Tamper Sellers Wheel

Susie Stubbs
Tamper Sellers Wheel, Sheffield

This Sheffield restaurant has all the right ingredients – great coffee, good food – so why did it have us hurrying to leave?

If you don’t feel the cold, start skimming now. If, however, you are possessed of an ability to assess a room’s temperature within half a second of stepping inside; if you spend your life dithering between your thick winter coat and your really thick winter coat – read on. You are my people, and I feel your pain. Well, I would bar the fact that, despite the April sunshine, I’m wearing two pairs of socks, a vest and four layers.

It is the cold that stops me loving a warehouse vibe quite as much as I would like. The sight of exposed brick and stripped floors gives me aesthetic pleasure but it also makes me go – oh. As in, oh, within half an hour my lips and fingers will be blue.

And so we come to Tamper Sellers Wheel. It is a laid-back restaurant that is as pretty as a picture. Street art by Faunagraphic dresses the walls, great vases of catkined pussy willow stand atop communal tables, drinks come in jam jars and vintage silver tankards hold the cutlery. At one end of the main room is a bar bedecked with the sorts of homemade cakes that would make the W.I. proud; just beyond is a brew bar that serves all manner of loose leaf teas and Tamper’s own-blend coffee.

The coffee is excellent. There’s none of that horrible, syrupy stuff that gets passed off as “artisan”

The emphasis on coffee makes sense when you clock that Sellers Wheel is run by Sheffield’s Tamper, a New Zealand coffee and dining “chain” (with other eateries on Westfield Terrace and Angel Street) that knows the difference between an Aeropress and a pour over, and which regularly runs coffee making and tasting workshops. The restaurant here is out back, fronted by a coffee bar that serves take-out food alongside its hot drinks.

So, the coffee is excellent – there’s none of that horrible, syrupy stuff that often gets passed off as “artisan” – and the menu is cute. The breakfast list stretches out as lengthily as a Bank Holiday lie-in. Its kids’ menu serves up such staples as “fush n chups” and “fluffy pikelets” (£4 each); there are mini milkshakes for the small people, too, and the attention to options for the kids has clearly paid off in terms of the range of people who eat here: everyone from mothers with babes in arms to office workers and academics from the university round the corner. A grilled portabello mushroom burger (£10) came stuffed with goat’s cheese, and stood on great hunks of bread that towered over a mountain of fat chips, salad and egg. While it wasn’t shout-it-from-the-rooftops great, it was a lunch that filled me right up.

In fact, I was as stuffed as a portabello. This was good grub that stuck to the sides – which was probably just as well, because where Sellers Wheel falls down is in its setting. Housed in a converted industrial building, a remnant of Sheffield’s cutlery-making past, its single pane glass and bare concrete floor had me reaching for my coat sooner than I would have liked. I’ll admit it: I was cold, and that’s a shame, because somewhere as good looking and as easy going as this should be a place to linger. To be fair, all the other (presumably warm-blooded) diners appeared to be doing just that. And maybe I will too, next time, assuming I can lay my hands on my really, really thick coat.

149 Arundel StreetSheffieldS1 2NU View map
Telephone: 0114 2757970 Visit Now

Accessibility

Wheelchair access via courtyard

Admission Charges

Free

Children and Families

Children's menu and highchairs

Services and Facilities

Cafe, restaurant, coffee shop

Opening Hours

  • Monday8:00am - 5:00pm
  • Tuesday8:00am - 5:00pm
  • Wednesday8:00am - 5:00pm
  • Thursday8:00am - 5:00pm
  • Friday8:00am - 10:00pm
  • Saturday9:00am - 6:00pm
  • Sunday9:00am - 4:00pm

Always double check opening hours with the venue before making a special visit.

What's on near Tamper Sellers Wheel

Close up image of peach, pink and lilac flowers with the words 'False Note' in a white block font.
Until
ExhibitionsCity Centre
False Note at Site Gallery

Site Gallery welcomes Freya Dooley’s solo show ‘False Note’, which examines the musical and idiomatic meanings of the term.

free entry

Where to go near Tamper Sellers Wheel

Sheffield
Event venue
Sidney and Matilda

Sidney and Matilda, a former paper factory, is now one of Sheffields’s most exciting gig venues and art spaces.

Street Food Chef
City Centre
Restaurant
Street Food Chef

An award-winning Mexican cantina serving speedy and fiercely tasty food – a healthy fast food alternative for the people of Sheffield.

The Rutland Arms pub in Sheffield
City Centre
Bar or Pub
Rutland Arms

A great pub situated in an early 20th century brick and bright yellow building on the corner of Furnival Street and Brown Street.

Bloc Projects in Sheffield - Open Residency: Duncan Higgins at Bloc Projects
City Centre
Gallery
Bloc Projects

Established in 2002, Bloc Projects in Sheffield is an artist-led project space with an annual programme of exhibitions, events and educational activity.

Birdhouse Tea Bar & Kitchen
City Centre
Café or Coffee Shop
Birdhouse Tea Bar & Kitchen

Birdhouse Tea Bar & Kitchen is a family-run tea bar serving breakfast, brunch and wood-fired pizzas alongside an extensive drinks menu, which includes creative brews and tea cocktails.

Site Gallery, Sheffield
City Centre
Gallery
Site Gallery Sheffield

Specialising in moving image, new media and performance, and offering a busy events programme, a visit to Site in Sheffield is not to be missed.

Gallery stock image
Sheffield
Gallery
The Viewing Room

Micro-Gallery with a mission to be a ‘high potency visual espresso’, promoting unique engagement with contemporary art and hosting regular events.

Culture Guides

Theatre in Manchester and the North
Theatre in Manchester and the North

Affecting contemporary performances and fresh, relevant takes on enduring classics, we pick out shows that help us scrutinise the world we live in.

Festival-goers at Green Island
Music in Manchester and the North

Gazing longingly towards the good times that will accompany the surely imminent sun, we take a look at the best music festivals coming up in Manchester and Salford.