Offers and Events
Week Day and Week Night Pre-Fixe Menu available
Throughout April and May 2010 our pre-fixe menu is available. Monday to Friday lunchtime 2 Courses £10.95 3 Courses £12.95. Monday to Thursday evening 2 Courses £12.95 3 Courses £15.95. Also Friday evening 6.00pm to 7.30pm 2 Courses £12.95 3 Courses £15.95 and Saturday lunchtime 12.00pm to 3pm 2 Courses £12.95 3 Courses £15.95.
Two Castles Run - Sunday 6th June 2010
If you are one of the three thousand people doing the Two Castles Run (a 10km route from Warwick Castle to Kenilworth Castle), you will receive an exclusive offer from Harringtons in your reward pack at the end of the race! Make sure you look out for your leaflet which offers a 10% discount off your total bill anytime except Saturday Night and Sunday lunches. Good Luck in the race and we look forward to seeing you ate Harringtons for your well deserved treat!

Leamington Courier
Review by: Simon Steel
Few things are finer than an extravagant, multi-course dinner in a top restaurant - if your wallet can shoulder the burden. Thankfully these days you can often combine the best bits of both experiences without breaking the bank, as Harrington's On The Hill proves with a flourish.
Sited near the castle ruins and two pubs, Harrington‘s physically sets itself apart from many of Kenilworth’s eating places. And inside it has an ambience all of its own.
My companion and I were directed upstairs. This is often a bad sign, but the room was as warm and well-decorated as the one below. Prompt, friendly service introduced us to the evening's set menu. The tomato and basil soup was the no-choice entree, but few could have complained. Fresh and subtle, it set the scene well.

A choice of several starters resulted in melon with champagne-soaked fruit in a pool of mango coulis and king prawns pan fried in garlic butter with seasonal leaves arriving at the table. Both were carefully prepared and well presented. The melon was pronounced excellent and only this reviewer's inept handling of the prawns spoiled an otherwise fine choice.
The main course arrived with slightly indecent haste. It deserved a longer wait, but was very good nevertheless. Only the size of the portion let my fillet of lamb in port and redcurrant jus down. Less is definitely not more when presented with something as tender and delicious as this. My companion's steak also came highly praised and was more than large enough. Crisp, fresh vegetables accompanied, along with excellent mash that was neither pureed nor lumpy.
Four other main meal choices were offered on the night in question, along with five desserts. Refreshingly, the menu was almost devoid of pretentious chef-speak. Only a description of one dessert as ‘draped in Creme Anglaise’ (that's with custard to you and me) offered a hint of ideas above their station.
Side-stepping the pitfalls of heavy desserts despite the dearth of lamb, I selected tuile baskets filled with blackcurrant creme and winter berries. Two crisp, wafer-like cups were well-filled and the fruit tasted fresher than it perhaps deserved to. The raspberry creme brulee selected by my companion also came highly recommended. It is hard to go wrong with a raspberry, after all.
Coffee completed the evening, which with a reasonable bottle of house red wine came to a little under £50. Eating out can be as cheap or expensive as you want, but pound for pound it won't come much better than this.