Mei Mei

A Borough Market stall turned Southeast Asian destination, Mei Mei earned Opinionated About Dining's Casual recognition in Europe for 2025, placing it among London's most-watched informal operators in the category. Chef Elizabeth Haigh brings Singaporean-rooted cooking to a compact, counter-led format at Rochester Walk — a different register from the city's formal dining circuit, and frequently more interesting for it.

London's Informal Southeast Asian Tier Has a Clear Reference Point
London's Southeast Asian dining scene has long split between fast-casual noodle formats and higher-spend pan-Asian tasting menus. The middle register, where technically serious cooking meets accessible pricing and no-ceremony service, is smaller and more contested. Mei Mei at Borough Market occupies that middle register with enough consistency to have drawn Opinionated About Dining's Casual in Europe recognition for 2025, a list that tracks sustained quality in informal settings across the continent rather than one-off critical moments.
For a point of comparison: the fine-dining end of London's restaurant circuit, where CORE by Clare Smyth, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, and Restaurant Gordon Ramsay operate, prices long-form tasting menus at multiples of what a meal at Mei Mei costs. The same applies to The Ledbury and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal. Mei Mei is not in competition with those rooms. It operates in a different economy of eating entirely, where the quality signal comes from OAD recognition rather than Michelin stars, and where the format rewards the customer who wants cooking of real conviction without a booking that requires months of advance planning.
Borough Market and the Daytime Bias
The address matters here. Borough Market, London SE1, is structured around daytime trade. The market's rhythm peaks from mid-morning through mid-afternoon, when the stall and counter operators at Rochester Walk see the highest foot traffic. For Mei Mei, that daytime momentum shapes what the experience actually delivers at lunch versus the relative quiet of evening hours, when the surrounding market district empties and the counter-seat dynamic changes in character.
At lunch, the energy is ambient rather than manufactured. Borough Market's food-conscious crowd, a mix of workers from the Southwark office cluster and deliberate visitors, creates the kind of backdrop that makes an informal counter feel activated rather than awkward. The format rewards solo diners and pairs who want to eat something precise and well-sourced without committing to a two-hour seated service. The proposition is closer to how serious food markets operate in Singapore or Kuala Lumpur, where quality and speed are not treated as opposing values, than it is to the traditional London lunch restaurant.
Evening service at this type of Borough Market operator tends to attract a different crowd: destination diners who have sought the address out specifically, rather than passing trade. The market setting is quieter, and the counter takes on a more focused quality. Whether that shift reads as intimate or reduced in energy depends on the individual diner, but for those who prioritise attention over atmosphere, evening visits at this end of London's SE1 informal circuit often deliver a higher concentration of engagement between kitchen and customer.
The Southeast Asian Reference Frame
Elizabeth Haigh's presence is the relevant credential here, and it functions as context for the cooking's reference points rather than as a personality story. The Singaporean-British culinary tradition she draws from is distinct from the generalist pan-Asian positioning that most of London's mid-range operations default to. Singaporean cooking, at its most specific, is a layered cuisine shaped by Malay, Chinese Hokkien, and Indian Tamil influences operating simultaneously within single dishes. When that tradition is applied with technical seriousness in a counter format, the result is categorically different from the Thai-Japanese-Korean fusion menus that populate London's casual sector.
For a broader reference on Southeast Asian cooking at different price points and formality levels, COAST in Yala and Coast in Milwaukee offer comparative cases where the cuisine type meets different service contexts. Within the UK, the full weight of the fine-dining tradition runs through country addresses like The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons in Great Milton. Mei Mei sits at the opposite end of that spectrum in format and register, but it is operating at a comparable level of culinary intentionality.
What the OAD Casual Recognition Signals
Opinionated About Dining's Casual in Europe list is assembled through aggregated votes from food-engaged voters across the continent, making it a different instrument from Michelin's inspectors-only methodology. Its signal strength is concentrated in the informal sector, where other guides are structurally weaker. A 2025 listing alongside peer casual operators across Europe places Mei Mei inside a cohort of addresses where consistency and distinctiveness in the informal tier are the primary qualifications. With 1,634 Google reviews averaging 4.4, the volume suggests this is not a restaurant with a narrow critical audience; the OAD recognition appears to reflect broad-based experience quality rather than niche enthusiasm.
Planning a Visit: What You Need to Know
Mei Mei is located at Unit 52, Rochester Walk, London SE1 9AF, within the Borough Market complex. The address puts it in one of London's most walkable food districts, accessible from London Bridge station. For visitors building a broader London day around serious eating, the SE1 area offers a concentration of food operators that justifies the journey from other parts of the city.
Given the market context, visiting during peak Borough Market hours on a Thursday, Friday, or Saturday, when the market operates at full capacity, will produce a different ambient experience than a weekday lunch. Timing to the morning-into-lunch window will capture the counter at its most active. Evening visits should be planned as deliberate destination meals rather than spontaneous stops.
Booking details, current hours, and pricing are leading confirmed directly through current listings, as the operational format at market-based counters is subject to seasonal and operational variation. For a broader view of London's dining options across price tiers, see our full London restaurants guide. Those planning a broader London trip can also reference our London hotels guide, our London bars guide, our London wineries guide, and our London experiences guide for a complete picture of the city.
Quick reference: Mei Mei, Unit 52 Rochester Walk, London SE1 9AF. OAD Casual in Europe 2025. Google: 4.4 from 1,634 reviews.
Frequently Asked Questions
Just the Basics
Comparable options at a glance, pulled from our tracked venues.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Mei Mei | This venue | |
| The Ledbury | Modern European, Modern Cuisine, ££££ | ££££ |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Modern French, ££££ | ££££ |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Modern British, ££££ | ££££ |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Contemporary European, French, ££££ | ££££ |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Modern British, Traditional British, ££££ | ££££ |
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