Brackenrigg Inn
Overlooking Ullswater, the Brackenrigg is a traditional 18th century coaching inn with 17 en-suite rooms. All have a TV, tea/coffee making facilities, hairdryer, and many have lake views. Several rooms allow dogs, while others have full disabled access.
The restaurant enjoys a good reputation for freshly prepared, locally-sourced food, while the bar offers a good selection of real ales, an open fire, and darts board.
Other facilities include a secure cycle shed and free car park.






Reviews / Comments / Additional Information
The following morning we went down for breakfast and found a table and although the breakfast was fine the service again was terrible taking around an hour and a half just to get breakfast!
We decided at this time to book a table in the restaurant for that evening, thinking the service might be better than in the bar, how wrong could we be!!!
Before dinner we decided to have a drink in the bar, there was no where to sit as all the tables had reserved signs with names on them.
At 8pm we went to our table in the restaurant, we were given menu's and asked for the wine list, this took around 20 minutes to appear, the wine we asked for was not available and an alternative offered this was brought to the table put in a wine bucket and not even opened, luckily it had a screw top so we helped ourselves. Our order was eventually taken and after around an hour our starters arrived, I had ordered a risotto with langoustines, it was the most tasteless and overcooked risotto I had ever tasted, after one forkfull I returned it to the kitchen, no alternative was offered and no apology given. After this we started talking to tables near us they were also complaining about the food and service. At around 9.30pm no main courses had arrived, in fact there was not one member of staff in the restaurant they had all dissapeared, eventually staff reappeared but it was too late the restaurant was in uproar with people complaining, I complained to the manager who stated that they were having problems this evening, I told him that they seem to have them every evening. Our food eventually arrived arround 10.15pm, my wife's sea bass was overcooked and dry, my lamb shank was salty but we were so hungry and tired by now that we had no alternative but to eat what we could.
Breakfast the following morning was a repeat of the previous days but with an even longer wait.
Finally, the Brackenrigg Inn would make Fawlty Towers look like the Ritz. If I owned the business I would seriously think about selling it to someone who knows what they are doing.