Hardens Guide to the Best Restaurants in London Marylebone
Hardens guides have spent 32 years compiling reviews of the best Marylebone restaurants. On Hardens.com you'll find details and reviews of 118 restaurants in Marylebone and our unique survey based approach to rating and reviewing Marylebone restaurants gives you the best insight into the top restaurants in every area and of every type of cuisine.
Featured Marylebone Restaurants
1. Colony Grill Room, Beaumont Hotel
American restaurant in Mayfair
The Beaumont, 8 Balderton Street, Brown Hart Gardens - W1K
Within a luxurious Art Deco hotel near Selfridges, this swish venue (majorly refurbished in 2021) has the “proper spacing”, “low level of noise” and “expert management” that’s ideal for a business meal (“particularly if you book a booth”). The menu aims to recreate that of ‘a New York-style grill room with a timeless selection of transatlantic favourites, salads, crustacea and steaks’, and by and large it succeeds. Top Tip – “afternoon tea like you’re in a Wodehouse novel”.
2. Lazeez Lebanese Tapas
Lebanese restaurant in Westminster
29 Duke Street - W1U
Here at Lazeez Tapas we bring a sharing culture akin to that in Lebanon, serving up contemporary Lebanese cuisine with a Mediterranean twist in a great central London location right next to Selfridges department store in Oxford Street.We use the freshest of ingredients ...
3. Cavita
Mexican restaurant in Marylebone
55 Wigmore Street - W1U
Originally slated for late 2019 (and following a pop-up at the Dorchester’s glam rooftop), Adriana Cavita’s May 2022 debut was worth waiting for by all accounts, although it arrived too late for our annual diners’ poll. Occupying two dining spaces (one with views of the open kitchen), it is decked out in earthy tones and with a mass of hanging plants; while the menu incorporates a ‘raw’ seafood selection and street-food dishes, but with larger sharing plates as the main event. According to an early review by The Evening Standard’s Jimi Famurewa it’s “a scintillating, fully-formed reminder of exactly how it should be done” delivering a “knockout combination of abuela-level domestic generosity and top-tier chef’s technique” that’s “absolutely stormingly good”.
4. 108 Brasserie
British, Modern restaurant in Marylebone
108 Marylebone Lane - W1
This pavement brasserie, complete with outside seating in warmer months, is part of a well-situated hotel at the top of Marylebone Lane, near the High Street. The food is sometimes “variable”, but can be “very good”.
5. Clarette
French restaurant in Marylebone
44 Blandford St - W1U
Converted from a Tudorbethan pub in Marylebone (complete with black and white exterior and leaded-glass windows), this three-floor wine bar and restaurant is part-owned by a scion of the French dynasty behind Château Margaux, explaining the extensive list of vintages from the estate on the French-centric list, many available by the glass. The better-than-incidental French/Italian cooking is also well-rated.
6. Les 110 de Taillevent
French restaurant in Marylebone
16 Cavendish Square - W1
Named for its “phenomenal wine list” – featuring 110 wines available by the glass using the Coravin wine storage system – this London outpost of a famous Parisian group offers a professional all-round formula, which also incorporates high-quality, modern French cuisine and “excellent service” (with particularly “superb sommelier knowledge”); all served in the “well-lit and welcoming” setting of a stylish dining room, looking onto Cavendish Square. On the downside, it can seem expensive; and “on a quiet night, atmosphere is lacking”.
7. Caffè Caldesi
Italian restaurant in Marylebone
118 Marylebone Ln - W1
“Wonderful pasta prepared on site” is the highlight at Tuscany-born chef Giancarlo Caldesi and wife Katie’s long-running Marylebone headquarters (they also have a country venue in Bray and a cookery school). Fans reckon it’s “always a treat to dine here – it’s traditional Italian with attentive and authentic service”.
8. Le Relais de Venise L’Entrecôte
Steaks & grills restaurant in Marylebone
120 Marylebone Ln - W1
“Formulaic… but it works a treat”. These “jolly” French steakhouses thrive on their “excellent and simple” format. “There’s just one choice on the menu, but it’s brilliant”: salad to start; then steak (“tender and delicious”) with “their magic secret sauce” (“the start of addiction”), plus “piles of hot fries”. (To follow there’s “a wide selection of desserts.”) “No wonder there’s always a queue, but it’s worth it, even though the inside is really crammed and can be chaos.” With the closure of the Soho branch, the remaining outposts are in Marylebone and the City. Top Tip – “ideal for a business lunch”.
9. Golden Hind
Fish & chips restaurant in Marylebone
73 Marylebone Ln - W1
“Great fish ’n’ chips” is to be found at this Maylebone veteran – one of London’s oldest chippies, given that it first opened in 1914. Your order can be steamed with olive oil and oregano and accompanied with mozzarella fritters and asparagus for those who want a change from the standard deep-fried option, and there’s a mouth-watering selection of old-school English puds including spotted dick, rhubarb crumble and treacle syrup sponge, all served with custard or ice cream.
