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Restaurants in London
London is one of the world's great dining capitals. Here you can experience a global range of cuisines, anything from a traditional English feast to the regional cooking of countries spread around the globe, from Italy to India. The last few years have been momentous for the London restaurant scene. Top-end pla ...
London is one of the world's great dining capitals. Here you can experience a global range of cuisines, anything from a traditional English feast to the regional cooking of countries spread around the globe, from Italy to India.
The last few years have been momentous for the London restaurant scene. Top-end places can no longer rest on their laurels; they are dealing with educated, well-traveled, and opinionated customers who know the value of a meal.
On top of that, the "gastropub" has become a force to be reckoned with. Young chefs have taken over moribund pubs, filled them with odd pieces of furniture, and now offer top cooking at less-than-top prices. Some are in the city center, but you'll also find many gastropubs in residential neighborhoods outside the usual tourist areas.
A big change in London has been the geographic shift from the West End to East London, where new cafes and small restaurants have emerged in what is now a dynamic part of the capital.
But perhaps the greatest coming-of-age for London's restaurants is the acknowledgement from the rest of the world that London is now a gastronomic world-class city. The internationally famous chef Joël Robuchon has described London as "possibly the gastronomic capital of the world," because all that is new and innovative in cooking and the restaurant world now originates in Britain's capital city.
It's all good news for restaurant-goers: Eating out in London offers more choice, more value, and more fun than ever.
Theater Dining - Restaurants in Soho, Covent Garden, the Strand, and Piccadilly Circus & Leicester Square are candidates for dining before or after a show in London's Theatreland.
Hours -- Restaurants in London keep varied hours, but in general, lunch is served from noon to 2pm and dinner from 6:30 to 9:30pm, although more restaurants are staying open later these days. Sunday is the usual closing day for restaurants, but there are exceptions. (Many also close for a few days around Christmas, so call ahead during the holidays.)
Prices -- Price categories above are based on a typical main course. Very expensive (££££) = £75+; Expensive (£££) = £17+; Moderate (££) = £10 to £17; Inexpensive (£) = under £10. But remember these are average prices.
Reservations -- Nearly all establishments, except pubs, cafes, and fast-food joints, prefer or require reservations. Almost invariably, you get a better table if you book in advance. For a few of the best, you must reserve weeks in advance, even before leaving home. (Always confirm your reservation nearer the time.) However, if you don't have reservations, even at a "reservations required" restaurant, it's worth checking; if they have room, you won't be turned away. If you're staying in one of London's top hotels, you might get lucky by asking the concierge for help with hard-to-get reservations. The free app Uncover hooks you up with last-minute availability at the tendiest and busiest restaurants.
Restaurant booking websites are useful, both for specific restaurants and if you're uncertain of where to eat. Top Table (www.toptable.com) has a large selection of London restaurants. You enter details (number of people, location, and so on), check the list and details like a typical menu, reviews, any special offers, and then book online. OpenTable.co.uk runs a similar service.
Restaurant Deals -- Look to the Internet for occasional impressive discounts on London dining. Websites promoting special deals include Lastminute.com and Squaremeal.co.uk. It's also worth subscribing to regular newsletters such as those emailed weekly by Lovefoodlovedrink.co.uk and Travelzoo.com, and signing up to deals websites such as LivingSocial (www.livingsocial.com) or Groupon (www.groupon.com). For a top meal at reasonable prices, many destination restaurants offer set-price lunch deals, as well as limited, but top-quality pre- and post-theatre menus. Some London and U.K. newspapers run promotions (usually during January and February). Keep an eye on local press.
Taxes & Tipping -- Charges for service, as well as any minimums or cover charges, must be made clear on the menu, and all prices shown must include 20% VAT. Most restaurants add a 10% to 15% service charge to your bill. But beware, some may add the service charge, but still leave the total blank on your credit card payment, a deplorable practice that's fortunately not widespread. If nothing has been added, leave a 10% to 15% tip as long as you were happy with the service.
The Best Places for a Cheap & Cheerful Meal
London has its fair share of good, cheap places to eat; you just need to know where to look.
Chipotle, 114-116 Charing Cross Rd., WC2 (tel. 020/7836-8491; Tube: Tottenham Court Rd.), is part of a large American chain, and the place for burrito wraps. Try the chicken variety at £6.60. A meal costs around £10. Hours are Monday to Saturday 11:30am to 11pm, Sunday 11am to 10:30pm.
