Franco Manca
See all winners in the Time Out Eating & Drinking Awards 2008
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WINNER, 'BEST CHEAP EATS', TIME OUT EATING & DRINKING AWARDS 2008
Franco Manca
Brixton Market couldn’t be further removed from the sun-dappled piazzas of Naples, but its West Indian food stalls, wandering preachers and humid reggae soundtrack make a similarly colourful backdrop against which to indulge in a perfect pizza – and we do mean perfect.
It may seem spartan to the point of anonymity – a handful of café tables and a couple of shared pews beneath the peeling ceiling of the market hall – but Franco Manca is a thinking punter’s pizzeria. Sourdough for the bases is left to rise for 20 hours before baking; ingredients are largely organic (the owners flew in a cheese maker from Sorrento to train their Somerset supplier in the art of mozzarella making); and the 500C Forno Napoletano brick oven crisps the crust without drying it out and locks in the flavours of the toppings.
Of six pizzas on offer, we plumped for one mixing organic Brindisa chorizo with mozzarella – the peppery kick of the meat contrasting with the smoothness of Somerset’s finest – and a calzone that paired crumbling buffalo ricotta with a generous helping of organic pork; the first was served with a smile, the second with a song. Proof that a little Italy goes a long way in even the unlikeliest of places.
Franco Manca, 4 Market Row, Electric Lane, SW9 8LD (020 7738 3021/ www.francomanca.co.uk). Brixton tube/rail. Meal for two with drinks and service: around £25.
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RUNNERS-UP
Baozi Inn
From the outside, there’s little to distinguish Baozi Inn’s downbeat decor from the nebulous swarm of nearby competitors, but the almost complete predominance of Chinese diners hints at good things going on behind the scenes. The restaurant takes its name from the steamed buns of northern China; we plumped for one filled with pork and found its saucy softness indulgent. Don’t miss the Chengdu classic, dan dan noodles (which is perfectly prepared using noodles that are handmade on the premises daily) or a salad of springy poached peanuts with celery, carrots and tofu skins. Service is affable and efficient, provided you can catch the waiters’ attention over the roaring Chinese opera.
Baozi Inn, 25 Newport Court, WC2H 7JS (020 7287 6877). Leicester Square tube. Meal for two with drinks and service: around £25.
Faanoos
Faanoos emulates the warm familiarity of bustling Tehran kebab houses, but the food is cosmopolitan enough to rival its pricier Kensington peers. A combination starter plate was uniformly excellent, which included smoky kashk-e bademjan (mashed aubergine with garlic and whey), zingy mast-o mousir (shallot yoghurt) and torsh, a Persian pickle packed with chunky vegetables. Mains were similarly satisfying: a tender chicken kebab was yellowed from long marination in saffron, lemon and onion, served with mountains of perfectly fluffy, saffron-tinted rice. Save room for the rare Persian desserts – either the faloodeh (frozen rice noodles in rosewater) or the bastani (traditional ice-cream).
Faanoos, 481 Upper Richmond Rd West, SW14 7PU (020 8878 5738/ 8876 8938). Mortlake rail. Meal for two with drinks and service: around £25.
Little Lamb
The image of thirteenth-century Mongolian soldiers brewing a meaty broth in their helmets before battle is a colourful one, yet the constant flow of customers suggests that Mongolian hot pot may be interesting enough with or without the legend. Dining is based around an enormous metal pot – filled either with a red chilli broth or a pale herbal tonic, or split down the middle and offering both – into which customers dip meat, fish and vegetables ordered plate by plate. Enormous chunks of squid and thinly sliced lamb absorbed the best of the fiery broth, while needle mushrooms and thick, flat noodles made from mung beans worked well with the herbal brew. Other ingredients, including flavourless chicken dumplings, were less successful, but the sheer childish amusement of plunging, losing and later finding things in a bubbling broth far outweighed any culinary shortcomings.
Little Lamb, 72 Shaftesbury Avenue, W1D 6NA (020 7287 8078). Leicester Square or Piccadilly Circus tube. Meal for two with drinks and service: around £50.
