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Breakfast at Pavyllon, London W1: ‘Does fine dining strictly have to wait until lunchtime?’ - restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

about 17 hours ago
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Now that gen Z is eschewing booze and all-night raves, are we moving into a hospitality era when the big posh breakfast might well be the main event?For 5am Club people such as myself, who love to be up, caffeinated and scribbling on Post-it notes pre-dawn, the Four Seasons’ recent launch of London’s first Michelin-starred breakfast is perfect.Now we can do all that over a £70, five-course tasting menu served at a counter in a genteel, pastel-shaded dining room.If, that is, you can get a booking, in which case well done; otherwise, you could simply sit a little farther from the counter and order almost the same food off the normal breakfast menu, only without all the explanations.Regardless, chef Yannick Alléno is clearly doing the world a favour by luring all of us early risers to one room and distracting us with lobster flatbread and a bespoke “amuse juice”, because we are clearly some of the most annoying people on Earth.Have you ever heard one of my bumptious 5.

46am WhatsApp admin voice notes? Or woken, blearily, to the sound of me rearranging furniture or stomping at a walking desk? People like me are a menace.We need to be contained so the polite world can sleep.Not only that, but, from a business point of view, the idea of offering snooze-averse diners pricey, Michelin-starred chia puddings is rather genius.We can now all meet and entertain equally up-and-at-’em colleagues over salted maple pancakes and fancy french toast.After all, does fine dining strictly have to wait until lunchtime? Perhaps now that gen Z is eschewing booze and all-night raves, we’re moving into a hospitality era when the big, posh breakfast may well be the main event.

But, being practical, who is going to staff these fancy-schmancy, forelock-tugging flash breakfast offerings? The Four Seasons seems to have that just about covered, with a small brigade in full primped attire going through the motions at 7,45am,My coat is transferred to the cloakroom and a stool is brought for my handbag,My lapsang souchong and “orchard juice” requirements are catered to, and a voluptuously glossy fresh pain au chocolat is delivered as an opening snack,The pastry is delightful, if not quite earth-shattering, and is filled with an elegant but not over-generous portion of chocolate.

It comes with a tiny jar of upmarket Maison Laurino jam.By 8am, I’m eating alongside a world-famous investor who is currently splashed all over the media.He’s having the eggs royale, which are heroically oozy and come on a very good English muffin; perfect hollandaise and prettily plated, too.As an old hand at this game, I don’t order poached eggs for breakfast anywhere, because they’re always, always cold, but not here they’re not.They also do benedict or florentine, and all come with the offer of an optional 5g caviar for an extra £25.

To my right, there’s a Saudi couple with three kids eating exotic mango chia and being cooed over by staff, while at the counter chefs talk an influencer type through a chicken samosa special topped with a fried egg and a delicate peak of fried vermicelli,I’m not too sure about this dish – true, it has about it pleasant shades of Malaysian mee goreng, but it strikes me as possibly a tad heavy for so early in the morning,The coconut-based chia pudding, on the other hand, is a total delight, even if it’s essentially just fruity frogspawn,The absolute showstopper, however, is the french toast: a sweet, custardy, structural work of art that turns up all discreet and unassuming,“I’m just a humble, beige slice of grilled brioche topped with a few toasted hazelnuts,” it says, but then, with the first forkful, it reveals itself as a sublime flavour bomb of vanilla milky-egginess with a perilously thin, crunchy outer surface.

It comes with some citrus-infused whipped cream, which is a nice gesture, but unnecessary, because this toast needs no backup.There’s no getting away from the fact that this breakfast is carb-based, ultra-filling and the polar opposite of setting the day up for productivity.By french toast time, I’d already quietly considered going back home to bed just to convalesce; this was not a day for building empires (tasting menu guests are also sent home with a little sweet baked gift in a bag to eat for elevenses).Whatever the hype is around the Four Seasons breakfast, I’m not sure they invented mega-early fancy dining, either – there are equally good things happening down the road at Hide and Cédric Grolet at the Berkeley – but the posh power breakfast is definitely on the rise.My main concern is how they’ll find legions of staff who are willing to perform so brightly from 6am.

It’s a specific sort of server who, at that ungodly hour, can stay in character, run a fine-dining level of service and make chitchat about ingredient provenance as if it’s dinner time at L’Enclume.Three cheers for the 5am Club! Up stupidly early, all bright-eyed, bushy-tailed and finding new ways to ruin everyone else’s happiness.Breakfast at Pavyllon Four Seasons hotel, Hamilton Place, Park Lane, London W1, 020-7319 5200.Open all week, 6.30-10.

