Westbourne Park (or, if you’re generous, the borders of Notting Hill) is perhaps not the most obvious location for many Londoners ever to consider visiting.
Assunta Madre: Fresh fish; fundamentally flawed (September 2015)
Chisou: Solid, but unspectacular (September 2015)
Social Wine & Tapas: Great expectations… (July 2015)
Graze: Put out to pasture (July 2015)
HIX Mayfair: Back to the bad old days (June 2015)
Spice Market: Half-asleep (May 2015)
28:50 Mayfair: Gone downhill (April 2015)
Kandoo: Kan-does (March 2015)
Texture: Textbook (February 2015)
Les Gourmets des Ternes: A tiny piece of France, transplanted to London (January 2015)
Maybe a few decades ago the French felt that they deservedly had the most bragging rights when it came to culinary superiority. Times have changed though. Japan can claim to have more three Michelin-starred restaurants than France and in London, ask many diners what style of cuisine they currently rate most highly, and – best guess – it won’t be French.
Les Trois Garcons: Deliciously decadent (December 2014)
I first visited Les Trois Garcons when it opened around 15 years ago. I loved it then and I still love it now. Shoreditch has changed a lot during this time, but the evidently successful formula here has not. We all probably play the game – if you had a restaurant, how might you choose to furnish it?
Number 22: Moving on up (October 2014)
Back with a new look and feel, Herne Hill’s Number 22 has the potential to become a well-established local favourite. Large windows, tastefully coloured walls (bold yellow in the back part of the restaurant, acts as a perfect foil to the light blue in the main part), a banquette around the left side and a beautifully tiled bar in the centre create an overall sense of warmth and welcome.
dindin Kitchen: Persian food For everyone (July 2014)
For anyone in search of something a little new and different – but also very good, fresh, healthy and innovative – then a visit to dindin is a must. On our way to the restaurant, my comrade and I discussed how much the London dining scene had changed in the last ten years, becoming much more varied and definitely better as a result.
Cha Cha Moon: Cheap and Cheerful (June 2014)
Visitors to the Carnaby/ Kingley street area of London are not short of culinary options. Even on the sunny lunchtime last week when two of us visited Cha Cha Moon for the first time, and the main criterion for choosing a restaurant beyond its location was the ability to sit outdoors, there exist many other nearby alternatives.
Canvas: Drawing a blank (May 2014)
As any estate agent would be only too pleased to tell you, when it comes to location, you need to think very carefully. Therefore, while Marylebone Lane may be a quaint and pretty strip tucked just to the north of Oxford Street, a restaurant isn’t going to survive here unless it does something pretty exceptional.
28:50 Mayfair: Wonderful wine and pretty good food – what’s not to like? (December 2013)
Arbutus: Best of British (October 2013)
On a wet and rainy night in October, there were few more comforting places to be than Arbutus. I had eaten several lunches here over the years, but this was the first time I had enjoyed dinner at the restaurant and it seemed fitting that my guest for the evening was an Italian, keen to assess the London dining scene and gain an insight into the best of British cooking/ produce.
Madsen (September 2013)
A festive set menu with a large group including some locals was both the best and the worst way to experience Madsen, a Scandinavian restaurant in South Kensington. On the positive side, our group certainly created its own atmosphere, the alcohol (including Acquavit, a not unpleasant Swedish spirit) flowed liberally and a good time was had by one and all.