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The Anchor & Hope

Current

36 The Cut
London, SE1 8LP
Nearest Transport: Southwark
020 7633 9144
Named Gastropub Of The Year at the ITV London Restaurant Awards in 2004, The Anchor & Hope serves outstanding food. With a 'no booking' policy it is advisable to turn up early to avoid queuing.

Reviews for The Anchor & Hope

  • 5
    The Anchor & Hope
    36 The Cut London SE1 8LP uk
    3rd March 2008
    Wow
    Current
    There are few destination Gastro pubs in Britain. Some of us are lucky enough to have some near our homes.

    Apart from The Eagle on Farringdon Road where on some days you can get a beautifully cooked "Onglet" with a red wine and shallott reduction , I would normally not cross town for a Gastro Pub meal. However I'm now finding I need a fix at least once a week.

    It's a place where you can enjoy "world class" bourgeois cooking like , Cassoulet , Ox Cheek stew with Dumplings , Slow cooked Tamworth ( along with Gloucsester Old Spot the only edible pork in Britain) with sauerkraut , Lanchashire Hot Pot , great soups and decent deserts. Go in a group and share some of the dishes for 4 or 3 that come in rustic looking pipping hot Le Creuset cookware !

    The people who run the place have excellent backgrounds at The Eagle and the St John.



  • 5
    The Anchor & Hope
    36 The Cut London SE1 8LP uk
    6th September 2007
    Current
    Fantastic place. What a gastropub should be. A great restaurant with a menu with a difference. Many unusual dishes are served.

    The food is great and seems reasonably priced considering. Excellent wine list too. As the Guardian put it:
    "Ham and figs; cockles; chorizo and chard broth; terrine; monks' cheeks, clams and bacon; beetroot, watercress and horseradish salad; Bath chap and pickled onion; smoked herring and lentils; pumpkin risotto; leg of lamb and flageolet beans; tripe and chips; smoked Old Spot chop and prunes; devilled kidneys and potato cake; plaice, leeks and herbs; grouse; braised venison and red cabbage; cassoulet (for four); green salad; duck fat potato cake; lentils; lemon cake; crème caramel; cheese. I make no apology for quoting the entire menu of the Anchor & Hope.."
    Highly recommended.
  • 5
    The Anchor & Hope
    36 The Cut London SE1 8LP uk
    3rd September 2007
    Anchor and Hope, The Cut, London
    Current
    I've been gagging to go to the Anchor and Hope for bloody ages. It hasn't helped that Oli who sits opposite me at work has now been twice and reminds me of it as often as he forgets to make me tea! So this week the perfect excuse to go came up. Mum rang out of the blue and asked if Cowie and I wanted to go to the theatre on Friday night at the Old Vic... and would we like to go for an early supper as well.

    Now the thing everyone always says about the Anchor and Hope is, get there early and be prepared to queue. So we arranged to meet at 6 in order to be able to scoff down two courses and a slurp some wine before doing battle with an obscure Spanish play full of transexuals and transvestites!

    Typically I arrived late because of a marathon, delayed conference call, to find everyone already assembled and ready to order on my behalf! I soon put an end to that and opted for potted crab on toast followed by roast Middlewhite pork with crackling... although in my haste I had meant to say pot roasted pigeon! It's weird what comes out of your mouth under pressure sometimes. But the thing with their menu is that you could have accidentally ordered anything on it and come up trumps.

    The dining room is literally curtained off from the rest of the pun a bit like the scene in Hamlet where Polonius gets stabbed, or the division on planes between business class and thrift. I guess it makes it easy to open the whole venue out of necessary and also gives the room a nice relaxed texture. Tables are plain wood and chipboard and I don't think any of the chairs match. It's just how I like things. I think the Japanese have an expression for it called "Wabi Sabi"... which is a celebration of the imperfect. It makes you feel at ease with your surroundings, happy to be wearing trainers, late, in a rush and keen to enjoy some gorgeous food.

    We loved the mini school glasses for wine. They must be so much easier to dish wash and are almost unbreakable. Practical. That's the word for this place. Practical. Very British.