10. The Ivy Café
British, Modern restaurant in Marylebone
96 Marylebone Ln - W1
“You know what you are getting” according to fans of this sub-brand, spin-off chain, whose ‘café’ branches are a cut below those trading as a ‘brasserie’. They laud its “acceptable” cooking and say, “it’s great to see how well the Ivy’s formula has been rolled out with very atmospheric décor”. Even fans of the “really nice buzz” inspired by these “costly surroundings” can find the food “pretty average” though. And harsher critics (of which there are many) say “what is the point of this expensive and dreadful group? They just demean memories of the original Ivy”. Top Tip – “really reasonable for breakfast with decent portions in a pleasant atmosphere” (and you can book in advance for it, too).
11. Taka Marylebone
Japanese restaurant in Marylebone
109 Marylebone High Street - W1U
Views diverged this year on this modern Marylebone Japanese – an exponent of ‘Shun’ (meaning ‘food should only be eaten when it is at its best and at the height of its season’). Fans say it’s a “lovely” place offering “novel and delicious” flavours from its wide-ranging, funky menu (‘rock and rolls’, ‘plant-based power’, ‘raw to the core’, ‘robata’…) – sceptics say that it’s “overpriced, with miniscule portions”.
12. Ottolenghi
Mediterranean restaurant in Marylebone
63 Marylebone Lane - W1U
Still “a gold standard”, with their “lovely, beautifully displayed food” – this small group of deli-cafés has expanded slowly since the first one opened in Notting Hill 21 years ago; the latest arrived in Pavilion Road, Chelsea, in January 2022. Hugely influential Israeli-born chef and writer Yotam Ottolenghi has transformed the way much of the world sees Middle Eastern cuisine – and vegetables. “I’m not a vegetarian, but I love eating the veg dishes here and I find I don’t need to order any meat”. (See also the chef’s two grander restaurants, Nopi and Rovi).
13. Tommi's Burger Joint
Burgers, etc restaurant in Marylebone
30 Thayer St - W1
The “Scandi bro-burger” consistently “hits the spot” at this Marylebone and Soho duo from Icelander Tómas Tómasson, who has 41 years in the burger business and a mini empire that stretches from his native Reykjavik to Copenhagen, Berlin, London and Oxford. Fun fact: Tómasson became the oldest first-time member of the Althing (Iceland’s parliament) in its 1,000-year history when he won election at the age of 72 last year.
14. Daylesford Organic
Sandwiches, cakes, etc restaurant in Marylebone
6-8 Blandford Street - W1
The food at the quartet of London cafés supplied by Lady Bamford’s organic farm in the Cotswolds suffered a mauling from some reporters this year. The Daylesford brand does have some “huge fans”, who praise its venues as “very pleasant for a good-quality snack”. But critics – citing “long waits”, “clueless staff” and “poor-quality, ropey ingredients” – feel they “may be a place to be seen but are overpriced and uninteresting”.
15. Blandford Comptoir
Mediterranean restaurant in Marylebone
1 Blandford Street - W1
A visit to this “very focused” Marylebone wine bar from sommelier Xavier Rousset is “an exciting experience for wine lovers” – “the breadth and array of Rhône vintages allow for an exploration that’s not possible anywhere else”. The “small plates” of bistro food tick the boxes, but can seem “rather mundane” by comparison.
16. La Fromagerie Café
International restaurant in Marylebone
2-6 Moxon St - W1
“Lots of lovely cheese” is on the menu at this specialist trio in Bloomsbury, Marylebone and Highbury, complemented by a “truly interesting and well-curated wine list”. The “delicious fondue and raclette go down well on a winter’s day”.
17. Fishworks Marylebone
Fish & seafood restaurant in Marylebone
89 Marylebone High St - W1
“Lovely fresh fish”, “cooked simply” and “at prices which should shame its neighbours”, is the attractive offer from this trio of straightforward seafood brasseries in some of the pricier parts of town – Covent Garden, Marylebone and Swallow Street, just of Piccadilly. Top Tip – “there’s a fishmonger’s attached”, so you can take some “high-quality fish” home with you.
18. Trishna
Indian restaurant in Marylebone
15-17 Blandford St - W1
“Absolutely flawless…”, “exceptional and memorable…”, “consistently superb” – the superlatives just keep coming for JKS Restaurants’ original venture, which scores just as highly as its sibling, Gymkhana, even if the latter is much better known nowadays. It’s a cosy and “upscale” experience, set in quirky U-shaped premises, off Marylebone High Street, and enlivened by “discreet and friendly” staff. Top Menu Tips – “don’t leave without trying the lamb chops”; “mushroom biryani is a standout”; and “crazy as it may sound for a mere piece of bread, the duck keema naan is a real highlight.”
19. Pachamama
Peruvian restaurant in Marylebone
18 Thayer Street - W1
These “groovy Peruvian late-night bar/restaurants” make “a stylish and fun way to end a night out, with a multiplicity of delicious small dishes on the tasting menu”. Best to go in a party mood: they can be “too noisy for conversation”.
20. CoCoRo
Japanese restaurant in
31 Marylebone Lane - W1
“Don’t let the décor fool you: the traditional sushi and other dishes here are really good and good value!”, according to fans of this “cheap ’n’ cheerful” small chain, whose most commented on outlets are the “really-Japanese-in-feel” Marylebone original and more deli-style Highgate spin-off (Bloomsbury and Bayswater inspire little feedback).
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