Leonie Cooper is a restaurant critic and editor.

She has written for Time Out since 2019, and has also contributed to The Guardian, The Independent, Evening Standard, Conde Nast Traveller, NME and the BBC.

Leonie was raised in north London and is on a never ending quest for the perfect pint of London Guinness. She covers London food news, and reviews restaurants across the capital, everywhere from Malaysian casual dining spot Mambow in Clapton, to slap-up dinners at Claridge’s Restaurant in Mayfair, and modern Filipino sharing plates at Donia in Soho. She also keeps a keen eye on our many food and drink lists, which let you know the best places to eat in Soho, as well as the best pubs in London, and our epic 50 Best Restaurants in London Right Now rundown. 

Time Out has covered the world’s greatest cities through the eyes of local experts since 1968. For more about us, read our editorial guidelines.

Leonie Cooper

Leonie Cooper

Food & Drink Editor, London

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Articles (267)

The best facials in London

The best facials in London

The smog and stress of London can really take its toll on your skin. That’s why there’s nothing better than a regular facial (or a one-off treat) to give you that much-needed top-up, leaving you feeling glowing, fresh-faced and dewy.  Just thinking about what we put our skin through is enough to give you frown lines. That’s thanks to the combined efforts of pollution and air-conditioned offices, as well as the added bonuses of harsh weather, booze, sun exposure, dehydration and – our least favourite – the inevitable passing of time. Happily, there are loads of great spas, treatment rooms and estheticians in London who can give your face a break and a much-needed zhuzh. Whether you’re after a relaxing, soothing facial massage, some instant radiance, a total skincare overhaul or something a little more intense such as microneedling or laser treatment, read our pick of facials in London.  RECOMMENDED: The best spas in London. 
The Best Movies of 2026 – Updated February 2026

The Best Movies of 2026 – Updated February 2026

And we’re off. In most years, it takes a few months to assemble a list of the best movies of the year so far where the bar for quality isn’t lowered into the Earth’s core. The first quarter of the release calendar is typically where studios toss their tax writeoffs, but to this point, 2026 has outstripped expectations. In how many other years have we gotten a killer horror sequel like 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, a sharp, gross Sam Raimi return-to-form, a Gus Van Sant thriller and one of the best actor-to-director transitions in recent memory, all before the calendar even flips over to March? And that’s to mention some of the smaller gems that have already popped up. As usual, this post will be updated throughout the year as highlights arrive – and there is bound to be a lot of them, between Project Hail Mary, Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day and Christopher Nolan’s The Odyssey, all arriving in the first half of 2026 alone. As you’ll see below, though, we’re already off to a good start. May we say that movies are… so back? 📺 The best TV and streaming shows of 2026 (so far)📕 15 book-to-movie adaptations to get excited about in 2026🔥 The 40 best movies of 2025
The best pilates classes in London

The best pilates classes in London

Have you noticed that everyone seems to be doing Pilates right now? Well, there’s good reason. Developed by German trainer Joseph Pilates in the 1920s, the exercise regime is low-impact but does absolute wonders for your muscles (including your core) – and it’ll sort out a load of other issues form bad posture to balance, too. Celebs, dancers and elite athletes swear by it and now all sorts of new studios are popping up over the city. If you wanna get a bit more bendy, toned and powerful, look no further than one of these expert pilates classes. What’s more, it doesn’t matter whether they’re mat-based, inspired by ballet or take place on a reformer machine (they’re not as scary as they look, we promise), these fun and fancy studios won’t leave you bent out of shape. Here are the best pilates classes in London. Fancy testing that new-found flexibility? Try one of these yoga classes in London next.  London’s best pilates classes at a glance Best for barre: Paola’s Body Barre Best for beginners: Frame Best for traditionalists: Kinetic Pilates Best for a budget: The Refinery RECOMMENDED: The best sport and fitness in London
London’s best Korean restaurants

London’s best Korean restaurants

Squid Game, Parasite, and BTS – the rising influence and popularity of Korean culture has taken the world by storm in the last few years, and that very much includes food. When it comes to Korean cuisine in London it’s all about the three Bs: banchan (small side dishes), bibimbap (mixed rice) and barbecue. From bibimbap in unassuming takeaways to sizzling bulgogi on table-top grills and a dizzying array of banchan on fine dining set-menus, you’re spoilt for choice for Korean food in London. Here are the 21 best Korean restaurants in London, many of which you'll find in south west London's New Malden neighbourhood, which has been home to the largest Korean community in the UK since the 1970s.  RECOMMENDED: London’s 20 Best Japanese Restaurants. Angela Hui is an award-winning journalist reporting on the intersection of food and culture, hospitality industry and food justice. She is the author of 'Takeaway: Stories from a Childhood Behind the Counter'. 
Best new restaurants in London of 2026 so far

Best new restaurants in London of 2026 so far

Every week, a frankly silly amount of brilliant new restaurants, cafés and street food joints arrive in London. Which makes whittling down a shortlist of the best newbies a serious challenge. But here it is. The 20 very best new restaurants in the capital, ranked in order of greatness and deliciousness. All of them have opened over the past 12 months and been visited by our hungry critics. So go forth and take inspo from this list, which is updated regularly. Check in often to find out what we really rate on the London restaurant scene. And look here for all the info about the best new openings in February 2026. London's best new restaurants at a glance: 🍛 Central: DakaDaka, Mayfair 🍠 North: Ling Ling’s, Islington 🥟 South: Doma, Sydenham 🍝 East: Tiella, Bethnal Green 🥗 West: Martino’s, Chelsea February 2026: We have a new Number 1! The newly-opened Tiella in Bethnal Green has scooped the top spot thanks to knockout regional Italian dishes from chef Dara Klein. Other fresh additions include the slinky Martino's in Chelsea, Cambodian residency Barang at The Globe in Borough Market, foodie wine bar in a one-time Clerkenwell tattoo parlour Passione Vino, perfect produce at Dockley Road Kitchen in Bermondsey, Korean fusion spot Calong in Stoke Newington, Hunanese heat at Fiery Flavors in Surrey Quays, Ukrainian elegance at Sino in Notting Hill, cool diner energy at Dover Street Counter in Mayfair, Georgian classics at DakaDaka in Mayfair, and spicy southern Thai at the seco
The best Stoke Newington restaurants

