Top Dining and Drinking Spots in East London 2025

Breakfast

Londoners have clamored for tables at Dishoom (Tube: Shoreditch High St) since 2010, and demand remains strong. (It’s walk-in, but at weekend brunch, you absolutely need a reservation.) The Iranian cafe serves a delicious morning spread called The Big Bombay, a colorful plate of their famous akuri (spicy scrambled egg), streaky bacon, sausages, masala beans, mushrooms, and homemade buns. Even if you have it at 8 am on a weekday, you’ll still be full way after lunch.

For a bun on the run, I recommend The Beigel Shop (Tube: Shoreditch High St). Every Eastie and their mom has been here. Since 1855, they’ve been using the same recipes and boiling techniques to make their chewy Jewish beigels ever since. It’s open 24/7, and the plain option is just 50p. I like mine stuffed with hot salt beef and drizzled with English mustard.

Coffee

The Royal Victoria Docks is my hideaway from city noise. I can park for hours in The Living Room of the floating Good Hotel (Tube: Custom House) with a coffee, lemon tart, and soak in views of the O2 Arena and cable cars. In the summer, you can take your cup to the roof terrace.

Because I have no space at home for a pet, going to CuppaPug (Tube: Haggerston) is a real treat. You have to pay a £15 entrance fee, so it’s more something I’d do to perk somebody up rather than come on the regular. Snuggle up to the owners’ resident pugs, who absolutely lap up the attention; you can also bring your own pugs to play in the pink ball pit. The bar serves smoothies, coffees, and cupcakes, all iced with pug faces. Cuteness overload.

Lunch

Seventy-four restaurants in London have Michelin stars; my favorite is La Dame De Pic London (Tube: Tower Hill). The work of Chef Anne-Sophie Pic inspires me; she’s battled the odds to secure 10 stars to her name, two of which are right here in Trinity Square. (This is major since only 6% of the top awarded chefs worldwide are female.) The cost of a double helping of girl-power stars? Not as much as you’d think. Come at lunchtime (Fridays and Saturdays) and you can partake in a four-course tasting menu for £100. Her innovative French swirls come in the form of lavender-scented Onion Plurielle Tartelette and Limousin Veal Sweetbread with Chamomile (which seriously works). I always choose the White Millefeuille to finish because it’s like drifting on a sweet cloud.

If you’re thinking of a casual Sunday roast out East, get to Mama Shelter (Tube: Bethnal Green) before 4:30 pm. I often wander in after shopping at Columbia Road Flower Market. Their Beef Wellington with port wine and thyme garlic jus (£23.95) comes with tons of gravy and a separate pan of seasonal vegetables. Have it in the garden atrium for a covered alfresco time.

Aperitivo

East London is a fun place to let your hair down, and my friends and I love a game with our liquor. Electric Shuffle (Tube: Canary Wharf), a shuffleboard bar, and sister property Flight Club (Tube: Old Street), a darts club, are the best places to down prosecco and play the afternoon away. On weekdays between 3 pm and 7 pm, it’s only £25 a bottle. Both establishments keep track of your scores electronically and even run hilarious playbacks of your game on the big screen. It’s a great ice-breaker in the company of new friends. And if you like 2000s Usher or Kylie, as I do, dancing’s hard to resist.

Dinner

There’s no going wrong with any Vietnamese restaurant on Kingsland Rd (Tube: Hoxton); all are authentic and family-run for generations. If I had to choose a number one, it’d be Tay Do, which is more about the food than the ambiance. You’ll dine among Vietnamese families on cheap beef pho (£11) and summer rolls (£6.50). If you’re feeling adventurous, try the braised Mekong catfish in caramel, served in a clay pot (£11). Reservations are not required, and in line with its neighbors, it’s a BYOB spot.

If you’re looking for something unique, I love Supper Club (Tube: Blackhorse Rd) in a quiet residential part of Walthamstow. A fixed price of £67 nets a seasonal six-course Latin American-inspired menu, on which Colombian native chef Beatriz Maldonado Carreño takes you on a ride (ho ho!) from Mexico to Patagonia aboard a vintage 1967 Victoria Line tube carriage. Drinks are charged separately; you can choose from private tables or communal seating (great for making friends). Advance booking is essential.

Bars

Dalston Superstore (Tube: Dalston Kingsland) is a party every night of the week. The all-inclusive queer bar always has top local DJs on hand to spin the groovy pop, disco, and electro beats, with the odd drag queen sprinkled in for good measure. There’s no dress code, but be sure to wear your dancing shoes.

If you’re in search of toasting with both bubbles and views, how about The Rooftop at One Hundred Shoreditch (Tube: Shoreditch High St)? This sleek space takes inspiration from Palm Springs and feels like a holiday, no matter how dreary the English weather is. I like that drinks are reasonably priced (£8 for a glass of prosecco, £14 for a cocktail), and there’s no need to reserve to enjoy all of East’s panoramic sights.

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