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Your favorite London chain restaurant
Perhaps a weird question, but I'm going to London on Monday and would love to hear your favorite London/UK "chain" restaurants that I couldn't find in the US... ie. Wagamama, Basuba Eathai, Nandos, etc. Just curious what I should try and what's overrated! I like all kinds of food. I'm trying to keep the eating budget cheaper and I'm also traveling solo so won't be eating out at sit down restaurants by myself. So excited for my trip! Its my 2nd trip to London and then on to Paris for the 4th time.
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Not much a restaurant person but you may want to try Garfunkels, kind of an imitation of an American restaurant I believe:
http://www.garfunkels.co.uk/ https://www.pret.com/en-us/ - Check out Pret as it is called I believe - a big popular chain with quick if not fast food. But it is a sit-down restaurant. For take-outs try the ubiquitous Chinese restaurants like in China Town, in the heart of the West End. |
Pizza Express.
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McDonalds - no lie - cheap and for London at least good coffee and can sit there all day - maybe a ice cram sundae or a salad - for those on a budget.
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Grafunkels is awful.
Try Eat, Pret, Abokado, most burrito chains like Tortilla, Chilango, or Poncho 8. Vital Ingredients is good for salads. Leon has good choices. Pod has some nice hot and cold options. There are tonnes of great sandwich shops where locals eat lunch...just look for the queues. Sit down - Pizza Express, Wahaca, Byron burger. |
You can also sit at Costa, Cafe Nero, Starbucks all day...
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EAT. is a serve-yourself salad and sandwich place, with tables and chairs if you care to sit down and eat instead of take-away.
https://eat.co.uk Mori, which serves bento-box type, quasi Japanese food, including soups, and the location I was in (Marylebone) had open tables in a pleasant setting http://mori.uk.com The international Belgian chain of le Pain Quotidien, although their prices can be annoying. Still, if you want soup or an omelette or a pastry, they can be very tasty. http://www.lepainquotidien.co.uk You should probably head to the markets as well to do some grazing. |
Also, in a higher price range but still very favorably priced for London, is the chain of Turkish restaurants called Tas, serving very fresh and good food if you like Turkish
http://www.tasrestaurants.co.uk |
Pret-A-Manger - now Pret - and EAT are direct competitors. The various Pizza Express outlets are decent.
There are plenty of The Slug and Lettuce restos, saw them but didn't try them. Yo! Sushi if you need both a quick sushi fix and no need to even sit alone at a table - just grab it when it comes by on the conveyor belt at the sushi bar. |
Hi SANDERSKN,
I agree with SURFERGIRL and others - PIZZA EXPRESS is decent. Really liked their fresh salad with avocado and who knows what else. Reasonable price on wine by the glass and open later in the evening. Also agree with Pal, that MCDONALDS in London is better than over here. I often had a 'McFlurry" ice cream in mid day instead of lunch - just to keep up my strength. :) |
http://westcornwallpasty.co.uk/
West Cornwall Pasty has some coffee shops in London and food wagons last I knew scattered about. |
I live far from Boston so look for Wagamama. I love their Korean bbq ribs.
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Pre Theatre specials can save you a bundle, for Italian Carluccios is ok and for French Cafe Rouge or Cote brasserie are reasonable
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Second the rec for TAS.
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Pret is usually good and dependable. I also like Cote Brassserie. Cafe Rouge can be good but quality varies as to location. ZiZi can be good too again depends on which one. All of these except Pret are sit down restaurants though very casual. I've been eating solo at a variety of " sit down" restaurants for over thirty years. Try it. :)
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Sometimes it seems everything in London is a chain.
If you're looking for something on the healthier side I'd say Leon and Itsu, I agree with jamikins's recommendations and the key point which is (sorry PQ) avoid Garfunkeles. |
On our last trip to London we went to a chain called Angus Steakhouse. That cow must have done something horrible in a previous life, because we were being punished.
We did not know it was a chain and it was busy, but maybe they were mechanical people in the windows. The service was forgetful, the check was wrong, the sides were overpriced and besides that I am sure someone had a jolly time. |
>>On our last trip to London we went to a chain called Angus Steakhouse<<
OH -- Tell us you didn't!??! Bad BAD decision! It has been awful for decades and the decor hasn't changed. |
We like ASK Pizza, but it's much more than just pizza.
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Thanks everyone! I'm totally fine with sitting down alone in a casual place, just don't want to eat at a formal place by myself.
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ASK?
There was (is it still there?) a particularly revolting ASK on Kensington High Street that we dined at years ago, a restaurant so dreadful that Falstaff would have turn his nose up at it. Unfortunately, I was forced in by other, less discrimating, members of my group. Thankfully, all the gin I drank killed the Listeria colony living in the bruschetta that was eaten. Many think that quinine is what saved the British in India, but, actually it was the gin. Thin |
We never eat at chains and simply didn't know. We live in a neighborhood where the culture is not to eat at chains. (Although that is unfortunately changing. When the first Starbuck's opened near here about 10 years, you would have thought they opened a 1/2 house for perverts.) Attribute the horrible meal to ignorance. We rarely complain, but the manager asked how things went as we were leaving. He told us to return for a meal on the house, the following night. Fortunately we were headeding for York the following morning.
