What is it with the past, why do we always feel a need to return there? Only a certain sort of person, surely, would decide to call their restaurant (or mini-chain) canteen. Prior to dining here at a friend’s suggestion, I looked up said word in the dictionary.
The Portman: Not a recipe for success (December 2015)
Yauatcha: Ten years on and still going strong (December 2015)
The Oak Room at Pendley Manor: Please don’t go (September 2015)
Assunta Madre: Fresh fish; fundamentally flawed (September 2015)
Clos Maggiore: Mostly magical Maggiore (September 2015)
Blanchette: Chic rustique (September 2015)
St John: Carnivore carnival (September 2015)
Lutyens: Solid, but unspectacular (September 2015)
Chisou: Solid, but unspectacular (September 2015)
Berners Tavern: Jason Atherton does it again (September 2015)
Singapore Garden: Singapore swings, mostly (August 2015)
Tom’s Kitchen, St Katherine’s Dock: Not rocket science (August 2015)
Bao: Bao – Wow (August 2015)
Sake No Hana: Just because it looks good, doesn’t mean that it is good (July 2015)
Zoilo: More than meats the eye (July 2015)
Think of Argentine cuisine and the typical response is steak. Zoilo, a small and intimate restaurant on the northern edge of Mayfair, proves this claim wrong. The food my comrade and I sampled on a recent weekday lunchtime certainly impressed, as did the ambience, even if the service was something of a let-down.
Social Wine & Tapas: Great expectations… (July 2015)
Graze: Put out to pasture (July 2015)
Dock Kitchen: Cooking up a feast (June 2015)
Outdoor space and genuinely original culinary concepts that aren’t instant flops are a hard combination to find, even in London. Nonetheless, Dock Kitchen scores well on both counts, constituted a perfect place for a relaxed summer meal, and has the potential to be amazing, if only they upped their game in terms of service a bit.