The best Stoke Newington restaurants

Eating out in Stokey is always a good time. A perfect day in N16 would involve lunch tacos at Sonora Taqueria and an all-out Indian veggie feast at Rasa or maybe Scottish-Spanish tapas at Escocesa. But we'll leave it up to you to make your own edible agenda; to help, here are the very best restaurants in Stoke Newington.  RECOMMENDED: The best restaurants in Hackney.  Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.  
The best massages in London

The best massages in London

Life in London can be pretty tense. Just think of all the time we spend each week contorting into gaps on the tube during our overcrowded commute or the hours a day hunched over laptops, sitting through stressful meetings or chained to our desks late into the evening before slumping over our phones at home to scroll through TikToks for several hours. Even if we find time in our days for an hour or two of proper fun, mindful quiet, or the endorphin hit of a sweaty exercise class, we still have tired feet, tight muscles, and shoulders that need soothing. Enter these amazing London spas and studios dedicated to massaging the city back to health. Permit yourself a break, put your slippered feet up and let these amazing treatments work their magic.   RECOMMENDED: Check out the best spas in London for more top treatments Want to save money on your massages? Loads of great deals at Time Out Offers
The best restaurants in Covent Garden

The best restaurants in Covent Garden

Covent Garden is so rammed with restaurants that decision fatigue can easily threaten the quality of your dinner. Weave through the tourists and theatregoing crowds and you'll discover that this area hosts many of the best restaurants in London, including French-styled Story Cellar, and The Portrait by Richard Corrigan, as well as old faves The Savoy Grill and J Sheekey. We’ve compiled a list of the best in the area, from cutting-edge eateries and classy counter joints to party-ready and casual hangouts, with pre-theatre favourites and cheap eats among them. Think of it as your Covent Garden bucket list. The best restaurants in Covent Garden at a glance: 🍸 Best for old school glamour: J Sheekey 🥦 Best for modern British cookery: Town 🥘 Best for Spanish tapas: Barrafina, Drury Lane and Adelaide Street 🍝 Best for perfect pasta: Bancone ⌛ Best for a fast feed: Adoh! RECOMMENDED: The absolute best restaurants in Soho. Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.
London’s best British restaurants

London’s best British restaurants

Of course greasy spoons are great – but our national cuisine is about way more than fry-ups, roasts and even fish and chips. London is a veritable goldmine of national culinary treasures: from 250-year-old aristo joints and top-hatted doormen to smoked eel sandwich-slinging brasseries, modern British steakhouses and scrubbed-up Victorian canteens. We’ve rounded up all the eateries that will make you come over weirdly patriotic with their exemplary takes on homegrown cuisine, featuring some of London’s most historic restaurants and some trad faves too.  RECOMMENDED: London's 50 best restaurants.  Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor, and likes nothing more than feasting on a well-stuffed meat pie. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.
The best restaurants in Shoreditch

The best restaurants in Shoreditch

Shoreditch is a dining destination for tourists, hipsters and ravenous city workers alike, so it’s no wonder that there are restaurants of all cuisines and price ranges in this always-buzzy area. But which of the many options deserve your time and money? Let us tell you, with our list of the best restaurants in Shoreditch and Spitalfields, which only features places that we know will hit the spot. Check out everything from Michelin-starred favourites for big spenders to stellar plant-based joints and some of the best Italian restaurants in the capital. Go east and feast. January 2026: We've just given this list a proper revamp, removing those Shoreditch spots that are no longer up to scratch and adding a load of new must-visit restaurants in their place. There's also a brand new number one - Plates, which is the UK’s only Michelin-starred vegan restaurant. Other new entries include Legado, from Michelin star Spanish chef Nieves Barragán Mohacho, Cycene (another Michelin-star scorer), sleek Ukranian restaurant Tatar Bunar, Japanese-Italian fusion spot Osteria Angelina, bottomless lasagna paradise Senza Fondo, Singburi 2:0 and spruced up gastropub The Macbeth. Plenty of local classics remain, from Brat and Smokestak to Smoking Goat, Rochelle Canteen, Manteca and The Clove Club.  RECOMMENDED: The best bars, pubs and rooftops in Shoreditch. Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.
The best restaurants in Peckham

The best restaurants in Peckham

Peckham locals have always been proud of the area’s brand: a melting pot of cultural vibrancy, eccentric individuals, and an artsy, young DIY crowd thanks to nearby Goldsmiths University and Camberwell College of Arts. It rivals Dalston and all those other East End upstarts as the place to hang out, and it’s the perfect spot for new restaurants to find their feet. Here are some of the best in the area, as well as a host of notable places to eat just down the road in Camberwell, too.  RECOMMENDED: The best 50 restaurants in London. Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines.
London’s best restaurants for outdoor dining

London’s best restaurants for outdoor dining

February 2026: It might not be quite al fresco weather yet, but you can still get your fill of patio action thanks to heated and covered terraces at restaurants such as Acme Fire Cult in Dalston, Pyro near London Bridge and Rake at The Compton Arms in Islington. This list also includes the places that will swing as soon as as spring hits, ideal for wearing your nice new sunglasses, looking important and snacking on a little salt cod fritter.  When it comes to outdoor dining there are some excellent – and hopefully sun-dappled - options at some of London’s best restaurants. These terraces, canal-side spots, gardens and al fresco restos should make you feel like you’re on a proper holiday in your hometown. Whether you’re in the mood to have spaghetti in the sun or snack on sushi by starlight, our list has you covered. If you don’t mind heights, then check out some of the finest rooftop restaurants with views in London as well. Not all of them are open in the colder months, so do check if you’re booking during a chillier time of year. RECOMMENDED: These are the best rooftop bars in London.  Leonie Cooper is Time Out London’s Food and Drink Editor. For more about how we curate, see our editorial guidelines. The hottest new openings, the tastiest tips, the spiciest reviews: we’re serving it all on our London restaurants WhatsApp channel. Follow us now.

