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The Black Swan at Oldstead: TripAdvisor named this rural inn in North Yorkshire, England as the world's best restaurant in its Travelers' Choice awards. Click through the gallery to discover why.
Courtesy The Black Swan
Cozy dining room: The Black Swan is helmed by Tommy Banks, who in 2013 became the youngest chef to be awarded a Michelin star at age 24.
Courtesy The Black Swan
Home grown: The Banks family, including Tommy's brother James, have lived around Oldstead for generations. Their restaurant sources most of its ingredients from the surrounding countryside or its own gardens.
Courtesy The Black Swan
Crapaudine Beetroot: A Black Swan signature, this slice of home grown beet is cooked for hours in beef fat before being delicately decorated with piped goat curd and linseed crackers.
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Beautiful countryside: Part of the Black Swan's appeal is its stunning surroundings. To the north lies Sutton Bank, offering views over the bucolic Vale of York.
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White Horse: Sutton Bank is home to a white horse which was carved into the landscape in Victorian times. The area is also a gateway to the heather-covered North York Moors.
Barry Neild for CNN
Village inn: The Black Swan has been keeping Oldstead refreshed since the 16th century. It's no longer a traditional village pub, although at least one local pops in for a daily drink.
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Scallop with fermented celeriac: Diners at the Black Swan are served an 11-course tasting menu. Among many highlights is this scallop braised in its own shell and served with a tart celeriac sauce.
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Dinner and a show: Diners can watch some of their dishes being carefully plated in the open-plan prep area. Here a sous chef puts the finishing touches on the classic beet dish.
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Cod with cauliflower and parsley: This succulent piece of cod is cooked in water at exactly 46 degrees Celsius before being served on a bed of pureed cauliflower and parsley. It's topped by roasted cauliflower.
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Winding lanes: Reaching the Black Swan isn't easy. It lies amid a tangle of country lanes that look barely big enough to drive down. It's more than 230 miles from London and 20 miles from the nearest city, York.
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Raw Dexter beef: Topped with grated chestnut and lightly seasoned with homemade chili sauce, this raw beef dish comes from local cows reputedly fed up to four pints of beer a day to produce an incredibly tender meat.
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Stay the night: Because of the remote location, many diners also choose to stay the night. The Black Swan has nine luxury rooms to choose from.
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Venison and smoked sloe: The meat in this dish is glazed with black garlic that's been roasted for six weeks using innovative if unorthodox techniques -- it's sealed up and then wedged behind a boiler.
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Byland Abbey: A mile or so east of the Black Swan lie the ruins of Byland Abbey. The 12th-century Gothic structure is said to have once been one of the greatest monasteries in England.
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Dinner and room packages: Overnight guests typically get dinner included in room packages that cost about £350 ($460) for two people.
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Damson and kernel: Worth waiting for, the dessert selection includes this ice cream sandwich. One half is made from locally grown damsons, the other is flavored using ground damson kernels, which taste not unlike amaretto.
Courtesy The Black Swan
A new concept: The Black Swan was struggling to attract customers before the Banks family took over in 2006. When their standard pub food failed to turn the business around, they focused on turning it into an upscale dining destination.
Barry Neild for CNN
Local produce: These lambs in the field opposite the pub weren't on the fall 2017 menu, but as the seasons shift, they'll likely be included. Sorry, lambs.
Barry Neild for CNN
Shandy Hall: Need another reason to visit? The nearby village of Coxwold is home to Shandy Hall, home to 18th-century writer and vicar Laurence Sterne, author of "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman."
Oldstead, England CNN  — 

British pubs are known for their traditional settings, cozy atmosphere, welcoming firesides and, very occasionally, their tasty menus.

But calling one the best restaurant in the world? Surely, that’s the beer talking.

Yet the Black Swan, a rural inn in England that’s been keeping the village of Oldstead refreshed since the 16th century, has been named just that by TripAdvisor.

After tallying up positive feedback, the review website ranked the pub over fine dining establishments from New York to Paris in its annual Travelers’ Choice awards.

It’s a claim worth investigating. Not just for the food, but as an excuse to visit the sublime tangle of country lanes, ancient woodlands and rolling hills of North Yorkshire that have failed to keep the Black Swan a secret.

So what’s it got going for it?