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Avoid Garfunkels and Angus steakhouse; can't imagine how these places still exist.
I like Wahaca for mexican food. Of the various sandwich places I prefer EAT. Their soups are great. |
Itsu or Leon if there weren't tens of thousands of real restaurants.
But why? Just choose any Vietnamese at random along Kingsland High St, or any stall in a street food complex. |
Best 'sit down' chain is probably Pizza Express in terms of both quality and consistency.
Best sandwich place - Pret a Manger by an absolute mile. Best coffee chain - Caffe Nero. There are also small stands at stations (ATP, APT or something?) and these are very good. Everything else mentioned (eg Cafe Rouge, Zizzi) is too hit and miss to be a safe recommendation. Garfunkles and Aberdeen Angus Steak Houses are laughably bad. Don't even consider them. I would not bother with chains for Indian or Thai or Vietnamese as you can eat cheaply and well at independant places that are not at all difficult to find. |
We always like Wagamama for their salad dressing and free tea. I have the salad dressing recipe if anyone wants it.
We also used to go to Prezzo frequently because they had surprisingly good rotisserie chicken. Alas, it's no longer on their menu. Now. I'd probably order their chicken, bacon and avocado salad. The Prezzos in Kensington and Mayfair seem to be the best of the bunch in London. If you get in the mood for a burger, Gourmet Burger Kitchen is pretty good and much better than the average fast-food burger joint. We were regulars at their branch in Winsor (very close to the castle and in the covered shopping/dining area next to Winsdor & Eaton train station). http://www.gbk.co.uk/locations If you want to splurge (a little) and have some Japanese, go to Kiku in Mayfair. Normally it's pretty expensive, but they have good set lunch menus for about 20-30 pounds. Includes starter, salad, rice, miso soup, pickles, main course, and dessert. Very popular with Japanese embassy employees. http://www.kikurestaurant.co.uk/eng/lunch.htm |
I'll put in another vote for Pizza Express. I like the one on Kings Road and I also frequent one in Marlborough.
I also like Bella Italia on Old Brompton Road. |
Wahaca is very good but the portions are very small. Cote Brasserie is also very good.
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Wahaca is meant to be street food where you order two to three of the small plates. They also have large plates like burritos that fill up all the guys I work with!
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Browns or Jamie Oliver's italien chains are both nice x
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Any American from the South West is likely to be disappointed by Wahaca.
My fave chain is Pizza Express - very good thin "Romana" pizza crusts. Difficult to find better pizza in Italy. Leon has delicious buttered toast if you are in need of breakfast on the go. |
>>Difficult to find better pizza in Italy.<<
If you like Roman pizza, with a thin crust, you are only going to find it in Italy in Rome. |
Why do we have an obsession with chains.
There's thousands of independent retailers in London who wipe the floor with some of the average dross on offer at most chains. I am still puzzled why anyone would pay the ridiculous amounts asked by Costa to sit in their council estate style interiors drinking dishwater served up as coffee. Whitbread built empires on serving dishwater beer like Boddingtons. They just rebranded the dishwater and called it Costa. Best coffee by far at a chain is Pret which isn't even a coffee shop. They use La Cimbali coffee machine to produce powerful espresso shots. The major part of getting decent coffee isn't the bean or roasting, it's the method of coffee production. And yes, Pizza Express Romana pizzas are far superior to any of those I've had in Rome. Believe or not McDs actually produce pretty decent, very cheap Americano coffees. |
I first ate at Wagamama in Oxford, with no idea it was a chain, and have gone back every trip. Of course, now I see them other places in the UK and if I'm looking for a place to eat and see one, I go there. I remember one in an airport, too, although no recollection which airport.
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The problem with chains is the food is older than people who make it.
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Another vote for Pret, also for Nandos. Forget Busabi Thai - they expect you to eat Thai food with chopsticks. If you insist on chains Marsala Zone isn't bad.
But there is no reason not to eat in more upscale places on your own. I used to take a book, now I listen to books on tape on my phone, which lets me people watch at the same time. |
sanderskn,
Adding an overall general warning against taking food recommendations from Brits. |
Another vote for no Grafunkels. It's worse than awful unless you want a horse burger.
Gourmet Burger Kitchen was very good and we were happy with our meals. |
Very suspect. I have never had a good burger in the UK. They are always "enhanced" to their detriment.
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I've generally found Cafe Rouge to be quite reliable. I once found myself with a friend in a Marsala Zone, and I was actually pleasantly surprised.
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