It is a bold claim for any restaurant to make suggesting that it provides an ‘unforgettable dining experience’, and all the more so if you have also been voted London’s ‘most romantic’ restaurant. Such is the standard that Clos Maggiore is forced to live up to.
L’Anima: Soulless (April 2015)
Quattro Passi: Just another posh Italian (January 2015)
Babbo: Nice – but at a price (June 2014)
Locanda Locatelli: Almost excellent (February 2014)
The Red Pepper: A Little Venice institution (November 2013)
A Little Venice institution, the Red Pepper has been delivering consistently good food in the fifteen years I have been visiting the restaurant. While there have been several changes in both management (the current team, led by the charismatic Lara, is a definite success) and décor, the basic formula has remained unaltered.
C London (October 2013)
Clearly C-London must be doing something right since the place was packed on the weekday lunchtime when I recently visited the restaurant. Maybe it’s just that people still want to be seen here, but even if C-London was in the vanguard of ‘destination restaurants’ some years ago, it seems difficult to believe that it has been able to sustain this mantle.
Al Duca (September 2013)
Bocca di Lupo (September 2013)
Olivomare: Full marks for food, but... (August 2013)
2 Veneti (December 2012)
Sartoria (September 2012)
I first ate here over ten years ago and for no particular reason had failed to return since. However, for any restaurant to be able to maintain consistently high standards in a city with a dining culture as competitive as London's is testament to the fact that Sartoria must be doing something right.