Listings and reviews (237)

La Serena

La Serena

5 out of 5 stars
A new-school gem in an old school location, La Serena brings the beachy Italian resort of Forte dei Marmi bang up to date. The 20-room La Serena opened in July 2023, and does the chic and artsy boutique hotel thing extremely well. It’s somewhat removed from the main hustle and bustle of Forte, but don’t think of this as a negative. La Serena might not have a beachside view or immediate access to sand, but it has something else – it’s own little world, and it feels much more contemporary than some of the rather more Soviet-looking hotels nearer the beach.  Why stay at La Serena? This seaside Tuscan spot is only open during spring and summer or from the middle of April until the end of September. We arrive right towards the end of the season, and find a super peaceful and still marvellously warm and sunny escape at our disposal. In fact, it feels like we have the entire place to ourselves, and it’s hard to decide who has the better room, me or my friend - her side of the hotel looks over the stunning Tuscan mountains, and mine is in the direction of the sea, via the majestic umbrella pine trees in the hotel’s stylish garden. No view is subpar. The modern landscaped garden feels like an open air art gallery, and everything is tasteful without being overblown or gaudy. There’s also a pool table just off the main lobby, making the place feel like a terribly chic youth club. Also check out the atrium room where local artists’ work is displayed on easels, while the corridor walls ar
The Bath Arms

The Bath Arms

4 out of 5 stars
Dating all the way back to 1736, The Bath Arms mixes ye olde English charm with contemporary cosiness. A historic country pub that manages to fit 16 bedrooms upstairs (and in an old stable block out back), think of it as a Tardis as written by Jane Austen. The Bath Arms is the bustling focal point of a tiny village called Horningsham in the sprawling Longleat Estate in Wiltshire. Just by the Somerset borders, this picture-perfect boozer is packed with diners and drinkers on the weekends, with some of the best pub grub in the county served in numerous nooks and crannies of a grand Georgian era-boozer. The fact that you can stay upstairs after stuffing yourself silly only adds to the charm.  What are the rooms like at The Bath Arms? The pub’s 16 bedrooms come in small, medium and large doubles. Clean, crisp and ultra-welcoming, rooms at the Bath Arms are stylish without being overblown. There are traditional beams, stone-coloured soft furnishings, Siberian goose down duvets on big, comfy beds, and quaint village views. Essentially, it’s classic cottage-core but without the chintz. Our large double is fabulously expansive, and comes with a roll-top bath in a spacious marble bathroom, as well as (pleasingly) wonky fixtures, as befitting of a building that’s almost 300 years old. Despite being above the main room of the pub, the sound from downstairs is barely audible. We slept like veritable logs.  What are the facilities like at The Bath Arms? Rooms come with decent wi-fi, big t
Calong

Calong

4 out of 5 stars
Joo Young Won used to be head chef at the Michelin-starred Galvin at Windows, which looked out, Mary Poppins-style, over the oligarchian rooftops of Belgravia and Hyde Park from the 28th floor of the Park Lane Hilton. His new restaurant, Calong, has a slightly different view.  Directly opposite a branch of Whole Foods, it’s right on the Buggy Mile (aka Stoke Newington Church Street). But who needs to gaze upon the middle classes clutching their sourdough loaves when the scenery inside is so nice. Cosy and simple, the front room-esque space features wall-mounted coat hooks a la St John, a chalkboard menu, an exposed brick fire surround and so many two-tops that you feel like you’re an extra on First Dates. Calong’s mythic BBQ onglet is the kind of steak a non steak lover could love  Calong is a date spot and no mistake, with food made for sharing and fork fights over who gets to scoff the last kimchi fritter. Chef Joo was raised in South Korea, but began his cookery career in the UK, and for a long time focused on French technique. It shows. Calong sees him cooking dishes inspired by his native cuisine in a masterful light-touch fusion fashion. Those kimchi fritters are a mighty opener, an even-more addictive take on the classic kimchi pancake, leaning into those crispy edges by making it all crispy edges. It’s a bit like if roast potatoes were just the skins. In other words: elite snackery. A warm pumpkin and crisp pear salad is delicately dressed with gochujang and, what we
Wuthering Heights

Wuthering Heights

3 out of 5 stars
Emily Brontë’s only published novel has always been utterly batshit, and director Emerald Fennell’s take on the gothic ‘romance’ of Wuthering Heights follows suit, as peculiarly cold as it is visually decadent. The destructive aspect of Cathy and Heathcliff’s obsessive love is front and centre, yet it’s hard to care about Margot Robbie’s bratty Catherine Earnshaw – who seems too old to be acting this teenage – and Jacob Elordi’s boring, one-note Heathcliff. In the book he is ‘wild’ and deeply charismatic. In the film, he is… tall?  For those unfamiliar with the unhinged masterpiece, Cathy has been infatuated with Heathcliff since her widowed father brought this mysterious boy to their Yorkshire home. Fast forward to adulthood and Heathcliff has buggered off, while Cathy has married their neighbour, Edgar Linton (Shazad Latif), who in Fennell’s delirious vision lives in a kaleidoscopic Rococo palace. Heathcliff then returns, stonkingly rich. She wants him, and he wants her, but they cannot be together as Cathy is now pregnant with Edgar’s child.  In the book, this leads to much unconsummated yearning, but Fennell – who infamously made Barry Keogan stick his dick in a freshly dug grave in Saltburn – gets the pair romping with impunity. This is, naturally, after Cathy experiences her sexual awakening while spying on household servants having a kinky stable-based encounter. But despite all this shagging, Wuthering Heights is not even Fennell’s horniest film. It’s hard to care abo
Tiella

