london restaurants

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (3611 of them)

I didn’t know Mr Kong’s, but my favourite places to go in Chinatown are Wong Kei and HK Diner. They both have enormous menus and unfairly harsh reviews (so are usually easier to get a table in at busy times). I wouldn’t go to either for a ‘special’ meal, but the food is perfectly delicious.

tangenttangent, Thursday, 9 August 2018 19:04 (seven years ago)

Its not special but its also not just a quick pop in for some grub in the area. iirc Wong Kei is ok but too shabby so I'll have a look at HK Diner. Thanks!

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 9 August 2018 19:11 (seven years ago)

Hmm, HK Diner is probably even shabbier tbh. Joy King Lau is maybe a better mid-ground!

tangenttangent, Thursday, 9 August 2018 19:16 (seven years ago)

ah ok. I am also thinking of going Japanese @ tonkotsu instead. Cheers!

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 9 August 2018 19:52 (seven years ago)

I would second the recommendation for Joy King Lau, especially for Dim Sum

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 9 August 2018 20:38 (seven years ago)

Baozi Inn on Newport Street is tiny and uncomfortable and full of weird Maoist propaganda posters but the food is excellent.

Matt DC, Thursday, 9 August 2018 21:06 (seven years ago)

two months pass...

Gaby's Deli is, disappointingly, even better than i remembered. It's such a shame it's closing. It was absolutely packed today.

Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Friday, 26 October 2018 12:11 (seven years ago)

four months pass...

Oh my sweet lord the Naga chicken pieces in Clutch Chicken in Horton. I didn’t think gourmet fried chicken really existed but last night I was touched by poultry god.

Hey hey, the tipple’s weak sherry (fionnland), Thursday, 21 March 2019 20:10 (seven years ago)

Hoxton**

Hey hey, the tipple’s weak sherry (fionnland), Thursday, 21 March 2019 20:10 (seven years ago)

This is an amazing guide to some of the cheapest and best restaurants that serve local communities all over London. Many of them in *cough* zones 4-6

https://london.eater.com/maps/best-value-restaurants-london-cheap-not-cheap-eats

xyzzzz__, Monday, 25 March 2019 21:42 (seven years ago)

That looks very good, although Singburi recently closed after they found several festering mouse corpses and faeces in the kitchen.

Matt DC, Monday, 25 March 2019 21:47 (seven years ago)

I went to Le Chamarel (the Mauritian place in Turnpike Lane) a few weeks ago and it is indeed terrific. Smokey Jerky in New Cross is great as well.

Matt DC, Monday, 25 March 2019 21:49 (seven years ago)

eeek i used to love that place :/

xpost

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Monday, 25 March 2019 21:49 (seven years ago)

don't get too carried away, just cross out one of their hygiene stars with a marker pen next time you are in there!

calzino, Monday, 25 March 2019 21:52 (seven years ago)

It has reopened and is up to code now.

ShariVari, Monday, 25 March 2019 21:54 (seven years ago)

I was thinking of going to Lahori Nihaari at the weekend but ended up at the food court in the little shopping centre in Green Street and had some of the best paneer tikka of my life.

ShariVari, Monday, 25 March 2019 21:57 (seven years ago)

I went to Ayam Zaman, the big Syrian place in Shepherds Bush, the other week and I don't think I've felt quite so defeated by a restaurant meal ever. Everything was delicious but absolutely gigantic. It felt like a real community hub though, lots of big family meals going on, and the decor is amazing.

Matt DC, Monday, 25 March 2019 21:59 (seven years ago)

Never heard of Smokey Jerkey when i lived in NC, always went to Cummin' Up. Anyone ever been to Little Ochi in herne hill?

plax (ico), Monday, 25 March 2019 22:08 (seven years ago)

There’s a Sudanese place in Shepherd’s Bush market that does a whole fried fish, salad and foul medames for around £10 and it easily feeds two. Outdoors, so definitely worth a stop in warm weather, as is Fake Morocco - the food trucks with outdoor seating in Golborne Road.

suzy, Monday, 25 March 2019 22:10 (seven years ago)

I better go there as I've been living in Herne Hill for the last couple of years #shameOnMe

xyzzzz__, Monday, 25 March 2019 22:11 (seven years ago)

Little Ochi is really good! Go in, go to the fish freezer at the back in the corridor, choose what you want with the cook, sit down, get a bottle of export guinness. Really nice atmosphere as well. Bus drivers grabbing a drink and a chat after the end of their shift. Local families &c.

Fizzles, Tuesday, 26 March 2019 08:03 (seven years ago)

More cheap and good - Sowa in Ealing just off the broadway is great. woman with huge arms kneading, roll no out and filling the pierogi in front of you. daily specials, which the last time i went were slow cooked pork ribs which i can’t imagine being bettered.

facebook page here: https://m.facebook.com/sowarestaurant/

goes a little way to making up for the loss of Beatta’s Patio in Shepherd’s Bush.

