Orange Pekoe © Michael Franke
No frills | Mid range | High end
No-frills afternoon teas
Bea’s of Bloomsbury
One
thing’s for sure, Bea and her battalion of staff know how to wield a
palette knife – as the impeccably decorated cakes in the window are
testament to. Inside, however, it’s the small delights – red velvet
cupcakes, ‘Belgian Blondies’ (white chocolate brownies), tarts and
cookies, all made in-house – will appeal to anyone with a sweet tooth.
As for the tea, there has been some serious thought put into it, with
varieties sourced from esteemed supplier Jing Teas. There aren’t many
places to perch in this tiny café, but visit off-peak and you’ll be
rewarded.
Bea’s of Bloomsbury,
44 Theobald Rd, WC1X 8NW (7242 8330/www.beasofbloomsbury.com). Holborn
or Chancery Lane tube. Tea and cakes: around £7 per person.
Bob Bob Ricard
This
retro-styled brasserie – all polished brass, buttoned green leather and
booth seating – is just the place to hide away for a discreet nibble
and chat, not least because it serves tea and cakes all day. The
choices for afternoon tea include the expected scones, clotted cream
and jams, the usual finger sandwiches, and cakes including a very dense
Victoria sandwich – all fine, though not outstanding. Help is on hand
for the very thirsty, though. In case of emergencies, every table has a
buzzer you press to ‘order champagne’.
Bob Bob Ricard, 1 Upper St James St, W1F 9DF (3145 1000/www.bobbobricard.com). Piccadilly Circus tube. Afternoon tea:
around £10 per person; served 7am-midnight daily.
Feature continues
Chaiwalla
To
break from tradition, all you need to do is head down to Neil Sanyal’s
Indian tea bar and wrap your hands around a warming clay cup of masala
chai. A little piece of Calcutta in Hampstead, Chaiwalla’s
down-to-earth bonhomie is a welcome antidote to a stressful week in the
capital. For a proper Indian afternoon tea experience, plump for the
excellent ‘all day chai snacks’; our favourites include the crisp
samosas (baked, not deep-fried, and with fillings ranging from potato
and peas to paneer or lamb) and ‘Indian’ cucumber sandwiches slathered
with garlic spread and sprinkled with freshly ground coriander seeds.
Plus, you can keep the clay cups as a memento.
Chaiwalla, 4a-5a Perrins Court, NW3 1QS (7435 2151). Hampstead tube. Tea and snacks: around £8 per person.
Louis Pâtisserie
This
Hungarian old-timer inhabits a fond place in our hearts. It could be
its faded charm, in the guise of the sepia-toned, wood-panelled,
leather-benched tearoom at the back; the lack of gimmicks; or the loyal
band of regulars spanning all ages and persuasions that keep the
scenery interesting. It could be all of the above, but most of all we
commend the Louis Pâtisserie for its consistently fabulous range of
creamy confections – marzipan moon, chestnut slice, strawberry
cheesecake – that go down so well with pots of tea.
Louis Pâtisserie, 32 Heath St, NW3 6TE (7435 9908). Hampstead tube. Tea and cakes: around £8 per person.
Maison Bertaux
A
café in Soho that doesn’t do espresso? It’s tea they serve here, or
maybe a café crème if you ask nicely. Maison Bertaux was established in
1871 by French communards, and retains its relaxed yet radical chic to
this day. It doesn’t serve afternoon tea as such – that would be too
English – but instead has a huge window display of fruit pastries and
special occasion cakes. We highly recommend the lemon tarts and
wonderfully light choux pastries with fresh cream and berries, but
really, everything is worth a try. A rare treasure in the commercial
heart of Soho.
Maison Bertaux,
28 Greek St, W1D 5DQ (7437 6007). Leicester Square, Piccadilly Circus
or Tottenham Court Rd tube. Tea and cakes: around £10 per person.
