2013

This rustic Italian pop up shack in Netil Market near Broadway Market serves up meatballs wiyh tagliatelle, aubergine parmigiana on sourdough, semolina shells and other authentic Italian dishes that taste like Mama has been cooking them for decades. Eat on gingham dressed tables and watch the next door bike menders fix brakes to the sound of reggae.

A taste of Manhattan at this cafe cum deli cum grocery store on Calvert Street. Come for brunch then pick up some cheese and salami for lunch.

Leila's Shop and Cafe

Posted on

Saturday 4 May 2013

LOBSTER MAC & CHEESE AND GREAT COCKTAILS

Hackney Road is a long and dark road to walk up at night. Once the shops, warehouses and trade outlets have pulled down their shutters, there is only the odd pub, kebab shop and a Bingo hall giving any signs of life in the evenings. But out of this drab darkness, dazzles the entrance of Mr Buckley's. A neat row of Hollywood movie lights along the awning and a welcoming red neon name sign in the window promises all the fun of the circus.
Mr Buckleys neon sign | East London restaurant reviews
Mr Buckleys neon sign,
Inside, it is as cosy and atmospheric as the outside promises. There is a pared down Scandi chic feel about the plywood furnishings, the smooth concrete surfaces and the lacquered exposed brick walls. But dim lighting, the cosy glow of red thrown from the neon sign and the sight of impeccably made cocktails being served in beautiful coupes creates a party atmosphere every night of the week to this eatery and bar which is open til 2am at the weekend. Primarily a restaurant, Mr Buckley's serves fashionable 'small plates' including its justifiably lauded lobster mac and cheese which is a silky, seductive tower of pasta tubes sweating in a lobster butter with the refreshing pop of caviar bursting through the unctious goo. 

 There are some adventurous dishes on the menu and some work better than others. If you're after a familiar comfort food such as burger and chips then head over to the Sebright Arms up the road where Lucky Chip are in residency serving possibly the best burgers in town. Successes were the rare sliced lamb, duck rillette and the salted caramel ice cream. With music played at moderate levels that allow conversation yet block out others, a spacious yet intimate layout that suits couples and groups alike, and a cosy bar downstairs that kicks off in the small hours, Mr Buckley's has rightly raced to the top of the East End's eaterie charts. 


Pared back Scandi chic at Mr Buckley's | East London restaurant reviews
Pared back Scandi chic at Mr Buckley's
Warehouse lighting at Mr Buckley's on Hackney Road | East London restaurant reviews
Warehouse lighting at Mr Buckley's on Hackney Road 
Mr Buckley's duck rillette with crispbread | East London restaurant reviews
Mr Buckley's duck rillette with crispbread 
Salted caramel ice cream | East London restaurant reviews
Salted caramel ice cream 
Mr Buckley's famous lobster mac and cheese | East London restaurant reviews
Mr Buckley's famous lobster mac and cheese
Mr Buckley's rare sliced lamb | East London restaurant reviews
Mr Buckley's rare sliced lamb
Mr Buckley's corn fritters | East London restaurant reviews
Mr Buckley's corn fritters 
Mr Buckley's spicy fried crab cakes | East London restaurant reviews
Mr Buckley's spicy fried crab cakes

Mr Buckley's restaurant review

Posted on

Saturday 23 March 2013

Salt marsh lamb and saffron jelly at The Gallivant


Drive all the way down the flat straight marshland road that takes you to Camber Sands on the south coast of England and you'll find this unassuming road-side beach bistro. Inside you'll find an oasis of warmth, cosiness and local foods cooked spectacularly well. Stay the night in one of its clean, simple rooms and you can enjoy possibly the best bacon buttie for breakfast in the country. TS

Perfect bacon butty | Gallivant Beach Bistro

The Gallivant in Rye | Places to eat in Kent
The entrance at The Gallivant Beach Bistro






Champagne and saffron jelly, earthy and satisfying
Camber Sands | The Gallivant restaurant review
Camber Sands




Champagne on call and golden age of trains 

Round the corner from my office is one of my favourite restaurants in Soho, Bob Bob Ricard. The polished brass, lush blue velvet curtains and Thirties inspired wallpapers ooze art deco chic. All tables are designed as booths reminiscent of the Golden Age of train travel with mahogany panelling, white table cloths, privacy curtains and a bell to call for more Champagne. Once settled in, it’s hard to ever leave. Try one of the deeply traditional English pies topped with glossy pastry tops stamped with the BBR stamp. TS

The windows at Bob Bob Ricard | Restaurant review
The windows evoking the golden age of trains at Bob Bob Ricard in Soho
A pie crust embossed with BOB initials | London restaurant reviews
A pie crust embossed with Bob Bob Ricard

SEE MORE OF BOB BOB RICARD...

