Heap's Sausage Café

Heap's Sausage Café

HEAPS

The brainchild of Martin Heap, the Simply Sausage shop sold 24 varieties of sausage, all created with one aspiration in mind: to be, quite simply, the best sausage you are likely to taste.

With the growth of sausage varieties, came increased demand and the move to Berwick Street in London’s Soho.

Together, these shops were shifting 10 tonnes of sausages per week and the name ‘Simply Sausages’ was becoming a household name in the South East and a media favourite.

In fact, so much so, that Martin decided it was time to share his wonderful sausages with the nation and so it was, that Simply Sausages became available to the masses through major retailers.

However, Martin still continues to enthuse others directly with his love of creating delicious, uniquely flavoured sausages, along with his business partner at his shop Heaps, in Greenwich, London.

http://heapssausages.com

Reviews and related sites

London's Best Dog-Friendly Cafes | Londonist

Review analysis
staff   food   drinks   desserts   location  

We dare you not to leave without buying one of the fantastic fromages from the counter... At the other end of Brick Lane from Exmouth Coffee, this beautiful cafe offers pan-Mediterranean food from breakfast to dinner.

The food is good too and will see you through from breakfast to afternoon cake, with everything in between.

The coffee isn't the greatest in the area, but you don't come here for that - plump for the sausage and mash, or the Lethal Lucifer Hot Dog.

Decent pastries and cakes as well as good coffee keep people and their pets coming back.

Finding a good, dog-friendly cafe in London no longer needs to be like a shaggy dog story.

London's best bits – Street-by-street local London guides

Review analysis
food  

But Drummond Street, just a few minutes’ stroll from the station, is home to what is probably the capital’s most diverse range of South Asian food.

But it’s not all kebabs and karahi gosht here: there’s enough on Drummond Street to suit even the most spice-averse of palates.

Drummond Street is set to be a casualty of the HS2 railway linking London to Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester.

Half the street could be used as a temporary taxi rank and local businesses face demolition from January 2018, despite the efforts of the Save Drummond Street group.

The campaign continues, but the best time to drop in and try London’s best mango lassis is now, before noise, dust and uncertainty sweep the street.

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