25th anniversary events | The Jancis Robinson Story

Beach House – worth a trip to Wales

Sunday 10 August 2025 • 6 min read
Hywell Griffith of Beach House

With Nick on his hols for a few weeks, Ben takes up the restaurant-reviewing mantle. First stop Wales, for extraordinary cooking and a fascinatingly wide-ranging wine list. Above, chef Hywell Griffith (credit: Beach House Restaurant).

Something of the Milk Wood dreamtime lingers on in the creeks and coves, the nants and the cilfachs, of this stretch of the south Wales coast. Faint echoes of Mrs Ogmore-Pritchard and Organ Morgan steal in on the ‘fishboat-bobbing’ tide only to be drowned out by the cries of the herring gulls wheeling overhead, while groups of Nogood Boyos still prop up the local bars. In the seaside towns of the Gower Peninsula, these Dylan Thomas characters at least are evergreen.

Oxwich Bay
Oxwich Bay (credit: Beach House Restaurant)

Nestling against the dramatic dunes of Oxwich Bay, the weathered stone and bleached wood of Beach House seems to mark the exact moment when the gold and grey of the shore resolves into the softer green of the surrounding hillsides. Wild strawberries and tufts of sea holly give way to a scrap of garden that shelters leeward. It leads to the main door that likewise turns its back on the weather’s caprices, one minute watercolours in the rain and the next gouache-thick sunlight pouring through holes rent in gun-metal clouds. Picture windows contrast this grandeur with the beautifully pitched urbanity within, marking the fragile border between nature and artifice. It’s an intoxicating dissonance that continues into the food that chef Hywell Griffith and team conjure from the best that local farmers and fisherfolk have to offer.

Opened in 2016 and now garlanded with 3 AA rosettes and a Michelin star, Beach House offers 3-, 6- and 8-course menus. At first glance, all need a little translating – each course being afforded a single-word description, ‘Celeriac’, for example, or ‘Citrus’. The dual-language menu doesn’t really help: betys being no more revealing than beetroot, lar y goedwig than hen of the woods. But further on, all is revealed. Betys, for example, are served with Pant ys Gawn. Which sounds like a remarkably brave idea in these windy environs. As it turned out, Pant ys Gawn is a goat’s cheese from Monmouthshire. A rather good one at that.

Beach House amuse bouches

We were still discussing the merits or otherwise of undercarriage aircon (I have Scottish ancestry so claim kilted carte blanche) when the first glimpse of gastromancy appeared bar-side to accompany our strawberry and Earl Grey cocktails. Two tiny amuse-bouches – a smoked-fish tartlet and a pressed-pork croquette topped with pineapple confit (pictured above) – augured well. So did the warm bread buns, light as a gull’s feather with a dab of local laver bread within, that awaited tableside in the airy, mid-century modern of the restaurant proper.

crab with shimeji mushrooms

We managed a bread-muffled thanks as our first course arrived soon after: a small bowl of seemingly disparate parts that came together on the spoon with the miraculous alchemy of a Michelin-starred hand. Briny, brown-meat-heavy crab hid beneath a reflective pool of yuzu gel (pictured above). Strewn on top, tiny Shimeji mushrooms, diminutive croutons and shoreline herbs that matched peerless local produce with notes of Japanese restraint (echoes of Griffiths’ Ynyshir past, perhaps?). It was a tall order for the wine pairing, though: Chateau Oumsiyat’s fresh but introvert Soupir rosé 2023. Something well-chilled with a little residual sugar might have fared better, even at this stage in proceedings.

lobster tartlet

But our smiling sommelier, Matty, came up trumps with the following course, a delicate lobster tartlet of seaweed-laden pastry garnished with edible flowers (above). He poured out orange qvevri wine from Khaketi in Georgia: Vachnadziani’s Rkatsiteli 2019. It was indeed wild on its own, as he had intimated, but it purred like a cat when presented with the buttery lobster. Matty, Maciej in fact, was from Poland. We quizzed him gently on his home country having been intrigued by Jancis’s reports of a nascent winemaking scene a few months back. His eyes misted over when he spoke about Riesling and Grüner Veltliner, and no doubt they will at this very moment be marching north to replace the Bacchus and Solaris PiWis of his homeland’s past. Just like England. No doubt Wales, too.

