H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Impala, London W1: ‘Shamelessly, brilliantly too much’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

1 day ago
A picture


Impala is like no restaurant I’ve ever been to, yet it somehow has echoes of almost all of themLate last month, Impala drove into Soho already flaming hot in the hype stakes: this was a sizzling booking to brag about even before executive chef and co-founder Meedu Saad had turned on the stoves.Impala, after all, is a Super 8 restaurant, the group that has, among others, Tomos Parry’s Brat in Shoreditch, which has been constantly, unfalteringly brilliant since 2018.It also runs Parry’s second baby, Mountain, which is likewise wonderful; sometimes weird, yes, but always wonderful.Long before that, back in 2016, they opened Kiln, the famed live-fire Thai counter hangout that cheffy boys in beanies have tried and failed to emulate all over Britain, while Super 8’s beginnings were with the boundary-pushing and much-loved Smoking Goat.That is nothing less than a litany of solid-gold bangers, and now they’ve unleashed Impala by Saad, the former head chef at Kiln.

In any normal restaurant review, it would have been common to have by now established what type of food Impala actually cooks – north African? Middle Eastern? Mediterranean? British?, etc – but in this odd, dreamy and defiantly dark nook in Soho (every single one of us in the room, even those with perfect vision, had our iPhone torches on just to read the menu), narrowing down its origin story is not quite that simple.“Bird’s tongue pasta braised with spiced oxtail?” someone asked over the loud jazz.“Molokhia, braised jute leaf and shoulder of cull yaw sheep?” queried someone else.It went on: aish baladi? Ftira? “Bird’s tongue pasta is the Egyptian name for orzo,” I ventured, adding that I thought molokhia might be a bit like spinach, but never have I been more ready for a server to turn up and ask: “Guys, may I explain the menu?”We choose a beef tartare with a smoky, sweet Tunisian harissa and crunchy chunks of deep-fried bread as brittle as pork crackling.We scoop honey bread through an insanely good mush of pounded white beans topped with chunks of pungent bottarga.

There are rustic pillows of that aish baladi, an Egyptian wholegrain bread that here comes with a fresh, rich harissa paste, and langoustine kibbeh and sun-dried wheat all wrapped in a neat perilla leaf cone.Saad’s new restaurant feels very much like a mesh of influences: there are nods to childhood trips to his Egyptian dad’s homeland, hat tips to the Turkish-Cypriot cooking of Green Lanes in north London, and definite undertones of Kiln’s take-me-or-leave-me rawness – notably in robust, non-mass-market dishes made with the likes of nettles or garum, and in rough, dry tangles of fattoush salad with pistachios and Greek anthotyros cheese.Suppliers include a serious-sounding bunch of Welsh farmers, Spanish citrus growers, Cretan olive oil producers and Cornish fisherfolk, all listed on the website as if they were movie stars.The nerdily chosen wine list ranges from France (traditional pouilly-fuissé!) to Slovakian orange wines and Moroccan reds, while the cocktail list offers banana rum punch, bathtime martinis and Long Island iced teas.We order monkfish wrapped in grape leaves and cooked succulently over coals, as well as grilled short rib infused with rosemary and made fiery by three varieties of black pepper; artichokes come with those aforementioned nettles and a pile of pale, balm-like sheep’s cheese.

This food is extraordinary and, more than that, it is inimitable, not least because it feels as if the menu is essentially a 3D printout of Saad’s mind.I’d go back tomorrow and the next day just out of sheer curiosity to see what this team comes up with next.Impala is like no restaurant I’ve ever been to, but at the same time it somehow has echoes of almost all of them.It is a long-ago holiday in Tunisia mixed with late-night dinners on the boundaries of Stoke Newington, complete with throwbacks to the cocktails at the weird, industrial-chic Alphabet Bar back in 90s Beak Street and sprinklings of London’s Turkish-Cypriot scene.Impala left me punch-drunk with memories, and wondering if this hazy blend of styles, cuisines and shabby-chic luxury might actually be the future.

If that all sounds a bit bloody much, you’re right, it is.Impala is shamelessly, brilliantly too much.Or at least it is right up to the dessert offering, which is where all the wild excess stops.It lists just one option, a like-it-or-lump it, £12 slice of riotous, salty-sweet date and pistachio custard tart – and no, they won’t be faffing about making sorbet just to fill the empty space on the menu.And I respect that fully.