Tiella

5 out of 5 stars
My misty-eyed infatuation with this new wave, old school-indebted trattoria dates back to the heady days of 2023, when chef-founder Dara Klein began doing alchemical things with pasta and breadcrumbs at alt-gastropub The Compton Arms in Islington. From a tiny kitchen the Brawn and Sager and Wilde-trained chef fired out heroic plates of deceptively simple but deeply satisfying Italian food inspired by her Pugliese heritage. Dipping into rarer regional cracks of Italian cuisine Like every decent crush, there was a moment of jeopardy when Dara hung up her apron at the end of 2024. But there was a plan. Of course there was a plan. Such was the effusive reaction to her residency, the Italian-born, New Zealand-raised chef was off to open a restaurant of her own. And here it is, inside a gorgeously gabled Victorian boozer on the eastern fringes of Colombia Road that was once known as The Globe, and, as elder millennials may remember, Stringray Cafe, the perfect place for a comedown pizza after you’d tumbled out of a Whitechapel warehouse party hours previously.   The building has been done up, but not too done up. It still feels pubby, with a handpainted Tiella sign, 1930s-styled stained glass windows, mahogany wood-pannelling and, inexplicably, a giant portrait of Cher above the bar. As Dara sagely points out, a true trattoria is the Italian equivalent of a British pub; a welcoming hub where the community comes together over food and booze. Tiella is that to the highest degree.  Un
Dover Street Counter

Dover Street Counter

4 out of 5 stars
The not-that-little sister of one of central London’s most important restaurant launches of the past few years, Dover Street Counter sits two doors down from its glossy sibling, The Dover. Just as elegant, but with a naughty glint in its eye, it’s almost enough to make Mayfair cool for the first time since the Beatles played on that roof.  McDonald’s for oligarchs Unlike The Dover, Dover Street Counter is an all-day affair (and, equally, a great place to have an all-day affair). With a shorter menu and a more casual set-up, food is important here – of course it is – but this place is about much more than what you’re eating. It’s about vibes, and DSC has a surfeit of them. The experience starts before you get inside, with a sleek curved glass frontage, that’s all 1930s shopfront by way of a Parisian Fin de Siècle knocking shop. Push open the door to find a thick, floor-to-ceiling curtain, which not only keeps out both winter drafts and summer sunshine, but separates two worlds from each other: dreary, workaday real life from a glamorous, wonderland of martinis and controlled mayhem. The soundtrack is largely ‘90s hip-hop that it’s impossible not to like. They probably want you to think of it as a mere diner, but it’s so much more.  The first room of many is lined by a chrome counter dotted with domed rattan lights, seemingly pinched from the set of Emmanuelle. The kitchen is in full view, but there are a couple of small tables on the floor if watching someone flip cheeseburge
Passione Vino

Passione Vino

4 out of 5 stars
Exmouth Market is an exceptional street. On a wet and blustery winter evening, there are still scores of people spilling out of Cafe Kick, Berber & Q’s Shawarma Bar and Morito et al, clinking beers, chugging wines and puffing on crafty cigs all down this pedestrianised strip of year-round urban hedonism.  It’s the perfect scene for the second outing from eccentric wine guy Luca Dusi, whose Shoreditch bar, with its ‘no list, purely vibes’ approach to serving customers has been enchanting Londoners since 2015.  Exmouth Market just got even more exciting The new Passione Vino offers the same intrepid method. Rather than a chalkboard or menu, intuitive staff will ask what you’re into and, after a kind of sommelier-adjacent cold reading, will return with a couple of bottles for you to try, before you’re poured a glass of your favourite. Wine here is exclusively Italian (Passione Vino started life as an import company), but you’re allowed to throw out names of global grapes and knowledgeable staff will suggest their Italian equivalent. Not sure what you like? That works too, with recommendations coming thick and fast, alongside brief but impassioned explanations of various vines.  If the space looks familiar, that’s because they’ve taken over the original home of long-running Clerkenwell tattoo parlour, the Family Business (don’t worry they’ve not closed, just moved next door). The gold foil ‘Electric Tattooing’ lettering remains emblazoned on the steamy windows, and the buzz of t
Poon's at Somerset House

Poon's at Somerset House

3 out of 5 stars
Conceptually, Poon’s has a lot going for it. First, there’s the location; a stunning, high-ceilinged antechamber in the west wing of Somerset House, all dolled up with hand-painted willows weeping down pastel pink walls. Then there’s the deep, storied lore. This is the latest incarnation of a London institution, with the first Poon’s Restaurant opening in 1973 and bringing Cantonese food to the tatty streets south of Soho and helping give Chinatown its name. Next came the flashier Poon’s of Covent Garden, which welcomed the likes of Frank Sinatra and Mick Jagger (not to mention a Michelin Star), in 1980.  There’s liver so enticing that even offal-phobes might lap it up Founders William and Cecilia Poon retired in the mid-2000s, but their daughter Amy has been keeping the family business alive, through what the marketing team are at pains to point out is a ‘food and lifestyle brand’, as well as various wonton-related pop-ups. This marks her first stand-alone restaurant, and a lot of thought has gone into the elegant space, which is as long, skinny and splendid as any 1990s-era supermodel.  Food isn’t quite as ornate. Although prawn toast, which is dubbed ‘The hill that Amy didn’t die on’ for reasons unexplained, looks the part, all chubby and deep-fried in sesame seeds, it doesn't taste of much. One of those famous Poon’s dipping sauces would be nice, but alas, it is served nude. Luckily, a bowl of slippery wontons are served with a helping of Poon’s branded Chilli Vinegar Dre
Hanbaagaasuuteeki

