Sally Lunn's Historic Eating House & Museum
Sally Lunn's operates from Bath's oldest house, dating to 1482, where you'll find both a working tearoom upstairs and a small museum in the basement.
About Sally Lunn's Historic Eating House & Museum
Sally Lunn's operates from Bath's oldest house, dating to 1482, where you'll find both a working tearoom upstairs and a small museum in the basement. The famous Sally Lunn bun is essentially a large, enriched bread roll that's bigger than your fist, served warm with sweet or savoury toppings like cheese, salmon, or jam. The basement museum reveals Roman foundations, medieval ovens, and the original Georgian kitchen range where these buns were first baked in the 1680s.
The experience feels like eating in someone's centuries-old home because that's exactly what you're doing. Upstairs, the tearoom spreads across low-ceilinged rooms with uneven floors and tiny windows. Downstairs, the museum part takes about 15 minutes to explore: you'll peer at excavated Roman stones, see the massive bread ovens built into medieval walls, and read about Sally Lunn herself (though historians debate whether she actually existed).
Honestly, it's touristy but genuinely atmospheric. The buns cost around £8-12 depending on toppings and they're filling enough to share, though most people don't realize this and order one each. The museum entry is free with any food purchase, otherwise it's £3. Skip the full afternoon tea (overpriced at £25) and just get a bun with butter or cheese. The queue moves faster than it looks because turnover is quick.
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