London Restaurant Festival 2010 held its media launch last night at The Club at The Ivy.
Please contact Chloe Couchman if you wish to use official photos from the LRF 2010 launch party.
London Restaurant Festival 2010 held its media launch last night at The Club at The Ivy.
Please contact Chloe Couchman if you wish to use official photos from the LRF 2010 launch party.
Our passionate commitment to encourage as many restaurants as possible to participate in the London Restaurant Festival in 2010 is now well underway.
We want hundreds of restaurants across the capital to be running their own Festival Menus this year. Ingenious, affordable and nourishing menus that excite regulars and entice new customers.
A founding principle of London Restaurant Festival is supporting the restaurant industry in London and the whole team at LRF will be focusing hard on this in 2010.
Restaurant Pre-Registration Opens Today
The first important news is that the restaurant sign up process has been completely overhauled, and simplified, so you will now be able to swiftly register online.
We are pleased to announce that from today we are opening pre-registration. This opportunity is primarily open to all the restaurants that took part last year and those who register will receive 10% off the sign-up costs as a thank-you for supporting us in year one.
On the subject of cost, we’ve simplified that too. This year we have decided to have one fee for each restaurant and this will be £110 per restaurant.
This means that pre-registered restaurants will pay £99. This offer is open until 30 March.
New Bloggers for 2010
This blog also marks the start of regular blogs from Fay Maschler, myself and the wonderful Penny Watson who is in charge of all the restaurants involved in LRF. There will also be some other guest bloggers in the months ahead.
We will announce our exciting schedule of events in April so if you want to be one of the first to find out what’s going on then do join our mailing list.
Thanks very much for your continued support. Here’s to our second year and to making London Restaurant Festival 2010 the internationally renowned celebration of restaurants that the capital deserves.
As a finale to the first ever London Restaurant Festival we headed east for our awards – and what a wonderful evening it turned out to be. Some 250 of the most influential chefs, critics and restaurateurs in the industry turned out.
Our host for the evening was the BBC’s Nigel Barden who provided both wit and warmth. Fay Maschler, the distinguished Evening Standard restaurant critic and festival Chair, opened proceedings explaining that the awards were devised to honour the fundamentals of restaurant-going as she saw it. So there was no Best French, Best Italian and so forth but categories that included Bravery, Passion, Ceremony and Fun.
Thanks to our awards presenters Giles Coren, Tom Parker-Bowles, Tracey MacLeod and Nick Jones.
Also thanks to GH Mumm champagne who were the official champagne of the London Restaurant Festival and Ketel One vodka who did cocktails.
You can see all the award winners if you click on the article in today’s London Evening Standard.
Fay was presented with a special award, by GH Mumm, for her outstanding contribution to the industry before I trundled up to give thanks to all of those who have helped the festival be such a tremendous success in year one.
The whole thing lasted no more than 40 minutes which Fay and I were particularly pleased about as there are few things we find more tiresome than lengthy awards ceremonies.
Pizza East Opening and After Party
The awards were held in a rather modish covered, cobbled courtyard that separates Shoreditch House from Pizza East, the latest restaurant from Nick Jones, the founder of Soho House, and his business partner Richard Caring.
Nick, who is an old friend of Fay and myself, very kindly offered to open up Pizza East to 160 of our guests for dinner. Given that the place does not open to the public until Friday this was extremely generous of him – and also rather brave given that the room was full of critics, chefs and restaurateurs.
Pizza East, housed in a 5000 sq ft former tea warehouse, straddles the worlds of the City and the Shoreditch funksters and its canny formula of rough-hewn hipness will appeal to both.
We feasted on the most delicious pizza and Francesco Mazzei, whose restaurant L’Anima won an award and who was brought up in Calabria told me he thought the pizza superb and he knows what he’s talking about.
Plate after plate of calamari, lasagne, sea bass and a divine cauliflower carbonara came to the table washed down with tumblers of wine – it’s all about tumblers of wine these days. Thanks so much Nick and good luck when you open on Friday.
All in all a wonderful way to round off the first London Restaurant Festival. However, this does not mean that this website will be going quiet. Oh no.
I’ll keep everyone updated as we start to make plans for the London Restaurant Festival 2010. All the team have achieved an extraordinary amount in year one with very little time or money and we intend to build on that platform.
We’ve learned an enormous amount. There’ll be changes, improvements and some new events so keep checking in.
Thanks everyone for your support and all feedback is vital to us so speak up.
