Log in | Register
     
Harden's - London & the UK's most authoritative restaurant guide
Harden's - the authoritative restaurant guide website Harden's online restaurant guides Harden's online corporate gifts services Shopping online with Harden's Register with Harden's and search our restaurant database About Harden's, - the authoritative restaurant guide Contact Hardens
branding bottom
Interested in restaurant reviews?
Sign up for our Newsletter!
   
  Quick search Harden's restaurant guide
  Search Harden's restaurant guides Search Harden's venues guides
  Quick search Harden's restaurant guide
    Track down the best place for any occasion.    
         
    Area:    
         
    any
postcode

near tube

location
   
         
         
    Main Features:    
         
    price
cuisine
   
         
Search now button
    Main features:    
         
    capacity
and above

max price band

   
     
button
Reviews

Yakitoria W2

25 Sheldon Sq   020 3214 3000


22 December 2005

There’s no Sheldon Square in the A-Z, or on streetmap.co.uk. All I could tell from the Yakitoria press release was that it was at the heart of the ginmormous new development that looms over the A40 by Paddington Station.

Expecting a faceless corporate jungle, I was pleasantly amazed by the whole area. You leave the rear of Paddington Station (by the Hammersmith & City line), to join a network of recently-built paths around the Grand Union canal, some areas of which have apparently been opened for the first time in 200 years. In less than 10 minutes, you can now stroll from Paddington into impossibly cute Little Venice.

And on the way, you pass this chic-looking new Japanese. Huge picture windows give the ground floor (there’s also a basement) a fine view of the canal, while the very airy interior is a stylish medley of slate, dark-stained timber, and green velvet drapes. If I hadn’t known that it was the creation of a Russian restaurant group, I would have thought that it was a third opening by Rainer Becker of Roka and Zuma fame.

The fashionable Japanese menu is reminiscent of Roka's with its emphasis on skewers from the charcoal robata grill, alongside a wide selection of sushi and main dishes. I went for a catholic selection incorporating five kinds of skewer and some trendy sounding ‘spicey red-eye’ and ‘garden’ sushi -- the former spiked with chilli pepper, the latter using ingredients like burdock. None of the items were disappointing, but equally all fell short of being inspirational.

Service was charming but a little keystone kops-ish (or whatever it is that Russians say for being disorganised and amateurish). Surely they can sort that out? Because if they can, the beautiful interior, picturesque setting and decent food are a strong incentive to venture a stroll in Paddington Waterside.

A meal with modest drinks from £40 a head.

This article first appeared as a review in:

City AM Logo


>>5th January 2006: Dune SW1