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| Mudchute Kitchen |
Mudchute Kitchen
It’s
impossible not to be charmed by the cheerful rusticity of the Mudchute
Kitchen. Utilitarian laminated tablecloths in bright colours and piles
of toys are a nod to the younger clientele, but the food has a broad
appeal no matter what your age. The cream teas are sensational and are
served with perfect scones every time which, like the tempting piles of
cakes that line the countertop, are own-made. Tots will be satisfied
with jammy scones or fairy cakes, while more mature diners might plump
for the light lemon and poppy seed sponge, or a coffee and cardamom
cake with thick frosting and a shower of sparkling pomegranate seeds.
Tea, in pots, is good and strong, and for a twist, their own-brewed
chai latte is properly rich and aromatic
with spices.
Mudchute Kitchen,
Mudchute Park & Farm, Pier St, Isle of Dogs, E14 3HP (7515
5901/www.mudchutekitchen.org). Mudchute DLR. Tea and cakes: around £7
per person.
Orange Pekoe
Marianna
Hadjigeorgiou’s Barnes tearoom is known far and wide for its cosy,
villagey charm and homespun appeal – and, naturally, the excellent
teas, cakes and savouries. It is, therefore, small wonder that Orange
Pekoe won the Time Out Eating & Drinking Award for Best Tearoom in
2008. Conscientiously, customers’ needs are well catered for – Orange
Pekoe does at least one gluten-free cake and wheat-free sandwiches.
Highlights are a zingy cucumber and mint sandwich, a Battenberg-esque
raspberry sponge and passionfruit cake, all of which are made in-house.
A unique feature of the afternoon tea here is that customers can enjoy
all the teas for the same price; all the better to try the rarer and
more expensive teas. An ideal place to spend a quiet afternoon.
Orange Pekoe,
3 White Hart Lane, SW13 0PX (8876 6070/www.orangepekoeteas.com). Barnes
Bridge rail or 209 bus. Afternoon tea: £16.95 per person; served 2-5pm
daily.
The Orangery
This
elegant and commanding room is favoured by locals as well as tourists –
it has all the sleekness and polish of great hotel teas (check out the
magnificent Corinthian pillars), but the buzz and atmosphere seem more
conducive to casual afternoon eating and gossip-led chinwagging. And
you can be as low-key or as extravagant as you like when it comes to
tea – we’ve enjoyed the simple Orangery tea (£12.50; highly
recommended) of cream cheese and cucumber sandwich, scone and the
signature Orangery cake (full of refreshing zest and tart frosting) in
the past. There’s also the Debutantes’ version (£13.65), a tea set
resplendent with nostalgia-inducing vol-au-vents, cheese on cocktail
sticks and warm, flakey sausage rolls. Or for a splurge, there’s the
pinkies-up Champagne tea (£17.95) where you can dot fresh berries on
your scones instead of bog-standard jam.
The Orangery,
Kensington Palace, Kensington Gardens, W8 4PX (7376
0239/www.hrp.org.uk/kensingtonpalace). High St Kensingon tube.
Afternoon tea: from £12.50 per person; served 3-6pm daily.
The Tea Rooms
Pastry
chef Isabelle Allfrey has carved out a small corner of Stoke Newington
to showcase her British tea-time treats alongside a modest collection
of retro tea china and glassware. Cakes and dainties are available all
week, but the traditional afternoon tea is reserved for weekends only.
We were overwhelmed by a cake stand laden with cakes and pastries
(including, but not limited to, carrot cake, bakewell tart, Victoria
sponge and Dundee cake), freshly-baked scones with seedy own-made jam
and proper finger sandwiches. The tea selection is small but of high
quality, with Sri Lankan Labookellie estate tea among the more
interesting varieties.
The Tea Rooms, 155 Stoke Newington
Church St, N16 0UH (7923 1970). Stoke Newington rail or 73, 393 bus.
Afternoon tea: served 2-5pm Sat, Sun; £10 per person.
