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A Foodie’s Guide to Clerkenwell

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Follow our gastronomic guide around London’s fashionable Clerkenwell

Words Helen Brown

Clerkenwell is well known as an area of culinary innovation. From cutting-edge restaurants, refurbished warehouses, markets, bars and tattoo parlours it embodies the gentrification of any East London district. But with its cobbled streets and ivy-clad Georgian townhouses it strikes a more sophisticated note. It’s like the grown up version of Shoreditch.

Exmouth Market

Begin your journey on the bustling drag of Exmouth Market. It’s a weekly street market on Fridays and Saturdays that focuses on superior local community shopping. Primarily on offer is a wide variety of mouth watering produce – from local and specialist farmers and producers, to small region continental delicacies. In addition to this, there are a small number of art and craft stalls, perfect for picking up one off trinkets and gifts. Morito is a tiny little spot in Exmouth Market that serves rustic Spanish fare.  The menu features tapas favourites like Padrón peppers, jamón Ibérico and patatas bravas. The specials board changes on the regular and sampling is a must. Think pork belly with mojo verde or deep-fried rabbit shoulder flavoured with rose harissa. The all-Iberian wine list is a crowd pleaser and offers some superb sherries.

Other hot spots at Exmouth Market are Caravan, Moro and Berber & Q

Luca

Following on, Luca is the second restaurant from the team behind The Clove Club and offers exquisite Britalian food to Clerkenwell by-goers. Head chef Robert Chambers joins from a slew of Michelin-starred restaurants, including The Ledbury. Luca’s menu has been developed to include dishes like spaghettini with Morecambe Bay shrimps and mace butter, and tortelloni served in a pheasant broth. The wine list ranges from big names to the best wines you’ve never tried.

Decor takes inspiration from 1950s Italy – sage, marble and brass feature in abundance. The main dining area seats an intimate 60, overlooking a semi-open kitchen and a private courtyard and a pasta-making room. The Garden Room is a second dining room which becomes roofless in the summer. Finally, the bar is a separate space that’s open all day long. It offers sharing plates, from breakfast to dinner, as well as an impressive cocktails. Accompanying digestifs like Amaro and home-made Limoncello and Nocino liqueurs are additionally available and just as divine.

Clerkenwell Grind

Clerkenwell Grind sees the coffee empire return to the area where it all started. This is the brand’s flagship restaurant and ‘club bar’ and is not too far from the original Shoreditch Grind café and bar. Clerkenwell serves a mean weekend brunch menu, including truffle hash topped with a poached duck egg or French toast-style banana bread. The weekday breakfast menu serves the likes of beetroot-cured salmon and kimchee. For lunch and dinner a charcoal oven cooks the likes of miso-glazed lamb ribs with red snapper.

This branch is spread over two floors, with a dining room and separate cocktail bar.  The basement is where you need to head for Grind’s renowned Espresso Martinis.

Bourne & Hollingsworth Buildings

This all-day bar and brasserie has a delightfully calming atmosphere. Immerse yourself in the tranquility of the greenhouses’ botanical gardens of the backbuilding whilst enjoying a menu that is quintessentially British. Dishes range from a simple pan-fried seabass to a braised ox cheek served with seared bavette.

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