Fizzles, Saturday, 30 March 2019 19:20 (seven years ago)

It's not my area but i still browsed this with interest wondering how many of these i could fit in next time i visit:

https://london.eater.com/maps/best-value-restaurants-london-cheap-not-cheap-eats

Acting Crazy (Instrumental) (jed_), Thursday, 4 April 2019 22:08 (seven years ago)

roti king is right by the station and so delicious. I went there wednesday!

plax (ico), Friday, 5 April 2019 06:20 (seven years ago)

(x-post)

A bizarrely defensive, passive aggressive, 'this isn't just a list of cheap eats, but it's a list of cheap eats - so what? come and have a go if you're hard enough mate' intro to that list.

Luna Schlosser, Friday, 5 April 2019 07:22 (seven years ago)

I didn't quite see it like that, because the community aspect is emphasized later on.

That list is basically the kind of restaurants I end up preferring, where people from the communities go to and that have been around for ages. They end up being cheaper than other ones...that I don't go to.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 5 April 2019 09:09 (seven years ago)

Yeah, it's saying that authentic well-cooked food that caters to communities that tend not to be so well off in inner-city areas deserve better than being labelled "cheap." This seems fair enough?

plax (ico), Saturday, 6 April 2019 07:15 (seven years ago)

The guy follows me on Twitter and he’s part of one of those communities, so that’s exactly what he’s talking about.

suzy, Saturday, 6 April 2019 15:50 (seven years ago)

Especially at a time when there’s barely any change from £20 for avocado on toast and a latte.

Excluding London's most cynical hotels, curious to see a list of all the places where this would cost much more than a tenner max

nashwan, Saturday, 6 April 2019 16:20 (seven years ago)

OK - i was being a bit mean-minded..... Thee article could perhaps have got to the communities element a bit faster, though i was looking at it on a phone.

Luna Schlosser, Saturday, 6 April 2019 21:02 (seven years ago)

I think it's fine to make that shift w/o bearing down on some overly-fetishist concept of disadvantaged communities as a resource for the cash-strapped

plax (ico), Sunday, 7 April 2019 06:40 (seven years ago)

Despite the Suzy seal of approval, I'm not completely convinced or is my leg being pulled here?

From London Eater - 2018’s Most Egregious Dining Grievances

Jonathan Nunn, food writer and Eater London contributor:

The proliferation of automated McDonalds ordering, meaning double cheeseburgers are made fresh and the meat and cheese don’t have time to sit on the heated counter fusing together. This is legit the most serious UK wide issue that is going on in food right now.

Luna Schlosser, Sunday, 7 April 2019 09:41 (seven years ago)

demarionunn owns & the list is proper

... and the crowd said DESELECT THEM (||||||||), Sunday, 7 April 2019 10:35 (seven years ago)

The guy's social media persona is irritating in the predictable ways you get with UK left dude Twitter but there's no question he puts the legwork in and he's repping these places because they are GOOD rather than just cheap or as some kind of realness totem.

Ultimately, if you can afford to, eat where you like and that can be community cafes, oversubscribed hipster restaurants or high-end places with world-famous chefs, it's all good. But lists like the London Eater one are a necessary corrective to a London food writing scene that can feel incredibly lazy, endless lists of London's best Thai restaurants that all contain the same places (Kiln, Smoking Goat, Som Saa, Begging Bowl etc, all of which have white chefs).

It's not to say one set of restaurants is better than the other - I enjoyed Hoppers as much Everest Curry King, a Sri Lankan place in Lewisham where they are completely unembarrassed about putting the food in microwaves right in front of you, and local Sri Lankan families queue all the way to the door at peak times. I enjoyed them in completely different ways, but the likes of Time Out, the Standard etc focus almost entirely on the former group now.

There are reasons for that - slashed editorial budgets and time constraints mean that journalists are going to focus on the restaurants with the best PR and social media game, so sites like London Eater do valuable work IMO.

That list is basically the kind of restaurants I end up preferring, where people from the communities go to and that have been around for ages. They end up being cheaper than other ones...that I don't go to

What are your favourite restaurants you've eaten in recently?

