View all newsletters
Have the short, sharp Spear's newsletter delivered to your inbox each week
  1. Wealth
August 31, 2018updated 06 Sep 2018 4:30pm

Review: The great rebirth of Simpson’s in the Strand

By Alec Marsh

Simpson’s in the Strand, one of London’s most revered culinary institutions, has had a welcome makeover, writes Alec Marsh

Much Beloved, Simpson’s in the Strand is a gastronomic bastion, a culinary dreadnought, one that’s been flying the flag for a certain sort of British cuisine since 1828. The name of the game, of course, is beef, and British beef at that, although they do serve lots of other things, such as oysters. British oysters.

But step inside and you’ll discover that something’s afoot: the place was done up in 2017, and they’ve made it very slightly hip. In the Grand Divan, fluted burgundy leather chairs – reminiscent of the bucket seats in a 1930s Alvis – have been introduced. And along the windowed wall there’s a new low, green-leather banquette with mint piping that’s elegant, intimate, comfortable and just a tad camp. Meanwhile, golden uplights capture the plaster mouldings above the oak panelling. What once was a bit 1980s boarding school now seems polished and a little chic. Touché.

Taking up a table along the new banquette, we drink Ridgeview, the Simpson’s house sparkling wine – a fizzy, biscuity bullet with touches of grapefruit fired from the South Downs. I start with the oysters – a half-dozen Jersey and Merseas, of which the former – creamy and oceanic – emerge victorious. Mrs Marsh has a revitalising zig-zag of salt-baked Lincolnshire beetroot – all saline sweetness bumping into the crunch of honeycomb, rhubarb and goat’s curd; a gentle delight. We rinse this lot home with a superb Stopham Estate pinot blanc from Sussex, before moving on to an impressive Hush Heath Estate pinot noir from Kent of all places.

Next I have the roast beef from the trolley – three buttery, tender substantial slabs of luminous pink, the colour of an Englishman who worked the guns at Trafalgar. And peerless, but not compared to the astonishingly satisfying Buccleuch estate 28-day dry-aged beef wellington – an impregnable Waterloo infantry square of protein, pastry, mushroom and peppercorn sauce. Oh for space to describe the cheese or the port – a sweet, twiggy sauna in the mouth. Good fare? By jingo: the dreadnought steams on.

Alec Marsh is editor of Spear’s

Review: Ruya, Mayfair

Review: Beck at Brown’s, Mayfair

Content from our partners
HSBC Global Private Banking: Revisiting your wealth plan as uncertainty abounds
Proposed non-dom changes put HNW global mobility in the spotlight
Meet the females leading in the FTSE

Review: Frenchie’s, Covent Garden

Review: The Fox & Pheasant

Select and enter your email address The short, sharp email newsletter from Spear’s
  • Business owner/co-owner
  • CEO
  • COO
  • CFO
  • CTO
  • Chairperson
  • Non-Exec Director
  • Other C-Suite
  • Managing Director
  • President/Partner
  • Senior Executive/SVP or Corporate VP or equivalent
  • Director or equivalent
  • Group or Senior Manager
  • Head of Department/Function
  • Manager
  • Non-manager
  • Retired
  • Other
Visit our privacy policy for more information about our services, how Progressive Media Investments may use, process and share your personal data, including information on your rights in respect of your personal data and how you can unsubscribe from future marketing communications.
Thank you

Thanks for subscribing.

Websites in our network