The Duck & Rice, London SW11: ‘Filling, but largely unmemorable’ – restaurant review

A picture


Not really your typical bowl-of-noodles stopgap jointThe Duck & Rice, the Chinese gastropub in Soho, London, has opened a second site in Battersea power station’s shopping precinct.To be fair, my use of the word “precinct” to describe this lovingly titivated landmark feels a bit shabby, as does “retail experience”.And plain old “mall” definitely won’t do, because Battersea’s collection of 150-odd shops is very much in the la-di-da, aspirational, lululemon, Mulberry and Malin+Goetz range of money-frittering, all set over multiple floors with dramatic mezzanines.This is a sumptuous paean to industrial chic, with pleasing air-conditioning and polished floors, and there is currently no more jocund and luxurious a place in London to spend money you don’t have on things you don’t need.In keeping with all this luxury, Battersea’s flagship restaurant right now is the new Duck & Rice, created 10 years ago by the renowned Hong Kong-born British restaurateur Alan Yau OBE, who also founded the likes of Wagamama, Yauatcha and Hakkasan.

The original Duck & Rice’s claim was that it was a Chinese gastropub, which, to my mind, confused it as a brand.Yes, it is indeed housed in a former pub on Berwick Street, but at the time it felt more like a very modern Cantonese restaurant that served roast duck, dim sum, “small chow” and wok dishes, most of them around the £10-£15 mark, as well as so-called “hero dishes” such as lobster laksa for £72.Yes, they sell Pilsner Urquell, which in 2015 was very gastropub-ish, but they also offer an array of lychee, chilli and blue curaçao cocktails, which is, well, a bit Ritzy’s nightclub.At the new Duck & Rice Battersea, however, they have £415 bottles of Vega Sicilia, which isn’t at all gastropub, and much more quaffing an oligarch’s cellar with George Osborne while celebrating the glorious 12th.This is made all the more peculiar by the fact that you’re indulging in such pompery at a restaurant that has the dystopian address of “Unit L1-003, Level 1, Phase 2”, and that’s next door to a champagne bar called Control Room B.

Even so, I find the Duck & Rice Battersea fascinating, not least because the great British public are, in 2025, still yet to fully submit to spending big money on important dinners inside shopping centres,The food courts of Westfield, the Trafford Centre and so on are swamped with all manner of casual dining options, but for important anniversaries and birthday dinners, we still lean towards bricks and mortar down the high street or, even better, in some bucolic setting or other,Yet here is a restaurant in Battersea power station, just along the way from a pilates studio and a luxury gilet shop, that isn’t really your typical bowl-of-noodles stopgap joint,When we arrived on a Tuesday lunchtime, we were to start with the only guests, but there were 22 cooks in the kitchen, three bartenders and four floor staff,This is a gargantuan space with little about it to love.

Still, a round of plump, voluptuous, wobbly fresh har gau, stuffed to nigh bursting with shrimp, were delicious, as was a plate of venison puffs where crisp, warm, buttery pastry meets rich, long-stewed meat.A “Duck old fashioned” with Volcán de mi Tierra tequila and Mozart dark chocolate liqueur was punchy, even if it rather ripped up the rulebook of what an old fashioned should be.For mains, we ordered the classic duck and rice house special, a vegan option of glass noodles with tofu mince and a wildcard Indonesian dish of Assam chilli prawns.After they appeared, however, we entered what I call the “service Siberia” stage of a meal, when no server speaks to or looks at us ever again.Those main courses were filling, but largely unmemorable: £25 for a glossy, crispy, medium-rare fillet of duck laid across white rice with a bit of cucumber, and tofu noodles that could really have done with more oomph, heat and spark; the whopping great chilli king prawns, on the other hand, were possibly the highlight of the meal: fiery as heck, and in a fragrant pool of bright red, tamarind-heavy sauce.

I might even have lingered over a shoumei white tea or imperial pu er infusion and leafed through the dessert menu, but the moment we finished the prawns, the bill was plonked on the table.By this stage, there were still only eight other guests, so you might think they’d have liked me to stay and spend more money, even if only to make the place look just a bit busier.After all, if there’s one thing for sure at Battersea power station, it’s that there are plenty of other places where I can spend my cash.The Duck & Rice Unit L1-003, Level 1, Phase 2, Battersea power station, London SW11, 020-3327 7881.Open all week, lunch noon-3.

