logo
We join the queue to try York's newest bakery and bistro – is it any good?

We join the queue to try York's newest bakery and bistro – is it any good?

Yahoo24-05-2025
Review: We try menus at Black Wheat Club, Fossgate, York
THERE was fanfare and fuss when this new eating spot opened in York a few weeks ago.
Expectation built for weeks on account of a series of 'teaser' posts on social media and the fact its windows were blacked out during renovations.
When Black Wheat Club (BWC) finally opened at the top of Fossgate (in the former Bowler vintage fashion store), people were queueing for a table.
And I was one of them.
Black Wheat Club in Fossgate. Photo from York Press
In the first few weeks, the business – set up by Tomasz Mlynarski and Marta Obuchowska, the Polish couple behind the Krep food truck in Shambles Market – was billed as a 'microbakery' and 'bistro' initially just offering a brunch menu.
This menu is still available and features the likes of freshly baked pastries, breakfast buns, egg dishes – all with a unique twist (leek, celeriac and cheese morning bun anyone?).
On my first visit – after a brief wait outside (luckily we were first in the queue) – we devoured one of the best sandwiches we had ever had in York: freshly made focaccia (all soft inside with a crisp, salty crust) packed with a stack of wafer-thin ham, mustard mayo, and layers of finely sliced pickled cucumber. The coffee and cakes were very good too.
Black Wheat Club in Fossgate, left, and its focaccia and ham sandwich for lunch. Photos from York Press
When we learned the owners' intention was also to open in the evening (Thursday to Saturday only), we vowed to return.
Which brings us neatly to a warm Friday night in May. We'd booked a table for three for 7.30pm.
On arrival, there were only two other groups of diners; a booking for four was a 'no show' so our friendly and super-helpful waiter gave us their space rather than the smaller, raised table with bar stools we'd been earmarked.
Small menus are always a plus for me (who wants to plough through a book in order to pick something to eat?) so BWC quickly won Brownie points for having its selection on just one page. Drinks get two pages!
We noticed the wine was priced from £32-£45 for a bottle, which felt like an electric bolt to the body. But we then spotted a Vermouth and Soda was only £5 (ditto the House Negroni), as was a can of IPA. A round of drinks for £15 – we were smiling again.
Our Vermouth 'sharpeners' came in pretty ornate classes. Served with lots of ice and a sprig of fresh thyme, they were a perfect drink for a warm, pre-summer evening.
Interiors and the Vermouth 'Sharpener' at Black Wheat Club. Photos from York Press
On to the food. BWC follows the fashion for serving small plates of food, designed for sharing. There were ten savoury dishes on the menu and two desserts; we ordered seven of them between us and were told they'd come in a random order.
Random was certainly the word, but I quite liked the surprise element.
We were surprised when the first dish to arrive was the house salad (£10). Tucked away at the bottom of the menu almost like an afterthought, it was anything but.
In fact, it was one of our favourite plates of the night. Presentation was impressive: the greens and deep reds of the salad leaves were mixed with the bright yellow of the turmeric-infused pickled kohlrabi, all topped with the edible white flowers of wild garlic. There was a taste of fennel too, from the seeds in the dukkah topping.
