Brick Lane Market is where Eastern promise meets East End chaos. As well as bric-a-brac and fruit and veg, you can now pick up everything from retro furniture to vintage jewellery. En savoir plus .
Head down the stairs, take a seat and lose track of time in the dark candle lit cellar. If cheese and wine is your thing then you’ll love Gordon’s. En savoir plus .
The food is cheery, with usual suspect pad thais and curries, but it's the interesting ingredients that put it above the norm: venison, scallops, soft-shell crab. Metro gave it 4 out of 5 Stars. En savoir plus .
Try the fine fish finger butty with sustainable haddock, twice-cooked chips and a side salad (fennel and dill is in season at the moment). Good, as the batter is crisp and not too floury. En savoir plus .
An acclaimed Italian restaurant - booking is essential. Try reservations@zuccalondon.com En savoir plus .
You could look inside this place and think it’s been around for a century, but in fact it only opened as a restaurant in 2003. Breakfasts here are a firm favorite among London’s movers and shakers. En savoir plus .
You can get a great meal here without breaking the bank, with starters from £2.25, wine from £3 a glass, and the delicious onglet (aka hangar steak) for just £10.95. En savoir plus .
Camden Market actually refers to the several markets that cover the northern end of Camden Town. Each market has a character of its own. En savoir plus .
One of London's best pizzerias, and cheaper than Pizza Express, in the mammoth mall at Stratford, the main Olympic Park transit hub. En savoir plus .
With their wood-fired oven, they fire up very good (and very generously sized) pizzas: the Saporita had a perfect light base, spot-on tomato and pools of almost liquid buffalo mozzarella. En savoir plus .