Gourmet San, 261 Bethnal Green Rd., E2 (tel. 020/7729-8388; Tube: Bethnal Green), is considered by some as London's best no-frills Szechuan cooking; certainly it's among the most fiery. A meal costs around £8. It's open daily 8:30am until 230pm.
Open Kitchen, 40 Hoxton St., N1 (tel. 020/7613-9590; www.openkitchen.biz; Train: Hoxton), is the training restaurant for the London City Hospitality Centre (LCHC), so you'll get ambitious cooking with great ingredients at unbelievable prices. Starters cost £4, mains £7, and desserts £4. It's open Monday to Friday noon until 2pm, and Wednesday through Friday 6 to 8:30pm.
The Stockpot, 273 King's Rd, Chelsea SW3 5EN (tel. 020/7823-3175; www.stockpotchelsea.co.uk), has been feeding impoverished Londoners for 50 years, and is still London's best budget pit-stop. Dinner menus range from £6.50 to £14.90. It's open Monday-Satrday 9am until 11pm and Sunday 11:30am to 11pm.
Everybody who goes to Wong Kei, 41-43 Wardour St., W1 (tel. 020/7437-8408; Tube: Piccadilly Circus), complains about the service and sometimes the food. But somehow it's part of a visit to London. It's cheap, packed, serves a huge Chinese menu, and the service is reassuringly consistent -- always bad. Meals are served Monday to Saturday between noon and 11:30pm, Sunday noon to 10:30pm.
Bookstore
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Available as paperback
and as e-book.
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Contemporary European
10 Greek Street
Sometimes, restaurants get it so right—from friendly and knowledgeable staff to unfussy surroundings to pure, clean, well-made food—that you wonder why they can’t all be this way. The menu, all choices a top value for the money, changes but the impeccable standards don’t: Frequent…$$ -
Indian
Amaya
Theatrical, with its chefs working at the open kitchen and charcoal grill; beautiful, with pink sandstone black granite worktops, chandeliers of cascading crystals, and colorful modern art; and seductive, with its rosewood and red bar—it's not surprising that Amaya is such a hit. And…$$$ -
British
Andrew Edmunds
The relaxed, townhouse–style storefront, a study in natural woods and candlelit purity, has been going since 1985, enduring most likely because it hasn’t caved to Soho trendiness and its stupendous wine list is priced fairly. Chairs don’t match, staff isn’t in uniform, and the menu…$$ -
Food hall
Arcade Food Hall
Arcade, which more feels like the lobby of a nice office tower than a food court, presents food and cocktails from 7 skilled vendors, and its central cocktail bar is as elegant as any high-end restaurant’s, which is why this place gets too rammed with bodies to be truly pleasurable…$ -
Israeli
Bala Baya
If you're a home cook like me, you probably owe a debt of gratitude to Yotam Ottolenghi. Not only did this prolific cookbook author introduce so many of us to the depth and richness of Middle Eastern cuisine, but his recipes teach how to balance flavors on a plate in bold and…$$ -
Italian
Bancone Covent Garden
A winning combination of perfect handmade pasta, an informally elegant space, and good value has made Bancone a big hit. The supple, star-shaped silk handkerchief pasta dish with walnut butter, nested with an unbroken egg yolk (pictured above), is routinely photographed like a…$ -
Coffee/Italian
Bar Italia
Italians settled Soho in the 1940s, and before they decamped for the suburbs, they installed a set of mod, gleaming coffee bars and cafes. This old-school straggler from 1946 is a haunt of slumming celebrities and artists who, we dare say, must not come for ingratiating service.…$ -
Bakery
Beigel Bake
The city’s most famous take-away bakery, Jewish or otherwise, never closes but there’s often a line hustling through. Watch the clerks, who are all business, slice juicy chunks of pink salt beef (pictured above) in the window, then slather it onto a beigel with pickle slices and some…$ -
International
Bill’s
A 5-minute walk from the British Museum and handy for many uses—all-day brunch, lunches, dinner, feeding kids, or downing cheap cocktails. In few other London establishments will you find mac-and-cheese, burgers, flatbreads, seafood linguine, and Caesar salad on the same menu.…$$ -
Meats
Blacklock Soho
Blacklock presents an existential challenge to American barbecue fans who think they’re the world’s best meat masters: The extravagant "meat mountain” roast (as Food Insider puts it), pictured above, is piled precariously atop browned potatoes and Yorkshire pudding and walloped with…$$ -
Italian
Bocca di Lupo
Stripped-down Italian expertly conceived and delivered like tapas: This simple, classy conceit—and its chipper buzz, and that long, alluring bar in front of the open kitchen—have made it a mainstay in Soho for over a decade. The menu might be printed twice a day to keep up with the…$$$ -
