International sushi day: the best value restaurants in London

Sushi London (fadya azhary)
Sushi London (fadya azhary)

Not all sushi experiences have to cost a week’s rent, which in London is a mighty relief.

High-class sushi restaurants, mostly served on sweeping counters by experts in their craft, are certainly en vogue. Sushi Kanesaka (45 Park Lane, dorchestercollection.com) has an 18-course menu for £420. Endo at The Rotunda (Television Centre, Wood Lane, endoatrotunda.com) might be the benchmark: a relative steal at £250 per head.

But there is space too for more affordable options, those which don’t cut corners or use poor-quality fish but are pitched to a less moneyed audience. These are also all the rage: London’s appetite for nigiri, maki, sashimi and the rest is potent, rapturous; many of us love nothing more than the cooling touch of tuna, medium fatty, on its bed of vinegar-clad rice, as if that momentary morsel might save us from the wearying clutches of delinquency.

 (Press handout)
(Press handout)

One of these more approachable restaurants is Temaki (12 Market Row, temaki.co.uk), a handroll sushi bar in Brixton Village. Founded by the Anglo-American chef A M Dupee, it specialises in elegant handrolls, a concept that hasn’t yet become mainstream. Sushi rice is mixed with trout, prawn tempura or barbecued eel, then wrapped tightly in a sheet of seaweed to form a cone. Set menus start at £24 (for four rolls; they are filling), moving up to the £39 blockbuster — featuring fine lobster, no less — which is a bargain.

Moving north, we find Akari (196 Essex Road, Islington, akarilondon.co.uk). It’s sushi in an old Islington boozer; dainty fish and good beers in traditional surroundings. Five pieces of shimesaba, or marinated mackerel sashimi, are a steal at £9. The aburi truffle white tuna nigiri, meanwhile, is £8.50, and you’d be hard-pressed to find a more agreeable way to part with a tenner and get change.

Some independent spots such as Zaibatsu, Greenwich, have closed, even if temporarily. Eat Tokyo (multiple locations, eattokyo.co.uk) is a group that serves affordable sushi to the masses. Despite expansion, the food has remained solid, and it’s a hit with celebs, Big Zuu among them. First-timers should visit the Soho branch.

In Kensington, try Kampai Kensington (127A Hammersmith Road W14 0QL, kampaisushi.co.uk), a bamboo-walled neighbourhood favourite often full of families feasting on scallop nigiri, while in Angel, Zen Mondo (326 Upper Street N1 2XQ, zenmondo.co.uk) offers a menu of classics. Those in the City might skirt Sushisamba in favour of Pham (The Heron, 5 Moor Lane, EC2Y 9AP, phamsushi.com), meanwhile, where diners will find bento boxes and set menus under £20. The salmon and jalapeño rolls are popular.

There is also a punchier middle ground emerging. The Michelin-starred Taku Mayfair has launched Iné (16 Hampstead High Street, takumayfair.com) a casual omakase venture in Hampstead led by Taku chef-patron Takuya Watanabe’s protégé, head chef Law Kwok Meng. Meng boasts 23 years as a master sushi chef, yet the 15-course offering will cost just £100.

London’s new penchant for affordable raw fish must be celebrated. Too often the capital is derided as expensive. Restaurants might be perceived as disparate: a cheap chain or a haughty independent with a star chef and big bills. When it comes to sushi, this is very happily not the case. Value is all, whatever the bracket.