between Cardiff and Holyhead and Cardiff and Manchester. I might put this on my list for next year!

Pullman Dining operates Monday to Friday on six trains:

  • 13.03 Paddington to Plymouth
  • 19.04 Paddington to Plymouth
  • 17.48 Paddington to Swansea
  • 13.15 Plymouth to Paddington
  • 18.16 Plymouth to Paddington
  • 12.23 Swansea to Paddington

First Class passengers can book a seat to dine up to one hour before departure. Standard Class passengers can eat if space is available – you are effectively getting a free upgrade to a First Class seat along with your meal!

The cost is £38 for a two course meal and £46 for three courses.

My Pullman Dining experience

I was booked on the 13.15 from Plymouth. The Pullman Dining car was part of First Class, at the front of the train.

The train started its trip in Plymouth and was ready for boarding a bit ahead of time. I was advised to sit in First Class until the dining coach was ready, at which point the staff would call us over. This happened roughly 15 minutes after the train had departed.

The Pullman Dining coach is half kitchen and half normal First Class seating, but with the tables set for eating.

On the day I travelled there were four tables set for one person and two for four people. I had a reservation but some passengers did not and had decided spontaneously to dine when they discovered seats were available.

The staff told me that they can do up to 20 covers per train, using the next First Class coach for spillover if necessary. The staff also mentioned that Taunton is the last stop for diners to come on board on this service, although the GWR website says Exeter St Davids. If you are travelling from London you must board no later than Reading.

This was my table:

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

This is a table set for four but only used by a couple:

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

The table cover is simple but well done with a white paper table cloth. The journey between Plymouth and Exeter is especially scenic and sitting at a laid out table awaiting good food was quite a treat.

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

Here is the menu for my journey – click to enlarge. There were three starters, four mains and two desserts on offer plus a selection of regional cheeses. Besides the wine list there were also spirits such as Tarquin’s Handcrafted Cornish Gin for £8 and a number of soft drinks. Bottled water is complimentary.

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

I took a shot of the galley with the skilled chef at its helm, skilled not only at cooking but balancing too!

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

The meal started with complimentary warm bread rolls of different varieties. For my starter I had Sumac roasted pumpkin with pomegranate, hummus and coconut yoghurt. It was delicious and looked appetizing too.

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

For my main I chose prime 6oz Oxfordshire fillet steak (£15 additional cost) cooked ‘well done’. It came with parsley butter, beef fat chip, tenderstem broccoli and cabbage and peppercorn sauce and, with mine, Dijon mustard. The broccoli was a bit soft but the steak was perfect and overall it was very tasty.

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

As dessert I had apple and blackberry crumble. The hot custard was hand-poured by the waiter and I like my crumble ‘drowned’!

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

The meal finished off with complimentary tea and a mint chocolate:

Review GWR's Pullman Dining

Conclusion

I had a really enjoyable journey from Plymouth to Paddington and arrived feeling very content. The food was very good quality, and with two courses at £38 and three courses at £46 I thought it was fairly priced, although my steak came with a £15 surcharge.

It is definitely something worth trying if you are heading to or from the West Country. For anyone used to regular First Class catering on the long-haul British rail network, it’s a revelation and I would definitely do this again. Give it a go whilst you can.

Comments (76)

  • Lumma says:

    60 Oz of fillet steak for a £15 supplement is a steal. Plate must be massive

  • Ian says:

    How can you have a steak cooked ‘well done’? Should be banned! 😂

    • Simon says:

      Came here to say this? I know it’s each to their own, but surely there should be limits…

    • Andrew. says:

      Easily.

      Anyone can cool a well done steak badly, it takes a good chef to cook a well done steak well.

      • cin4 says:

        What on earth are you on about, that makes zero sense. You can’t undenature proteins.

  • The Savage Squirrel says:

    “cooked well done”: even on a train the chef dies a little inside….

  • Peter Taysum says:

    I would add The Northern Belle to your list too. They tend to do bespoke return trips including dining! 👍 A very enjoyable experience!

  • Lumma says:

    I think the Transport for Wales 1st Class dining looks better than this from the reviews I’ve seen. And it’s almost half the price. Obviously it’s no use if you want to get from Plymouth to London though

    • Sharka says:

      Probably multiples of the price when you consider the taxpayer subsidy likely implicit in the Transport for Wales dining, generously provided by the Welsh Assembly.

      • CommonSense says:

        Welsh Parliament*

      • Rich says:

        Exactly – I mean do the maths. 20 covers is £766 income net of VAT if everyone buys 3 courses (add £250 net if they all go for steak) plus whatever drinks they sell. Staffing and other costs surely make this a nostalgic loss maker or do they sell lots more £350 first class tickets as a result of this offering?? What am I missing?

  • Kowalski says:

    Nice review thanks Conny. I hope to travel on this at some point this year.

  • Andy says:

    Intrigued as to how one would pour custard over a crumble, other than by using one’s hands!

  • G says:

    Worth noting, its not served on public holidays, so not doable on a bank holiday weekend

    • daveinitalia says:

      When I last did a trip to Devon and Cornwall over a bank holiday weekend the tactic I used was Pullman down on the Friday evening (the 1903 I think I chose) to Plymouth. I gradually worked my way to Penzance and got the sleeper back from there on Monday evening, getting me into London in time for a shower at the station and off to work on Tuesday.

      • Mark says:

        Is there some sort of HfP readership obsession about showers…???

        I wouldn’t expect a shower on a train, nor in a train station lounge for that matter, should such a thing exist to even accommodate shower facilities…

        I don’t get it, maybe it’s just as I’m from outside the M25 and therefore considered the great unwashed to the spivs and chavs from London Town…!!!

        • Tariq says:

          Must be. In my mind, if you’re purchasing a bed to sleep the night then (like in a hotel room) a bathroom with shower comes with it. Probably more logically to the morning shower-ers than those that shower at other times of the day.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please click here to read our data protection policy before submitting your comment

The UK's biggest frequent flyer website uses cookies, which you can block via your browser settings. Continuing implies your consent to this policy. Our privacy policy is here.