Burro, WC2: ‘Big but the opposite of brash – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

A picture


Brings old-school charm to a touristy part of townBurro, a new Italian restaurant in Covent Garden, London, had been on my horizons even before the napkins were on order, because Conor Gadd, the chef-owner, has form.His first restaurant Trullo, up in Islington, has sat unshakably around the top of my recommendations list for about 15 years and is namechecked by me at least twice weekly when complete strangers want a tip for a birthday, proposal or a client they need to impress.Or simply, “somewhere to take a foodie” who “really likes food”.Yes, the brief given to restaurant critics is often that vague, but to all these things I say: “Have you been to Trullo? Order the beef shin ragu and some good red wine.It’s been there for ages and they know what they’re doing.

”While trends came and went – no reservations, no tablecloths, no seats, just benches and upturned buckets – Trullo kept on being an actual grownup restaurant.And now Gadd, via Burro, is bringing some of that authority and old-school charm to a more touristy side of town; to be specific, a few minutes from Covent Garden tube, off King Street in a hidden courtyard that leads down to Floral Street.Burro’s menu certainly has elements of her big sister, but perhaps erring more on the elegant but hearty side.Take the rough-hewn, well seasoned, luscious paté of Venetian chicken livers on a thick slab of bruschetta that sits on the antipasti section of the menu, but in all honesty would do as a main course with a glass of something bright, sharp and white to cut through all that fattiness.Or simply a negroni, as chosen by my dining companion, the long-suffering Charles.

An antipasto offering of fried artichoke with bottarga was another delight: chunky, lightly battered artichoke, resembling calamari and with wafts of salty fishiness.The fresh focaccia: glossy, crisp, springy and moist – no complaints there.Burro’s menu begins boldly, whisks through primi of tagliarini with clams and strozzapreti with pork and chilli, then moves into meaningful secondi, where a whole lemon sole comes in a prosecco sauce and a whopping vitello al burro (its take on a veal milanese) is breadcrumbed, buttery and rich with garlic.The braised beef shin on polenta is pure comfort food, with the polenta almost wholly submerged in butter and the beef itself as soft as nursery food.Burro is big, but the opposite of brash.

It’s an oasis of pristine sanity in a postcode full of fire-breathing buskers and, recently, Guinness hats,For such a large space, it’s elegant and defiantly serene; the colour scheme’s a rhapsody of unobtrusive beige and taupe with non-jarring bursts of ombre,There are real tablecloths – what luxury! – and staff (some of whom have come from Trullo) who know the menu forwards and backwards, so will talk you though those primi, secondi and contorni while you sip a Donkey Kick (whisky, chartreuse, lime juice and, um, poitín – AKA Irish moonshine),Was moonshine in cocktails on my spring 2026 trend forecast? No,Do I trust Gadd from Belfast to introduce moonshine classily to the masses? Yes.

Do I appreciate his tendency to serve Italian food with sides of roseval potatoes drenched in butter and garlic? Yes, that, too.For me, the highlight was Burro’s fettuccine with duck and porcini ragu – a spin on Trullo’s classic beef shin ragu – and it’s possibly one of the best dishes currently being served in this pasta-stuffed postcode.Rich, silky, decadent, fabulous.It’s a sharing portion, or a self-indulgent gannet’s portion.Take your pick.

Patently, the Tricolor flag-draped elephant in the room is whether central London needs more Italian restaurants: Locatelli at the National Gallery is fantastic, Charlie Mellor’s new Osteria Vibrato is superb and, holy heck, even Jamie’s Italian is back from the dead in Leicester Square, serving burrata, bruschetta and linguine.But I think when it comes to Burro, we can squeeze in one spin on tiramisu, which here comes in doughnut form.Or, to be exact, a small pile of warm ricotta dough sprinkled with sugar and blitzed ladyfingers, and served on a pile of coffee cream laced with marsala.Is this still tiramisu? Probably not.It would make a purist cry.

