An evergreen haunt of Soho barflies, the French House should have 'La Marseillaise' playing as you walk in. Leggi tutto.
Jump off the Overground line at Rotherhithe for a pint and some food at one of London’s best pubs. It takes its name from the ship that took the Pilgrim Fathers to New England in 1620. Leggi tutto.
A super little neighbourhood pub in Bloomsbury with an inspired beer selection, cheese and meat boards, and thoughtful design touches. There’s live music, comedy and a regular quiz. Leggi tutto.
Bradley’s may call itself a bar, but it’s indisputably one of the West End’s few great pubs, and home to London’s most appealing jukebox, a vinyl-driven, genre-spanning monster. Leggi tutto.
"Despite the exotic name, this Mile End stalwart is a "proper East End boozer". It has stood in proud isolation ever since its neighbours were demolished by enemy action in the blitz..." Leggi tutto.
"An oasis of calm and good cheer amid the noise and chaos of Covent Garden and Trafalgar Square. Real ales, often from local breweries such as Meantime and Ascot Ales, are the draw..." Leggi tutto.
This pub isn’t big but it is still possible to get lost in its two rooms. That might be down to the oddly green colour scheme or the cracking beer from St Peter’s Brewery in Suffolk. Leggi tutto.
"Various good quality sandwiches (home-cured honey roast ham; deep-fried cod cheek with lettuce and salad cream), and bar snacks of the ploughman's, potted crab, and pork pie variety...." Leggi tutto.
This princess is actually the queen of Yorkshire brewer Samuel Smith’s collection of central London pubs. Leggi tutto.
This Fleet Street landmark was rebuilt back in 1667 ('in the reign of King Charles II'), and its seventeenth-century history is in large part responsible for its twenty-first-century appeal. Leggi tutto.