Scottish
Boisdale
Richly done up in red and green like an all-year manifestation of the coziest Christmas, Boisdale makes a year-round gift of the best of Scottish cuisine, from whisky to neeps. It’s big on brilliantly prepared fish (the delicately fried calamari with pickle and Tellicherry chili mayo…$$ -
French/ Algerian
Boro Bistro
If the aimlessly gawping hordes at Borough Market exhaust you, a relaxing chill-out spot can be found very near the grounds. Downstairs in the brick vaults between the Market and Borough High Street just east of Southwark Cathedral, this European-with-a-pubby-twist bistro is many…$ -
International
Borough Market
Countless visitors cite it as a highlight of their London vacations. This extremely popular sheltered/outdoor complex, an outgrowth of a Victoria-era commercial market, Three Crown Square, is alive with glorious, farm-fresh flavors, much of which is rendered as finished small dishes.…$ -
French
Brasserie Zédel
When you enter via its grand staircase, you’ll feel like Toulouse-Lautrec in search of tonight’s muse: The always-lively, gilt-and-marble cellar dining room, awash in fin-de-siècle statements like platter mirrors and vested waiters, is a perfect piece of Paris off Piccadilly. This is…$$ -
Traditional British
Browns
In London, there’s a Browns for fashion and a Brown’s Hotel, but Browns the spacious brasserie is the Browns you can afford. Installed in the former Westminster County Courts (check out the old proceedings chambers upstairs), this high-quality, Brighton-based English chain serves…$$ -
International
Café in the Crypt
Super-central, fun, and unquestionably memorable, it’s the tastiest graveyard in town! Under the sanctuary of the historic St Martin-in-the-Fields church at Trafalgar Square, atop the graves of 18th-century Londoners—fret not, the former occupants were moved elsewhere decades ago—one…$ -
International
Caravan
Housed in a former metal box factory a short walk from Tate Modern, the industrial-feeling and cheerfully casual Caravan is always busy but glows with the joie de vivre of quality ingredients and flavorful combos. It roasts its own coffee (and does a brisk business on that alone) and…$$ -
Peruvian
Ceviche
This is my firm favorite in Soho. Owner Martin Morales quit his job at Disney’s European music division to pursue his true passion: food. Now he is a TV personality, a cookbook author, and runs this hopping, cheerful Peruvian hangout that pours the best pisco sour in town. Flavors…$$ -
British
City Social
The scene: The quintessential Special Occasion restaurant: ambience, style, exquisite plating by award-winning chef Jason Atherton, dizzying prices. The view: on the 24th floor among the City skyscrapers, with a clear view of the Shard and the Gherkin. It’s also worth a trip for its…$$$ -
MODERN BRITISH
Clipstone
If you were to dream up the ideal neighborhood restaurant where you celebrate British ingredients in a bright space conducive to hanging out and chatting, you’d probably create the picture of Clipstone, a somewhat raw space on on a glassy corner in mostly residential Fitzrovia a…$$ -
British
Darwin Brasserie
The scene: The atrium (pictured above) atop the “Walkie-Talkie”, which welcomed its 10 millionth visit in 2023, is like an upscale mini-mall of evening pursuits, including thump-thump-thump beats at Sky Pod bar and a seafood place, Fenchurch. Our choice, Darwin, has an honest menu…$$$ -
Traditional British
Dinner by Heston Blumenthal
This restaurant is helmed by one of the world's great chefs, Heston Blumenthal of the Fat Duck in Bray. The dining room looks over Hyde Park on one side and into an open kitchen on the other (look into the chef's table if that interests you). The decor is fine, but it's the food that…$$$ -
MODERN INDIAN
Dishoom
Dishoom, a boisterous collision of Irani and Indian foods, has been nothing less than a smash in Britain since its 2010 debut. Now it has seven locations in London, all popular as go-tos for a moderately priced meal. Far from being a standard curry slinger, its modern flavors bend…$$ -
MODERN BRITISH
Dovetale
Tom Sellers is one of London’s most exciting young rock-star chefs, and after years of brilliant trompe l’oeil creativity at his boffo Restaurant Story in Bermondsey, he’s now expanding his brand by creating culinary destinations elsewhere. Here, in the sustainability-obsessed…$$$ -
International
Ducksoup
The sort of invisible hidey-hole you have to be told about, tiny little Ducksoup feels like “your” spot. The metal grille on the windows, world-weary checkerboard flooring, and life-beaten walls make it look like a greasy cafe that would sling a fry-up at you, but instead, there’s a…$$ -
