Born from a pop-up Seafood Shack in Hackney last year and with the successes of further projects (The Bonnie & Wild and the Bonnie-on-Sky) under their belts the team have decided to take things a step further and open up a full-time and permanent restaurant on 21A Foley Street W1.
Head chef, Luke Robinson (Fifteen and Ristorante Citrus, Umbria), has a simple style that focuses on allowing quality ingredients to speak for themselves. His menu will change daily reflecting the seasons, the day’s catch and of course the weather conditions out at sea. Starters might include: Isle of Lewis mussels with Aspell cider and Cumbrian bacon; Scottish langoustine, pickled apple, roasted pork belly and endive salad and smoked rainbow trout with beetroot potato pancakes & horseradish. Mains might include: whole Devon cock crab with shack mayo; fresh razor and surf clam linguini or West coast Scottish lobster with shoestring fries and garlic butter. Puddings will include: Eton mess; Muscat melon soup, watermelon and summer berries or British cheeseboard with homemade chutneys.
Bonnie Gull Seafood Shack
British Restaurant in Soho
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Website
http://www.bonniegull.com/
Opening Summary
Tuesday - Friday: 12Noon - 22.30
Saturday & Sunday: 10.30 - 22.30
Monday: Closed
Tuesday - Friday: 12Noon - 22.30
Saturday & Sunday: 10.30 - 22.30
Monday: Closed
Bonnie Gull Seafood Shack Picture Gallery
All In London Review
Bonnie Gull is charming enough to succeed as a permanent restaurant
Bonnie Gull began life as a Hackney pop-up in 2011, followed by Bonnie and Wild, a fish and game eatery within M. Manze’s in Islington, and Bonnie-On-Sky, a rooftop seafood eatery in London Bridge. The stripy blinds and cramped space fulfil the seaside shack theme, although the marble-topped raw bar for champagne and shellfish tells a different story.
The menu has fish and seafood from all over the British Isles, with dishes like lemon sole, beer battered North Sea haddock and whole Devon crab, the latter boasting intensely rich mayonnaise and succulent crab meat. Also good are the smoked mackerel with grilled beets and new potatoes, and the Isle of Lewis mussels in a sauce made with Aspall cider and smoky bacon. Skinny fries with rosemary are wonderfully aromatic and nicely salted.
A starter of smoked rainbow trout paired with cooked beetroot and a horseradish mousse is a little less successful, each element is individually delicious, just not together. Dessert doesn’t quite live up to its promise either, as the brownie with dulce de leche is a bit too dry, and a combo of dried and fresh banana doesn’t really work.
But overall Bonnie Gull does work, and the final sway is in the great cocktails: the Bonnie Mary with clamato tomato juice is loaded with pepper and topped with a plump oyster as garnish, and their take on a martini swaps vermouth for thyme liquor, resulting in a lightly fragranced drink that’s every bit as robust as the real thing. It’s far too charming a proposal to be just a temporary success.
Reviewed by Leila
Published on Nov 6, 2012
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