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Autumn food foraging on North Norfolk coast

Prepare to fall in love. Fall in love with modernism that is. The point of all Living Architecture holiday homes is to give people the opportunity to experience living in an architect designed house, in this case a house designed by the notable Sir Michael Hopkins. One can only imagine the cost of the build but for one week/weekend only, it can be your home. 



Depending on your architectural preferences (traditional or modern) first impressions of the house will either be, from the exterior, bleak or staggeringly beautiful, and once inside, spartan or gloriously spacious. Whatever your initial judgment though, this house will beguile you, soothe you and engender such harmonious social interactions, that you will, without doubt, be loathed to leave and promising to return, despite the expensive - but not exorbitant - cost attached.

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Oysters and royal jelly on Mersea Island


A long weekend on Mersea Island so we could gorge on oysters and seafood fresh from the boats at the Company Shed. Bring your own wine and bread and feast on fish. TS


Monkey beach cottage
Monkey Beach Cottage, Mersea Island, UK


Monkey Beach Cottage | Cosy bedroom with brass bed


Queen's head jelly mould



The Company Shed, Essex | Queuing for a table
The Company Shed, Mersea Island, Esses

A dozen oysters | The Company Shed
The Company Shed, a dozen rocks

Otto knocking em back







Pigs ears and greyhounds in Victoria Park Village

Vintage furniture, friendly staff and great food hit all the right notes in the epicentre of Hackney’s thriving food scene, Victoria Park. The Empress has undergone a gradual transformation over the last year since it was bought by Michael Buurman, and its present incarnation as a relaxed, warehouse-style East London eatery is its best. 


The kitchen is now helmed by chef Elliott Lidstone (former chef of Michelin-starred L’Ortolan restaurant in Berkshire) who has put together a European menu with a fashionable emphasis on British cheap cuts such as ox tongue and pig’s ear. With the Ginger Pig butchers opposite, Jonathan Norris fishmongers up the road and E5 Bakehouse in neighbouring London Fields, The Empress has the finest food produce at its fingertips.

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Markets, bars and restaurants in London's east end


Basically a long role-call of my friend's places - markets, cafes, bars, clubs, shops and restaurants - luckily all my friends have the coolest places.























Markets in East London
If you’ve got a serious vintage clothes addiction, head to the northern end of Brick Lane and make a beeline for the brilliant This Shop Rocks (129-131 Brick Lane), which dresses the most colourful characters seen at local cabaret and burlesque nights. Keep with the retro vibe and head to Labour and Wait (85 Redchurch Street), a delightful old-fashioned hardware store selling household products harking back to the Forties and Fifties.
Nearby Columbia Road Market is most famous for its colourful and fragrant Sunday flower market which runs from the crack of dawn until 2pm. However, it’s also a treasure trove of interiors shops and art galleries, including Nelly Duff (156 Columbia Road), Elphicks (60 Columbia Road) and Ryantown (126 Columbia Road), Red Online favourite Rob Ryan’s first shop selling his intricate and delicate papercut designs. A lovely find is knitting shop Prick Your Finger (260 Globe Road, Bethnal Green) where you’ll find knitting paraphernalia, from homespun yarns to upholstery yarns and chunky yarns from their own sheep. It also sells humorous knitted novelties such as knitted cigarette kits and crochet moustache kits.
Best hotels in East London
There’s so much to do in the East End with accommodation options to suit all tastes; it’s easy to make a weekend of it. For a quirky stay, there’s the deeply eccentric 40 Winks (109 Mile End Road; tel: 020 7790 0259; 40winks.org), a bed and breakfast with two flamboyantly decorated rooms, courtesy of its interior designer owner David Carter. David regularly organises decadently themed storytelling evenings from professional storytellers.
For contemporary cool, try Boundary, which offers an excellent restaurant (part of the Conran stable), stylish rooms and a popular rooftop for sunset drinks with a view, all on the super fashionable Redchurch Street near Brick Lane. 
Even deeper into East London is Bethnal Green’s Town Hall (Patriot Square; tel: 020 7871 0460) which combines cooler-than-cool modern rooms with the architectural splendour of the former town hall. It also has its own Michelin-starred restaurant, Viajante and its sister eatery, The Corner Room.