The biggest Sunday Roast ever witnessed in London took place at Leadenhall yesterday with 800 people sitting down to beef, partridge, venison, pork and lamb cooked by a roll call of top London chefs.
Photo gallery:
The Bistrotheque team – Pablo Flack and David Waddington - produced another astounding ‘pop-up’ restaurant specially for the London Restaurant Festival. Supersonic Masonique was created at the Masonic Temple in the Andaz Hotel and the three evening were sold out in 45 minutes and was deemed an unmitigated success. Thanks for all your support guys.
Photo gallery:

A team of top London chefs just pipped a team of critics to victory on Saturday night at the inaugural Starter For Ten quiz – part of the London Restaurant Festival.
Questions were set by distinguished critic, and London Restaurant Festival chair Fay Maschler, with legendary quizmaster Bamber Gascoigne in charge of proceedings.
Thomasina Miers from Wahaca, Richard Corrigan, Rowley Leigh from Le Cafe Anglais and Jeremy Lee from the Blueprint Cafe were on the chef team against Giles Coren, Toby Young, Matthew Norman and Tracey MacLeod were the critics. Simon Parkes of the Food Programme of Radio Four was the voiceover man.
There were drinks beforehand – kindly donated by our sponsors Field, Morris & Verdin – and the quiz had picture rounds, music rounds, proper buzzers and the whole works. It was all very professional and the questions were deliciously tricky.
Well done to the chefs and good effort from the critics – better luck next year.
The idea for the Gourmet Odyssey was hatched a few years ago when Fay organised a Gourmet Gallop for winners of an Evening Standard competition. We took ten people to four different restaurants and they had a course in each. It was a triumph.
The Gourmet Odyssey is the same notion but on a far larger scale using London Routemaster buses with four itineraries involving Scott’s, Corrigan’s, Wild Honey, Arbutus, Quo Vadis, Hakasan, Maze, Sake No Hana and Hibiscus.
Almost 300 people bought a ticket and arrived at The Metropolitan Hotel on Park Lane for a glass of Mumm champagne who were our sponsors. Guests, in a high state of excitement and anticipation, received smart little tags as if for race day and these denoted their itinerary by colour.
My wife and I were on Park Lane 1 and headed off to Theo Randall at the Intercontinental. Theo had hotfooted it back from appearing on the BBC’s Saturday Kitchen where he was busy talking about the Gourmet Odyssey (thanks Theo).
Chef Randall worked the tables and talked through the remarkably fresh Devon crab he served for our starter before signing guest’s menus.
Then it was onto the bus and off to Corrigan’s when the great man was offering a choice of a divine venison ‘Wellington’ or sole. After being introduced by Fay, who joined us for lunch, he chatted to all the guests, signed menus and had his photo taken.
Everyone deemed the food exquisite and with a spring in our steps after generous refreshments we boarded the bus once more and headed to Scott’s where we were welcomed by Tim Hughes, affable executive chef of Caprice Holdings, one of our festival patrons and owners of some of London’s greatest restaurants.
Scott’s was buzzing and they served us a tasting plate that included apple pie and a chocolate parcel that oozed the richest flow of chocolate sauce when burst. And we got a pud wine.
On the bus back to the Met the atmosphere was fantastic and everyone couldn’t have been happier about their day out which after all the work involved was hugely rewarding.
An enormous thank you to all the restaurants who took part, all of those who supported us by purchasing a ticket, The Met hotel and also Katie Mann from the London Restaurant Festival who managed the event and helped it run so smoothly.
We already have some plans for next year and some new itineraries for different parts of the capital.
Our photographer captured the Pall Mall Gourmet Odyssey, click the pictures below for the image gallery:

To the London Eye on Friday evening where Gordon Ramsay took his turn cooking for ten guests who had bid to eat in our extraordinary capsule restaurant.
The great man was on cracking form and came to meet the guests who included singer James Blunt. He then headed off to the little kitchen we have created in the ticket hall and produced a wonderful dinner. The first course was a ravioli of lobster followed by the fillet of Angus beef, cheese and then a Granny Smith apple trifle. Wines were kindly provided by Fields Morris & Verdin and involved magnums of Jacquesson Cuvee 732, Mountford chardonnay 2005 and a Bodega Pintia 2004.
The successful bidder had paid £23,000 for the one-off opportunity with money going to Starlight, the charity that grants wishes to seriously and terminally ill children. Fay and I would like to thank Gordon for taking the time to support Starlight and the London Restaurant Festival.