Awards and Reviews

 

 




2007 Wine Spectator Award

The Refectory is awarded
The Wine Spectator Award for Outstanding Wine Cellars.
The Refectory was at one time
Ohio’s only Grand Award Winner and now proudly receives
The Wine Spectator’s Best of Award of Excellence.
The Refectory is one of only
eleven restaurants in Ohio to receive this award.

2007 Four Diamond Award - AAA

For ten years, The Refectory was honored to be the only restaurant in Central Ohio to receive this prestigious Award! In 2007, we now share this coveted title with two other restaurants in Columbus. We are proud  to lead the city in raising the standards and expectations of the discerning dining public here in Central Ohio.

In 1991, The Refectory was one of only 95 restaurants world-wide
to receive the prestigious Grand Award for outstanding wine cellars
from The Wine Spectator.

Since 1976,
The Refectory has consistently been dedicated to presenting each guest with the finest dining experience possible. We recognize that every day creates the privilege of serving our guests in a manner which continues to merit the trust placed in us. Please don't ever hesitate to advise us if we do not live up to your expectations.




This commitment to excellence in cuisine, service, and wines has been acknowledged by both guests and the many awards we have received.

The Refectory is the only
Columbus restaurant to receive
all of these distinctions:




  • Grand Award The Wine Spectator
  • AAA Four-Diamond Award
  • DiRona Award Distinguished Restaurants of North America
  • Five Stars, Columbus Monthly
  • Five Stars, This Week Papers
  • Top Ten Dining Since 1982,
    The Columbus Dispatch

"The Refectory deserves each and every ounce of praise it receives from our local food critic to The Wine Spectator for your food quality and wine selection. Although we appreciate both of these attributes, it is your people that keep us coming back! Every time we dine with you, it is a totally delightful experience."
--Gerry and Chuck




"Recently some gentlemen from San Francisco were at 
our office for a business meeting, and they said they were  staying in Columbus and wondered if I knew of anywhere  good to eat because I used to live there. I told them they  have to eat at The Refectory, it is the best place in town..."
--Eric W., "Watch TV," Lima, OH

"Eric: Just wanted to drop you a quick line to let you know thatThe Refectory
was spectacular! Wonderful food, unique and very interesting location, excellent wine list...man, what else could a guy want? Prices not over-inflated either. Thanks again for the recommendation!"
--Craig C.

"This fine dining establishment may well be the finest restaurant in Ohio."
--The Columbus Dispatch

"Extraordinary...in a class of its own"
--Jon Christensen





The "professional staff," "romantic" setting in an "old church," "spectacular wine list" and "classic haute cuisine" leave surveyors searching for superlatives to describe this Northwest French: "world-class," "as close to perfection as we have," "nothing else comes close"; it's Columbus' most popular restaurant and a favorite "for that special evening." --Zagat's

"This was our first experience and we are very impressed."
February, 2008                                Rob M.

"This was a phenomenal experience. Could not have been any better. Service and food were spectacular. We will difinitely be back"
February, 2008                                   David W.

"Our dining experience at The Refectory is like no other. It's first class."
February, 2008                                   Richard O.





The Refectory has a long and distinguished history. The building was first used as a church built in the mid 1800s, and assumed its role as Columbus' premier French restaurant in the 1980s.

THE REFECTORY, A HISTORY
In 1842, about twenty-five worshippers who had been meeting in a building that was formerly a distillery began meeting in a barn located at the corner of Kenny and Francisco Roads. In 1848 the group purchased one half acre of land at Kenny and Bethel. In 1853, a building about 30 x 45 feet was completed. A member of the congregation offered to donate some timber from his land to be used as siding, but asked that the men be sure not to cut the trees on the east side stream. Unfortunately, the fellows got it wrong and cut those trees. As a result, the church siding was made mostly of beautiful walnut! That year the church was completed and a Sunday school was started. The building was surrounded by a board fence with two entrances. There were hitching posts located all along the fence where the people hitched their horses. During the worship at Bethel United Methodist Church, men sat on one side of the church and women on the other. No musical instruments were used as the founders did not approve. After a new generation took over, an organ was purchased.