No frills | Mid range | High end
Mid-range afternoon teas
The Botanist
Sloane
Square’s chic set drop by in the afternoon to relish the sanctuary that
is Tom and Ed Martin’s beautiful botany-inspired dining room. Teatime
treats are wonderfully classic, and slightly childish, with crumpets
and waffles to sate the tired shopper. But it’s the full-blown Botanist
Afternoon Tea that takes the cake. Delightfully dainty finger
sandwiches are untainted with newfangled ingredients, opting for
simplicity in the form of familiar cucumber, egg and cress or cheese
and pickle. English jams and Devonshire clotted cream are inoffensive
and neatly served, much like everything else. It isn’t terribly
exciting, but golly is it a pleasant place to be, watching the
beautiful people stroll by outside.
The Botanist,
7 Sloane Square, SW1W 8EE (7730 0077/www.thebotanistsloanesquare.com).
Sloane Square tube. Afternoon tea: from £15 per person; served 3.30-6pm
Mon-Sat.
High Road Brasserie
If you want buzz, this branch of Soho House has it in spades. It’s often full of young west London families and trendies,
and
the staff do a wonderful job at front of house – as they should, in a
space as attractive as this one, all dark wood furniture and
comfortable banquettes, heels clattering on the iconic patchwork floor
tiles. The afternoon tea, at a tenner per person, is a steal, with
creamy confections such as Victoria sponge, éclairs and meringues
making cameos in an otherwise traditional set-up.
High Road Brasserie,
162-166 Chiswick High Rd, W4 1PR (8742 7474/www.highroadhouse.co.uk).
Turnham Green tube. Afternoon tea: £10 per person; served 3-6pm
Mon-Fri; 4-6pm Sat, Sun.
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| Peyton & Byrne cupcakes |
National Dining Rooms
This
most British of institutions, The National Dining Rooms, is a temple to
fine British food. Naturally, afternoon tea here is a well-guarded
tradition. Presented without frippery – the grandeur is taken care of
by the room – are warm buttermilk scones, Peyton & Byrne jams and
lashings of thick clotted cream. Cakes and pastries are divine; our
favourites are the millionaire’s shortbread, raspberry teacakes and the
fabulously retro fig rolls. For a more understated tea, a similar
spread (from a neat £5.50) can be enjoyed in the National Café – though
the loud clatter and chatter does break the spell a bit. Peyton’s other
restaurant, The Wallace, also does a decent afternoon tea with a French
slant.
The National Dining Rooms,
Sainsbury Wing, The National Gallery, WC2N 5DN (7747
2525/www.thenationaldiningrooms.co.uk). Charing Cross tube/rail.
Afternoon tea: from £14.50 per person; served 3-5pm daily.
Nicole's
The
basement of Nicole Farhi’s Bond Street boutique is every size-zero
fashionista’s dirty little secret. For in this modern space (adorned
with arty black-and-white photography) you’ll find the chic clientele
enjoying the ‘Miniature tea set’ (£16.50). On our visit, this included
bite-sized macaroons in pretty colours, dainty orange madeleines,
cherry muffins and blinis with smoked salmon and tiny open sandwiches
that are on the right side of moreish. There’s also the offer of a
‘Saintly tea’ with gluten-free, 97 per cent fat-free chocolate cake and
goji berries, paired with Puer tea (£6.95). Nicole’s sister branch on
Westbourne Grove, 202 Café, doesn’t do a set tea but is an equally
precious place to sit down with a decent cuppa and cakes.
Nicole’s,
158 New Bond St, W1S 2UE (7499 8408/www.nicolefarhi.com). Afternoon
tea: £16.50 per person; served 3.30-5.30pm Mon-Fri; 4-5.30pm Sat.
St Pancras Grand
The
food here is staunchly British in every way, so we would have been
aghast if there was no afternoon tea to greet the weary traveller fresh
off the Eurostar. The opulent surroundings yet personable service
create the right blend of elegance without snootiness, so sit back in
the soft leather banquettes, enclosed by engraved glass partitions, and
indulge in the very English tradition of tea, cakes and scones. It
might not be an extravagant or groundbreaking afternoon tea, and there
is little choice about what you can have, but we think the surroundings
make up for it.
St Pancras Grand,
Upper Concourse, St Pancras International station, Euston Rd, NW1 1QP
(7870 9900). King’s Cross St Pancras tube/rail. Afternoon tea from
£17.50 per person; served 3-5.30pm daily.
