Foxlow Clerkenwell

Foxlow Clerkenwell

Foxlow | Neighbourhood restaurants inspired by great British produce. The best steak, brunch and Sunday Roasts in Balham, Clerkenwell and Soho.

Foxlow | Seasonal Brunch, Lunch, Dinner & Cocktails

http://www.foxlow.co.uk

Reviews and related sites

Foxlow/Rextail: Restaurant reviews - It's behind you! | The ...

Review analysis
food   location   staff   drinks   menu  

To cheer for, we have a couple of home-grown food heroes, Huw Gott and Will Beckett, whose excellent Hawksmoor group of steak restaurants recently scored a multi-million-pound investment from a private equity firm, taking the affable duo from bar-owners to moguls in a few short years.

Foxlow’s menu is a short but lovely thing, widening focus from Hawksmoor’s famous Ginger Pig rare-breed steaks to include dude-foodish tempters like slow-smoked bacon ribs, and a salad bar which draws heavily from the Ottolenghi cookbook.

Braised beef short rib is smaller, less complex and, at £24, £8 pricier than the Foxlow version, though the smoked marrow bone is a nice touch.

Foxlow, 69-73 St John Street Clerkenwell, London EC1 (020-7014 8070).

Around £40 a head including glass of wine and service Rextail, 13 Albemarle Street Mayfair, London W1 (020-3301 1122).

Food review: Veganism at Foxlow, St John Street | Eating Out ...

Review analysis
food   menu  

Foxlow’s Clerkenwell branch in St John Street is offering a vegan menu during November.

In November, world vegan month, it’s offering a special vegan menu.

It’s plush, atmospheric and full of diners.

Like vegan restaurants which unimaginatively but the letter “V” in their name, I’m not a fan of vegan food presented in a meaty style.

It’s the sort of thing you just don’t get in the vegan world, with a luxuriously sweet and buttery sauce making it an exceptional pudding.

Fay Maschler reviews Foxlow | London Evening Standard

Review analysis
food   staff   location   busyness   drinks  

This summer, budding catering entrepreneurs visibly brightened and busied themselves at the news that Will Beckett and Hugh Gott of the four-strong steakhouse group Hawksmoor were paid in the region of £35 million by Graphite Capital for a minority shareholding.

Gott, Beckett and group head chef Richard Turner are all on the premises, singer Mick Hucknall and Gizzi Erskine part of a large group of customers at a table towards the back — this is not a stealthy kick-off.

It is only when it becomes apparent that main course protein is mostly served marooned on empty plates and side dishes (£3.50-£4.50) and sauces (£1) are all extra that optimism dwindles.

Portion control is strict, especially among first courses such as Brixham crab with devilled mayonnaise — lots of lettuce, an itsy amount of white crabmeat — Old Spot baby back ribs you can count on the fingers of one hand and crispy five-pepper squid.

Monkfish with chermoula (buoyant), house-cured salmon (drab) and Iberico pork Pluma (pork’s spirited answer to Wagyu) gaze anxiously across empty plains of plates until those are inhabited by sides of skin-on fries with bacon salt, beef-dripping potatoes with gubbeen (cheese) and capers and broccoli with chilli and anchovy.

Grace Dent reviews Foxlow | London Evening Standard

Review analysis
food   drinks  

When Kate Moss said, ‘Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels,’ I thought she possibly needed to fire whichever flunkey was booking her restaurants.

Foxlow, I felt, is a great place to hide from a man you have paid cold, hard cash to force you to do squat thrusts and that plank thing that is a human rights abuse.

It’s a good place to hide from those ‘I’m sober for January’ miseries in your office, some of whom this year I see want financial sponsorship for the arduous act of drinking water for 31 days.

Oh, and Foxlow also takes reservations, just like restaurants did in the olden days before the w***ers took over and decided to make us pop by on the off chance that we might get some dinner or we might get turned away — the sure route to make anyone feel brand-loyal.

We settled in with steaks and Miami Dolphin cocktails (essentially a Piña Colada with a jelly baby hidden at the bottom), a banoffee split and some Neal’s Yard cheese and had one of those dinners where you laugh a lot and weep a bit and listen to Magic FM’s ‘Ten at 10’ easy-listening slot on the way home and sing the backing vocals to ‘Time After Time’ by Cyndi Lauper.

Foxlow, London EC1, restaurant review - Telegraph

Review analysis
food  

It is a curious style they're essaying – part smoky American pork fest, part nonchalant French bistro – and there's a whiff of gastropub in dishes such as five pepper squid (£7), which make no geographical sense but which everybody would miss.

B had smokehouse rillettes (£6.50), unlike any rillettes I've ever tasted – the fat was so relaxed it was more like a sauce, and there were creamy, mushroomy side notes that baffled but intoxicated my senses.

Cooked pink (daring, for pork, but seasoned pig-fanciers trust the meat thermometer), it is criss-crossed with fat, but is nothing like belly, has none of those inch-thick seams.

Puds were a bit curious: B had bourbon caramel soft-serve sundae; I had cherry ripple (both £5).

In my view, if you want a Mr Whippy, that's exactly what you want; trying to recreate it is needless and unlikely to succeed.

Foxlow Clerkenwell | Restaurants in Farringdon, London

Review analysis
menu   staff   food  

In a cosily masculine room, magically transformed by the duo behind Hawksmoor, a compact menu offers food that will comfort and soothe (and fantastic service).

One held over a restaurant site, doubly so.

The cooking, on the whole, is terrific.

There’s a daily specials board of impeccably-sourced steaks – but unlike Hawksmoor, Foxlow is not a steakhouse.

As if the sweet, smoky, spicy meat with its strata of juicy fat wasn’t succulent enough, it came with a dinky jug of fiery, sweet and smoky barbecue sauce.

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