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The South will rise again,' sang the Confederate soldiers as they tramped back to their burned-out farms at the end of the US Civil War in 1865. It's taken...
The menu is British at the Anchor & Hope, and so is the seating policy, with no reservations from Monday to Saturday, meaning that diners wanting to sample...
Despite the slide of many gastropubs into aping fancy restaurants, the Eagle - one of the originals - remains pleasingly unreconstructed. Scuffed cream...
It's not named after Didier Drogba, the battering-ram striker of Stamford Bridge (just up the road), but instead takes its name from the symbol of the...
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Chelsea's shooting set probably feels quite at home among the trophy antlers and stuffed birds adorning the walls of the small dining area at the back of...
Very much a local Marylebone spot - with the requisite polo shirts and pearls on show - the Duke of Wellington is a good bet for a weekday evening catch-up...
The old red cow herself, if she wasn't apocryphal, probably didn't have a pleasant visit to this pub's manor - Long Lane was an ancient cattle route to...
The Railway Tavern in Dalston? That one next to Dalston Kingsland Station with the peculiarly segregated front and saloon bars? No, not that one. Has the...
The Fox is an after-work magnet on Thursdays and Fridays, when you can hardly see the bar for bodies. Outside peak hours, though, it's a very pleasant place...
Set in the tangle of unpromising streets behind King's Cross, the Driver is a stylish gastropub, with a 'vertical garden' and a decked roof terrace,...
Buried away off Bishopsgate in a cobbled corner close to Spitalfields Market where city suits and Shoreditch collide, the Water Poet is a multi-tasking gem...