Feeling by now semi-fluent, ‘it’s betys’ I thought to myself as the beautifully cooked medley of beets arrived. Offset by the delicious infamy (at least at our table) of that goat’s cheese and dabs of garden pesto, it was the tiny hazelnut details that pulled together both taste and texture. To go with, a leesy, cedary white from Armenia (ArmAs Reserve Voskehat 2023). It was, I think, the vinous highlight of the evening, dry but with a ghost of fruit-driven ripeness powering significant if well-behaved alcohol. Stone-fruited, melon-scented and with a haunting herbal lilt (thyme flowers, woody honeysuckle?), it turned over the earth of the beets wonderfully.

ArmAs Reserve Voskehat

Pearlescent cod (below) appeared next, accompanied by a single confit-potato chip and a patriotic charred leek to gather up the herb-oil-split sauce. I was fascinated by the white chosen as its partner, Hirutza’s Txakoli 2024 from Spain’s Basque country. It resembled another Atlantic coast hugger, Vinho Verde, with its slight spritz and green-citrus bite. But it was leaner, coiled and almost feral. Salty and sweaty, like a Jean Genet dream of Bilbao bad-boy sailors, I rather liked it.

cod and chip

The few shavings of raw asparagus (merllys) that followed barely registered against the risotto chew of ancient grains cut with verjus and haunted by wild garlic. But we didn’t care, as hidden in the dish’s Brythonic depths was a single slab of unforgettable treacle-cured pig. Homemade yeast extract gave the whole even more savoury depth. Our passion for this Welsh Marmite of sorts remained undimmed even by the news that it was made from fermented scraps in a plastic bin out back (I imagined a barrel of jetsam crude in the car park). Chilean Cinsault was destined to buckle under this savoury weight but Pedro Parra’s Imaginador 2019 from Itata was itself meaty-smoky, making for a lively conversation that elevated food and wine.

beef cheek with truffle

What is the correct response when a smiling waiter approaches clutching a winter truffle (from Monmouthshire, no less)? ‘No thank you, I prefer to taste my beef’ is perhaps wise or there’s the more practical, ‘how much of a “supplement” are we talking?’. But I just nodded, mesmerised like a tom in catnip. Predictably, it did dominate our next, beef-cheek course (pictured above) with its neat carrot rocher, lar y goedwig (you should know by now) and baroque black-garlic detailing. But supplementary truffle has a grim inevitability to it. At least for me.

A ‘nice piece of meat’ seems now destined to come with fripperies: a kitsch pie, a fiddly-faddly stuffed wing or, if truly unlucky, a modish bon-bon. The gleeful proffering of a wee copper pan alongside met therefore with a rather curmudgeonly nod. I associate the term cottage pie with the dun meals of my school days – Late C20th Brown is the Pantone, I think – but such it was, taxonomically speaking anyway. But delving through the pomme purée we discovered ox-cheek depths and duck-liver richness; this was the sort of thing you gobble in indecent haste leaving only a smidge to dab provocatively behind your ears on the way out. It was especially lovely with the confit brambles of our Colchagua Carmenère (Montes Alpha, 2021), the same notes Sam picked up in the 2019.

Pre-desserts, or pre-pud puds, feel somehow off the record, a chance for introverted pastry chefs to run amok. Here, a relatively trad meringue, goat’s curd and honeycomb number was shot through with pink peppercorns whose perfumed heat went brilliantly with a chilled Moscato d’Asti (Nivole from Michele Chiarlo). Puds proper came in the shape of warmly spiced bara-brith soufflé with tea ice-cream and a shiny, shiny choc number (below) electrified by pearls of sherry-vinegar gel. One final throw of the vinous dice brought a five-year-old Marsala Dolce Superiore from Curatolo Arini which struggled with the choccy tang and a Chambers Rutherglen Muscat that predictably fared better with the raisin-and-nutmeg charms of the soufflé.

chocolate with vinegar gel

Warm notes of Welsh tea bread and Aussie sticky wafted us to our waiting taxi just as the night clouds were coming in across the bay. ‘Beautifully orchestrated Sturm und Drang’ was the phrase that kept playing in my mind. By now geographically challenged by too much good food and the long-haul wine flight, I could only think of a Fingal’s Cave surge and swell, though Karl Jenkins would have been more appropriate. As it happened, we got neither. It was Neal Diamond who serenaded us home. Not even Tom Jones.