In 1877, the Hocking Valley Railroad was built. It ran not more than 75 feet from the front door of the church. The noise was devastating, and the minister had to stop talking until the trains had passed. About 200 yards west of the church there were two one-room school houses, one of brick and one of frame. In 1918, Perry Township put the land and the old school buildings up for auction. The church was very interested in acquiring them since they had plans to move their building to that site. Mr. Will Henderson bid $800.00 on behalf of the church and all the other bidding stopped. Charles Hibbs, a building contractor, drew up the plans to move the church building to the school ground and join it with the frame school building. The building was jacked up and placed on large timbers. Rollers were placed under the timber, then ropes were attached to the timbers and to two large windlasses anchored to the ground 50-75 feet in front of the building. Then horses were hitched to the ropes; they walked around and around the windlasses, slowly moving the building forward inch by inch. The drums had to be moved several times as the church was pulled across the field.

Meanwhile, a basement was dug and a foundation built. The gravel used was donated and hauled in by horse and wagon from what is now Antrim Lake. The church building, in the front, was attached to the school building in the back. In 1954, the church and the brick school building were joined by an addition with two classrooms and a hall. In 1969, this family of worshippers, having grown beyond the capacity of their structure once again, made the decision to relocate the church.

And this is where the history of the building seemingly moves into a different sphere.

December of 1971 saw the consecration of the new Bethel United Methodist Church located just west of its old, outgrown home. The old church was sold to a group of individuals starting a restaurant: The Olde Church-House. An interesting clause was written into the deed by the sellers upon the sale—the building could never be used again as a church. The schoolhouse was used as the restaurant; the causeway to the sanctuary was the kitchen; and the church itself lay bare and deserted for the most part. As the restaurant settled into routine operation, the new owners had grand ideas for the use of this vast open space. Plans were made and final drawings were approved. Sketches, complete with fabric swatches and carpet samples, of a proposed disco were framed and hung. Yet nothing more materialized. It should cause one to wonder it were not more than simple coincidence that the noise would diminish only one stop from turning the old church sanctuary into a twentieth-century dance hall. The Old Church-House Restaurant, however, was more in line with the reserve stature which characterized its origins. With a setting of stained glass windows, high-beamed ceilings and candlelight, the serenity of the building could still be felt.

Now The Refectory Restaurant ("refectory" being an eating room or dining hall in a convent or monastery) purchased in December of 1980 has again expanded its perimeters. The old and the new have been fused together so intricately only one who has witnessed the metamorphosis, or heard of it, can tell where the old melts into the new. More than just the setting, the philosophies and sense of purpose of the people working in those buildings seem to characterize, too those surroundings and beginnings. It is the attitude of heart, this desire of honest, hard work that has been the thread woven from the past up through the present.

The building still welcomes its old congregation—for dinner. Most are delighted with the changes. Choir members and Sunday Schoolers of old happily reminisce as they stroll through the hallways once more. One former pastor has celebrated many wedding anniversaries dining in the very room where he once addressed his flock.

The refectory, to some a landmark of dining greats in this city: to others, a link to yesterday where, beneath its old majestic ceiling, the spirit of its past and the presence for which it was set apart can still be felt.

THE REFECTORY NOW
The east wing or original schoolhouse is now the lounge and smoking/dining area of The Refectory. The sit-down bar features and eight bottle Cruvinet wine preservation system. This allows The Refectory to feature wines by the glass from its world-class wine cellar encompassing over 700 selections. The west wing of the building is now the nonsmoking dining area and features the original hand-hewn beams and exposed wooden roof structure. Bricks have been added on the interior to complement the brick schoolhouse.

The unique architecture and majesty of the original construction create a relaxed intimate candle lit ambiance. The Refectory presents an unparalleled dining experience that is well-known to wonderfully complement this elegant setting.