30am (7am Sun); breakfast tasting menu Sat & Sun only.From about £40 a head; tasting menu £70 a head for five courses with tea or coffee, plus extra drinks & service
technologySee all
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Jack Dorsey to cut 4,000 jobs due to AI advances at Square parent Block

Fintech company Block announced that it would be laying off 4,000 of its 10,000 employees because of gains in AI productivity.“Intelligence tools have changed what it means to build and run a company,” Jack Dorsey, Block’s CEO, said in a letter to shareholders on Thursday. “We’re already seeing it internally. A significantly smaller team, using the tools we’re building, can do more and do it better. And intelligence tool capabilities are compounding faster every week

2 days ago
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Woman at heart of US trial says she was addicted to social media at age six

The young woman at the heart of the landmark trial about the addictive nature of social media testified for the first time on Thursday, saying she got hooked on YouTube starting at age six and Instagram at nine. By the time she was 10, she said, she had become depressed and was engaging in self-harm.The woman, who is now 20 and known by her initials KGM, is the lead plaintiff in an expansive lawsuit against YouTube and Meta, which owns Instagram and Facebook. The crux of the case alleges social media companies intentionally create addictive products, leading to mental health issues in young people.KGM testified on Thursday that her use of social media made her anxious and insecure, and features like beauty filters distorted her self-image

3 days ago
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Riaz Hasan obituary

My father, Riaz Hasan, who has died aged 87, was a water resources engineer with a distinguished career working across 40 countries – in the 1970s with the British firm Halcrow and, from the 80s, at the UN and the World Bank.Originally from Hyderabad, Riaz arrived in the UK in 1965 with £3 and an A–Z, invited, like many engineers in India at that time, by the government. After completing a master’s degree in water resources at Bradford University, where he developed a love of Yorkshire pudding and received his degree from Harold Wilson (which he described as a real privilege), he embarked on his career designing life-saving, long-term water and food solutions for the most vulnerable and those affected by war, famine and natural disasters.Born in the small town of Warangal, near Hyderabad, to Mohammed, an English professor, and his wife, Khadija, Riaz went to Nizam college. He did his engineering degree at Osmania University, graduating in 1960, then got his first job at the Central Water Power Commission (CWPC) in Delhi

3 days ago
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Met police to pilot facial recognition identity checks, mayor confirms

Metropolitan police officers are to start scanning citizens’ faces using automated facial recognition technology to check their identities, in a move backed by the mayor of London but described as “alarming” by opponents.The pilot was revealed on Thursday when Sadiq Khan said 100 officers would use the roaming technology – commonly deployed on smartphones – for six months. The mayor was responding to questioning from an opposition politician amid rising concern about the rollout of AI-powered policing tools. The Met’s website still states it “does not presently use the so-called operator initiated facial recognition”.Face scanning has already been deployed by police with cameras on vans and in fixed locations including in Croydon, Manchester and South Wales

3 days ago
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Tell us: how will the UK’s landline switch-off affect you or your family?

UK telecoms companies are retiring traditional landline services and replacing them with internet-based home phone connections.The industry has set a deadline of January 2027 to complete this switch with roughly 3.2 million homes still to move over. While the digital switchover has been straightforward for most households, for some vulnerable customers, such as those with telecare devices, it has been very stressful.In December 2025 Virgin Media was fined £23

3 days ago
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‘Unbelievably dangerous’: experts sound alarm after ChatGPT Health fails to recognise medical emergencies

ChatGPT Health regularly misses the need for medical urgent care and frequently fails to detect suicidal ideation, a study of the AI platform has found, which experts worry could “feasibly lead to unnecessary harm and death”.OpenAI launched the “Health” feature of ChatGPT to limited audiences in January, which it promotes as a way for users to “securely connect medical records and wellness apps” to generate health advice and responses. More than 40 million people reportedly ask ChatGPT for health-related advice every day.The first independent safety evaluation of ChatGPT Health, published in the February edition of the journal Nature Medicine, found it under-triaged more than half of the cases presented to it.The lead author of the study, Dr Ashwin Ramaswamy, said “we wanted to answer the most basic safety question; if someone is having a real medical emergency and asks ChatGPT Health what to do, will it tell them to go to the emergency department?”Ramaswamy and his colleagues created 60 realistic patient scenarios covering health conditions from mild illnesses to emergencies

3 days ago
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Leeds’ Maika Sivo stars in demolition of Hull KR in Las Vegas

about 20 hours ago
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Formula One to revise controversial rule at centre of Mercedes engine row

1 day ago
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Oleksandr Usyk to defend title against kickboxer at Pyramids of Giza in Egypt

1 day ago
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Already on the plane or left at home? How England’s Rugby World Cup squad is shaping up

1 day ago
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‘I know I can do it again – 100%’: Lando Norris on proving himself against the best in F1

1 day ago
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Winter Paralympics walks tightrope as Russia’s inclusion risks ceremony boycott

1 day ago