LDNGuide

London's Classic Restaurants

From harrumphing British establishments, to Cantonese canteens, to a trailblazing ocakbaşı, and lots more.
London's Classic Restaurants image

photo credit: Giulia Verdinelli

A classic restaurant is like a classic car. They’re familiar to lots of people, often endearingly imperfect, and you’ll more than likely see Jerry Seinfeld sitting in one of them. We don’t think of a classic as something that solely equates to age though. Like, that stain on your kitchen wall isn’t ‘a classic stain’. It’s the scene of a so-so ragu you drunkenly cooked 10 years ago. Something as special as a classic restaurant needs more than longevity and more than perfect food. It needs to make you feel something.

You see, a classic restaurant doesn’t have to be faultless. It can have great noodles but bad lighting, average lasagne and an amazing atmosphere. But as long as it gives everyone that feeling—that indefinable rightness—well, then that’s what makes it a stone-cold classic.


THE SPOTS

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Malaysian

Queensway

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Normah’s is about as homely as a restaurant can get. The tiny Malaysian spot deep inside Queensway Market has been around since 2015 and is made up of one person, and one person only: Normah. She sends out plate after plate of perfectly fried chicken wings, mee goreng chicken, and king prawn laksa, all of which you’ll immediately regret agreeing to share. Her beef rendang is one of our death row meals and, as for that flaky roti? Well, we’d happily be wrapped up in it and eat our way out. The humble space isn’t anything to write home about, but Normah and her food absolutely is.


This century-old Marylebone deli will do anything you like when it comes to sliced and quartered sandwiches. Egg mayo with glistening anchovies, luminous coronation chicken, sizzling bacon with a squirt of ketchup—you name it, Paul Rothe will do it. Inside it’s somewhere between a caff, a deli, and a Ye Olde Chutney Emporium. Jars of jams, pickles, and condiments line the wall and there are half a dozen or so formica tables plus a little counter to call dibs on. Hover politely, nab a table, and you’ll be settled in with a cup of tea in no time.


Daquise has the air of a dining room that hasn’t changed for half a century or so. Chandeliers hang and borscht is ladled into your bowl tableside at this wonderfully old-school Polish institution in South Kensington. Sitting in its grand, aged dining room—part tiled, part distressed, but wholly elegant—makes us wonder why this traditional ideal of a restaurant is no longer in vogue. The clientele, additional pieces of Daquise’s antique furniture, decompress at being served in the most thorough but familiar of fashions. Yes, the goulash is overcooked, so have the moreish hunter’s stew or a fail-safe schnitzel instead.


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Walk into St. John’s white-walled bar area, eyes closed and, when you open them, you’d be forgiven for thinking you’d walked into some kind of restaurant heaven. The Clerkenwell institution is London’s most famous British restaurant. Its ‘nose-to-tail’ cooking approach, first defined by chef and workwear icon Fergus Henderson, is known the world over. The pies are an experience that every person should have at least once in their life. In fact, the whole restaurant is. From the signal-less bar and bakery area, filled with the noise of glasses clinking and madeleines baking, to the all-white dining room where a lunch will turn into a dinner and dinner into the next day.


Look up, high above Wong Kei’s sign, and you’ll learn that before it was the Cantonese canteen and Chinatown institution it is today, it was home to a renowned Victorian wigmaker. The excellent Instagram account caffs_not_cafes has a detailed post about this. What’s clear is that this was a noteworthy building then, and it continues to be a noteworthy building now. Without its slapped-on-your-table wonton noodle soups and roasted meats bathing in sweet, shining umami gravy, London would be a much poorer place.


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If someone were to invite you to lunch at Andrew Edmunds and tell you that it’s in an 18th-century townhouse and the menu is scrawled on a blackboard, you might imagine a snoozefest. But a meal here is anything but. This Soho spot is the epitome of an old-school establishment. A meal at this romantic, candlelit den will make you notice the green flecks in your childhood arch nemesis’ eyes. Bring a date, bring a friend, or just bring yourself. Andrew Edmunds is charming enough that, even though the modern European food is excellent, you could come here for the hazy atmosphere alone and leave completely content. 


Roll up to Sông Quê in a group on a Thursday, Friday, Saturday or, sod it, most nights, and you’ll find that approximately 90% of east London appears to have had the same idea. The reason being is that this now institutional Vietnamese spot on Kingsland Road is one of the best around. The cavernous pastel green room is full of noodles being slurped and bottles of Oyster Bay being cracked every night, but come by in the day and you’ll find a soothing space for one person lunches. Order a phở or bún chả, split some summer rolls, and fight over the last piece of salt and pepper squid.


There are few combinations better than nostalgia and a prawn cocktail. This is a fact of life that is never more apparent than at Sweetings, a classic City seafood spot that’s been serving oysters and sticky toffee puddings for over 130 years. We’re going to go out on a limb and say that its continued success comes down to the heady mixture of tankards of black velvets, white tablecloths, and waistcoat-clad waiters that still operate under the Fawlty Towers school of hospitality. You definitely want the mighty fine fish pie on your table, but just be warned that Sweetings is only open Monday to Friday and exclusively for lunch service. 


