Prince of Wales

Join us at Prince of Wales. The Prince Of Wales pub is a traditional British London pub in Kensington. serving great freshly cooked traditional pub food. Our menu is in the best tradition of British pub food. Best enjoyed with a drink, friends and always with a warm welcome.

Greene King Local Pubs | Prince of Wales pub in Kensington

The Prince Of Wales pub is a traditional British London pub in Kensington.

serving great freshly cooked traditional pub food.

Our menu is in the best tradition of British pub food.

https://www.greeneking-pubs.co.uk

Reviews and related sites

Home - Prince of Wales

“Very beautiful local pub with a very good range of gins and very charming staff.

They do the best Sunday roast in the area” Proud to be Putney’s true local, The Prince is a traditional pub where everyone’s welcome, whether you’re catching up with friends or meeting with business buddies, over a craft beer or a boutique gin and tonic.

The Prince of Wales - Hotel, Restaurant and Conference Venue

Review analysis
food   ambience   facilities  

Welcome to the NEWLY REFURBISHED Prince of Wales, where superb accommodation, memorable food and quality liquor meets informality and a relaxing atmosphere in a unique but comfortable setting.

The Prince of Wales is a traditional red brick town inn, where the emphasis is on hospitality - from the welcoming ambience and the attentive service to the quality of the eating experience.

The Prince of Wales now boasts a delightful restaurant, a first class chef, a unique wine list and a sophisticated bar offering stylish fine dining and bar food alongside exciting drinks and cocktails.

Whether it's a meal for two or a group dinner, the Prince of Wales is a welcoming place to dine.

Read More Ampthill Park is situated on the top of the Greensand Ridge with impressive views to the north over the Marston Vale.

The Prince Of Wales Marlow, Buckinghamshire | Homepage

Marlow has it all...and it has the Prince of Wales; which has it all for the discerning drinker, diner and guest.

The Prince of Wales is a very comfortable and spacious pub with three distinct bar areas, yet it successfully manages to retain the atmosphere and ambience of a real 'local' - a quality fast disappearing in these days of themed, pub chains.

This welcoming appeal is due to the cross section of clientele that includes local sportsmen and women, businesses and people of all ages who frequent this pub on a regular basis: no doubt to take advantage of the company, the banter, and the friendliness it affords - alongside its range of fine food and ales, served by very pleasant, happy, bar staff who all live locally - again adding to that ambience of a genuine 'local' pub.

The Prince of Wales has the unusual benefit, and luxury within Marlow, of being able to offer a large off street parking space for 22 vehicles in its own car park.

Access to the pub from the car park is through the equally spacious yet relaxing, protected patio area that can handle up to 40 people, appeals to those taking the summer sun.

POW / The Prince Of Wales – A multi-floored bar and club the Prince ...

Review analysis
food  

The Prince of Wales pub & POW form a large music venue with two-tier outdoor roof terrace in Brixton.

Our 1920s Art Deco dancehall has a sprung wooden dancefloor and a banging Turbosound system with heavyweight bass to get your rump shaking.

Climbing the stairs to our two-tier outdoor roof terraces you can watch the sun go down as you sip one of our fabulous cocktails and check out the biggest names in clubland DJing on our newly installed Funktion 1 sound system.

Recently described by Time Out as: ‘The best outdoor terrace in London’ you’ll find the sounds of sunset then the night – every weekend!

On Thursdays the Prince of Wales’ live Jazz Jam sessions are becoming the talk of the town.

Prince of Wales, London SW15, restaurant review - Telegraph

Review analysis
food   desserts  

It's unassuming and bric-a-bracky; it's surprisingly quiet; you can see the old-fashioned frontage of Putney School of Art and fancy yourself in the 1950s, except that if a pub had given you food this good back then you would have been more than bewildered; it would have been a Doctor Who moment.

I had the goat's cheese (£8), baked to an attractive deliquescence; it had a lactic, subtle taste, which was delicious against a zingy salad.

I had lamb (£19), with pea purée and a salad of heritage tomatoes, which were raw, particoloured, gorgeous and juicy.

My pud was even more Michelinish – a plank of strawberry parfait (£7), like a frozen mousse, whose flavour was great, even though I can't really see why parfait was invented when ice cream exists (was it like a diet food of history?

Surrounding it was a salad of strawberries with a bit of black pepper and balsamic, but not so much that it tasted more fashion than delicious.

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