London Street Food?
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Apr 2011
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London Street Food?
I love gourmet street food; the really good stuff. Many cities in the US have meeting places for vendors and that creates a culinary gathering place of very unique and excellent tastes. What can I expect and should I look for in London?
#7
Joined: Apr 2003
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"Eating in the street is not quite polite."
Well, that (or at least that anyone cares if it isn't) would be news to hundreds of thousands of Londoners.
Any glance at a London crowd will reveal lots of them eating. But it's almost always something - sweet or savoury -bought from a shop. Street food was Health & Safetyed out of existence in the late ninteenth century, when practically every account of London life included an enormous range of seafood and pie sellers.
Apart from Tubby Isaac's seafood stall near Aldgate East tube, you've now only got very, very dodgy hotdog stalls in the centre. But, whatever tarquin thinks, it's perfectly acceptable (indeed at my station around 6 pm, almost mandatory) to grab hot food from a takeaway and eat it on the run: there's a growing number of noodle shops catering for this, and any number of Cornish pasty kiosks, sandwich bars every three inches, sushi-style takeaways every three yards and nice savoury nibbles in most South Asian sweet shops (Drummond St, near Euston station's good for them). Even the bposherst fish & chip places sell a significant proportion of their stock to people eating while walking.
Camden Lock market at weekends actually offers sort of what you're asking for, with lots of unusual (for us) ethnic stalls. Mostly exceptionally mediocre, IMHO, and not remotely upto SE Asian standards.
Well, that (or at least that anyone cares if it isn't) would be news to hundreds of thousands of Londoners.
Any glance at a London crowd will reveal lots of them eating. But it's almost always something - sweet or savoury -bought from a shop. Street food was Health & Safetyed out of existence in the late ninteenth century, when practically every account of London life included an enormous range of seafood and pie sellers.
Apart from Tubby Isaac's seafood stall near Aldgate East tube, you've now only got very, very dodgy hotdog stalls in the centre. But, whatever tarquin thinks, it's perfectly acceptable (indeed at my station around 6 pm, almost mandatory) to grab hot food from a takeaway and eat it on the run: there's a growing number of noodle shops catering for this, and any number of Cornish pasty kiosks, sandwich bars every three inches, sushi-style takeaways every three yards and nice savoury nibbles in most South Asian sweet shops (Drummond St, near Euston station's good for them). Even the bposherst fish & chip places sell a significant proportion of their stock to people eating while walking.
Camden Lock market at weekends actually offers sort of what you're asking for, with lots of unusual (for us) ethnic stalls. Mostly exceptionally mediocre, IMHO, and not remotely upto SE Asian standards.
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#9
Joined: Mar 2003
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Other than Borough market , I don't think of London and street food in te same sentence, If you go to Borough Market try the hand dived scallops from the vendor on one of the outer aisles. Excellent , we get them every time. ALso like the venison and lamb burgers sold in various stalls
#11
Joined: May 2005
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I refer people to Cut-me-own-throat Dibbler & his sausage inna bun to give an idea what UK street food is like
http://wiki.lspace.org/wiki/Cut-Me-Own-Throat_Dibbler
http://wiki.lspace.org/wiki/Cut-Me-Own-Throat_Dibbler
#14
Original Poster
Joined: Apr 2011
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Kappacasein grilled cheese: Please come and see us at the reopening of the stall in Bermondsey on Saturday 14th of May 2011 from 9am to 2pm, at what will also be our new cheese making premises:
1Voyager Business Estate (at the junction of Frean Street and Ness Street)
London SE16 4RP
1Voyager Business Estate (at the junction of Frean Street and Ness Street)
London SE16 4RP
#16
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 6,144
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Stick with Borough Market . For god's sake don't go near any of those minging pizza slice stalls you see in the West End. Probably avoid the chestnuts too.
I vaguely recall some kind of group bollocking in a school assembly because pupils had been seen 'eating in school uniform' on the street . And a few years ago they did have posters on the tube asking you not to eat in front of other passengers ( 'the smell of a snack makes some people crack!). But the number of people clutching Pret bags and MacDonalds suggests that sentiment is very much on the way out....
I vaguely recall some kind of group bollocking in a school assembly because pupils had been seen 'eating in school uniform' on the street . And a few years ago they did have posters on the tube asking you not to eat in front of other passengers ( 'the smell of a snack makes some people crack!). But the number of people clutching Pret bags and MacDonalds suggests that sentiment is very much on the way out....
#17

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 4,651
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I disagree on the chestnuts (winter only). Those warm chestnuts on cold winter days as I'd walk from work to the tube -- let's just say I lived for those!
Not necessarily "street food" but definitely food you can eat on thre street (or in their small restaurant) are the cornish pasties at the West Cornwall Pasty shop in Covent Garden. Delicious, fresh! Nothing more fun (or tasty!) than grabbing one of those, and walking around Covent Garden snacking and watching the side shows.
Not necessarily "street food" but definitely food you can eat on thre street (or in their small restaurant) are the cornish pasties at the West Cornwall Pasty shop in Covent Garden. Delicious, fresh! Nothing more fun (or tasty!) than grabbing one of those, and walking around Covent Garden snacking and watching the side shows.
#18
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 57,886
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I have been to LOndon at least 5 times and I must admit I don't have any recollection of street food. And coming from NYC - where we have many hundreds of street vendors it was kind of a surprise. (We have multiple breakfast places, hot dog carts, stand with food in a host of different ethnicities as well as all the ice/ice cream stands and fresh juice bars.
In Vienna there are innumerable stands selling a variety of wursts, as well as some with pretzels. In Belgium there are frites stands everywhere and in Scandinavia I've seen a bunch of herring stands. But London - nothing.
In Vienna there are innumerable stands selling a variety of wursts, as well as some with pretzels. In Belgium there are frites stands everywhere and in Scandinavia I've seen a bunch of herring stands. But London - nothing.
#20

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 21,269
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>>But London - nothing.<<
A combination of the last remaining traces of social convention with fairly strict enforcement of traffic regulation controls on street trading generally and health-and-safety controls on food preparation. Basically, only at regular pitches at markets* or other fixed locations like stations, or fly-by-night appearances at events drawing large crowds, like football matches, where the police will be busy doing other things (so the classic dodgy kebab or mystery sausages).
*One not mentioned so far would be Broadway Market in Hackney on a Saturday afternoon, but it's a bit out of the way for most visitors.
A combination of the last remaining traces of social convention with fairly strict enforcement of traffic regulation controls on street trading generally and health-and-safety controls on food preparation. Basically, only at regular pitches at markets* or other fixed locations like stations, or fly-by-night appearances at events drawing large crowds, like football matches, where the police will be busy doing other things (so the classic dodgy kebab or mystery sausages).
*One not mentioned so far would be Broadway Market in Hackney on a Saturday afternoon, but it's a bit out of the way for most visitors.