The Wallace
A
glorious location indeed, light-filled and airy thanks to its position
in a Georgian townhouse conservatory (the main building of which houses
the impressive Wallace Collection of fine art). Twee garden furniture
(iron-wrought chairs plumped up with fluffy red cushions) and elegant
sculptures fill the room. The glass atrium provides all of the perks of
being outdoors without being exposed to the elements, making it all the
better to sit down and enjoy a French-style afternoon tea complete with
cakes and tarts, fromage frais and own-made pâtés.
The Wallace,
The Wallace Collection, Hertford House, Manchester Square, W1U 3BN
(7563 9505/ www.thewallacerestaurant.com). Baker St or Bond St tube.
Afternoon tea from £21.50; cream tea £6.50; served 2.30-4.30pm daily.
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| The Wolseley |
The Wolseley
This
genteel institution takes its inspiration from the grand cafés of the
Continent – from the Florentine marble floors to the Corinthian pillars
which were built to be the framework of a car salesroom. Good linen and
silverware are the norm, as is impeccable service. Head to the cute
café off to the side, where despite a more casual atmosphere, the tea
service is as polished as that in the main dining room. Enjoy lavish
stacks of finger sandwiches, scones and pastries accompanied by hot,
properly brewed pots of tea.The Wolseley’s own special afternoon tea
blend can be bought to take home to recreate the experience.
The Wolseley,
160 Piccadilly, W1J 9EB (7499 6996/www.thewolseley.com). Piccadilly
Circus. Afternoon tea: from £19.75 per person; cream tea £9.75 per
person; served 3.30-6.30pm Mon-Fri, 3.30-5.30pm Sat.
Yauatcha
It’s
fitting that a place renowned for three things – the tea list, the dim
sum and the pastries – would offer an afternoon menu combining all
three. True, there is a choice of a standard afternoon tea set with
cakes and savouries, but we rate the Oriental Afternoon Tea menu, which
offers the best bites of both East and West. The bottom tier offers
moreish dim sum, such as Yauatcha’s famed barbecued venison encased in
golden puff pastry, a small but fluffy char siu (barbecued pork) bun
and a wedge of moreish sesame prawn toast. Work your way up, enjoying
warm, fluffy scones (imbued with coconut and green tea – an inspired
deviation), then a selection of fashionable dainties – blue tea gateau,
say – and end with oriental-inspired chocolate truffles and
palate-cleansing exotic fruits (lychee, dragonfruit). The commendable
tea list is a joy to peruse. Our only quibble is the dozy, inattentive
service, which has been consistently poor since the tea room opened.
Yauatcha,
15 Broadwick St, W1F 0DL (7494 8888). Leicester Square, Oxford Circus,
Piccadilly Circus or Tottenham Court Rd tube. Afternoon tea: from
£22.50 per person; served 12.30-6pm daily.
No frills | Mid range | High end
High-end afternoon teas
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| Brumus © Rob Greig |
Brumus
This
is the newest and grandest hotel of the very British but stylish
Firmdale Hotels group. You can take tea in the blood-red Brumus
restaurant, or a much brighter hotel reception area (called the
Conservatory). The afternoon teas are excellent, ranging from a choice
of cream teas (£9 per head) through to a luxe champagne tea (£25 per
head). Our Haymarket tea (£17 per head) included a cake stand filled
with savouries – scones, plus finger sandwiches of crab and avocado,
and the more usual egg and watercress, smoked salmon etc. The top tier
was clotted cream and some sublime dense jams and preserves. But the
middle tier was prettiest: cupcakes, fresh fruit tarts, and a lamington
(an Aussie sponge cake). The tea was good quality too, with unlimited
top-ups. We didn’t need to book ahead, and weren’t turfed out after two
hours. At such a price, this is one of the most flexible and enjoyable
afternoon teas in the West End.
Brumus,
Haymarket Hotel, 1 Suffolk Place, SW1Y 4BP (7470 4000). Piccadilly
Circus tube. Afternoon tea: from £17 per person; served 3-5pm daily.