Hanbaagaasuuteeki

4 out of 5 stars
You have to hand it to Hanbaagaasuuteeki for its supremely confident choice of location. This Asian-inspired burger joint has opened up within patty-spitting distance of Shake Shack and Bleecker Burger, making this London’s prime hamburger nexus. Need meat sandwiched between buns? Victoria’s hectic transport hub is calling.  It feels a lot like hallowed West Coast burger joint In-N-Out with a K-pop twist  Happily, Hanbaagaasuuteeki pulls off its cocky move in a major way. A drop-in spot with high stools, counter-top tables and bright red splashes of colour, it feels a lot like hallowed West Coast burger joint In-N-Out with a K-pop twist.  As well as a few cursory sides, the menu features nine burgers, kicking off with a ‘1950s-style’ double cheeseburger, a tribute to the ultimate in trad fast food with a gentle Japanese lilt (its onions are rehydrated in dashi vinegar). It’s good, sure, but why not try something a little more exciting than the all-American classic. Hanbaagaasuuteeki’s more inventive burgers don’t seem like novelty additions, nor a panicked afterthought. On the freakier fringes of the menu is where the magic happens.  Take, for example, my favourite, the shrimp kong baga. Surf and turf if you happen to be surfing on the shores of Okinawa, this smashed, lacy beef patty comes topped with a cavalcade of crispy, deep fried shrimps, topped with sweet and tangy 1000 island-style dressing as well as melted cheese. There’s a scattering of seaweed strands on the top,
Ikoyi

Ikoyi

5 out of 5 stars
Ikoyi is a huge deal. Monumental, in fact. Arguably the most important British restaurant of the past decade, it’s also one of the only London locations to regularly find itself in official rankings of the world’s greatest places to eat. Michelin stars? You bet. Ikoyi has a casual two, and is shamelessly gunning for a third.  It is, of course, exceptional. At these prices it has to be. With the most expensive tasting menu we’ve ever come across (£380 a head, and that’s before drinks), food at Ikoyi can’t just be ‘good’. It has to be really fucking great.  Dishes that simultaneously make you think and make you feel held Jeremy Chan makes sure of it. Ikoyi’s steely and determined head chef has such a singular vision that people have come, night after night, since 2017 to spend the best part of an average weekly salary on a single meal.  A demi-brutalist space of warm walnut wood, and soft spotlights over each table, Ikoyi’s deeply chill dining room sits at the corner of the 180 Strand building. Also home to a branch of Soho House, elite deli 180 Corner, and the HQs of uber cool fashion brands Martine Rose and Harris Reed, as well as style mag Dazed and art fair dons Frieze, 180 Strand is where you’ll find the coolest creatives in London, and possibly everyone who ever bullied you in sixth form.  Named after the affluent suburb of Lagos where co-founder Iré Hassan-Odukale was born, Ikoyi has gently moved away from its original west African culinary concept. Now the focus is on
Lilibet's

Lilibet's

3 out of 5 stars
There’s something terribly trad about naming your restaurant Lilibet’s – a reference to the late Queen Elizabeth’s cutesy childhood nickname. A royalist flex can be blamed upon the location of this fancy new seafood spot, which is on the Bruton Street site of the 18th century townhouse where Lizzy II was born in 1926. Demolished in 1937, it made way for the vast office building which stands here today.  It is, essentially, the perfume counter at Selfridges with a bonus raw bar Inside this huge corner spot is where things get interesting. With its baby blue frilly swags, powder pink floral wallpaper, shiny silver candelabras and plump soft furnishings, Lilibet’s offers a rococo take on the OTT flamboyance displayed by its Mayfair neighbours Sexy Fish, Bacchanalia, Hakkasan and Park Chinois. It is, essentially, the perfume counter at Selfridges with a bonus raw bar, or the sugar plum fairy’s boudoir by way of Billingsgate, and although the frothy, frilly girlishness of the place should be too much, it is somehow just enough. Oddly enough, it’s from the same former Nobu exec chef who founded the ‘rock’n’roll’ ramen chain, Bone Daddies.   Wondrous wallpaper aside, starters are Lilibet’s strongest suit. Diminutive anchovy eclairs are as fabulous as the decor, offering a gruff creamy parfait tongue-slap but with a sweet and sour sauce that cuts, lazer-like, through the delicate honk of fish brine. Next comes a pretty, pretty crab tart with grapefruit, which is almost presumptuousl
Plaza Khao Gaeng

Plaza Khao Gaeng

4 out of 5 stars
The original Plaza Khao Gaeng surprised everyone with its monumental greatness. A restaurant slipped into a food hall mezzanine isn’t supposed to be one of the best in London, and yet the bijoux, southern Thai-inspired canteen blew minds and mouths with its relentless approach to flavour and fun when it opened in 2022. Run by a Brit, Plaza held up its hands when it came to its inauthenticity, but made up for it with the dedication that chef-founder Luke Farrell poured into the place. A couple of months after it launched, spin-off restaurant Speedboat Bar arrived, a day-glo, stand-alone tribute to Bangkok’s Chinatown in London’s Chinatown.  It’s a shouty, cocky spot that demands your attention Now, like Speedboat Bar, Plaza has a space to call its very own, rather than what felt like digs in a culinary halls of residence. Plaza Khao Gaeng 2:0 can be found in the ever-expanding Borough Yards development by London Bridge, where so many esteemed London restaurants have launched culinary siblings. You’ll find it next to a baby Barrafina, Akoko offshoot Akara, and Cafe François, a mini manifestation of Maison François in Mayfair.  At 78 covers, it’s at least twice the size of the original Plaza, and makes the most of a spacious railway arch. There are two dining areas, both rowdy and roomy, with a pleasing soundbed of clattering cutlery alongside what looks like a Wild West vaudeville stage in the cosier back room and buzzing strip lights which reflect the full-on, nowhere-to-hide

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This glamorous dining room is officially the best restaurant in Covent Garden in 2026

This glamorous dining room is officially the best restaurant in Covent Garden in 2026

