If you are in Newport for the Worldchefs Congress & Expo in May 2026, Mid Wales is two to three hours north, and worth every mile. This is farming country, where the food on your plate has usually travelled less distance than you have. Welsh lamb, Welsh Black beef, farmhouse cheese, foraged herbs and small-batch spirits are not trends here. They are how things have always been done.
Mid Wales covers Powys, Ceredigion and Southern Snowdonia. The landscape is open, green and quiet. The food scene is shaped by it.
Where Chefs Eat in Mid Wales
In the Brecon Beacons, Llangoed Hall uses Welsh ingredients in a country house setting near Brecon. The Bear Hotel in Crickhowell is a 15th-century coaching inn with a reputation for honest cooking and a good bar. The Dragon Inn, also in Crickhowell, keeps things straightforward and does it well.
Further north in Llanwrtyd Wells, Britain’s smallest town, the Neuadd Arms Hotel is the kind of pub where locals and visitors sit side by side. The Trout Cafe in nearby Beulah serves fish, local produce, and does it without fuss.
On the Ceredigion coast, The Moody Cow Bistro at Bargoed Farm outside Aberaeron takes a farm-to-fork approach. The farm shop is next door. In Aberystwyth, Harry’s Bar & Bistro, Y Ffarmers and Y Consti each bring something different to the table. Hiraeth in Llanidloes is worth a stop for its relaxed all-day menu.
In Southern Snowdonia, The Wynnstay in Machynlleth is the town’s gathering point, with food that matches the welcome. Brigands Inn in Dinas Mawddwy pairs pub cooking with views down the valley, and Corris Cafe & Welsh Deli is a good stop between courses.
Browse restaurants, cafes and bistros or find pubs and bars across the region.
Welsh Producers and Craft Spirits
Mid Wales has a growing number of producers making things properly.
Dyfi Distillery in Corris makes gin using foraged botanicals from the surrounding Dyfi UNESCO Biosphere. Dà Mhìle Distillery near Llandysul produces organic spirits and liqueurs on a Ceredigion farm. Heart of Wales Brewery in Llanwrtyd Wells brews on a small scale with Welsh water and grain.
Kerry Vale Vineyard near Montgomery is one of the few vineyards in Wales, with a cellar door and cafe where you can taste what this soil produces. Teifi Cheese near Llandysul is a farmhouse cheesemaker whose products turn up in good kitchens across Wales. Bargoed Farm Shop in Aberaeron stocks produce from the farm and from neighbouring producers along the coast.
See all vineyards, breweries and distilleries or visit farm shops to stock up.
Market Towns Worth Your Time
The food scene in Mid Wales is tied to its market towns. Crickhowell, Aberaeron, Machynlleth and Llanidloes all have independent food shops, weekly markets and the kind of supply chain where the butcher knows the farmer. Montgomery Charter Market has been running for centuries and remains a fixture.
Find farmers markets across Mid Wales.
Getting Here and Staying On
Newport to Brecon is about ninety minutes via the A40. From Brecon, the road north through Llanwrtyd Wells, Tregaron and on to Aberystwyth takes you through some of the emptiest country in southern Britain. Allow two to three days to do it properly.
Stay in hotels and inns, guesthouses and B&Bs, or self-catering cottages across the region.
A Place That Takes Food Seriously, Quietly
Mid Wales does not shout about its food. But if you cook for a living, or care about where ingredients come from and how they reach the plate, you will find a lot to learn here. The chefs, farmers, brewers and cheesemakers in this part of Wales have been doing things well for a long time.
Add a few days to your Congress trip. Browse our food and drink guide to start planning.