Things to do in East London
For a cultural night out, see what’s on at the Hackney Picture House (270 Mare Street). It shows mainstream and art house movies, and its Hackney Attic venue on the top floor often has live bands and music, film quizzes, short film screenings, and spoken-word events. Similarly, Rich Mix (35-47 Bethnal Green Road) near Brick Lane is a cinema and arts centre with an eclectic line-up of spoken word events and art exhibitions. For a romantic movie night, head to the Aubin Cinema (64-66 Redchurch Street), where you can order a bottle of wine and watch your movie from a velvet sofa snuggled up under soft blankets.
One of the coolest places for a drink and a dance is Platform (Netil House, 2nd Floor, 1-7 Westgate Street), a cafe/bar/terrace on the second floor of a former Sixties office block, which has been turned into a warren of studio spaces. This industrial-style space is filled with a mish-mash of vintage leather sofas, retro kitchen tables and chairs and, bizarrely, houseplants, for an at-home feel. Every night features different DJs and sounds that always get the crowd up and dancing.
Bistrotheque (23-27 Wadeson Street), is just a stone’s throw from the Vyner Street art galleries and is a smart venue with a wood-panelled bar selling the perfect whiskey sour. It’s got a white-table clothed restaurant offering the best bistro food in the area, and a cabaret room showing some of London’s best burlesque and cabaret acts.
If you happen to be in East London on the first Thursday of the month, join the crowds of local artists and residents at the open evening on Vyner Street where all the art galleries open their doors to the public until 9pm in the evening.
Best bars and cafes in East London
There’s no shortage of good pitstops in East London, the most westerly one being Shoreditch’s Pitfield Lifestyle Shop and Cafe (Pitfield House, 31-35 Pitfield Street). Here you can linger over coffee and cake while perusing upcycled furniture, vintage finds, designer wallpapers and other curiosities.
Another quirky little place serving great coffee, snacks and wood-fired pizza, is Towpath Cafe (36 De Beauvoir Crescent, Hackney), a long, thin waterside eatery along the Hackney stretch of the Regent’s Canal. The Welsh rarebit is particularly recommended and makes a perfect brunch option for a sunny Sunday. Towpath also organises occasional events using barges and floating platforms to house DJ decks, fireworks and other seasonal events.
Too cool for school – but in a great way – is Ombra (1 Vyner Street). It’s a Venetian cafe and eatery on the uber-arty Vyner Street, home to architects and art galleries, and its authentic relaxed Italian vibe, staff and menu help turn every visit into an Aperol Spritz-fuelled fiesta.
Best restaurants in East London
Broadway Market’s cacophonous Saturday food market brings in swathes of food-lovers eating on the hoof, but it also now offers great bars and restaurants that are open all week long. Amongst these is the recently opened Market Cafe (2 Broadway Market), with its Italian worker’s cafe vibe, complete with Formica tables and Fifties wallpaper, a young, arty clientele, and a top-notch eating experience with an affordable price point. Try the ‘Hackney Cup’, a delicious Campari-based cocktail, and the homemade pasta with meat sauce (especially if it happens to be the pork cooked in milk).
For a slightly more formal environment, head to The Empress (130 Lauriston Road) in Victoria Park Village. It’s a relaxed, warehouse-style East London restaurant helmed by Chef Elliott Lidstone. The former chef of Michelin-starred L’Ortolan restaurant in Berkshire has put together a European menu with a fashionable emphasis on British cheap cuts such as ox tongue and pig’s ear. With the Ginger Pig butchers opposite, Jonathan Norris fishmongers up the road and E5 Bakehouse in neighbouring London Fields, The Empress has the finest produce at its fingertips.
It would be a crime to leave East London without trying one of its famous curry houses, but locals in-the-know avoid the tourist traps on Brick Lane and head to one of a ‘trinity’ of much-loved curry houses.Lahore (367 Commercial Road) and Mirch Masala (111-113 Commercial Road) are both brilliant, whileTayyabs (83-89 Fieldgate Street), has expanded across three buildings to cope with its unstoppable rise in popularity (though you’ll need to factor in queuing during peak times).
Interesting East London walks
The Olympic Games will leave some amazing legacies, not least of which is the development of Fish Island and Hackney Wick. A walk around this edgy neighbourhood, bound by the River Lea and the Hertford Union Canal, brings you to the very heart of East London factory land. This maze of warehouses, many featuring stunning street art, has slowly been turned into artists’ studio spaces, cool coffee shops, pizzerias, microbreweries and arts spaces. Stop for a coffee at Counter Cafe (7 Roach Road, Hackney Wick)or a pint of Crate Brewery IPA at The White Building (Unit 7, Queen’s Yard, 43 White Post Lane) and catch a view of the Olympic stadium on the opposite side of the waterway.
Designed originally to be the lungs of smog-choked working class East London, Victoria Park is an 86-hectare green space bordering Bethnal Green, Bow and Hackney. You can easily spend a day taking in this pretty, well-maintained park. Don’t miss the romantic houseboats moored along the Regent’s Canal to the west of the park, the Chinese pagoda, the new skate park and adventure playground to the east of the park. There’s also a boating lake and the Pavilion Cafe (Victoria Park, Old Ford Road) which sells Square Mile coffee and does the meanest brunch menu in all of East London.