3. Zaika
8.8
1 Kensington High St, Kensington, Greater London
Indian Restaurant · 59 tips and reviews
Lester Kan: Good enough. Service a bit mechanic without soul or passion. Recommend the tasting menu with a very good variety. Food 8/10, service 6/10, ambience 7.5/10, value for money 6.5/10.
Kunal Shah: Ordered malai tikka, murg handi lazeez (butter chicken), kadai subzi and garlic naan. Everything was delicious and quite authentic. Malai tikka and butter chicken were the best.
Elliott Dexter: Just do yourself a favour and go. Best Indian in London.
7. The Bolingbroke
8.2
174 Northcote Rd, London, Greater London
Pub · Northcote · 11 tips and reviews
Marsh & Parsons: Try the pint of prawns, scampi, mustard and honey coated sausages from the bar snack menu. Also a great venue for a big group Sunday lunch.
Katie Fox: Have eaten here many times and never disappoints. Service is excellent. Would highly recommend.
Ralph Mallett: Excellent roast beef and Bloody Mary. Attentive, friendly service. Highly recommended
8. The Warrington
8.2
93 Warrington Cres, London, Greater London
Pub · Little Venice · 48 tips and reviews
Valentina Covey: Beer garden outside is great fun, always a good atmosphere
Peter Gregson: Service is literally terribly awfully slow but the food is actually worth the wait. Tricky.
Ricardo Sanchez: They've changed the menu recently and it's much better now, try the thai curry carpaccio, really tasty. Much better service upstairs on the restaurant.
10. British Museum
9.4
Great Russell St (btwn Montague & Bloomsbury St), London, Greater London
History Museum · Bloomsbury · 1013 tips and reviews
National Maritime Museum: The 16th-century mechanical galleon clock from the ‘History of the World in 100 Objects’ project once shuffled along imperial banquet tables playing music and firing cannons. Find your maritime story. Read more.
Jane: The London Review Bookshop on Bury Street near by does awesome tea and cake. I'd recommend the blueberry tea cake! Read more.
HISTORY UK: The British Museum began from the collection of naturalist Sir Hans Sloane which he left to the nation on his death in 1753. Now it houses 7 million objects including more than 100 Egyptian mummies.
11. Costa Coffee
6.6
51-52 High St (The Pavilions), Uxbridge, Greater London
Coffee Shop · 4 tips and reviews
Antash Agaya: The scones are okay, Costa over the years has lost the coziness and tingly feeling with its edibles. It's more mechanical and uniform. Loyalty however brings me back every time. For quick kicker only.
A L: Not the best of Costas around, but still better than some. Very few tables and crowded for the better part of the day. Go to the Nero if you can.
Bahtiar Mohamad: I love coffee latte
12. The Old Shades
7.8
37 Whitehall, City of Westminster, Greater London
Pub · 23 tips and reviews
Nallely Mejia: The Coronation Chicken sandwich is really tasty - kind of like coconut green curry and chicken, with crispy chips. Recommend it!
Natalie Morris: One of the lady bartenders was sooooo nice and amazing and this other guy who served us made us feel so awkward and bad for even being here! Kind of want to come back but kind of don't want to...
Steven: Nice atmosphere and a good escape from the crowded bars in other surrounding pubs. I've had a couple of dodgy pints though so choose carefully (or drink bottled).
13. Flat White
8.3
17 Berwick St (near Broadwick St), London, Greater London
Coffee Shop · Soho · 214 tips and reviews
Antash Agaya: Mechanical seating, smell of burning sugar and melting cheese. Flat white is however good.
Táňa: Great latte, cool place, nice people. I enjoyed french toast...
Jon Choo: One of the best coffee shop in Soho, but cash only! Also, pretty miserable.
Simon Willison: Check out Tippoo's Tiger - a life sized automaton of a tiger devouring a European, captured from Tipu Sultan by the East India Company. It has a concealed pipe organ and a groaning/roaring mechanism!
Kris Covo: The new refurbished rooms have modernized this classic museum, while their exhibitions are world class, spectacular, and must see events. And they have just brought back their beloved bookshop.
HISTORY UK: The V&A is the world’s largest museum of decorative art and design and holds 4.5 million objects. Henry Cole, the museum’s first director, printed the world’s first Christmas card in 1843.