But, for me, it was Blackpool promenade doughnut stalls meet clipping about Bologna on a Vespa.It’s either abject madness or complete sanity to recreate the small, bespoke loveliness of Trullo in Covent Garden.I happen, after some consideration, to think it’s the latter.Burro 2 Floral Court, Floral Street, London WC2, 020-4580 1495.Open all week, lunch 12.

30-3pm, dinner 5.30-10.30pm (9.30pm Sun).About £70 a head for three courses, plus drinks and service
technologySee all
A picture

Court dismisses former WhatsApp security chief’s lawsuit against Meta

A US court has dismissed a lawsuit from WhatsApp’s former security chief, who alleged that parent company Meta ignored internal flaws he flagged about the messaging app’s digital defenses.Abdullah Baig, who claims he was fired in retaliation for raising these concerns, had alleged that billions of users had been put at risk because of these vulnerabilities. Thousands of employees could view sensitive user data, including profile photos and location, Baig claimed in the lawsuit filed in September. A judge ruled he had not presented enough evidence to move forward.The US district court in northern California ruled last month to dismiss Baig’s claims, with the judge, Laurel Beeler, writing on 19 March that “the complaint does not contain sufficient facts to show that the plaintiff reported violations of SEC rules or regulations

A picture

Goodbye mrbrightside416: Google allows users to alter quirky Gmail addresses

Did your McLovin!1976!@gmail.com email address seem funny at the time but less so now you are applying for dozens of jobs?Google has said it is giving US users a chance to appear more professional by letting them change their Google account username – whatever appears before @gmail.com in an email address – without losing access to their account.However, the tech company will limit the name changes to one per 12 months. In an example shared online by Google, the email address sk8tergrl123

A picture

Pupils in England are losing their thinking skills because of AI, survey suggests

Pupils using artificial intelligence are losing their capacity for critical thinking, according to a survey of secondary school teachers in England.Two-thirds said they had observed the decline among children who they also said no longer felt the need to spell because of voice-to-text technology.“Students are losing core skills – thinking, creativity, writing, even how to have a conversation,” one teacher told the National Education Union poll.“AI is destroying what ‘learning’ – problem-solving, critical thinking and collaborative effort – is,” said another. A third anonymous contributor added: “Children no longer feel the need to spell as voice-to-text replaces knowledge

A picture

Claude’s code: Anthropic leaks source code for AI software engineering tool

Anthropic accidentally released part of the internal source code for its AI-powered coding assistant, Claude Code, due to “human error”, the company said on Tuesday.An internal-use file mistakenly included in a software update pointed to an archive containing nearly 2,000 files and 500,000 lines of code, which were quickly copied to developer platform GitHub. A post on X sharing a link to the leaked code had more than 29m views early on Wednesday, and a rewritten version of the source code quickly became GitHub’s fastest-ever downloaded repository. Anthropic issued copyright takedown requests to try to contain the code’s spread. Within the code, users spotted blueprints for a Tamagotchi-esque coding assistant and an always-on AI agent, per the Verge

A picture

SpaceX confidentially files to go public at $1.75tn, reports say

SpaceX has confidentially filed for an initial public offering on the US stock market, according to reports from Bloomberg and the Wall Street Journal. The IPO is set to be one of the most closely watched and highly valued listings in market history.Elon Musk’s company, which has become a dominant power in both space travel and satellite communications, could potentially seek a valuation upwards of $1.75tn. The confidential filing will give regulators a period to review and discuss the company’s financial disclosures before investors and the public are able to view them

A picture

‘System malfunction’ causes robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in China

A “system malfunction” has caused several self-driving robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in China, police have confirmed, after distressed riders were stranded for hours.Local authorities in the central Chinese city of Wuhan said they began receiving calls “one after another” on Tuesday night from riders reporting that autonomous vehicles operated by the Chinese internet company Baidu had frozen.“Multiple Apollo Go cars stopped in the middle of the road, unable to move,” police said in a statement on Wednesday, referring to Baidu’s driverless taxi service. “After investigation, preliminary findings suggest the cause was system malfunction.”Baidu has a fleet of more than 500 driverless cars in Wuhan