Enjoy this list of recommended Modern European restaurants in London.
Have you eaten at a London restaurant or cafe you would like to recommend? Or have you been unfortunate enough to have had a bad experience in a London restaurant? Then tell us all about it! Here's how to submit your London restaurant review.
Andrew Edmunds is located in a townhouse in Soho. The dining rooms are quite small and the cosy, rustic tables are quite close but that adds the intimate atmosphere in this candle-lit restaurant. Great for a romantic evening.
Archipelago Restaurant at 110 Whitfield Street, London W1T 5ED offers global cuisine in a setting of golden buddhas, dwarf palm trees, and giant peacock feathers. The menu can include such rare delights as bugs, crickets, locusts, crocodile, kangaroo, wildebeest, and peacock.
Below Zero is the restaurant and lounge with the Absolute Ice Bar London in Piccadilly.
Boxwood Cafe is a Gordon Ramsey restaurant attached to The Berkeley hotel in Knightsbridge. Does it live up to the hype? Read my review.
Criterion Restaurant in London's Piccadilly has a sumptuous neo-Byzantine decor which never fails to impress. The Criterion first opened in 1874 and is still a popular romantic venue with Modern European cuisine.
Fika is a Swedish restaurant on Brick Lane in London's east end. The traditional Scandinavian menu is served in a wooden-themed interior for up to 35 diners.
Movies on the Menu is the chance to dine and visit the 30-seat screening room at One Aldwych, one of London's finest luxury boutique hotels.
Proprietor Patrick Gwynn-Jones has run Pomegranates since 1974 and I don't think he's decorated since then. Don't be put off as this adds to the charm of this basement restaurant.
Rhodes W1 Brasserie and Bar, located at the front of the Cumberland Hotel, is an informal place to meet for a drink or light meal. It's a large space with a funky feel but it's not 'neon-modern'. It's stylish with excellent service and serves Modern European cuisine with a British twist.
St Alban Restaurant on Regent Street in central London is Chris Corbin and Jeremy King's new restaurant, owners of The Wolseley, and former proprietors of The Ivy, Le Caprice and J. Sheekey.
The Wapping Project is a restaurant and arts center in a disused hydraulic power station.
The Wolseley is a grand restaurant on London's Piccadilly but is not inaccessible as you CAN get a table and you CAN afford to dine there.