Matt DC, Sunday, 7 April 2019 10:43 (seven years ago)

"irritating in the predictable ways" = funny and good :D

overrated: leek and potato

underrated: cum https://t.co/OYRHXO0Ugg

— the mango lover (@demarionunn) April 1, 2019

mark s, Sunday, 7 April 2019 10:46 (seven years ago)

some people are not into food enough to go to restaurants where you need to have a degree of confidence and the staff won't hold your hand or may not be bothered about service or have a different idea of what it is, or maybe don't particularly welcome random white people.

couple that with the fact that the big lists are going to focus on areas where rent is exorbitant and a certain type of restaurant tends to feature. also like, is it really lazy that the same places appear in lists or is it just that people like those places? it would only be lazy if the places were really bad restaurants.

personally i guess i couldn't give a shit about service generally once everything functions at a basic level, there are plenty of places i go to regularly where it's cheap and rude, but eg when i went to roti king, i got in at 5pm when it opened and at a quarter to 6 my food hadn't arrived and i had to leave to go to a lecture. the same was true of the person next to me. it was just a chaotic mess of food being given to people who shouted at the waitress loudly and frequently enough. i didn't go back. i didn't really feel like complaining either tho, that sort of restaurant feels so personal and sort of family run that i wasn't about to, even politely, try to raise issue with anything. feels like you're a guest in a more old-fashioned sense.

and ultimately it doesn't really stay in my mind, shit happens - but you constantly see raging comments on google reviews or whatever from people who get recommended to go somewhere like roti king and expect bland, steady professionalism or standardised service, maybe it's better that lists cater to the vast majority of people who use them, most likely tourists or those who wish to take photos of their food as it congeals, or people in need of a helping hand who prob will just find reasons to get angry if anything erratic happens.

i have discovered places via eater but mainly cos they have a list for every fucking possible thing you can think of.

FernandoHierro, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:15 (seven years ago)

i assume some of eater's target readership is students w/no money

mark s, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:35 (seven years ago)

i mean presumably they might as well do any and every list they can, to attract users, but their main lists tend to skew mid-price to expensive. tho there are a few places that you could eat for under a tenner on them that don't get included in that list, which seems to be aiming for some slightly indefinable concept of value/authenticity that excludes lots of places, which i don't really understand, but might explain the slightly odd intro.

FernandoHierro, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:45 (seven years ago)

I’m putting out a hard recommend for Master Wei in Cosmo Place - hand-pulled noodles and Xi’an dishes for people who enjoy places like Silk Road but can’t hoof it out to Camberwell or want someplace really good after work by Russell Square (which is half of London ILX). I went the first weekend it opened and loved it. Chang’s Noodle in New Oxford Street comes recommended to me by Marina O’Loughlin because it’s along the same Sichuan/Xi’an lines. It looks really shabby on the outside but she says to ignore that.

I’m delighted by the variety of hotpot and skewer Chinese restaurants opening within a 5-minute walk from my flat in any direction.

suzy, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:53 (seven years ago)

couple that with the fact that the big lists are going to focus on areas where rent is exorbitant and a certain type of restaurant tends to feature. also like, is it really lazy that the same places appear in lists or is it just that people like those places? it would only be lazy if the places were really bad restaurants.

Most of these restaurants are good, even great. Still, I do think it's lazy but there are mitigating factors for that which I've talked about above. I still have a copy of Time Out's 100 Best Restaurants book on my shelf from about 10 years ago and occasionally look through it even though a lot of those places are gone now. It's really apparent that the old list is a lot more diverse, both geographically and in terms of the types of restaurants, than the current list.

Obviously things are different now because food culture feels like an absolutely central part of London youth culture in a way it wasn't even 10 years ago. I get that not everyone wants to trek to Wembley for dinner (hell, I don't) but London is also a city of millions of people and increasing numbers of them live in further flung parts of it because it's more affordable, it's good they know about good, unheralded places that might be on their doorstep. Borough/Soho/Shoreditch/wherever are always going to be hubs of amazing restaurants but not everyone wants to spend all their time eating there.

and the staff won't hold your hand or may not be bothered about service or have a different idea of what it is, or maybe don't particularly welcome random white people.

I've eaten at a lot of random restaurants over the years and the worst I've encountered was a sort of bemused curiosity that we might have wanted to go in there in the first place. I've had awful, chaotic service at lots of tiny local places but also waiting staff who were very happy to talk us through the menu and make recommendations - that's a big part of why people should review them in the first place. Never been to Roti King though - that's pretty central right?