Teachi
Teachi’s mix of traditional dim sum and bite-sized Chinese delicacies is well suited to a city obsessed with downsized Oriental dining, and the food has seldom failed to impress. Flash-fried salt-and-pepper squid is light and deliciously moreish; marinated salmon bellies are disarmingly tender; and an interesting take on duck pancakes offers flavoursome chunks of meat coated in an airy batter and cut into quaint triangles. Our only complaints on a recent visit concerned atmosphere: Teachi is pleasantly decorated, but we’ve seldom seen a restaurant sterilised by such unnecessary brightness. On top of that, service appears in six months to have gone from fawning to frowning – a request for an extra plate was sniffed at, a question about the food laughed at – and so many bottles of wine were unavailable on our last visit that the next step up from a (rather poor) house red cost almost £20.
Teachi, 29-31 Parkway, NW1 7PN (020 7485 9933). Camden Town tube. Meal for two with drinks and service: around £50.
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27 comments
I would like to recommend the Fox and Anchor in Farringdon, Charterhouse Street, as it serves the best British pub food ever!!! Fantastic sirlon steak burger, homemade pies, fish and chips, knickerbockerglory + great service...AMAZING!
Time Out was Ok once when it was hippies doing it now its wankers from Neo Lib world.They can't write,know shit and are really the offspring of Thatcher's dream for the UK.
Posted by Josh on 23 Sep 2008 23:24
I'm a bit surprised they recommend everybody go to Brixton. Really. Lets try a bit harder Timeout.
Try the Banana Leaf in Clapham:
You absolute ponce. Stay in Clapham mate, I've heard the Revo's there does a great burger.
Yes - good point gypz. That Indian place on Chapel Market is a winner even if you are not a vegetarian I think most will love the food. And it's actually £3.50 to eat all you can.
Franco Manca officially has the best pizza in London - it really, really is fantastic - secret sourdough bases!
I live very near La Rueda in Fulham and have eaten there on at least a couple of occasions. I have to say that I didn't particularly like the tapas, and the meal wasn't particularly cheap either. There are many other nicer places - the new Cuenta on the Wandsworth Bridge Road, and Los Molinos in Brook Green. Not too expensive, and the food is delicious.
the indian vegan buffet in chapel market is a glorious eat-as-much-as-you-like joint.good salad bar, very fresh food, totally (and politically) vegan and stupidly cheap at 5 quid.GO!
Sorry, had to comment again as I have just realized that TO counts £50 as budget...
On our last anniversary my boyfriend took me (as a treat) to La Rueda, a tapas bar on the Kings Road. With desert, coffee, wine, more amazing tapas than we could eat (there was an actual mountain of mussels), the bill came in at less than that. And this was Fulham...
I clicked on this feature eagerly in expectation of being educated on the wonderful cheap places I had been missing out on in London.
How terribly wrong I was. I've eaten cheaper and better than this so many times. In fact, pretty much every time I go out for dinner in London.
Perhaps Time Out should give me a job if this is all they can come up with.
Dont recomment doing to Teachi - food is tasteless, service horrific and staff unfriendly!
Had any of the moaners here actually had a pizza at Franco Manca then they wouldn't be complaining. They make the best pizza ever.
WARNING
FANCO MANCA: DO NOT TAKE DRAG YOURSELF OR ANYBODY ELSE HERE AFTER 5PM. Why Not??? it closes at 5 and your spend 30 minutes wandering failing to fined it in bandit country. TIME OUT please warn people!!!!
LIttle Bay was mentioned in the 2007 round up of cheap eats in London, and I enjoyed visiting the one near me in Fulham - a two course lunch including a glass of wine cost just £6.50! And it was always very tasty.
Unfortunately I probably didn't visit it enough and earlier this year it appeared to change ownership, before closing down altogether. Now it's being completely stripped out though I don't know what will take its place. Are the other branches still open, or have they all gone?
£25 is outrageous.Has the writer of this ever visited London?
You can all come to my house and I'll charge you £1 a massive meal. You'll be so happy about how cheap it is you'll ignore how bad my cooking is.
I'm a bit surprised they recommend everybody go to Brixton. Really. Lets try a bit harder Timeout.
Try the Banana Leaf in Clapham