With a 300-strong collection, Cottons boasts the widest rum selection in the UK. They also serve delicious traditional Caribbean fare, including jerk chicken, Bajan fish fritters and chickpea curry. Read more.
Go for triple-cooked fries and baked aubergine as sides, and sip on a potent jam-jar cocktail. It’s only got a couple of days left to run, so make haste. Read more.
If you like your game cooked by the absolute experts, this is the place to go. Don’t be surprised when the woodcock — if on the menu — arrives on its own on a plate. It tastes sublime. Read more.
Smart without being stuffy, this Indian restaurant serves a mind-boggling range of veggie food, with a separate vegan menu. Great for dieters, as 98% of their dishes don't contain butter or cream. Read more.
Imaginatively topped - think veal meatballs with prosciutto and cream or spicy sausage, mozzarella and tenderstem broccoli. We loved the Soppressata. Read more.
The shakes: With all sorts of flavours from the Bacardi Gold rum-and-raisin to a Tiki, a Jack Daniel’s mint and a julep shake, these have got that bit of extra oomph. Go early and tuck in. Read more.
The shakes: Bramble Cream, Chocolate Roses and Liquid Toblerone. In the Bramble Cream they use Beefeater gin, lemon juice, vanilla ice cream, milk and Crème de Mure. Read more.
Big. Cheap. Tasty. This is the best way to describe Mother Flipper’s offerings. Their burgers (just three on the menu) have a delicious marbled look from all that yummy fat content. Read more.
The eponymous ‘Honest Burger’ is a brilliant classic - premium beef, smoked bacon, pickled cucumber and red onion relish. Also worth a mention are their rosemary salted chips. Read more.
Enjoy open-air dining on the terrace whilst tucking into a contemporary French menu, and observe the impressive views of St Paul’s Cathedral, the Gherkin and the Bank of England. Read more.
Whilst the Michelin-starred menu has in the past had lacklustre reviews, the feeling of omnipotence from such a height makes the trip well worth it. Set menus range from £39 to £95. Read more.
A venerable and chic fish restaurant, J Sheekey has a strict sustainability policy. On the menu at Sheekey's, the "fried fillet of haddock" comes with chips and mushy peas and weighs in at £17.50. Read more.
Bruno Loubet cooks real French food and his slow-cooked dishes are particularly fine. Try the lamb shank slow-cooked in olive oil and served with sweet lemon purée. Read more.
This thriving Chinese restaurant excels at what are known as "clay pot" dishes — slow cooked casseroles to the rest of us. Great gravy, great flavours. Read more.
Jeremy Lee's cooking gets better and better — the Blueprint is a great place for big flavours and lengthy cooking. Read more.
Mark Hix has played a leading role in the use of foraged ingredients. Here you may find chickweed, sea beets, rowan jelly — and, yes, sea buckthorn. Read more.
Fillet of cod comes with Wiltshire truffles and sea veg. Sea buckthorn may also be on the dessert menu. Read more.
You need both a strong disposition and a mighty wallet to eat the excellent sushi at this fabled and old-established Japanese restaurant. Great knife skills on show and formal service. Read more.
Part of a trio (the other branches are on Brewer Street, W1 and Thurloe Place, SW7), this is a pleasant and unpretentious conveyor-belt sushi house. Good fish gently priced. Friendly atmosphere. Read more.
A clubby sort of place and none the worse for that. Almond cake, chocolate and coffee cake, pineapple upside-down cake, or banana and pecan cake (all at £3.75). Read more.
There are plenty of small plates here, priced £1.95 to £4.95 - look out for brown bread crostini topped with lardo and chestnut honey or the deep-fried baby artichokes. Read more.
The menu here lists 15 or so cicchetti (£3 to £8), including breaded baby mozzarella and artichoke crostini with Parmesan, roast quail with pancetta and baby cuttlefish and polenta. Read more.
By replacing sugar with fruit in their 'Skinnies' they've struck upon a winning formula. The Rhubarb and Rose with only 98 calories is our favourite. Read more.
The word “exclusive” really does take on a whole new meaning with this one. Regular punters can however book a table in the early evening – just book at least a day in advance and arrive before 9pm. Read more.