The Northall Restaurant: Quintessential British Cuisine in London

The Northall Restaurant within the Corinthia Hotel in London. Photo courtesy of Corinthia Hotel.

While staying at the Corinthia Hotel in London, I had a meal at The Northall Restaurant, which is helmed by Executive Chef Garry Hollihead, who has won Michelin stars at three different establishments including L’Escargot. The restaurant has picture windows that provide views of Whitehall Gardens and the Thames, and it has two private dining rooms available for events. The décor includes mirrored panels and burnt orange leather seating.

The suckling pig at The Northall Restaurant, London. Photo by Melanie Votaw.

The Northall specializes in British cuisine. If you had the idea that the British don’t know how to cook or to eat, you’re mistaken. Using wholly British suppliers, the restaurant focuses on a mix of traditional dishes with contemporary twists. Beef is sourced from The Lake District Farm, fish is brought in from Cornwall, and cheeses are from La Cave. The menu is seasonal, but I had a delicious lamb dish, while my dinner companion had the suckling pig.

Lamb dish at The Northall within the Corinthia Hotel London. Photo by Melanie Votaw.

For dessert, I had sorbets and cookies. Steaks can be ordered with a variety of sauces like blue cheese, port and shallot, or truffle hollandaise.

Sorbets and cookies at The Northall Restaurant, London. Photo by Melanie Votaw.

Currently on the menu are such dishes as violet artichokes with homemade ricotta and anchovies, Scotland rabbit and Monmouthshire ham ballotine with young summer vegetables and sour cream, Cumbria pork tail terrine with caramelized cherry jam and bitter leaves, and braised pork shoulder and grilled pork chop with new season potatoes and gooseberries. If you want a quintessential British dining experience that’s upscale and well-done, The Northall is the place to go!

The author of this article received a complimentary meal at this restaurant but is dedicated to providing a non-biased assessment of her experience.

+ posts

Melanie Votaw is the Publisher and Executive Travel Writer of LuxuryWeb Magazine. She has visited more than 50 countries on 6 continents and written for such magazines as Executive Travel, Just Luxe, Business Insider, South China Morning Post, Travel Mindset, and more. She is a member of the International Food, Wine & Travel Writers Association and the International Travel Writers Alliance. Melanie's photography has won awards, and she has also written 39 nonfiction books as either the author or ghostwriter.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like

Restaurant Review: 87 Sussex, Jersey City, New Jersey

Restaurant Review: 87 Sussex, Jersey City, New Jersey

New restaurants appear in Northern New Jersey all the time. However, some are just run of the mill eateries serving the same tired dishes that have been served for ages, while a few others are serving food of exceptional quality, rivaling Michelin-starred establishments around the world in inventiveness and ingredient quality. The 87 Sussex Restaurant in Jersey City is an absolute stunner – modern and upbeat.

read more
Is Davide Scabin Reopening a Restaurant in Turin, Italy?

Is Davide Scabin Reopening a Restaurant in Turin, Italy?

At a recent major wine event in New York City promoting Barolo and Barbaresco wines and general tourism to Piedmont, Italy, I heard a rumor that one of the best and most influential Italian chefs, Davide Scabin, will be opening a new venue. His last renowned restaurant Combal.zero (pronounced Combal Dot Zero) closed in 2020 because of the pandemic, and the culinary world has been much poorer for its absence. 

read more
Dessert Wines: Classics from Europe and North America

Dessert Wines: Classics from Europe and North America

I don’t understand why there are so few articles written about sweet wines, except for articles about madeiras, ports, and sherries. It seems that a number of wine writers veer away from sweet wines and consider aficionados to have “uneducated palates that cannot appreciate the complexity and beauty of dry wines.” That’s exactly what a well-known, very full of himself wine writer commented during a tasting we both attended.

read more
Sherry: The Spanish Nectar of the Gods

Sherry: The Spanish Nectar of the Gods

Sherry is one of the two spectacular fortified wines produced in the Iberian Peninsula, in the wine-growing maritime region of Jerez, mostly from white grapes. The other is Port, produced in Portugal at the country’s northwestern Atlantic seaboard, mostly from red grapes grown in vineyards along the Douro River.

read more
How I Came to Love Rye Bread

How I Came to Love Rye Bread

For a long time, I thought there was no good New York-style rye bread in any other area than Manhattan’s Lower East Side. So it was with great pleasure that I recently discovered a bakery near me that makes a classic artisanal New York rye loaf with a somewhat dense interior and a crispy crust.

read more