Traditional British/ Diner
E. Pellicci
London’s tradition of mid-20th-century diners, or “caffs,” is quickly being gentrified into nostalgia, but this fry-up on deeply authentic and unflashy Bethnal Green Road has been run by the affable Nevio family since 1900. Some of them were born upstairs, and the matriarch of the…$ -
Italian
Emilia's Crafted Pasta
There’s not much good to eat around the Tower of London, so this marvel is most welcome. Just east over the approach to Tower Bridge is an atmospheric maritime enclave known as St Katharine Docks, dug by hand for cargo boats in the 1820s. Under cast-iron columns in a former goods…$ -
Steak
Flat Iron
For a mere £14, you get an absolutely perfect 200g (7-oz.) steak cut from the tender shoulder of the cow, a cup of salad, a serving of beef-dripping popcorn, and on the way out the door, a cone of caramel ice cream topped with shavings from a block of dark chocolate. No wonder…$$ -
International
Gordon’s Wine Bar
The atmosphere is matchless at this vaunted and vaulted casual wine bar, one of London’s worst-kept secrets. It was established in 1890 (when Rudyard Kipling lived upstairs) and, thank goodness, hasn’t been refurbished since—look in the front window and you’ll see untouched champagne…$ -
Steak
Hawksmoor
Americans like to think they’ve mastered the almighty steak, but even they would have to dine here every day for a month to find a cut of meat that wasn’t cooked beyond fault. Other than that, the menu is simple (sides, seafood), but the cocktails are inspired, starting with the…$$$ -
Contemporary
Hide
One of the city’s most celebrated chefs, Ollie Dabbous, oversees this ambitious, three-level foodie destination in Mayfair, arranged in a sparse Scandinavian style, where he has plenty of space to throw money at ideas and allow diners to absorb the ministrations of his army of staff,…$$$ -
Middle Eastern
Honey & Co. Bloomsbury
It’s packed for good reasons. First, the food on its changing menu brilliantly adapts Middle Eastern dishes to London palates. Spectacular lamb shawarma is tender as brisket and spiked with pomegranate and mint, and is served in a little pot with hot and soft pita. Chicken dumplings…$$ -
Seafood
J. Sheekey
Smartly turned-out waiters prep you with so many specialized fish-eating utensils that your place setting starts to look like a workstation at Santa’s workshop. Such presentational flourishes are appropriate to theaterland, where Sheekey has been a classic for years, and although…$$$ -
Contemporary Mexican
KOL Restaurant
You may not think you came all the way to London for Mexican food, but you’ve almost certainly never had it prepared so experimentally and innovatively by a chef so laden with awards. Young Santiago Lastra has been laden with plaudits for rendering traditional Mexican dishes, but…$$$ -
Japanese
Koya Soho
A queue for a quick and cheap bowl of noodle soup? That seems excessive, but this stuff is no plain soup. The Soho dining room, where transactional servers turn over trade quickly, is plain, supporting nothing more special than exposed ductwork, cheap chopsticks in cups, menu boards,…$ -
French
L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon
The London Atelier of Joël Robuchon (who, incidentally, has 28 Michelin stars and restaurants around the world) is based on his concept of an informal restaurant. There are three areas: La Cuisine, which is the most conventional; the Le Salon bar; and the moody red and black…$$$ -
French
Le Gavroche
There are always newcomers in Mayfair hoping to capture the vanity crowd, and trendy styles with fresh young chefs rise and burn out, but Le Gavroche remains the top choice for classical French cuisine. Its leader, Michel Roux, Jr., is the son of the chef who founded the restaurant…$$$ -
International
Leon
The meat-and-all options are fashioned from a free-trade/organic shopping list and avoid refined sugar. At lunch, its block wood tables and chairs are crammed with office workers grabbing a healthy, casual meal. If it’s full, pack your meal in one of the cute brown folding boxes and…$ -
British
Lyle’s
The kind of place where chefs like to eat, where the dishes appear simple and fluid and yet require authority to accomplish, Lyle’s has a short, changing New British-meets-Nordic menu, but it runs deep with inventiveness and delicacy: lemon sole with buttermilk and sea aster (a salt…$$$ -
Italian
Margot
Perfect house-made pasta, carefully sourced meats, attentive service that aims high but never condescends, and a contemporary, bright dining room filled with bespoke furniture—in Mayfair, a tourist like you wouldn’t get in, but in Covent Garden, it’s a convivial and civilized place…$$$ -