Koya’s English breakfast udon bowl—that mixes the pig fat of a fry-up with a gooey tamago egg and shiitake mushrooms—is one of the great modern London dishes. The little udon bar first opened on Frith Street in 2010 and the standards of this Japanese spot remain very high indeed. Queues snake outside from lunchtime onwards and, come nighttime, the dimly lit counter is a corridor of hunched shoulders and constantly moving chefs. Its lasso-worthy noodles suit any meal and any season, but a late dinner is where Koya comes into its own.


Hunan is one of the ultimate IYKYK restaurants in London, a Chinese fine dining spot located on a pretty street in Pimlico. There’s a ‘trust me’ tasting menu that changes every day, and though you don’t have a choice in what you eat, you should definitely trust the chefs. They know what they’re doing. The food comes out in small, immaculate courses, and the prawn toast and crispy duck are both excellent, as is the seafood. It’s a lovely spot for a serene white tablecloth-type lunch or dinner that saves all the surprises for its food.



Taylor Swift chose Bob Bob Ricard for her ex-boyfriend’s birthday party. Whether that makes you want to make a booking or scroll swiftly on, will depend on your feelings towards seminal hits such as Love Story. Despite only opening in 2008, Bob Bob Ricard quickly became known as ‘that fabulous place in Soho with the press for champagne buttons at every table’, and became an instant classic. Designed exclusively for people who honestly believe they are destined to own a G6, it’s one of the most decadent, OTT restaurants in London, and importantly, the French-by-way-of-Russia food is just as rich and special.  


If you leave Ciao Bella analysing your spaghetti con polpette, then something has gone very wrong. There’s no doubt that this old-school Italian restaurant in Bloomsbury is so much more valuable than a bowl of perfect handmade pasta. It will feed you well and make you happy. So much so that when we eventually keel over, this is where we want our wake. Not because Ciao Bella will stuff everyone into a stupor, but because it’s one of the most perfect celebrations of eating out in London.


We love a specialty. And the specialty at Roti King in Euston is soft, flaky roti canai. The Malaysian spot’s menu has grown over the years, as have their locations, but you’ll still find their signature roti served with a bowl of excellent curry, with your choice of dhal, chicken, mutton, or fish. While the rest of their menu, which includes things like nasi lemak and beef rendang, is all pretty great, if you only get one thing here, make it the roti canai. 


How does one decide whether a restaurant is classic? Is it about the age? Or how often pheasant appears on the menu? To some people, it might be the amount of maroon velvet and gold detailing there is inside. Others may say a restaurant is classic by virtue of the amount of Prime Ministers that have dined there. Rules has all these characteristics covered. The British Covent Garden restaurant is London’s oldest, open since 1798. It’s also London’s most questionable, thanks to a mural of Margaret Thatcher. On top of that it’s also quite good, if you order correctly. Stick to beef and game, and all the things that will give you gout.


photo credit: Karolina Wiercigroch

No one does dim sum quite like Royal China Club. The roasted pork buns have an endless comfort factor, the pork and shrimp dumplings will make you a certified har kau addict, and the prawn cheung fun is an edible revelation that will have you booking this huge Baker Street restaurant at every opportunity for a big group meal. The flagship restaurant of the Royal China group, this sprawling sophisticated spot has been known as the place for excellent Cantonese cuisine since 2005. Although the whole peking duck is one of London’s best dinner dishes, we recommend you come during the day to get involved in that winning dim sum. 


Oslo Court has been open since 1982 and apart from the appearance of a card machine, this place hasn’t changed one bit. It’s at the bottom of a beautiful modernist block of flats of the same name in St John’s Wood. So, as soon as you realise you’re in the right place, you can start the task of picking from their long menu of British classics. The food can be…eccentric, let’s say, and if you’re offended by steamed vegetables or waiters who describe every dessert as if it’s The Da Vinci Code, then this might not be the place for you. But it’s a one of a kind, dessert trolley, time machine type of restaurant.


Fondly referred to as ‘The French’ by its regular patrons and those who’ve watched one too many Guy Ritchie films, the Soho boozer-cum-devious upstairs dining room isn’t just a historical inclusion. Of course, the no mobile phones rules and famous patrons, both literary and legless, add a little glitz, but it’s everything about The French House that’s fantastic. Whether you’re sinking cidres downstairs or settling in upstairs on a Thursday—their imperious steak et frites day, FYI—you always feel a part of something a little secret and potentially sordid.


J Sheekey is the place to go when you want to show someone that you know a thing or two about the finer things in life. The finer things being grilled lobster, seared scallops, and you attempting to throw back a Jersey oyster in a sexy manner. The chi-chi Covent Garden go-to has an oyster bar, dark green leather booths, and black and white photos hung up everywhere. The menu has a bunch of things mostly revolving around seafood and there’s something for everyone. Whether that’s the monkfish and tiger prawn tikka masala you hear the table next to you order without hesitation, or the fish pie that’s equal parts creamy and worth burning your tongue for. 