30pm, dinner 5-10pm (11pm Fri & Sat).From about £40 a head à la carte; weekday lunch, from £18, all plus drinks and serviceThe next episode of Grace’s Comfort Eating podcast is out on Tuesday 9 September – listen to it here.
cultureSee all
A picture

‘The Mother Teresa of Aussie supermarkets’: meet the woman cataloguing grocery deals on TikTok

Maya Angelou once said “a hero is any person really intent on making this a better place for all people” and when she said that, I can only assume she had Australian TikToker and micro-influencer Tennilles_deals in mind.Who exactly is Tennilles_deals? Firstly, she’s the Mother Teresa of Aussie supermarkets. Secondly, I don’t know anything about her personally because this savvy queen doesn’t market herself like your average influencer. She lets her work speak for itself.The work in question? Weekly uploads of POV-style videos where Tennille meticulously goes through major supermarkets to show you what’s on special that week

A picture

Drawings reveal Victorian proposal for London’s own Grand Central station

The vaulted arches of New York’s Grand Central station are recognisable even to those who have never taken a train into the Big Apple. But they could very easily have been a sight visible in central London.Shelved 172-year-old architectural drawings by Perceval Parsons show how he envisioned a new London railway connecting the growing number of lines coming into the city to a huge main terminal by the Thames.The drawings of London’s own Grand Central Station, which are being put on open sale for the first time to mark the 200th anniversary of the first public passenger railway, show a scheme that would have given the capital of the UK a very different look today.The station was to be located at Great Scotland Yard, close to the modern-day Embankment tube station, and would have boasted an ornamental frontage about 800ft (245 metres) in length

A picture

Blur’s Dave Rowntree: ‘People think music was better in the old days, to which I say: bollocks!’

You’ve just put out a coffee table book of photographs of your early years with Blur. I imagine you didn’t have too many expectations at the time. Why had you stopped taking photos by the time the band blew up?I told myself that I was not experiencing life, that I was looking at it through the lens of the camera. But what really happened was, after a few years, things stopped being bright and shiny and new and exciting. It was pretty clear that we were going to have a career, that this wasn’t just a 15-minute Warholian burst of fame

A picture

Gems review – dazzling technique elevates LA Dance Project’s contemporary ballet trilogy

Australia sees so little international contemporary dance – considered too far and too expensive a journey, with too small a dedicated dance audience to make it worthwhile. What does appear is mostly in Melbourne and Sydney. So it’s a curious coup for Brisbane festival to land the second visit to Australia by L.A. Dance Project – the troupe founded by the former New York City Ballet principal Benjamin Millepied – after the Sydney Opera House’s presentation of his contemporary, genderqueer Romeo and Juliet Suite last year

A picture

The Guide #207: How Britain embraced The Simpsons, America’s true first family

Mum wouldn’t have Bart Simpson in our house. When, 35 years ago this month, The Simpsons first drifted across the Atlantic and on to UK screens, they brought with them a bad reputation. In the US, Matt Groening’s peerless animation had quickly become a ratings sensation after it debuted in 1989, but it was also a controversy magnet, particularly over its breakout delinquent star. The Simpsons was seen by the more conservative end of the US media as a bad influence on kids (a viewpoint famously echoed by President George HW Bush a few years later with his call for American families to be more like the Waltons and less like the Simpsons). Plenty of US schools banned a massive-selling T-shirt with Bart declaring himself an “underachiever and proud of it, man”

A picture

From On Swift Horses to David Byrne: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

ChristyOut now Following a prize-winning premiere at the Berlinale, this Irish drama starring Danny Power has been feted as an auspicious feature debut for director Brendan Canty. Telling the tale of two estranged brothers in Knocknaheeny, Cork, it’s a social-realist breakout hit.On Swift HorsesOut now Muriel (Daisy Edgar-Jones) and Lee (Will Poulter) are newlyweds who move from Kansas to California in the 1950s, with Lee’s brother, Julius (Jacob Elordi). A bond emerges between Muriel and Julius – however, this isn’t a typical love triangle, but an exploration of same-sex attraction in a time and place where that could be life-threatening.The Conjuring: Last RitesOut now Something wicked this way comes: the ninth and (allegedly) final instalment of the Conjuring franchise, based on the (alleged) exploits of paranormal experts Lorraine and Ed Warren, played by Vera Farmiga and Patrick Wilson, who are investigating the Smurl hauntings of Pennsylvania