| Ben Haines |
Apr 11th, 2000 09:09 AM |
Fodors <BR> <BR>Baker Street has hardly a single restaurant. But just 200 yards east, and running parallel, is Marylebone High Street. This has plenty. <BR> <BR>Langan's Bistro at 26 DevonshireStreet <BR>Odin's at 27 Devonshire Street <BR>Caravan Serai at 50 Paddington Street <BR>Le Muscadet at 25 Paddington Street <BR>Patiserrie Valerie at 105 Marylebone High Street <BR>Stephen Bull at 5 Blandford Street. <BR>Cafe Flo at 13 Thayer Street <BR> <BR>Then there's a cluster south of Wigmore Street <BR>Cafe Rouge at 46 St James Street <BR>Masako at 6 St Christopher Place <BR>Cranks at 23 Barrett Street <BR>Pizza Expressat 21 Barrett Street <BR>Zoe at 3 Barrett Street <BR> <BR>As Damian says, this is an expensive area, and of all these I can afford only the Pattisserie Valerie, which I like well. I can also afford the Cafe Rouge and the Pizza Express, but they are not serious places to eat. :their food comes from factories and is micro-waved ready for you. <BR> <BR>The area is splendid for shops, both the great stores of Oxford Street and odd little shops on Marylebone High Street, including an interesting Oxfam book shop, and a tourism promotion office for Romania. <BR> <BR>I wouldn't choose Baker Street for getting to tourist attractions. Of course you can go anwhere fast by tube, or on top of a bus, but most attractions lie on a fairly straight line from South Kensington via Victoria and Trafalgar Square to the City and the Tower. Which is to say the District Line. So the best hotels for sightseeing lie around the Strand: Charing Cross Hotel, Royal Aldwych Hotel, Strand Palace Hotel, Savoy Hotel, and Waldorf Meridien Hotel. Most of these are expensive, but then so are the hotels on Baker Street.. <BR> <BR>Please write if I can help further. Welcome to London. <BR> <BR>Ben Haines <BR> <BR> <BR> <BR>
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