Our list of the best restaurants in Covent Garden has got a brand new number one. Following the closure of former list-topper Tandoor Chop House last month, Time Out’s London food experts have crowned a new primo destination in the land of tourists and theatregoers. And the winner is... Twenty8 Nomad.  See past the slightly annoying name and you’ll find one of the best places to eat in this buzzy central London neighbourhood. You’ll find it at the NoMad hotel, and the newly revamped in-house restaurant (previously known as Atrium) is a high-octane tribute to the big, ballsy American brasserie.  Our 2025 review said of the restaurant: ‘The aesthetic... is all Manhattan-by-way-of-the-Marais, an extravagant Yank take on the French brassiere, complete with excessively high ceilings, balustrades and balconies.’ The grand space offers a lavish ‘raw bar’, supersized-steak frites and an entire cocktail offering devoted to the martini. Crispy artichoke, prawn cocktail, mussels in green curry sauce, and lobster pasta also make the menu.  Nomad is also home to a great bar, Side Hustle, which specialises in tequila and mezcal, and was named the best international hotel bar in the world in 2025. Read our review of Side Hustle here.  Covent Garden is home to many of the best restaurants in London, including French-styled Story Cellar, and The Portrait by Richard Corrigan, as well as old faves The Savoy Grill and J Sheekey.  The best restaurants in Covent Garden, according to Time Out. Did
Beloved Hackney pub The Gun is set to reopen this month

Beloved Hackney pub The Gun is set to reopen this month

Huge news. The Gun is re-opening later this month. The much-loved Well Street pub closed down at the start of 2025, but the stalwart of Hackney’s eating and drinking scene will reopen on February 23. Under new ownership, the pub says: ‘Come for the Guinness. Stay for the wagyu.’ Hot Dinners reports that the man behind the relaunched boozer is Kotaro Ogawa of Mayfair’s fine dining Japanese steakhouse Aragawa.  That should mean that the pub, which has hosted several kitchen residencies over the years, such as the inimitable Ling Ling’s and Rake (which is now at The Gun’s former sister pub, The Compton Arms), will still be serving up serious food.  However, The Gun’s history as a rave pub, hosting DJs like Daniel Avery and Marie Davidson in its intimate 90-capacity space, might all be in the past. The Gun was forced to close its doors in March 2025 due to the ‘increasing costs of running a hospitality business in the current financial climate’. Nick Stephens, Hanna Sinclair-Stephens and Oliver Dixon opened the pub in June 2014, breathing new life into the building by polishing up its original Victorian features. The venue was saved from closure in 2020 thanks to a crowd funding campaign during the pandemic, which raised more than £30,000 in one day. The team still run Islington’s The Compton Arms.   The best pubs in London, according to Time Out. Get the latest and greatest from the Big Smoke – from news and reviews to events and trends. Just follow our Time Out London WhatsAp
The 10 cheapest Michelin-starred restaurants in London right now [updated for 2026]

The 10 cheapest Michelin-starred restaurants in London right now [updated for 2026]

With London’s newest Michelin stars announced for 2026 this week, you might be considering making a trip to one of these very delicious award-winning restaurants. And you also might be pondering whether you’ve got enough dosh to afford it. Most Michelin star spots are pretty pricey. Prohibitively expensive, in fact. Take, for example, Sushi Kanesaka in Mayfair, which costs £420 a head for its omakase offering (and yes, that is before drinks). Or how about Ikoyi at 180 Strand with its (very delicious) £380 tasting menu of 14-ish courses?  But not every single Michelin star tasting menu will leave you destitute. We’ve collated a list of the top 10 most affordable Michelin star dinner tasting menus of at least four courses in London. It is possible to get a cheaper deal at lunchtime in many Michelin star restaurants (and some places offer shorter, three-course set menus, as well as a la carte options) but who wants a slap-up meal at midday on a Tuesday?  At the top of the list is Indian restaurant Amaya in Belgravia, with a £75 tasting menu at dinner, which includes the likes of tandoori black pepper chicken tikka and smoked chilli lamb chop. The vegetarian tasting menu is even better value, at £70. Amaya has had a Michelin star since 2006.  In second place is lovely little neighbourhood bistro Casa Fofo in Hackney, where you can dine on an eight-course tasting menu for £76, which might include the likes of pollock with bergamot and chanterelle mushrooms, and strawberry grapes w
Arvostelussa elokuva Humiseva harju

Arvostelussa elokuva Humiseva harju

Emily Brontën ainoa julkaistu romaani oli alun perinkin täysin pähkähullu, ja ohjaaja Emerald Fennellin elokuvaversio Humisevasta harjusta lisää kierroksia: se on yhtä oudon kylmä kuin visuaalisesti dekadenttikin.  Fennell laittaa Cathy ja Heathcliffin tuhoisan, pakkomielteisen rakkauden täysillä tarinan keskiöön, mutta katsojan on vaikea lämmetä sen päähenkilöille. Kolmekymppinen Margot Robbie tuntuu aivan liian vanhalta esittämään teini-ikäistä Catherine Earnshaw’ta, ja Jacob Elord on yksinkertaisesti tylsä yhden ilmeen Heathcliffinä. Kirjassa hän on villi ja karismaattinen hahmo. Elokuvassa hän on… pitkä? Niille, jotka eivät tunne Brontën holtitonta mestariteosta, Cathy on ollut Heathcliffin lumoissa siitä saakka, kun leskeksi jäänyt isä toi salaperäisen pojan heidän Yorkshiren-kotiinsa. Täysi-ikäistyttyään Heathcliff lähtee omille teilleen, ja Cathy päätyy naimisiin naapurin Edgar Lintonin kanssa (Shazad Latif), joka Fennellin houreisessa visiossa asuu kaleidoskooppimaisessa rokokoopalatsissa. Heathcliff palaa tietysti takaisin, älyttömän rikkaana. Hän haluaa Cathyn, ja Cathy haluaa hänet, mutta he eivät voi olla yhdessä, koska Cathy on raskaana Edgarin lapsesta. Fennell saa paljaat nummetkin ulvomaan intohimosta Kirjassa tämä johtaa pitkään, patoutuneeseen kaipuuseen, mutta Fennell – joka sai Saltburn-elokuvassaan Barry Keoganin tökkäämään miehuutensa vastakaivettuun hautaan – päästää parin toistensa kimppuun. Tämä tapahtuu, luonnollisesti, sen jälkeen, kun Cathy kokee s
The 7 London restaurants that lost stars in the 2026 Michelin Guide