Matt DC, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:55 (seven years ago)

the piece is combining a quite complex argument abt price and approach and expectation -- which cannot but get political tbh -- with an actual guide to some places nunn thinks are good (lol it reminds me a bit of the kinds of lists i used to put in the wire back when we covered EVERY KIND OF MUSIC DAMMIT) (ie they didn't make much sense unless you got what i was on abt which i WASN'T GOING TO EXPLAIN! NEVER!)

i like that he routinely does get into the politics bcz you can't map london honestly w/o politics! but the complex argument ends up being extremely compressed and yes, a little under-defined wrt value and values -- it needs a much longer piece on the "digital facing page" of course but then you'd just click straight to the list in the we have made

mark s, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:58 (seven years ago)

insert world, log off

mark s, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:58 (seven years ago)

It’s right by Euston and one of the two times I went was with Mrs DC!

suzy, Sunday, 7 April 2019 11:58 (seven years ago)

i went once and it was great though i did have to wait in line for about half an hour to get in which felt faintly ridiculous

Lil' Brexit (Tracer Hand), Sunday, 7 April 2019 12:00 (seven years ago)

the piece is combining a quite complex argument abt price and approach and expectation -- which cannot but get political tbh -- with an actual guide to some places nunn thinks are good (lol it reminds me a bit of the kinds of lists i used to put in the wire back when we covered EVERY KIND OF MUSIC DAMMIT) (ie they didn't make much sense unless you got what i was on abt which i WASN'T GOING TO EXPLAIN! NEVER!)

i like that he routinely does get into the politics bcz you can't map london honestly w/o politics! but the complex argument ends up being extremely compressed and yes, a little under-defined wrt value and values -- it needs a much longer piece on the "digital facing page" of course but then you'd just click straight to the list in the we have made

yeah, this is exactly what i was getting at! the politics of it. i guess for me he doesn't get properly into that and i would like him to, but i guess the eater editors just want their clicky list. i mean there's a lot to be said about the idea of an independent restaurant and the kind of faux-independence that is on the rise in london and already fairly well-established in new york, but yeah, would be a different piece.

xpost i was first in the queue having heard about the long waits but as i said my food never arrived :(

FernandoHierro, Sunday, 7 April 2019 12:02 (seven years ago)

roti king’s popularity has justly imo skyrocketed over the last what six? years. food is still excellent. it’s got more expensive. and yes the queues are now v long and although the service has always been fine for me i get that they have some trouble processing that many people sometimes or that a service mistake has a bigger consequence.

but i kind of feel “meh market forces” about it. (tho i can understand it’s irritating if you’ve gone there for a quick bite - i would probably just avoid it for that now). food’s still good and it hasn’t done the other version of being affected by success, which is scaling to a bigger place or opening more places with the quality dropping off, which is worse imo.

Fizzles, Sunday, 7 April 2019 12:59 (seven years ago)

What are your favourite restaurants you've eaten in recently?

My job takes me from London quite a bit so most of my recommendations would be from around the country. The thing is that piece really captures my experience of the kind of place I like where the food just ends up as almost something that could be cooked by a parent or grandparent (if you happen to grow up with family members that know how to cook). In the end they serve whoever with no fuss, often cash only.

Yesterday I was eating at an ok place in Angel with a friend which is the opposite. More expensive, nice and all but the food took a while and it was...just enough in terms of quantity. The owners clearly took care with the decor, had to be booked in advance (why I'd never go myself, just fail at that basic level)...there is a whole level of 'experience' that is coming into being just by going there, which is what my friend goes for.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 7 April 2019 18:05 (seven years ago)

"i like that he routinely does get into the politics bcz you can't map london honestly w/o politics! "

You can't talk about food honestly w/p politics either, food cultures are always embedded with histories of globalisation, colonisation, access to and scarcity of resources. I think it reflects more poorly on the bulk of food writing that takes so little account of the relationship b/w food and its contexts that this little gesture to these issues seems quite thorny and noteworthy. Its a great list though and hopefully the answer to a good many "where can you get decent X in London?" questions that I can never seem to get a good answer to (where can you get a good Maffé for instance?), and I think that any such list will draw attention to, even if unintentionally, the redrawing of the map in recent years and the end of inner-city areas as ethnically diverse enclaves. It would be weird not to draw attention to this phenomenon at least cursorily I think?

plax (ico), Monday, 8 April 2019 09:40 (seven years ago)

Cookery writers who write about specific culinary traditions tend to be much better at acknowledging historical forces that have influenced how e.g. particular ingredients were introduced, and while this can veer into a fetishistic exoticism, it is on the whole a lot more interesting than whatever epistemology underwrites how restaurant critics are expected to frame their writing. As a counterpoint has anybody ever read the absolutely demented ramblings of the catwalk reviewers on vogue.com/runway?

plax (ico), Monday, 8 April 2019 09:49 (seven years ago)

We happened to be in Ealing this weekend and took Fizzles's tip: the peirogi at Sowa are really very good indeed. Thanks Fizzles.

This part of an interesting London restaurants weekend also involving a delicious chicken shish at a very ordinary newish kebab shop in Peckham, and the excellent (and IMO very good value at £45ish) tasting menu at Perilla on Newington Green.

Tim, Monday, 8 April 2019 10:36 (seven years ago)


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.