The leaves had been leisurely left in the house marinade so were glossy and slightly wilted, and utterly delicious. We asked the waiter if they sold the dressing? No was the answer. Well they should. He did reveal the secret ingredient was orange; I will now be adding that to my salad dressings at home.
After something so summery and light, we were thrust back to the tastes of autumn and winter as two plates of heavy-duty carbs came our way: roasted celeriac (£12) and the BWC potatoes (£9).
Burger, left, and celeriac dish at Black Wheat Club. Photo by York Press
The former was another pretty plate, the two fat and slightly-charred wedges of celeriac opening like a butterfly on a moat of yellow romesco and fermented squash salsa and filled down the middle with dukkah. It tasted divine: the celeriac crunchy on the outside and soft, but still with a bit of bite, inside.
The potatoes were definitely in the 'naughty but nice category', cooked so they had gone beyond soft (yum) and topped with just-melting Botton cheese and creamed rosemary butter, together delivering a gooey gorgeousness with each bite (double yum).
Our 'protein' plates came next: starting with the house burger. Encased in greaseproof paper that we had to unwrap before cutting into pieces to share, we all agreed we'd come back and have one to ourselves. At £15 this might be one of the most expensive burgers in York. But it also might be one of the best.
The plaice fillet (£17) was perfectly pan fried, delivering mouthfuls of soft, succulent fish. It came with three rounds of charred celeriac on the side.
Pan fried plaice at Black Wheat Club. Photo by York Press
We also chose the pork steak (£16) which had been slow cooked to the point it fell away as we raked through our forks, scooping up hearty mouthfuls which were quite divine.
Latest York food reviews:
'This food was worthy of a last supper: a perfect 10' - best York restaurant?
Is this 'the best pie in the UK'? We put it to the test
Review: Masala Craft, Indian Street Kitchen, Walmgate, York
At six dishes between us, we were quite full, but in the interests of offering a full review we selected a dessert too.
There were just two choices – bread and butter pudding or cheesecake; we plumped for the latter. This was another winner – and a rather whopper of a helping, which was easily generous enough for us to share.
Pork steak, left, and cheesecake at Black Wheat Club. Photos by York Press
Thick, dense and creamy in the tradition of all the best baked cheesecakes, it came with a sweet and sticky raisin sauce.
The bill for three was just £102 (tip not included). For around £35 a head, we thought we'd had a very special dinner in York.
It's also worth noting that the restaurant's interior is quite special too: we loved the wood panelling in dark green and the stamped table ware – and the loos must be some of the smartest in the city.
Bathroom upstairs at Black Wheat Club. Photo by York Press
We just hope that word gets out and the restaurant fills up – the Black Wheat Club deserves to have a healthy 'membership' in York and beyond.
Fact file:
Address: Black Wheat Club, 52 Fossgate, York
Closed Tuesdays and Wednesdays
W: www.blackwheatclub.com (reservations via website)
Instagram: @blackwheatclub
Our view:
Food: Fresh, seasonal and tasty with choices for breakfast lunch and now dinner
Decor: Smart and fashionable - with really lovely loos!
Value: Not cheap, but you are paying for quality produce and skilled cooking
Verdict: A great addition to York that deserves to do well
All reviews are independent and meals paid for by The Press
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

