Pale Ale
Rüya London

Rüya London

30 Upper Grosvenor Street, London I-W1K 7PH, United Kingdom

Vegan • Halal • Turkish • Vegetarian


"an unlikely date night until somewhere where I had only seen passing. first the good food was quite delicious! isli patlican 9/10 citir kalamar 7/10 (side dives not so good) shish tavuk 9/10 the tomatoes surface garnish to salty adana kebap 9/10 the burned tomato hot would better pide 1/10 would not again a soft fluffy broth, but was hard and chewing hot salt boiled hard the personal is in training and learns clearly what the service means in a Mayfair operation. at the arrival the front of the house could not find our booking and made this quite obvious) so asked us to take a place in the bar while she "founds us a table" in an almost empty restaurant. she forgot our name and asked if we were someone else. Finally she took us to our table, the head waiter pulled her at this point to not carry with a tablet our drinks once sat our first waitress was nice and fast sorted our order, but must pass her shift halfway through and handed over to someone else who came by during the lunch and asked if he could start, plates which I immediately told him not to do as we eat. after the order desert, our table was not cleared before they were new plates and cutlery during the meal, the staff all stood along the passes and watched us eat only waiting for something to do. this place has a lot of potential and I hope that I will return if the staff can be better up to scratch"

Ye Olde Mitre

Ye Olde Mitre

1 Ely Ct, EC1N 6SJ, Camden, United Kingdom

Pub • Beer • Drinks • British


"A search for the oldest public house in London turns up several venerable claimants. But the most authentic may be Ye Olde Mitre, near Chancery Lane tube stop in the Holborn district of central London. It boasts an age of nearly five centuries, established in 1547. That makes it hands down the oldest pub in London. Then again, a slight cavil might be raised that while something like a pub or a tavern probably has been in this spot since Henry VIII, it’s in dispute whether the current building could be that old. But it certainly looks like it might be, as the wee rooms, wood panels and walls of pictures offer exactly what every Anglophile would expect a true British pub to be. If a dictionary of illustrations could be produced, best entry for “cozy” would be this little place. It may also be among the most demure, tucked behind a street in London’s jewelry store district. It’s just off Hatton Garden, but look closely for the sign among the dazzles of diamonds. Likely nobody is going to stumble across Ye Olde Mitre by accident. A narrow passage, 1 Ely Court, brings you to a few outdoor tables. Inside, the pub rooms are not much bigger than an average living room. One is even called “Ye Closet.” More tables out back, and an upstairs, but for the most part visitors can really imagine themselves sitting back on a worn stool to drink a pint or two with Shakespeare’s spirit. Beers are by Fuller, a London stalwart, and included are some unusual brews on tap, such as “mild.” “Seldom found in London,” observed a bloke at the next table. “Usually found in the Midlands.” When you seem to be sitting in someone’s living room, you may feel like striking up a chat. Pub grub is modest, “toasties,” that is, toasted sandwiches and crisps. Service is low-key and the venue, set back from the street, quiet. It may not be London’s most lively pub, and certainly it is not the biggest, but it may be the oldest and certainly it is among the most charming."