Eight-course tasting menu £135 a head plus £79 per person ‘Curious’ wine flight (there’s a ‘Distinguished’ flight as well, distinguished by price and no doubt wines). Oh, and that £15 truffle supplement …

Beach House Oxwich Beach, Gower, Swansea SA3 1LS; tel: +44 (0)1792 278 277

Photos are the author’s own unless otherwise credited.

Choose your plan
JancisRobinson.com 25th anniversaty logo

Go for gold with your wine knowledge.

The world just came together in Italy – and there’s never been a better time to explore its wines and beyond.

For a limited time, get 20% off all annual memberships by entering promo code GOLD2026 at checkout. Offer ends 12 March. Valid for new members only.

Member
$135
/year
Save over 15% annually
Ideal for wine enthusiasts
  • Access 290,073 wine reviews & 15,929 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
Inner Circle
$249
/year
 
Ideal for collectors
  • Access 290,073 wine reviews & 15,929 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
  • Early access to the latest wine reviews & articles, 48 hours in advance
Professional
$299
/year
For individual wine professionals
  • Access 290,073 wine reviews & 15,929 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
  • Early access to the latest wine reviews & articles, 48 hours in advance
  • Commercial use of up to 25 wine reviews & scores for marketing
Business
$399
/year
For companies in the wine trade
  • Access 290,073 wine reviews & 15,929 articles
  • Access The Oxford Companion to Wine & The World Atlas of Wine
  • Early access to the latest wine reviews & articles, 48 hours in advance
  • Commercial use of up to 250 wine reviews & scores for marketing
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Free for all

Ch Ormes de Pez
Free for all An overview of the 2016s tasted at 10 years old. See tasting articles on right-bank reds and sweet whites and...
Ferran and JR at Barcelona Wine Week
Free for all Ferran and Jancis attempt to sum up the excitement of Spanish wine today in six glasses. A much shorter version...
Institute of Masters of Wine logo
Free for all Congratulations to the latest crop of MWs, announced today by the Institute of Masters of Wine. The Institute of Masters...
Joseph Berkmann
Free for all 17 February 2026 Older readers will know the name Joseph Berkmann well. As outlined in the profile below, republished today...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Bonheur restaurant interior
Nick on restaurants The Australian chef who used to be in charge of Gordon Ramsay’s flagship restaurant in London now has one of...
Samantha harvesting protea’s on Ginny Povall’s farm
Wines of the week Two wines to conjure up spring. Flower Girl Albariño 2025 from €20.95, $25.65, £23.95 and Big Flower Cabernet Franc 2024...
left-bank 2016 firsts bottle line-up
Tasting articles Impressions from the most recent Ten Years On tastings held by Bordeaux Index and Farr Vintners. See this report on...
Le Pin Lafleur and Petrus 2016 bottles
Tasting articles The first of three articles about this lauded vintage. See this guide to our comprehensive coverage of Bordeaux 2016. This...
Sam smelling a glass of wine.jpg
Mission Blind Tasting The power of scent, and how to harness it to figure out what’s in your glass. In last week’s MBT...
Corbieres - vineyard island
Don't quote me Chris Howard contemplates the precarious balance of water, weather and vines in France’s Languedoc. Late summer sun beats down on...
bunch of California Riesling
Tasting articles Convinced of Riesling’s inherent greatness, these California winemakers strive onwards despite the Sisyphean task of selling the wines. Above, a...
Close up of two rows of wine glasses stretching into the distance
Tasting articles From a forest of wine glasses, a comprehensive exploration of Margaret River’s best bottles and their international competitors. Including a...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.