🎥 England celebrate EURO 2025 triumph with London bus parade
🎥 England celebrate EURO 2025 triumph with London bus parade

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

🎥 England celebrate EURO 2025 triumph with London bus parade

The EURO 2025 champions are back home and celebrating with their fans. It's been a packed 48 hours for the England squad having touched down on Monday following their win over Spain for a reception at 10 Downing Street. But the party isn't over with the Lionesses now on an open top bus parade down The Mall in central London and heading towards Buckingham Palace. Are some of the best clips from the parade so far ... Early vibes on the bus ... Sunday's goalscorer has her say ... It came home ... Heading down The Mall ... What a way to toast the queens of Europe. 📸 Alex Pantling - 2025 Getty Images

Here's Your First Look at Emma Corrin and Olivia Colman in Netflix's New Pride & Prejudice
Here's Your First Look at Emma Corrin and Olivia Colman in Netflix's New Pride & Prejudice

Vogue

timean hour ago

  • Vogue

Here's Your First Look at Emma Corrin and Olivia Colman in Netflix's New Pride & Prejudice

I firmly believe that, like Little Women and Wuthering Heights, every generation gets the Pride & Prejudice they deserve. For those who came of age in the mid-'90s, that was the glorious BBC adaptation starring a note-perfect Jennifer Ehle and a wet-white-shirt-wearing Colin Firth. For those, like me, who grew up in the aughts, it was Joe Wright's ravishing, Keira Knightley and Matthew Macfadyen-led effort. (This is still, in my humble opinion, the best take on this literary classic.) And now, Gen Z is about to have their own: a six-part limited series reimagining of Jane Austen's scintillating romp is coming to Netflix. And the cast is to die for. On April 10, it was announced by the streamer that Golden Globe-winning period drama regular Emma Corrin (The Crown, Lady Chatterley's Lover, Nosferatu) would be taking the hotly contested part of Elizabeth Bennet, while Jack Lowden (Saoirse Ronan's husband and the star of War & Peace, Mary Queen of Scots, Benediction, and Slow Horses), would be the inscrutable Mr. Darcy. And as for the role of the wonderfully silly (and increasingly desperate) Mrs. Bennet? None other than Oscar winner Olivia Colman, Corrin's fellow Crown alumni, will slip into her frilly bonnet. More casting news followed on July 29: The Holiday, Scoop, and The Diplomat's Rufus Sewell will be the wry Mr. Bennet; Industry's Freya Mavor will be the angelic Jane Bennet; Heartstopper's Rhea Norwood will be the flighty Lydia; and recent graduates Hollie Avery and Hopey Parish will make their screen debuts as the giggly Kitty and the somber Mary, respectively. Then there's internet boyfriend Louis Partridge as the dastardly Mr. Wickham; Fleabag's Jamie Demetriou as the humorless Mr. Collins; Bad Sisters' Daryl McCormack as the kindly Mr. Bingley; and the formidable Fiona Shaw as the terrifying Lady Catherine de Bourg, so memorably embodied by Dame Judi Dench in the 2005 version. The supporting cast is rounded out with Domino Day's Siena Kelly as the glamorous Caroline Bingley; We Are Lady Parts' Anjana Vasan as the Bennet sisters' aunt, Mrs. Gardiner; The Tudors' Sebastian Armesto as her husband, Mr. Gardiner; Rosie Cavaliero as Lady Lucas; Justin Edwards as Sir William Lucas; Saffron Coomber as Mrs. Hurst, Bingley's other sister; James Dryden as Mr. Hurst; James Northcote as Colonel Forster; Eloise Webb as Harriet Forster; and Isabella Sermon as the luminous Georgiana Darcy.

Black Sabbath bassist reflects on rehearsing with 'frail' Ozzy Osbourne for farewell show
Black Sabbath bassist reflects on rehearsing with 'frail' Ozzy Osbourne for farewell show

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Black Sabbath bassist reflects on rehearsing with 'frail' Ozzy Osbourne for farewell show

Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler is sharing emotional reflections on the last time he ever saw his bandmate Ozzy Osbourne. In an essay for The Sunday Times published on Sunday, July 27, Butler paid tribute to the rock icon and wrote about performing with him for the last time during Black Sabbath's farewell show on July 5. Weeks after the performance, Osbourne died on July 22 at age 76. "Nobody knew he'd be gone from us little more than two weeks after the final show," Butler wrote. "But I am so grateful we got to play one last time together in front of his beloved fans. The love from the fans and all the bands, musicians, singers and solo artists that night was incredible. Everyone had come to pay homage to the Prince. I am so privileged to have spent most of my life with him." Butler, who founded Black Sabbath with Osbourne in 1968, said rehearsals for the farewell show started about a month prior, and he was taken aback when he saw Osbourne struggling with health issues. Surprise! Johnny Depp joins Alice Cooper for Ozzy Osbourne tribute "I knew he wasn't in good health, but I wasn't prepared to see how frail he was," he wrote. "He was helped into the rehearsal room by two helpers and a nurse and was using a cane — being Ozzy, the cane was black and studded with gold and precious stones. He didn't really say much beyond the usual greetings and when he sang, he sat in a chair." Rock star Ozzy Osbourne dies at 76, weeks after final Black Sabbath show Butler said Osbourne seemed exhausted after they played six or seven songs during rehearsal, and although they "had a bit of a chat," he "was really quiet compared with the Ozzy of old." The musician shared that he wishes he "had more time backstage with Ozzy" at their final show. "I didn't realize then that I would never see Ozzy again after that night," he wrote. Butler also remembered his former bandmate as a "born entertainer" who "had a heart of pure gold." Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi previously paid tribute to Osbourne on Instagram, writing that "there won't ever be another like him." Drummer Bill Ward also wrote in his own tribute, "Where will I find you now? In the memories, our unspoken embraces, our missed phone calls, no, you're forever in my heart." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ozzy Osbourne death: Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler reflects

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store