Firstly, this isn’t some backwater pub wallowing in obscurity. Talented young chef Tommy Banks, a local lad, is already a TV regular in the UK and has had a Michelin star to his name since becoming the youngest recipient ever in 2013 at the age of 24.

Culinary magic

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Diners can watch intricate dishes assembled in the open prep area.

Secondly, it’s not really a pub anymore. Like many rural UK hostelries, the Black Swan had been in decline for many years before 2006, when Banks’ family took over. After their attempts to run it as a pub struggled, they decided to make it a dining destination.

They never looked back.

It now operates as both restaurant and upscale accommodation, offering food-and-stay packages that help lure customers to its truly remote location. It’s usually booked up well in advance.

That’s not to say that the Black Swan doesn’t feel like a pub. Walk through its front doors and you’re greeted by a wood-burning fire, a bar, tables, bookshelves crammed with old tomes and, likely as not, a friendly hound.

Says Banks’ older brother James, who runs front-of-house, at least one local treats it like a pub, popping in daily for a drink at the bar, although he has to choose from a cocktail, wine or a bottled beer list rather than a traditional hand-drawn ale.

Upstairs is where the culinary magic happens. After enjoying an aperitif such as a tangerine marigold martini, guests are led to their tables to get stuck into Banks’ 11-course tasting menu.

The restaurant is a simple space. There are two rooms of tables under low-beamed ceilings. Wooden floors are covered with oriental rugs. At one end, a chest-height wall separates the dining room from an open stainless steel kitchen prep area.

Dinner and a show.

Before getting to the food, it’s worth talking about the area, since that’s where most of the menu is sourced from. Oldstead lies roughly 20 miles north of the ancient city of York, where a large flat vale meets the rising gradients of the heather-covered North York Moors.

It’s a gentle, idyllic spot, far removed from the rough, windswept hillsides that make up much of the countryside of the surrounding English region of Yorkshire.

Old tracks and narrow lanes

Courtesy The Black Swan
Cooked for hours in beef juices, this beet dish is a Black Swan signature.

A mile or so down the road in one direction stands the 12th-century ruins of Byland Abbey. In the other, carved into the slope of Sutton Bank, lies the White Horse of Kilburn, a landscaping folly created in Victorian times that can be seen for miles.

It’s a beautiful terrain of old tracks and narrow roads to lose yourself in either on foot, bicycle or by car. It’s also a fertile source of beets, damsons, beef, lamb and other ingredients that regularly find themselves on the Black Swan’s seasonally shifting menu.

The food is worth making the journey for. Only one tasting menu is offered (at £95 – roughly $125), but it’s rammed with extraordinarily clever creations that rate off the scale for looks and flavor.

There’s Banks’ signature Crapaudine Beetroot – a slice of beet from the Black Swan gardens that’s been cooked for hours in beef fat before being delicately decorated with piped goat curd and linseed crackers.

There’s venison, glazed with black garlic that’s been baked for six (yes six) weeks, raw Dexter beef from local cows reputedly fed on four pints of beer a day and, amid the dessert rundown, a terrific ice cream sandwich made with both the fruit and stones of local damsons.

One unexpected highlight is a dish of just bread and butter – or sourdough bread served with a sour butter that has been pushed to the limits of its lifetime and tastes so good a smear of it could render the napkins edible.

Down-to-earth

Barry Neild for CNN
The Black Swan is reached down winding country lanes.

The dishes are brought to the table by James and his team of friendly wait staff or by Tommy’s sous chefs, all happy to relate the intricate ingredients and their back stories. There’s a relaxed ambiance with an air of theater and excitement.

Diners come from near and far. During CNN’s visit, neighboring tables included a couple on an overnight break from their kids. Another hosted two of the Banks brothers’ old school teachers, on a trip up from York.

Precisely the kind of crowd that have helped lift the Black Swan to TripAdvisor glory.

“We’re looking to create a down-to-earth and Yorkshire experience, something that’s really high quality but for normal people,” James tells CNN as an evening’s service is drawing to a close.

“I guess this award recognizes that real people come in here and enjoy what they’re having, so much that they write a review, which is wonderful.”

But is it really the best restaurant in the world?

It’s definitely a contender, even if James isn’t so sure.

“It’s an amazing thing to say about us,” he adds. “But I feel like we’ve still got a lot of things we can improve and do better, to be honest. We’re quite young as a team, we feel there’s loads more things we want to do.”

The Black Swan, Olstead, York; +44 1347 868387