Caramel Room at The Berkeley
The
elegant Caramel Room might err on the side of bland, but then the space
serves as the metaphorical catwalk for The Berkeley’s famed
Prêt-a-Portea. The confections and cakes are all inspired by the latest
fashion designs (on our visit, the autumn-winter ’08 collection; the
spring-summer ’09 creations will debut from May), from a lime green
Louboutin heel biscuit to a light fromage blanc with d raspberry
meringues emulating Alexander McQueen’s ethereal chiffon dress, all
balanced on dashing Paul Smith crockery. On the savoury side, miniature
canapés, tasting spoons and little skewers offer bursts of flavour –
chilli prawns, smoked salmon and pea purée tarts, say, or a tiny
roulade of juicy chicken and prosciutto. Attentive staff won’t falter
when you ask slyly for seconds – in fact, they practically lavished
extra sandwiches, cakes and canapés upon us. All in all, the service is
positively un-diva like.
Caramel Room at The Berkeley, Wilton
Place, SW1X 7RL (7235 6000/www.the-berkeley.co.uk). Hyde Park Corner or
Knightsbridge tube. Afternoon tea: from £35 per person; served 1-6pm
daily.
Espelette at The Connaught
Our
first visit to Hélène Darroze’s ‘informal’ bistro at The Connaught was
a shade underwhelming. Still, we couldn’t help but notice that the
cream-coloured, light-filled room would be perfect for afternoon tea –
an inviting display of cakes, tarts and fruity things in beautiful
glasses said as much. So at Espelette, it’s best to turn up for the
‘Chic and Shock’ tea (slightly cringeworthy, given the haughty
sophistication of The Connaught) for a fabulously rendered selection of
classic teatime treats with minute twists (the ‘shock’ factor?). Finger
sandwiches are prettily assembled, with impressive ingredients –
Bellota ham with confit tomatoes, smoked salmon with a light yet punchy
wasabi cream – while desserts are sublime. Observe the rice crispy cake
with chocolate chantilly cream, or the zingy cucumber, lime and mint
jelly shot in a tiny glass. A refreshing departure from normal
afternoon teas, though you will have to fork out £35 (add £10 for a
glass of Laurent Perrier champagne) for the privilege. Naturally.
Espelette, The Connaught,
Carlos Place, W1K 2AL (3147 7100/www.the-connaught.co.uk). Bond St
tube. Afternoon tea: from £35 per person; served 3-5.15pm Mon-Fri;
2-5.15pm Sat, Sun.
The Lanesborough
The
Lanesborough is well-known among tea connoisseurs – not only does it
employ Britain’s first ever tea ‘sommelier’, Karl Kessab, but its
conscientious selection of nearly two dozen tea varieties are all
carefully sourced at auction. So expect a perfect brew – and if you’re
unsure, Kessab is the man to ask. Unusually, teas are served in the
Russian samovar – an elegant silver vessel traditionally used to heat
water, whose function then turned to being used to make tea in England
from the late eighteenth century onwards. Foodwise, there’s no extra
froufrou – perfectly acceptable sandwiches and scones, and adorable
toasted teacakes. Pleasingly, this is also one of the few places to do
gluten-free and dairy-free afternoon teas (requiring booking 12 hours
in advance). The plush room with banquettes you just sink into, the
thick napkins and attentive service complete the experience.
The Lanesborough,
1 Lanesborough Place, SW1X 7TA (7259 5599/www.lanesborough.com). Hyde
Park Corner tube. Afternoon tea: from £33 per person; served 3.30-6pm
daily.