Pub
McGlynn’s Public House
McGlynn’s isn’t hundreds of years old, or even important, but it fulfills the image of a “local” where the neighborhood folks hang out in peace and the landlord welcomes new faces. Its coal-blackened brick corner building, painted in old-fashioned green and red trim, is hard to find…$ -
Mercato Mayfair
To soothe your Oxford Street shopping breaks, the group behind the original Merato Metropolitano (see below) took over the Neo-Classical St Mark’s church from the 1820s—sanctuary, balconies, and all, with wine and cheese now served in the crypt and an outdoor drinking terrace on the…$ -
Food hall
Mercato Metropolitano
Dedicated to small producers and emerging chefs, this former factory space has been a smash since its 2016 opening. Fresh-baked wood-fired pizzas, cocktails, and beers, all sorts of world food across more than 3 dozen traders in an indoor/outdoor setting. Lively, and a great place to…$ -
Vegetarian
Mildreds
Packed since 1988, it’s where vegetarians with palates go. The menu (all three meals) is ever-changing but always assembled with more care than the usual beans and tofu: Sri Lankan sweet potato and lime cashew curry, wood-roasted mushroom and ale pie, and green falafel with sour…$$ -
British
Noble Rot
East of the British Museum and 2 blocks from the Charles Dickens Museum, behind an old storefront amid the transporting upscale boutiques of Lamb’s Conduit Street, spend a languid meal sampling spectacularly well-chosen wines, cheeses, and sublimely fine slices of Spanish hams. There…$$ -
Seafood
North Sea Fish
Suggested by pretty much every hotel manager within a walkable radius since it opened in 1977, North Sea Fish scratches the fish-and-chips itch in a table-serving setting. Expect a dignified fish market-cum-restaurant hidden on a lost-in-time side street. Portions are huge, and…$$ -
Japanese
OKAN South Bank
In the tourist thicket around the London Eye and Westminster, you’ll be grateful for an affordable lunch option that isn’t pre-fab sandwiches or fried chips. Squeezed into a lobby space on the east side of County Hall (the opposite side from the London Eye booking hall) and fitting…$ -
Ottolenghi
Chef Yotam Ottolenghi, known for TV appearances, a food column in the papers, and popular books, runs a few casual spots to pick up his celebrated Middle East-inflected concoctions that lean on clean and sometimes surprising ingredient clashes like roasted cauliflower with mustard,…$$ -
International
Oxo Tower Restaurant, Brasserie & Bar
The scene: Behold, a gratitude-inducing panorama over the Thames from an Art Deco landmark which, like Tate Modern, was once a power station. The associated bar, casual brasserie, and restaurant (pick one) are favorites for celebrating special occasions. The view: St Paul’s and the…$$$ -
Italian
Padella
Eaters go wild for its succulent and savory pasta dishes—there’s always a line curling out the front door into this one-room fishbowl alongside Borough Market. Once you’re in, you mount a stool at a counter (facing the cooks is best, but it’ll be too busy for you to be choosy) and…$$ -
Delicatessen
Paul Rothe & Son
You’d swear this shelf-lined wooden box is a modern pastiche built to flatter its upscale neighborhood just north of Oxford Street’s shopping, but in fact, it opened in 1900, when this was a block favored by German immigrants. The same family still runs it, doling out simple but…$ -
Contemporary European
Petersham Nurseries Café
Go southwest to Richmond, and you'll come across Petersham Nurseries—and in a glasshouse full of odd furniture, artifacts, and sweet-smelling plants, you'll find Damian Clisby (under the supervision of culinary celeb Lucy Boyd) cooking some of the best slow food in London. The…$$$ -
Seafood
Poppies
Big crispy portions flopping on big oval plates eaten with a big knife and fork to big 1950s sock-hop music: The franchise-ready Poppies does for British fish-and-chips what peppy jukebox diners have done for mid-20th-century American food. For all its plastic theatricality, it hews…$ -
Indian
Punjab Restaurant
Do not be deceived by looks. This is not a hack kitchen sponging off the Covent Garden tourist trade—this comfort food stalwart predates the recent curry trend, which is why it survived the crest of the popularity wave. Punjab has been cooking since 1946, when it was opened by…$ -
SINGAPORE/MALAYSIAN
Rasa Sayang
When you need something quick, flavorful, and filling before showtime in Chinatown or the Theatre District, this no-pretentions spot is superior to most of the other fast-casual Asian restaurants in Chinatown, and the service is more engaged. Rich and flavorful street food–inspired…$ -
Traditional British/ Diner
Regency Café