    Cowie's crayfish arrived looking like beasts out of hell... dangerous little claws and deep, blood red in colour. She must have had half a dozen of the little devils on her plate alongside her small glass of garlicy mayonaise... I managed to steal one of them, purely for reporting purposes of course, and can reveal that they were far less sweet and saline than langoustines... more earthy and really juicy. I remember reading an article about them saying that they are impostors from America an are decimating our native versions. If this is right then good on the Anchor and Hope for perpetuating the cull... if not, well they're tasty little lobsters!

    My crab on warm buttered brown toast was exquisite. Slurpy, salthy, sweet, well textured and plenty of it. You'd have to go a long way to better it. The only times I have had better crab have never been in this format. My crab at the Riverside in Dorset was stunningly fresh and showstoppingly good, as was wok steamed crab with ginger, chilli and black bean sauce on Lamma Island off Hong Kong. But this was the best potted crab on toast that I've eaten... Yum.

    Mum had terrine which she said was OK and Suz had a salad that almost filled the entire table which kept her quiet for 10 minutes so it must have been good!

    The next door table ordered a leg of kid. It arrived looking slighly smaller than a leg of lamb and was greeted with great reverence by the table of four men keen to devour their meat. A chap in a red jumper did such a bad job of carving that Dad was tempted to offer his assistance but instead declared that it made him ill to even watch someone carve that badly! He was carving with the grain, giving his mates vast hunks of meat rather than Dad's slender chunks! Schoolboy! If you're going to order a whole leg of goat you'd better practice your public carving skills in advance!

    Cowie and Suz shared an enormous fish soup from a communual couldron that could have been a prop in Macbeth. The vast pot was chock full with gunard, mussels, scallops and all sorts of other goodies and probably made from the stock of Cowie's crayfish!

    Mum and Dad tucked into their Dover Soles with equal enthusiasm. Two each seemed excessive but neither complained. They looked beautifully cooked and judging by the lack of commentary from Dad must have met with his approval. His laparotamy on both fish was perfect so they must have been cooked perfectly.

    My pork arrived to a small sqeal from Cowie when she realised that it wasn't a dish for two. I valiantly tucked into my enormous mound of swine savouring every forkfull of juicy, tender white meat and light crunchy crackling. It's hard to do the crackling justice using words alone. It was as light as a wafer, warm, crisp and simply divine. I'll never forget it. Simply spectacular.

    This was British cooking at its most authentic. Top quality ingredients. No mucking around and posh French names. Just good, solid, brilliantly cooked food in a charming, low key setting.

    I simply can't wait to go back so we can spend more time enjoying it... and to do some carving! Luckily Mum and Dad enjoyed it so they are keen too!
  • 5
    The Anchor & Hope
    36 The Cut London SE1 8LP uk
    13th June 2007
    Current
    One of my favourite restaurants in London because it's all about the food and nothing else although service is also excellent.

    It's all about healthy portioned British food, basically what's in season. Simple, well-done dishes with excellent quality produce. I love their casseroles and any dishes for 3 or more people.

    The only annoying thing is that a lot of people know about this place now and you can't book (apart from Sunday lunches) so be prepared to wait a couple of hours if you miss the first sitting. In my opinion, it's definately worth the wait :D
  • 4
    The Anchor & Hope
    36 The Cut London SE1 8LP uk
    8th June 2007
    Dog friendly gastro pub
    Current
    Food here is hearty and homey. Fish pies to share, lamb shank - that kind of thing.

    Plus you can take (well behaved and small)dogs in!

    This may be a turn off to most but a god send to dog owners who don't want to be parted from their pets over dinner...
  • 2
    The Anchor & Hope
    36 The Cut London SE1 8LP uk
    21st April 2007
    Current
    Here's the thing. This gets rave reviews yet I have had three meals there now, and the food was very ordinary at best. Once I could put down to bad luck, but three times and I start to feel like one of those characters in Invasion of the Bodysnatchers. Everyone around me looks normal, but something is not quite right. I just don't understand why people find the food good here. Sorry.
  • 5
    The Anchor & Hope
    36 The Cut London SE1 8LP uk
    17th August 2006
    Current
    Award winning gastro pub with some of the best service and food in London. Very laid back atmosphere

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