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| Rough Luxe © Rob Greig |
Rough Luxe
You
have to take the rough with the smooth at this new hotel opposite
King’s Cross station. The rough: the service is a bit amateurish, you
need to book and then (re)confirm, and the tea room is really just a
poky basement – good if you’re the only people taking tea, but
awkwardly intimate if not. The smooth: they really lay on a spread for
£30 per head, as well they should. Everything is baked to order, and
there’s lots of it. Our bounty included: muffins, chocolate pots,
shortbread, an entire Victoria sponge, jam tarts, scones with cream and
strawberries… oh, and few token savouries (ie finger sandwiches) plus
endless refills of good tea. It helps if you have a sweet tooth; we
nearly had to be stretchered off the premises with hyperglycaemia, and
even then had only polished off around a quarter of the spread
provided. If only we’d known earlier: the manager let us take a huge
doggy bag of goodies away with us. Booking essential.
Rough
Luxe Hotel, 1 Birkenhead St, WC1H 8BA (7837 5338/www.roughluxe.co.uk).
King’s Cross tube/rail. Afternoon tea: £30 per person; served
3.30-5.30pm Mon-Sat.
No frills | Mid range | High end
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32 comments
Enjoyed very much The Connaught's afternoon tea last Saturday.
Service is superb. Beware the Champagne option though.
It might cost £10 more (worth it as you get a large glass of Laurent Perrier) but subsequent glasses cost £15 and it doesn't tell you that on the menu. Our very enjoyable two glasses each x4 cost us £100!
I'm not sure how you can have an Afternoon Tea feature without mentioning Claridges, or The Berkeley. The Berkeley do a fashion themed afternoon tea with cake and biscuit designs straight from this seasons catwalks, and crockery designed by Paul Smith - could not recommend highly enough. £35 for standard tea, but well worth it, you won't go hungry!
Bob Bob Ricard should not be under the "no frills" heading, as tea is £23 per person.
The Wolsey is very noisy - for that reason I wouldn't recommend it for afternoon tea
I was not impressed with Orange Pekoe. I walked into their tea room not realising that you had to order at the counter and be advised as to where to sit. They shouted at me from the counter telling me off and from there it went downhill. It is a nice space but they can definitely improve their service.
No one has mentioned the cutest and funkiest tea rooms I have been too - you must try Camellia World Teas in Kingly Court on Carnaby Street, very near to Liberty on Regent Street. Really high quality teas and lushious afternoon tea ceremonies and amazing, warm service - a must visit !
Yauatcha is still remains my favourite afternoon tea with 2 different set which is one oriental and other is english afternoon tea.. Each of them cost £25 (include vat)per set. I am a small petite person .. i skip my lunch to enjoy with my 2 friends with 2 sets. Fantastic teas ,scones and cakes and macaroons !
Tea at #14 in Kensington was wonderful. Great atmosphere and delicious cakes! http://www.noveltea.co.uk/14.html
The Lanesborough offered a perfect - disappointment:
-One miniature scone.
-A selection of dry cakes
-Boring sandwiches
And as an uninvited guest a huge fly:
"What is that",asked the butler.Well,at least he made an appearance.At times.
Yes,I did receive the strawberries (frozen ones would have been sweeter) I requested.But the price was that of the entire champagne menu.
Awarded ‘Best Afternoon Tea in London 2008' by The UK Tea Council.Apparently a license to let go.Or that prize is of no value.(When it comes to good food.)
And the butler could have been a bit less obvious,thank you.
Tea at the Botanist (sloane sq) was brilliiant. (Free Champagne if you book online and very good value at 15 quid) Claridges was sublime, truely sublime but twice as expensive as the Botanist.
St James at Fortnums was lovely. Bustling informal atmosphere; we were offered more sandwiches, then when we hesitated, assured they were complimentary. Delicious tea too -very relaxing experience though not cheap.
The staff at Orange Pekoe were incredibly rude and it was difficult to select our cakes and teas in the busy environment, plus the tea was a bore. Was not worth the trip. My favourite remains Yauatcha, though also not the best staff...
Tea at the Ritz was a total rip-off.
Kensington Gardens Hotel does a great one, great setting overlooking the gardens and you get refills on food and tea- good value for a 'high end' tea they also have a pianist. Landmark Hotel in Marylebone is gorgeous but very dear....
Thanks for the list. Some of the places mentioned here are really happening and their services are also good.
Afternoon tea at The Landmark in Marylebone is lovely