The 7 London restaurants that lost stars in the 2026 Michelin Guide

Pour one out for the London restaurants that lost their stars in the recent update to the Michelin Guide. The 2026 awards for Great Britain & Ireland were held earlier this week in Dublin, and as well as 10 newly anointed London restaurants, a number of places were left sadly star-less. Humo in Mayfair was the only restaurant to officially lose its Michelin star, with the decision made after acclaimed chef Miller Prada left at the start of 2025. The live-fire restaurant gained its star under the direction of the Colombian-born chef, who had previously worked with Endo Kazutoshi at Endo at the Rotunda in White City.  Prada is currently looking to launch a new project of his own. Time Out’s five-star Humo review – written when the restaurant still had its star – praised the chef, saying: ‘Watching the skilled, admirably efficient Prada at work is also all part of the joy of Humo. His way with placing beetroot jus on a plate of lamb was hypnotic, the resulting red squiggles and shapes resembling a static Alexander Calder mobile.’  A host of one star restaurants have also closed since the last awards, including the two-Michelin-starred La Dame de Pic at Four Seasons Hotel London at Tower Bridge and the two-Michelin-starred Bibendum in South Ken. The one star Lyle’s in Shoreditch, Dosa at the Mandarin Oriental Mayfair (which was open less than a year), and The Five Fields in Chelsea have also shut down, with Club Gascon in Smithfield set to stop operating next month. As such, all
10 London restaurants have just been awarded a new Michelin Star in the 2026 awards

10 London restaurants have just been awarded a new Michelin Star in the 2026 awards

The Michelin Guide hosted its annual awards for Great Britain & Ireland last night in Dublin, and there are 10 newly anointed London restaurants. The restaurants to gain their first Michelin stars included one which features in Time Out’s own list of the best new restaurants in London: Spanish restaurant Legado in Shoreditch, which opened last summer. Legado is run by Nieves Barragán Mohacho, the visionary chef behind Mayfair’s Sabor, which was awarded a Michelin star in 2018. Other restaurants to receive their first star include Tom Brown at the Capital in Knightsbridge, which also opened in 2025. A fish-centric fine dining spot, it’s headed up by the boss of the now-shuttered Michelin star-scoring Cornerstone, which was in Hackney Wick.  RECOMMENDED: a full list of every Michelin star restaurant in London.  Ambassadors Clubhouse in Mayfair - which opened in 2024 – also received its first star. Ambassadors Clubhouse is known for its high-end Punjabi cuisine, and is part of the JKS group, which includes fellow Michelin star holders Trishna and Gymkhana (which has two).  Other new openings to win a star include the 12-seater Restaurant Gordon Ramsay High, which opened last year on the 60th floor of 22 Bishopsgate in the City. Labombe by Trivet on Park Lane – which is a spinoff of Bermondsey’s Trivet – also gained its first star, as did gastropub The Kerfield Arms in Camberwell, and Corenucopia by Clare Smyth in Pimlico, which is a bistro version of the three star Core by Clar
Ranked: all the Michelin star restaurants in London that Time Out’s food editor has been to (updated for 2026)

Ranked: all the Michelin star restaurants in London that Time Out’s food editor has been to (updated for 2026)

With a bunch of new Michelin stars dished out this month (and a few taken away), there are now a whopping 88 restaurants in London that have been deemed worthy of Michelin star status.  I’ve been lucky enough to eat at 34 of them and I’ve definitely got some favourites. What makes a good Michelin star restaurant? For me it’s a little bit of everything. Not just incredible flavours and special service (coming back to a folded napkin after you’ve nipped to the loo never gets old), but old-fashioned value for money – which is pretty important seeing as these are some of the most expensive restaurants in London, and possibly the world.  My all-time Michelin star restaurant in London is the don of British dining; St John. The celebrated, ever-chic Smithfield restaurant won its star in 2012 and has kept hold of it ever since. I love it not just because you can have a blow-out meal in the main dining room, but can also swing by without a booking and eat – or simply drink martinis – in the roomy bar area. One chunky, cheesy slice of rarebit and a glass of St John Rouge is the city’s finest Michelin star dinner for one and I won’t hear anyone say otherwise. RECOMMENDED: Every Michelin star restaurant in London for 2026. My second favourite Michelin star spot in London is Ikoyi. I went just last month (January 2026), and though it might be one of the most expensive places to eat in the UK (£380 a head! Before booze!), it was a truly spectacular meal from chef Jeremy Chan. Lasting four
One of London’s best Indian restaurants has shut without warning

One of London’s best Indian restaurants has shut without warning

Tandoor Chop House – which was previously included in Time Out’s ranking of the 20 best Indian restaurants in London – has closed down for good.. The restaurant, which opened on Adelaide Street a decade ago, was also on our list of the best restaurants in Covent Garden, alongside the likes of J Sheekey, Town and Frog. It offered an excellent twist on an old-fashioned British ‘chop house’, only using Indo-Punjabi spices and swapping the grill for the tandoor. Our four star review of the restaurant compared it to a ‘less hectic, more refined mini-me of the original (St Martin’s Lane) branch of Dishoom’. Our critic added: ‘There’s so much to love about TCH, I don’t really know where to start.’ Despite its many fans, the restaurant closed without warning last month. ‘We are now closed,’ states the Tandoor Chop House site. ‘Thank you to all of our customers over the years!’ No reason has been given as to why it has shut, but it’s not the only restaurant in London to close its doors recently, with vegan Club Mexicana in Soho recently shutting up shop. Club Gascon in Smithfield will also be serving its last meal next month, after 30 years in business.   Did you see that one of north London’s greatest pubs is closing? Plus: 10 London restaurants have just been awarded a new Michelin Star. Get the latest and greatest from the Big Smoke – from news and reviews to events and trends. Just follow our Time Out London WhatsApp channel. Stay in the loop: sign up for our free Time Out Londo
One of London’s best vegan restaurants is opening a second location in the City

