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

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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)

  • CJD says:

    60oz has to be a typo, most fillet portions I’ve seen in restaurants are 300g (so about 10oz), and a sharing chateaubriand is typically about 700g. 60oz is roughly 1.8kg, which is huge – the photographed steak looks pretty normal.

  • Kev says:

    This sounds well worth a try. Is it selected services only? I used the Cardiff to Manchester enhanced service on TfW last summer with dining and it was great value as was the service and wine selections. Lovely route as well and it uses old carriages for style!

    • Ryan says:

      🙁

      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

    • daveinitalia says:

      The review lists the services that it’s available on. Unfortunately breakfast services never returned after covid. There’s only a few services each day so you need to book on those and if possible reserve your seat.

      Back in the 2000s GNER (now LNER) was the only operator that took restaurants seriously and actually increased the number of restaurant trains offered compared to British Rail, almost every weekday train had a restaurant (except the ones departing after 8pm and a small smattering of quiet trains), other operators were winding down their restaurants (in BR days most InterCity trains except CrossCountry had restaurants). FGW (now GWR) kept a few which still remain. The GNER ones started to disappear in 2007 when GNER lost their franchise to National Express with the final restaurant operated by East Coast in 2011

  • Novice says:

    Good review. Good to see some vegetarian options and also fish as main.

  • captaindave says:

    Presumably you have to book this via GWR direct rather than the likes of train line etc ?
    We get on at Totnes to get to Paddington, sounds like a no-brainer if you book standard, and there is dining availability…

    • John says:

      You book the dining with GWR, but you can book your travel ticket anywhere.

    • daveinitalia says:

      Never book via trainline, there’s really no point to. They just add a booking fee to what any rail operator sells. Your credit card or bank card might be offering money off deals with various train operators (LNER is quite common). All train operators have to sell the full range of National Rail tickets, not just ones for their own services.

      • flyforfun says:

        I never get why people use trainline with it’s added fees. It’s like they can’t find the name of another operator. I use CrossCountry on the rare occasion I take a long distance train, but often check on the operating train companies site to see if you can specify seating beyond window, aisle, airline or table seating options. I also see LNER discounts on my credit cards virtually all the time. I wonder if use it once if I’ll ever get it again.

      • Kipto says:

        Yes I regularly get 10% off offers via Amex for LNER . You don’t have to travel on LNER either. You just use their app to book travel anywhere in the country.

  • krys_k says:

    Must be around 18 years ago would travel from london to Leeds for work and they would have a great restaurant carriage; always looked foreword to that trip.

    Over last few years took lots of journeys throughout Poland on their intercity trains. They have a WARS section in carriage (forever getting smaller, once was a whole carriage, now seating on one side of a half-carriage and standing table on the other side). Ever changing menu of cooked dishes. Their scrambled eggs are perfectly cooked to order. Great soups and mains. Washed down with a selection of great regional beers. And cheap, between £5-£10 depending on what you choose.

    • Matarredonda says:

      Yes ate on the Berlin to Warsaw express lDt yesr. Excellent value as you say and good food served with a smile. If I am not mistaken these are Polish operated trains.

    • daveinitalia says:

      Restaurant cars will only survive as long as people use them so it’s a shame to hear the ones in Poland are shrinking. I had good value from them when I was travelling through there in 2011 I think. Also a couple of years later had similar value on a Czech train from Prague to Vienna. My rule is that if there’s a restaurant car on board, I will use it.

      I had a nice surprise a few weeks ago, I bought a ticket on a EuroCity train between Padova and Verona and it was a Swiss operated train to Zurich and it had a restaurant car. As it was a short journey I had no time to dine, but with only one other person dining there was plenty of seats so they were happy to serve me beer (in proper glasses, better than the cardboard cups of Trenitalia).

      • Pat says:

        They’re not shrinking. The OP is wrong. They’re the same as they always were. On Flirt trains which are EMU’s it’s just a small section as factory delivered. Loco-hauled they’re the same as before, a full carriage. What’s new is that they feature fewer freshly cooked options.
        By Polish standards WARS is expensive.

        • Londonsteve says:

          I suspect that WARS is (trying to be) an important profit centre for Polish railways when revenue from ticket prices is low. It’s the same with MAV and Utasellato whose prices are high by Hungarian standards (and it must be said, the food isn’t that good, but at least it’s available, unlike the near total absence of catering on UK trains). Polish and Czech trains offer the best food quality in central Europe while Austrian OBB also has an excellent menu, albeit at higher prices.

  • Paul Rothwell says:

    Good review. I regularly have dinner on the 17.48 train from Paddington to Carmarthen which is equally as good. Great service by friendly and courteous staff.

  • Dirtyneedlebluesky says:

    This looks great and thanks for the details about Cardiff / Manchester service. I’ve never heard of this dining option before and looks really great value. Will have to look at schedules and use it as an excuse to head to the Cardiff area.

  • Chris says:

    Are the wine prices per bottle (reasonable) or per glass (expensive!)????? Couldn’t see any mention on the menu.

    • Chris says:

      Disregard – on second glance I saw there’s a measure against each description. Bit in distinct in the photo due to blurring so I didn’t spot it first time.

    • Tom says:

      IIRC the “bottle” is actually a half bottle.

      Might be why the price seems reasonable!

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