The mid-20th-century “caff” diner, once a staple of London life, is rapidly being swept into Formica heaven by trendy bistros. Among the few holdouts still doling out classic English breakfasts all day is the 1940s Regency, a discount-Deco requiem to a lost age in yellowed white…$ -
Modern British
Restaurant Story
This event restaurant has been celebrated for its creativity as much as its skill; in 2018, it closed temporarily for a total refit, including the menu, but before the change, it went like this: The moment you sat, your server lit a white taper as you pulled your menu from the leaves…$$$ -
British
Rochelle Canteen
A sublime secret is hidden away, discovered only if you ring a doorbell beside a green door in a brick wall. You’ll pass through the grassy yard of an 1880s school, and in the old bike shed, join a daytime garden party. The changing menu is rigorously British and fresh, yet without…$$ -
Traditional British
Rules
For a high-end kitchen that takes British cuisine seriously, go with an icon. Rules is London’s oldest restaurant (est. 1798), and its patrons have included Graham Greene, Charles Dickens, Evelyn Waugh, and Edward VII, who regularly dined here with his paramour Lillie Langtry. (The…$$$ -
Mediterranean
Sarastro
What if Mozart went insane on hollandaise sauce? He’d open this flamboyant paean to the opulence of opera. In a design that must give the fire marshal sleepless nights, Sarastro’s every cranny has been gilded, sheathed in shimmering fabric, or filled with erotic statuary (you can’t…$$$ -
French
Savoir Faire
After braving the rummage sale of mediocre gastronomic clip joints around the British Museum, patrons are known to smugly proclaim this cozy duplex their “discovery”—omitting the reality that it’s been presenting what it correctly terms “affordable gourmet” since 1995. How could…$$ -
Modern British
Searcys Helix Restaurant at The Gherkin
The scene: Very James Bond. You provide ID, clear security, and ride a few lifts in The Gherkin to arrive at a former member’s club duplex with floor-to-ceiling glass—a view forbidden to the public until 2018. The food is the freshest English fare, the wines immaculately chosen. The…$$$ -
Food Hall
Seven Dials Market
A 5-minute walk north of Covent Garden, this thriving multi-level hub wows palates in a complex of Victorian warehouses once used for bananas and cucumbers. Of the two bars and 20-odd vendors that span the globe for flavors, do not miss Pick & Cheese (reservations recommended via…$ -
Traditional British
St John Bread & Wine
Hand in hand with the gastropub trend is “nose-to-tail” eating. That’s a polite way to say you’ll be eating various animal body parts, resulting in tastes that are commonplace among English farmers (heart, cockscomb, marrow, whole pigeon) but perhaps daring for most North American…$$ -
Spanish
Tapas Brindisa
Borough Market brings a steady stream of customers to the area—folk who regard good food as one of life's necessities—so Tapas Brindisa, which sources its food directly from Spain, is constantly busy and has built itself a respectable name. Add to that a no-bookings policy and a…$$ -
Indian
Tayyabs
This Pakistani/Punjabi-inspired restaurant, which has been in the same family since 1972, goes from strength to strength. In a former Victorian pub, it's on two levels and near enough to the City for savvy bankers to make it their local lunch spot. Tayyabs' gutsy food at low prices…$ -
French
Terroirs
Hearty rustic French food, good wines (including "natural" wine from small artisan growers, unfiltered and unrefined), and a vibrant atmosphere is what gives Terroirs the edge over other Covent Garden restaurants. The wine bar is a great meeting place for pre-theatre drinks, and…$$ -
Pub
The Anchor Bankside
This Thames-side patio in sight of St Paul’s dome is perhaps the most popular spot in London at which to sit on the water with a fresh-pulled pint. There’s been a tavern here at least since the 1500s, when Londoners ferried to Southwark for bear baiting, gardens, brothels, and…$ -
Pub
The Argyll Arms
Having a beer in here can feel like drinking in a bejeweled red velvet box, thanks to the acid-etched glass screens that subdivide the busy bar into dignified drinking areas. Originally installed in 1895 to prevent brawls between the working and middle classes (at a time when even…$ -
Cafe
The Attendant
A unique one for the coffee culture fans. They only serve light meals here, but they roast their own beans and the setting is worth a detour: a gourmet coffee/loose-leaf tea cafe in an underground men’s toilet in Fitzrovia. The facilities had been abandoned for 50 years; the…$ -
Mediterranean
The Barbary
