Occupying perhaps the most lavishly-refurbished conservatory in London, this new restaurant offers a true grand luxe experience, albeit in rather American style; an Italian menu is realised to a competent standard, though rather overshadowed by the setting and the service. To an extent which is perhaps unique among the capital’s top places to stay, the […]

Continue reading


A simple but pretty-much-perfect Gallic bistro, on a Primrose Hill corner site that’s seen a number of occupants in recent years. What are you looking for in a restaurant? Glamour, excitement, novelty? This is not the place for you. If, on the the other hand, your idea of perfection in a no-nonsense Gallic bistro, you […]

Continue reading


Old-school in all the best ways, this (relaunched) Mayfair restaurant is one of two truly English grand hotel dining rooms in town (the other being the Goring); a soothing and clubby sort of place, it offers an experience of uniformly high quality, but at prices which give nothing away. Favourable first impressions of the panelled […]

Continue reading


Fronting on Park Lane, a classic brasserie-style operation, where the attractions of good Gallic food and service are overwhelmed by depressing design and high prices. Is it deliberate that hotels often get things so desperately wrong? Do they just not understand the concept of ‘restaurant’? Have any of the people who commission new hotel-restaurants every […]

Continue reading


Alain Ducasse’s re-launch of a grand (but quite small) brasserie, near the place Wagram, offering an almost exclusively fishy menu; it offers food of solid quality, but the service adds little joy to the place. Celeb chefs haven’t made a big hit in London by running classic restaurant sites. Think of MPW’s recent sales of […]

Continue reading


A grand and agreeable brasserie, handily located in the heart of the City; it offers good (and reasonably-priced) wines and friendly service, but seems to us to ‘miss’ fractionally on the food front. The look and feel of a classic brasserie is, for our money, very difficult to beat, and this lofty former banking chamber […]

Continue reading


A good but pricey ‘eco-chippy’, from celeb-chef Tom Aikens, which offers a very handy Chelsea stand-by – just two minutes’ walk from a road (King’s) that’s always been infamously short of decent places to eat. Note to reviewers everywhere: Chelsea is expensive. Most houses there cost £millions. The locals are not stuck for a bob […]

Continue reading


Not far from Sloane Square, a good all-rounder – in modern ‘Chelsea trattoria’ style – that has finally convincingly shaken off its pizzeria-origins. Perhaps there really is something in third time lucky. Not that it’s something you often see in the restaurant world – not under the same name anyway. Vivezza – associated with the celebrated […]

Continue reading


In an emerging part of Battersea – near the Dogs’ Home – a surprisingly good Italian, where pizza is just one part of a satisfying overall package. What’s in a name? Does Three Bridges say ‘Italian’ to you? Is location everything? These are the sorts of questions inspired by an early-evening visit to this new […]

Continue reading


On the sixth floor of the city-centre Urbis centre, a smart modern bar/brasserie – on the former site of Mont (RIP) – offering pleasant but unremarkable cooking, and a smart and discreet setting perhaps most obviously suited to a business lunch. Well, it couldn’t be said we’re lagging on this one. We find ourselves sitting […]

Continue reading