Where To Eat In London: November 2025

In London, it’s no secret the hype cycles are now faster than the seasons. A restaurant can go viral before the door. New openings can feel like limited edition vinyl drops. A residency can come and go before your group chat can find a date. If you blink for a month, you return and there may well be a Pret in your wanton restaurant’s place.

Not that it’s all bad. We are living through a golden age of restaurant micro-moments, where the places that really speak to your tastes, and therefore genuinely deserve your money, your time, and your paid babysitter, can now turn hype into staying power.

This month’s edit reflects that. These are the places that aren’t just serving food for food’s sake, but all giving us something a little bit more. We have cavernous new openings designed for slow evenings. Dining experiences that feel more aligned with punk art than any form of Michelin star. A fast-casual chain that is–shockingly!–out-cooking half the carb-heavy Soho scene. And that’s just the start.

Where to Eat in London This Month

Highbury & Islington is not a place I go to feel surprised. It’s commuter busy, it’s got some good little spots—sometimes great—but we’ve been fed variations on the same neighbourhood-dining trope for years. Making newly-opened Oui Madame the bolt of voltage the postcode needs.

What Martin Lange and chef Jacob Buckley have created here is the sort of intimacy Londoners are starved of. It’s built to be somewhere you take someone you actually want to spend time with. It’s European in the grammar of the plates, London in the pitch of the room.

Buckley’s French-ish cooking is serious and studied, but delightfully un-serious. The kind of flavour-first cooking that makes you reappreciate the value of a dish assembled with intention. The beef tartare deserves early cult status – the gochujang and nashi pear interplay is intelligent and thrilling– and the green potato gnocchi with corn espuma–elegant, playful, the sort of thing you hope they never take off the menu.

But what really sealed this list placement for me was downstairs. The cave. Dim, stone-walled, thick with scent intoxications from the kitchen. The exact birthday-room-energy I like: private-enough, but not cut off from life.

Address: 290 St Paul’s Rd, London N1 2LH

Punk Royale is not a restaurant you discover by accident. You hear whispers. You see someone in Stories doing a bump of caviar off a spoon and wonder where on earth they are. You hear someone mutter “why do I feel like I’ve just left a wedding” as they wander, half-drunk, into the streets of Soho and–suddenly–you’re googling table availability.

This is the sort of place that reminds you London still has mischief in her bones. Each evening unfolds like a piece of performance art that happens to be dinner. Servers spoon-feed you bites. Diners lose their inhibitions in real time. Strangers become conspirators over the course of fifteen, twenty, thirty plates (it’s truly hard to keep track).

Some dishes are extraordinary. Some are nuts. But the point is not perfection. The point is tasting menu provocation. Shock. Excess. A sense of occasion that doesn’t rely on white tablecloths, but on the shared willingness to go somewhere strange and silly together.

As I alluded to in my newsletter, my expectations were compromised, but the reality was a truly phenomenal.

Address: 6 Sackville St, London W1S 3DD

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/lelalondon/2025/11/06/where-to-eat-in-london-november-2025/