The aromatic spices of the Mediterranean and the Middle East are given life by award-winning chefs who care about clear and classic methods, using a bespoke robata charcoal grill and clay tandoor oven. Sit at the bar watching the cooks work, and feast on rich and savory tapas dishes.…$$ -
Pub
The Blackfriar
Deservedly protected by landmark status, this 1904 Art Nouveau masterpiece (also spelled the Black Friar) is as jolly as the fat friars that bedeck it in bronze, wood, and glass. A short walk from St Paul’s, it was once snuggled down a few dark alleys, but neighboring demolitions…$ -
Pub
The Chandos
A laid-back, spacious, wood-lined, and easy-to-find pub situated east across the road from the entrance to the National Portrait Gallery, the Chandos has an upper-floor Opera Room furnished with sofas. Big and relaxed, with lots of people who come for a drink before dashing out…$ -
British
The Clove Club
You wouldn’t be the first rhapsodize about a set meal at The Clove Club, where the steady procession of impeccable proteins is exceeded only by the average customer’s amazement at just how they were so cleverly prepared and plated. Scotland-born Chef Isaac McHale has pocketed many…$$$ -
Pub
The Coach and Horses
The simple corner beerhouse in the thick of Soho’s tourist crowd at Romilly Street dates to the mid-1800s, and although several pubs in London bear its name, few others share its history as a hangout for inebriated journalists. Stay downstairs for better prices, hang outside for air.$ -
Pub
The Coal Hole
A onetime haunt of actor Edmund Kean, who drank himself to an early curtain, was rebuilt in 1904 in the Arts and Crafts style and is still a hangout for performers at the adjoining Savoy Theatre. Use the entrance in back, by the stage door, to access the clubbier lower level. The…$ -
International
The Delaunay
In 2012 Jeremy King and Chris Corbin, who did the acclaimed Wolseley, opened another pitch-perfect evocation of a Continental cafe from a lost age. This one, just south of Covent Garden, is fitted with Art Deco brass fittings and lots of dark wood, and its menu, which does all three…$$$ -
Pub
The Dove
The 17th-century charmer houses many legends: that Charles II would cheat on his queen by sneaking off with Nell Gwynne here (probably false); that the composer of “Rule Britannia” lived, and died prematurely, upstairs (true); that dissolute artists Graham Greene, Ernest Hemingway,…$ -
Traditional British
The Eagle
By now, the word gastropub is so widespread that the term is virtually meaningless, but foodies note: That trend began here in 1991 (or so most agree), in an old pub in Clerkenwell, a then-ungentrified area between Bloomsbury and Islington. So old are this place’s roots that it…$$ -
Traditional British/Take-Away
The Fryer’s Delight
In this age, no one would dare name their joint something as hydrogenated as The Fryer’s Delight. Fortunately, this joint is not of this age. It’s a true old-world chippy, where the fry fat is from beef drippings, chips come in paper wrappings, the wooden booths and checkered floor…$ -
Pub
The George Inn
Unquestionably one of the most important ancient pubs still standing, the George traces its lineage to at least 1542, when a map of Southwark first depicted it; the Tabard Inn, where Chaucer’s pilgrims gathered in Canterbury Tales, was then a few doors south (it’s gone now).…$ -
Pub
The Grapes
It’s in every way a classic that is cherishable in that inimitable English way—Victorian wooden bar with stools, red carpeting, worn plank floors, a blissful lack of clanging “fruit machines.” But then again, that tiny back porch with a smashing riverfront panorama of a bend in the…$ -
Pub
The Grenadier
They say this was the Duke of Wellington’s local bar—his home, Apsley House, is around the corner. It was also the unofficial clubhouse for his regiment, hence the battlefield artifacts on display; they also say someone was beaten to death here for cheating at cards, hence the…$$ -
American
The Hard Rock Café
We include the Hard Rock not because of life-changing food (it’s good enough), but out of a grudging acknowledgment of authenticity—this is the original Hard Rock Cafe, opened here in 1971 long before you could find knockoff in every city from Key West to Kuwait. Its burgers nudge…$$ -
Traditional British
The Ivy
A West End tent-pole since 1917, with guests ranging from Coward to Cumberbatch, this is where London thespians pretend to slum it, lifting hamburgers alongside cognac beneath its iconic wood paneling and harlequin mullioned windows. At its sumptuous flatiron bar—you can drink at it,…$$$ -
British
The Jones Family Kitchen
This secluded courtyard bistro brings a groovy, convivial steakhouse vibe to the neighborhood near Victoria Station. If you love beef, the way JFK’s grill can almost mystically seal in the flavors of its Yorkshire longhorn could blow your mind, but then again, the oxtail burger might…$$ -
