Christopher's

Modern American Restaurant and Martini Bar, Private Dining, Best Steak, Fish and Lobster, located in Covent Garden, London, best american restaurant london, best brunch london, best private dining london, best restaurant covent garden

Christopher's - Martini Bar and Restaurant, Covent Garden

Due to popular demand, our famous Chocolate Brioche French Toast is now available all day in the Martini Bar and on our Dessert Menu in the Restaurant.

Come down any time and treat yourself to wonderful french toast deliciousness from 11.30am.

Please allow 20 minutes as we make each French Toast to order.

For Restaurant & Martini Bar Reservations, please call 020 7240 4222.

Please note we do not take reservations on our sharing table in the Martini Bar which is available for walk-ins all day.

http://www.christophersgrill.com

Reviews and related sites

Christopher's - London Restaurant Reviews | Hardens

Christopher's, 18 Wellington Street London WC2 | The Independent

Review analysis
food   staff   ambience  

Founded by Tory scion, Christopher Gilmour, and splendidly housed in a handsome Covent Garden mansion, Christopher's specialised in American-style dining – lobsters, burgers, steak and the like – at a time when that kind of fare was the exception in London rather than the rule.

At the time the new owner captured the madcap romance of the restaurant business by announcing "I am considering a number of investment/roll-out options".

And then you get to the first-floor restaurant, two connecting rooms whose designer has apparently been given the brief: strip this space of any character or atmosphere, and make it feel like the breakfast room of an international luxury hotel.

The American classics we tried were mediocre – a £32 surf'n'turf combo of under-seasoned burger and overcooked lobster; a tender but more or less tasteless New York strip steak; forgettable fries, tobacco onions with a weird peppery aftertaste.

And the chocolate, peanut butter and jelly sandwich with banana ice-cream we shared for dessert (absolutely gorgeous, if you like a huge slab of carbs drowned in glossy chocolate sauce) showed it's also capable of utter indulgent wrongness.

London, St Christopher's Place

Review analysis
location  

Restaurant review: Christopher's - Business Traveller – The leading ...

Review analysis
food  

When it opened, the restaurant was one of the first in London to focus on American food.

For the last seven years it has been owned by Ambar Paul, director of engineering firm the Caparo Group, and his daughter Anika Paul, who is the restaurant’s director.

The building is easy to spot, located on the corner with steps leading up to a grand entrance.

Through the windows are views of Waterloo Bridge.

Unlike many new restaurants, this one has opted for a more traditional look with white tablecloths as opposed to bare wood, which added a regal feel to the setting, with its pretty cornicing, marble fireplace and parquet floor.

Christophers Martini Bar Covent Garden London Review ...

Review analysis
food   drinks  

Christopher's Martini Bar, located in the heart of Covent Garden, is a sumptuous addition to the West End bar scene.

Located on the ground floor of a Grade II listed building, this London bar is an all-day destination in its own right (upstairs is Christopher's renowned American Dining Room).

The extensive drinks list focuses on cocktails, both classic and contemporary, with Martinis being a particular speciality.

The bar team have also created their own contemporary drinks such as 'Mexican Heat' (Jose Cuervo tequila, fresh pomegranate, Grand Marnier, lime juice, chilli and grenadine).

The Martini Bar food menu is offered throughout the day, offering contemporary American casual dining which runs from salads and shares to Clubs and Po' boys.

Hoppers: Home

This Easter take part in our Double Egg Roulette competition, which also comes with prizes!

To celebrate the festivities, all you have to do, is drop by either Hoppers Soho or St Christopher’s for lunch or dinner, between Monday 26th March – Monday 2nd April and order our Egg Hopper off the menu.

A random selection of diners will get the chance to win, and if you’re lucky enough to find a double yolk hopper you will also win a limited edition Hoppers T-shirt.

The limited-edition T-shirt is also not one to miss as its been designed in-house by the team and will be available to purchase for £15, but once they are gone, they are gone!

RESTAURANT REVIEW: HOPPERS, ST. CHRISTOPHER'S PLACE ...

Review analysis
busyness   location   food   menu   drinks  

The list of places under their stewardship reads like your Instagram Explore highlights reel; there’s Bao, Gymkhana, Lyles, Trishna, Bubbledogs and Kitchen Table, Xu, Sabor (shortly to open) and of course, Hoppers.

Hoppers St. Christopher’s continues the rich run of form so popular at Frith Street and doesn’t mess with the formula; Sri Lankan curries, dosas, the hopper itself (a kind of pancake) and more – all of exotic, heady, just-off-centre spicing and playful delivery.

Tables are crowded with little copper pots of vibrant coloured dips, new dishes to the party call for a game of tetris to fit them in, and the expansive nature of the dosas seemingly pokes fun at the general lack of elbow room.

A holy trinity of hopper, varuval and the aforementioned squid would be a superb meal in itself, even before the accompanying dips brighten up the table and pique the palate’s curiosity.

The volume of the queue at Hoppers Frith Street was, for a while, in danger of drowning out the praise surrounding the food inside.

Christopher's, 18 Wellington Street London WC2 | The Independent

Review analysis
food   staff   ambience  

Founded by Tory scion, Christopher Gilmour, and splendidly housed in a handsome Covent Garden mansion, Christopher's specialised in American-style dining – lobsters, burgers, steak and the like – at a time when that kind of fare was the exception in London rather than the rule.

At the time the new owner captured the madcap romance of the restaurant business by announcing "I am considering a number of investment/roll-out options".

And then you get to the first-floor restaurant, two connecting rooms whose designer has apparently been given the brief: strip this space of any character or atmosphere, and make it feel like the breakfast room of an international luxury hotel.

The American classics we tried were mediocre – a £32 surf'n'turf combo of under-seasoned burger and overcooked lobster; a tender but more or less tasteless New York strip steak; forgettable fries, tobacco onions with a weird peppery aftertaste.

And the chocolate, peanut butter and jelly sandwich with banana ice-cream we shared for dessert (absolutely gorgeous, if you like a huge slab of carbs drowned in glossy chocolate sauce) showed it's also capable of utter indulgent wrongness.

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