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Restaurants & Nightlife

New London restaurants

It’s here: our monthly digest of every new drinking and dining spot to have on your radar.

Author

Words by Amelia Allen

5-minute read

We know you’re a sucker for a new opening. Just the word ‘new’ in the title of this article was enough to lure you in, the promise of fresh drinking and dining spots too enticing to miss. And luckily, London has one of the most exciting food scenes in the world; an ever-changing tapestry of fusion flavours, best-in-class chefs, and ritzy, glitzy openings you simply must try. 

So, as we’re the world’s leading luxury lifestyle group, we’ve selected the finest new restaurants this March. From an Indian-inspired breakfast to a boujee 12-course menu, here are five you won’t want to miss. 

Kricket Shoreditch 

We bet you didn’t have an Indian-inspired breakfast on your March bingo card, but Kricket’s brand-new concept is sure to bowl you over. After successful innings in Brixton, Soho, and more recently, Canary Wharf, Kricket is hopping over to Shoreditch – and this time, they’re bringing breakfast to the table. While you won’t be stumped on what to order, don’t sleep on the samphire pakora or the grilled butternut squash makhani – you’ll soon see what all the hype is about. 

A white plate with three pieces of yellow ravioli, garnished with black shavings, sits on a dark, marbled tabletop. A white plate with three pieces of stuffed pasta topped with a small amount of black garnish, served in a light sauce on a marbled black and white table.
1 Nicholl’s Clarke Yd, E1 6SH 

Victor Garvey at The Midland Grand 

What do you get when the man behind Chiltern Firehouse and SOLA’s chef join forces? Well, without stating the obvious, something big. But if you want the specifics: a Michelin-starred chef cooking up a storm inside the St. Pancras Renaissance Hotel’s super-swish dining room. There’ll be a seven-course tasting menu, and we have high hopes that SOLA’s signature finishing touches will be finessed in front of diners, like butter-poached lobster trickled with lobster jus tableside. 

Dimly lit, modern restaurant interior featuring a long, elegant bar with high stools on the right and round tables with cushioned chairs on the left. Warm lighting creates an inviting ambiance with a visible wine rack in the background.
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22 Park Ln, W1K 1BE

Din Tai Fung Canary Wharf 

Canary Wharf’s food scene is the best it’s ever been, and now, there’s another reason why it’s coming up trumps: Din Tai Fung. Follow your nose to Crossrail Place for a Taiwanese feast in east London. Expect the same dishes you know and love from its Selfridges outpost, like its multi-award-winning Xio Long Bao (delicately folded steamed soup dumplings), plus some new additions like beef tenderloin fillets and broccoli tossed in garlic oyster sauce.  

Two women sit at a restaurant table enjoying pasta dishes, salad, and pizza. They are smiling and conversing, with glasses of water and wine in front of them on a cozy brown leather booth. Two women sit at a restaurant table, smiling and enjoying a meal together. The table is set with plates of pasta, salad, bread, olives, glasses of water, and wine in an elegant, warmly lit setting.
3 King’s Blvd, N1C 4BU 

Trullo at Harvey Nichols 

Knightsbridge might not have needed another Italian, but none have quite as much in store as Trullo – and not just because it’s inside Harvey Nicks. Hot off the press this month: Islington’s treasured trattoria has opened a stylish, southwest sister for a three-month pop-up. On the menu, you’ll find classics like silky smooth slow-cooked beef shin ragu with pappardelle, alongside new Knightsbridge-approved dishes like tagliarini crowned with a dollop of Beluga caviar. 

Several clear, stemmed glasses, some filled with light golden and transparent liquid, are arranged on a white marble surface with sunlight casting shadows and reflections across the scene.
A single opened mussel shell with an orange-yellow mussel inside is set on a plain, light brown surface. One half of the shell is empty, while the other holds the mussel meat.
160 Great Portland St, W1W 5QA 

3 Gorges 

Goodge Street is always in our good books, but even more so after 3 Gorges gave it a Cantonese glow-up. And with Yipeng Qian at the helm – who’s worked his Michelin-starred magic at MiMi Mei Fair, Hakkasan, and Gouji – we can guarantee it’s going to be good. We can also guarantee that the 12-course menu for £388, although on the boujee side, is perfect for blowout dinners: think cheese lobster and black truffle king crab noodles, and caviar Peking duck. 

A martini glass filled with a clear cocktail, garnished with three green olives on a metal pick, sits on a dark wooden surface against a textured brown background.
A plate with sliced medium-rare steak topped with green herb sauce, served alongside a roasted bone marrow piece on a wooden table.
53b Southwark St, SE1 1RU 

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