One of London’s best vegan restaurants is opening a second location in the City

Notting Hill’s Holy Carrot is set to bring its excellent plant-based cookery to Spitalfields. But there’s a twist – the second Holy Carrot won’t be totally vegan. Don’t worry, they won’t be adding offal to the menu, but it will be vegetarian rather than vegan, with a smattering of cheese on some dishes. Not a total pivot from the west London’s restaurant's original ethos then, and vegans will still be more than welcome, with most dishes abiding by their dairy-free doctrine.  Holy Carrot started life as a supper club before a Knightsbridge residency, opening its first restaurant in 2024 on Portobello Road. It’s run by fashion journalist-turned-restaurateur Irina Linovich and chef Daniel Watkins, formerly of Acme Fire Cult in Dalston. When it opened, Time Out’s review gave it a glowing four stars. ‘Holy Carrot isn’t out to blow your mind – this is innovation of a dependable, not reckless, sort – but this gets close,’ said our writer of its crispy celeriac with pickle butter dish.  Holy Carrot prides itself on its fondness for ferments, and you’ll be able to find more pickled stuff at the new branch, which will open on March 13 at 61-63 Brushfield Street, E1 6AA. What else can we expect? ‘A new space shaped by the same principles; vegetables, fire and fermentation. Familiar dishes, cooked with care, alongside new plates made for the table,’ say the team behind Holy Carrot.  These are the best vegan restaurants in London - see where the original branch of Holy Carrot is on the l
Could one of London’s most famous restaurateurs soon ban influencers?

Could one of London’s most famous restaurateurs soon ban influencers?

Don’t like it when you’re in a restaurant and the next table suddenly starts an impromptu social media shoot, making you an unsuspecting star in someone else’s content? It seems legendary restaurateur Jeremy King doesn’t care for it either. The restaurateur behind The Wolseley – as well as the soon-set-to-relaunch Simpson’s in the Strand – has addressed the influx of influencers at The Park, which he opened in 2024 by Hyde Park. Writing in a newsletter (via the Standard) he commented: ‘In recent weeks, The Park has been subject to unexpected visits by camera-wielding influencers. This has taken us completely by surprise, probably because we do not spend a lick of time on TikTok. But some of our digitally-oriented team members have shared that The Park and its restrooms are trending.’ He added: ‘We take this very seriously, and have already addressed the matter… with the appropriate parties. In the meantime we have implemented protocols to minimise any potential disruption of your meal, and can assure you that you will not end up in the background of anyone’s Reel.’ Does this mean influencers have been banned from The Park? It’s not entirely clear, but it certainly sounds like words have been had. ‘We are not quite ready to declare The Park a mobile-free zone, but if another young lady shows up with a three-person camera crew, makeup artist and vanity mirror, we’ll have no choice but to reconsider our position,’ he added. Photograph: The Park Restaurant Jeremy King made his
The 9 best new London restaurants opening in February 2026

The 9 best new London restaurants opening in February 2026

There’s all manner of edible excellences launching right now in London. Whether you’re after Welsh laverbread sandwiches, Caribbean glazed plantain, Cantonese fish balls, a Lunar New Year feast from two of London’s best chefs, or simply a nice bit of smoked sausage, we’ve got you.  These are the 9 best new openings of the month.  The best new London restaurants opening in February 2026 Photograph: Bara 1. The cute Welsh cafe Bara, Peckham Stockpile for St David’s Day at lovely little Welsh cafe, Bara - which means ‘bread’. The project of Masterchef Professionals quarter-finalist Cecily Dalladay (from south Wales) and Zoë Heimann (from south London), the cafe is inspired by a 1950s Welsh Gas Board cookbook that used to belong to Cecily’s grandma. Expect a Caerphilly Cheesesteak sandwich, Pembrokeshire lobster roll, and brunch offering of a ‘Swansea Breakfast’ (smoked bacon, leeks, cockles and laverbread on toasted focaccia), as well as honey butter pancakes, brown crab rarebit, and leek bubble-and-squeak sarnies.  Address: 44-46 Choumert Road, SE15 4SE Opens: Feb 12   ROKAS JUOZAPAVICIUS - WWW.ROKPHOTO.NET 2. The return of a modern Caribbean classic  The Good Front Room, Dalston Chef Dominic Taylor is relaunching his Good Front Room concept at a permanent site in Hackney. It started life as a pop-up at The Langham after Taylor won Channel 4's Five Star Kitchen: Britain’s Next Great Chef, which was judged by none other than Michel Roux Jr. Expect food that harks back to his
Big Zuu and Dom’s Subs are launching a very special collab sandwich

Big Zuu and Dom’s Subs are launching a very special collab sandwich

One of our favourite sandwich shops, Dom’s Subs, has teamed up with Time Out cover and podcast star Big Zuu to create two special sarnies. The pair of creations are little different for your usual sandwich, with both of them containing packet noodles. There’s a Tarragon Chicken with Chicken Super Noodles version for the meat eaters, and a Veg Tikka Masala with Curry Super Noodles and crispy poppadom crumb for the vegetarians. They’re available from today (Feb 4), and will be on sale while stocks last. ‘British sandwich eaters love a wild combo – and noodles in a sub roll is next level,’ commented Big Zuu of the collab. ‘The Super Noodles Sandwich is bold, fun and surprisingly banging. I love seeing people push boundaries with their food, and this one definitely deserves its moment.’ Big Zuu will be giving away 100 free sarnies on launch day (yes, that is today) at the City of London flagship branch of Dom’s Subs at 7 Cullum Street, EC3M 7JJ.  Dom’s Subs is also behind one of our favourite bars in London, Rasputin’s in Hackney, which is just around the corner from its burger joint, Jupiter Burger, which makes the cut on our best burgers in London list.  Get the latest and greatest from the Big Smoke – from news and reviews to events and trends. Just follow our Time Out London WhatsApp channel. Stay in the loop: sign up for our free Time Out London newsletter for the best of the city, straight to your inbox.