But instead of joining the merriment in there, go through the extremely boring, office-like doors to the left, and trust that you will be justly rewarded…ĭetails: 12-14 Denman Street, Soho, W1D 7HL | Book here – Nightjar Carnaby | Soho How to get in: Make for the buzzy, packed-out restaurant that is Kricket Soho on Denman Street. And a good deal of their passion for Indian ingredients makes its way into the cocktails, with blisteringly good concoctions like a Curry Leaf Gimlet and Jaggery Old Fashioned on the menu. SOMA comes to you from the same duo behind London’s family of brilliant Anglo-Indian restaurants, Kricket. There are no bookings here, so cross your fingers and wait for someone to let you in…ĭetails: Inside Brewdog Waterloo, The Sidings, Waterloo Station, London SE1 7BH | No bookings – SOMA | Soho How to get in: Scour Brewdog for a vintage black telephone, and pick it up. Come here for off-the-charts cocktails by mixology pioneer Rich Woods and his crack team of bartenders. Not all those who wander are lost… but many of those who wander round Brewdog Waterloo are looking for Lost Property Office, an intimate cocktail oasis hidden, miraculously, within what has to be one of the loudest pubs of all time. Otherwise, find a door on Gerrard Street that doesn’t lead to a Chinese restaurant, and smile politely through the peephole.ĭetails: 13a Gerrard Street, W1D 5PS | Book here – Lost Property Office | Waterloo Hidden behind a scruffy-looking, easily-missable door in the bustling heart of Chinatown is this: a moody, legendary, Parisian, prohibition-style speakeasy cocktail den lit almost entirely by candlelight. When you get there, head below…ĭetails: 136 Shaftesbury Avenue, W1D 5EZ | No bookings – Experimental Cocktail Club | Chinatown How to get in: You’re looking for a place called Stone Nest, which is the boarded up old church on Cambridge Circus. Including being hidden beneath a deconsecrated 19th century church on one of the busiest streets in the city. Lit only by candlelight and sporting a slim, but expertly-concocted menu of cocktails, beers and natural wines, Below Stone Nest is everything a good speakeasy should be. Head on up…ĭetails: 58 Poland Street, W1F 7NR | Book here – Below Stone Nest | Leicester Square How to get in: Look for the “Opticians” sign on Poland Street, then push the door beneath it with the pig-shaped knocker. It boasts both classic and signature cocktails (like the Mi Casa Es Tu Casa with tequila, rhubarb, kumquat and caramelised white chocolate), and they’ll bring you food up from the restaurant below. This smart, NYC-styled speakeasy sits proudly above Jason Atherton’s Social Eating House in Soho. JUMP TO: EAST LONDON | WEST LONDON | SOUTH LONDON | NORTH LONDON SECRET BARS IN CENTRAL LONDON The Blind Pig | Soho ![]() NOTE: It’s important to clarify at this point that while most of these bars are hidden behind bookshelves, mirrors, and fridges, some of them are simply very difficult to find. ![]() ![]() Or, if you’re reading this for a second time, what follows is a list of bars that were tucked away, secret, hidden, or otherwise nearly-impossible-to-find …but are now as familiar to you as the back of your own hand. What follows is a list of the finest tucked-away, secret, hidden, or otherwise nearly-impossible-to-find bars. Secret Bars | The Ultimate London Speakeasy Guide
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