Pub
The Lamb
Quiet, not too touristy, this east Bloomsbury choice (where Ted Hughes took Sylvia Plath on their early dates) is representative of a neighborhood local that still has some prime Victoriana from the old days. Check out the rare sunburst etched-glass snob screens obscuring the bar,…$ -
Pub
The Lamb and Flag
Too tiny and thronged after work to supply much respite, it is nonetheless the epitome of a city pub, tucked down an atmospheric brick alley and blessed with an original fireplace. It has been known throughout the centuries as both the Coopers Arms and the Bucket of Blood (the latter…$ -
Pub
The Market Porter
Amid the gastronomic mayhem of Borough Market, this lovely old timber-beamed boozer is a fine place to drink in any time of the week. In fact, more times than most pubs, because its location earned a special license to open at 6am when vendors are working. Sundays and off-hours are…$ -
Pub
The Marquis of Granby
Amusingly, since the 1800s some pubs near the Houses of Parliament have been equipped with a “division bell,” which rings—rather like a fire alarm—to warn socializing MPs they have only 8 minutes to scurry back to vote. The custom has been replaced by an app, which is disappointing.…$ -
Pub
The Mayflower
The story goes that in 1620, local resident and sea captain Christopher Jones was recruited by some dissenters, who boarded his ship the Mayflower alongside this pub (then it was the Shippe; the current building is from the 1700s) to set sail to Southampton and thence to the New…$ -
Traditional British
The Narrow
It’s too bad that Gordon Ramsay, the blustery celebrity chef, has cultivated an international aversion to his surly attitude, because it means people sometimes avoid the pleasant boathouse-style dining experience tucked in a pretty inlet on the north bank of the Thames east of the…$$$ -
British
The Princess Louise
This Victorian fantasia just south of the British Museum is worth a visit even if you don’t drink. Its lost-in-time feeling begins with the proud signage, a traditional marquee of gold lettering on black. The 1891 interior has been miraculously maintained in mint condition: Morris…$ -
Pub
The Prospect of Whitby
The oldest riverside pub in London has much to entice you: a pedigree that stretches back to 1520, during the reign of Henry VIII. A 400-year-old stone floor. A backstory that includes a seamy stretch as a den for river smugglers, thieves, bare-knuckle boxers, and cock fighters. The…$ -
Pub
The Salisbury
The Covent Garden/Leicester Square location is unbeatable, and the ornate exterior and interior are unmistakably Victorian—ostentatious, just-how-drunk-was-the-designer Victorian, to be precise. Thrill to the Grecian urns in the brilliant-cut glass, the pressed-copper tables, and the…$ -
Pub
The Ship & Shovell
One of the most endearing configurations for any pub you’ll ever see, it’s cleft in two by an alley trod by commuters on their way to Charing Cross. On the north, there’s a traditional Victorian-style space, and on the south, a cozier room with a languidly sloping floor and private…$ -
French
The Square
The Square has remained consistently true to its aim of serving quality food in a sophisticated, quietly casual setting. The popular chef and co-owner, Phil Howard, has been here since it opened in 1991 and has never failed to deliver the best. Signature dishes such as a lasagna of…$$$ -
Pub
The Ten Bells
It’s said that Annie Chapman, one of Jack the Ripper’s victims, downed her last beer at this Spitalfields boozer while another, Mary Kelly, picked up her clients outside, and for an icky period in the ‘70s, the pub capitalized on infamy by being renamed for their slayer. All that…$ -
Contemporary European
The Wolseley
“No Flash or Intrusive Photography please,” chastises diners in a footnote on the menu. That’s because this opulent bistro in the Grand European style, posing with every polished surface to appear like something Renoir would want to paint, is home base for celebrities and power…$$$ -
Pub
Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese
Just the sort of rambling, low-ceilinged tavern you imagine London is full of (and was, once), it was built behind Fleet Street in the wake of the Great Fire in 1666; steady log fires and regularly strewn sawdust make it smell like it’s still burning. In later generations, it played…$ -
Pub
Ye Olde Mitre
Suspended in a hidden courtyard and seemingly between centuries, this enchanter—no screens, no music—was once part of a great palace mentioned by Shakespeare in Richard II and Richard III. The medieval St Etheldreda’s Chapel, the palace’s surviving place of worship, stands just…$