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Modern British Brasserie

Google: 4.6 · 1,332 reviews

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London, United Kingdom

Bread Street Kitchen

CuisineModern British
Executive ChefDario Catapano
Price≈$65
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseLively
CapacityLarge
Opinionated About Dining

Bread Street Kitchen at South Place in the City of London occupies the sharper end of casual Modern British dining, with Opinionated About Dining recognition across three consecutive years. Under chef Dario Catapano, the kitchen operates a full-week service from late morning through the evening. Its EC2 location makes it a fixture for the financial district crowd and a useful reference point for contemporary British cooking at the accessible end of London's mid-market tier.

Bread Street Kitchen restaurant in London, United Kingdom
About

The financial district east of Liverpool Street has a particular rhythm: lunch crowds that move quickly, dinner tables that fill from the office rather than the theatre queue, and a preference for rooms that feel substantial rather than precious. The stretch of South Place that runs near Moorgate sits inside that rhythm, and the dining room at Bread Street Kitchen reads the room accurately — high ceilings, the ambient noise of a space that expects to be full, and a service format that doesn't require a pre-theatre window to work through the menu in reasonable time.

Modern British at the Casual Register

London's Modern British category divides across a wide price and formality range. At the upper end, three-Michelin-star operations like CORE by Clare Smyth and destination country-house restaurants such as L'Enclume in Cartmel or Moor Hall in Aughton define the tasting-menu tier. Below that sits a mid-range casual bracket where the cooking is contemporary, the sourcing is positioned as seasonal, and the experience is designed to serve a repeat lunch clientele rather than a one-visit occasion diner. Bread Street Kitchen operates in that second register, and its consistent Opinionated About Dining recognition — ranked #671 in Casual Europe for 2024 and #870 for 2025, with a recommended listing in 2023 , indicates a kitchen that holds a level rather than peaks and troughs.

The trajectory of those OAD rankings is worth reading carefully. Moving from a recommended listing in 2023 to a ranked position in 2024 and maintaining that ranked status into 2025 suggests sustained kitchen consistency, not a one-season flash. In the casual Europe category, which spans a competitive field across multiple major dining cities, retaining a named ranking across two consecutive years reflects a baseline competence that many City of London restaurants at this price tier don't maintain once the initial opening energy dissipates.

The Sourcing Question in a Modern British Kitchen

Modern British cuisine, at almost every price point, now carries an implicit sourcing argument. The category's identity is built on British produce , seasonal vegetables, domestic meat breeds, coastal fish , and that positioning intersects directly with questions of supply chain transparency, waste reduction, and ethical procurement. The degree to which a kitchen actually delivers on those implied commitments varies considerably across the sector.

At the ambitious end of the British sourcing conversation, kitchens like The Fat Duck in Bray and Gidleigh Park in Chagford have built long-term supplier relationships that are documented and verifiable. Further along the moderate-formality spectrum, Hand and Flowers in Marlow and hide and fox in Saltwood demonstrate that serious sourcing practice exists outside metropolitan fine dining. Regional Modern British operations like Artichoke in Amersham and 33 The Homend in Ledbury apply similar standards at the casual-to-mid tier.

What matters at the casual register is whether the menu rotates meaningfully with seasonal availability rather than treating British produce as a branding layer over a static menu. A kitchen running a six-day lunch-and-dinner operation , as Bread Street Kitchen does across most of its weekly schedule , faces genuine logistical demands around waste management and stock rotation that a twice-weekly tasting-menu restaurant simply doesn't encounter at the same frequency. Managing those pressures well is itself a form of operational discipline that the OAD rankings implicitly reward through consistency.

Chef Dario Catapano and the City Kitchen Context

Chef Dario Catapano leads the kitchen at the South Place address. In the City of London dining context, a head chef's ability to maintain quality across a high-turnover, high-volume lunch trade is a different skill set from the tasting-menu work that generates most critical attention. The mid-market City lunch trade is demanding precisely because it is repeat-visit: the same professionals returning weekly means that a kitchen cannot rely on novelty to cover inconsistency. OAD's casual ranking methodology is built on aggregated opinion from frequent diners, which means it captures repeat-visit satisfaction rather than one-off destination appeal , a more honest measure of this kind of operation.

For context on where Bread Street Kitchen sits relative to other Modern British addresses in London, Dorian, Ormer Mayfair, and Cornus occupy adjacent or overlapping parts of the contemporary British spectrum. The Ritz Restaurant operates at a different formality and price tier entirely, but the comparison is useful for understanding how wide the Modern British category actually stretches across London's dining scene.

Hours and the City of London Rhythm

The weekly schedule reflects the operational logic of an EC2 address. Monday through Wednesday service runs to 10pm; Thursday and Friday extend to 11pm, catching the late end of the working week. Saturday also runs to 11pm, positioned for a City-adjacent dinner crowd that skews younger and less time-constrained than the Monday lunch trade. Sunday closes at 9pm , earlier than the rest of the week, which tracks with reduced City footfall on the weekend. All services open at 11:30am, covering both early lunch and a late-morning brunch window that suits the area's corporate calendar.

For anyone building a broader London itinerary, the full London restaurants guide covers the city's dining range in detail. The full London hotels guide, London bars guide, London wineries guide, and London experiences guide provide the surrounding context for a full stay in the city.

Know Before You Go

  • Address: 14 South Place, London EC2M 7EB
  • Nearest transport: Moorgate station (Elizabeth, Circle, Metropolitan, Hammersmith & City lines); Liverpool Street within walking distance
  • Hours: Monday–Wednesday 11:30am–10pm; Thursday–Friday 11:30am–11pm; Saturday 11:30am–11pm; Sunday 11:30am–9pm
  • Cuisine: Modern British
  • Chef: Dario Catapano
  • Recognition: Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe , Recommended (2023), Ranked #671 (2024), Ranked #870 (2025)
  • Google rating: 4.6 from 1,078 reviews
Signature Dishes
Beef WellingtonFish and ChipsBread Street BurgerScotch Egg
Frequently asked questions

City Peers

A quick comparison pulled from similar venues we track in the same category.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Lively
  • Modern
  • Elegant
  • Industrial
Best For
  • Business Dinner
  • Group Dining
  • Family
  • Casual Hangout
  • After Work
  • Celebration
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
  • Rooftop
  • Live Music
  • Waterfront
  • Panoramic View
  • Historic Building
  • Standalone
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Craft Cocktails
  • Beer Program
Views
  • Waterfront
  • Street Scene
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelLively
CapacityLarge
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingStandard

Modern British brasserie with industrial chic design, warm lighting, open-plan comfort, and an electric atmosphere; vibrant and welcoming even at peak times with exposed concrete and reclaimed materials.

Signature Dishes
Beef WellingtonFish and ChipsBread Street BurgerScotch Egg