Nine years before Gökyüzü opened on Green Lanes, Mangal 1 became the first Turkish ocakbasi restaurant in Dalston. Known for its legendary grilled meats, and in particular its tender sweetbreads, the BYOB spot has reigned supreme in a city that has numerous classic Turkish restaurants. It’s a classic for its cooking, its longevity, and also its story: one of the co-owners expanded down the road and opened a place, now run by his sons. It’s called Mangal II.


There are family-fun restaurants, and then there’s witnessing E. Pellicci’s manager Nevio Jnr. hollering to his mum Maria. A daytime Italian cafe in Bethnal Green that’s been open since 1900, this place runs on strong cuppas, various formats of fried bread, and good chat. It’s high-energy hilarity where you can indulge in The Best Fry-Up Of Your Life circa 8am, or a truly epic portion of lasagne come afternoon. Be sure to inspect the pictures of celebrity patrons that line the ‘40s panelled wooden walls, and for the love of god, never leave the bread pudding unfinished or risk the wrath of our favourite adoptive restaurant family.  


One of the great problems with chippies is that every person’s favourite chippy is the good one closest to them. Outside of a trip to the coast and that irreplaceable sea air seasoning, you’ll be hard pushed to find a chippy actually worth travelling for in London. Well, we think Fish Central is one of them. The Clerkenwell classic is a blast from the past in all the best ways. White tablecloths are paired with silver trays of tartare sauce and a meal involves prawn cocktail, cod and chips, and sticky toffee pudding.


Not only is this Brick Lane bakery a classic Shoreditch hot spot for anyone looking for a late-night bagel (it’s open 24 hours), Beigel Bake is a place that’s been around since the ‘70s and isn’t budging anytime soon. It’s become an east London landmark, and you’ll almost always find a queue for their smoked salmon bagel and legendary salt beef sandwich. If you haven’t found yourself eyeing up the freshly baked bagels at an ungodly hour, you, my friend, have not had a full London experience. 


Few restaurants maintain the gold-stamped guarantee of a good time quite like Quo Vadis. The Soho British restaurant and members' club is a homely institution that’s also home to two classics. One comes in the shape of Jeremy Lee, QV’s amiable chef-proprietor who has made Dean Street not just his home, but a home to many others. The second is in the delicately poised shape of his famous smoked eel sandwich. Of course, it’s as good as everyone says, as is their bar. Perfect for propping up with a martini, pâté, pies, and a tower of profiteroles au chocolat.


Tayyabs is loud. It’s full of families, couples, friends who are making the most of the no corkage fee, and it’s been serving excellent Punjabi food since 1972. There’s a lot to appreciate at this Whitechapel institution, not least the decently priced curries, grilled lamb chops, and sensational keema naan. Most of all, what makes this place a classic is the fact that despite the many top-tier Punjabi restaurants in the city, this will still be the one that springs to mind when someone asks where to find a really great curry.


This Italian institution in Hammersmith has been serving everything from rosemary pizzettas to whole pancetta-covered pigeons since a time when London thought antipasti was a movement against pastries. Yes, you should be impressed. It has earned its reputation through the glorious medium of exquisite Italian food, and its legendary chocolate nemesis tart that is oh-so rich. On that note, it’s worth knowing that a meal here will undoubtedly cost you a small fortune, but on the right summer’s day, sitting beside the Thames with a seafood risotto is one of the most life-affirming special occasion meals you can ever experience. 


A great caff does not come without great characters. That is simply how they’re made. These days, the Regency has a mixed bunch. Thanks to its long established fame in both its home city and through Hollywood features (hello Daniel Craig in Layer Cake), the legendary Westminster cafe is just as popular with tourists as it is with blokes named Terry. One thing that never changes inside its beautiful black tiled building are the blood-curdling cries that match the colour of the floor. ‘FULL ENGLISH! Double eggs! Extra black pudding!’. A fried breakfast here is never not an event.


There are many ways to start your day in London. But the ultimate way to start your day in London is with eggs benedict and a stack of berry pancakes inside The Wolseley. A huge, glossy, converted 1920s car showroom in Mayfair, this place serves European brasserie dishes alongside huge wrought iron chandeliers and an air of true sophistication. They’re open throughout the day, but from our experience, things tend to get a little lacklustre come evening. So to really make the most of this place, get involved in a glorious breakfast experience, bellinis encouraged.  


This two-floor Italian restaurant, with its huge light-up sign on the corner of Gloucester Road, runs on pasta and good times. Open since 1967, there’s a strong old-school Italian energy going on here, with huge menus and a spacious downstairs dining room with a hanging disco light. This isn’t the kind of place you come to for a low-key catch-up. This is a loud, messy, group dinner kind of spot. A spot where you can share a hefty portion of fusilli alla siciliana, a chorizo-topped pizza, and a big fat slice of tiramisu, and leave £25 lighter. It’s rowdy, it’s fun, and the chaos is all part of its charm.

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