I’ve seen the next era of restaurants, and it’s weird, jumbled, dark, unapologetic and delicious.Impala 13-14 Dean Street, London W1 (no phone).Open Mon-Sat, lunch noon-3pm, dinner 5-10.30pm.From about £65 a head, plus drinks & service
sportSee all
A picture

Bread and honey for breakfast and 150 miles a week training: secrets of Sawe’s world record

Sabastian Sawe’s astonishing world marathon record of one hour 59 minutes and 30 seconds at Sunday’s ­London Marathon was fuelled by running 150 miles a week, wearing the ­lightest super shoes in history and a pre-race breakfast of bread and honey, the Kenyan and his team have revealed.With an estimated 800,000 watching in the capital, the 31-year-old became the first man to run a sub-two-hour marathon in an official race as he powered home in the second half of the race to shatter the world record.Afterwards, Sawe said he immediately realised that he had created a moment that would never be forgotten. “I have made history today in London,” he said. “For me, I have shown that nothing is not possible

about 15 hours ago
A picture

UFC president Dana White says experience at press dinner shooting was ‘awesome’

While many of those present during the shooting at the White House correspondents’ dinner were shocked by Saturday night’s events, UFC CEO Dana White seemed to rather enjoy himself.White, a long-time ally of Donald Trump, was sitting near the front of the ballroom hosting the dinner when the event was interrupted by the sound of gunfire. Rather than trying to find a safe place to hide during the chaos, White was enthused by the scene.“All of a sudden, it just started getting noisy,” White told reporters of the aftermath of the shooting. “Tables getting flipped over, guys running in with guns and they were screaming ‘Get down!’ I didn’t get down – it was fucking awesome

about 15 hours ago
A picture

Masterclass on Anzac Day encapsulates why unflappable Scott Pendlebury is so good

The week in football was characterised in many ways by the absence of competence. There wasn’t much competence over at Kayo, which had more crashes than Leslie Nielsen. There wasn’t much competence in the umpiring on Friday night. There wasn’t much competence at the AFL tribunal, with its barking dogs and house inspections. There wasn’t much competence, or basic decency, at its appeals board

about 16 hours ago
A picture

Nikola Jokić boils over after McDaniels’s mocking layup in Nuggets’ loss to Timberwolves

Nikola Jokić and Julius Randle were ejected after Jaden McDaniels made a meaningless – and provocative – layup at the end of the Minnesota Timberwolves’ playoff victory over the Denver Nuggets on Saturday night.With Minnesota already all but guaranteed victory in a game that ended 112-96, McDaniels chose to make the layup with 2.1 seconds left rather than run out the clock, as is customary. That led to Jokić jogging down from half-court to confront McDaniels, and a shoving match ensued as other players became involved.“I don’t know what [Jokić] said, to be honest

about 19 hours ago
A picture

London Marathon 2026: Sabastian Sawe breaks two-hour barrier and world record – as it happened

Sabastian Sawe has done it! He wins the London Marathon and finishes the race in 1:59:30! That is the first record broken in the men’s race in London since 2002.Sean Ingle was on the Mall to witness the incredible Sabastian Sawe.double quotation markThey call Sabastian Sawe the silent assassin. But it was impossible to ignore the beautiful destruction on the streets of London as the 30-year-old Kenyan became the first athlete to shatter the two-hour barrier in an official race.As Sawe crossed the line on the Mall, the clock showed that he had run 26

about 20 hours ago
A picture

Sabastian Sawe breaks two-hour barrier to make history in London Marathon

He came. He Sawe. He conquered. Not so very long ago, the idea of anyone running an official marathon in under two hours lurked only in the realms of the fantastical and theoretical: part holy grail, part scientific curiosity.But over the course of one hour, 59 minutes and 30 seconds of a tumult­uous spring day in London, Sabastian Sawe turned it into a brain-spinning reality

about 20 hours ago
politicsSee all
A picture

Dozens of MPs oppose Streeting’s new power to say what NHS pays for drugs

1 day ago
A picture

Key figure in Mandelson vetting scandal will not give evidence before MPs

1 day ago
A picture

Security vetting stepped up after MP is given bodyguard with far-right links

1 day ago
A picture

Partygate v Mandelson: Keir Starmer faces attack from his own playbook

2 days ago
A picture

Unlucky chancellor? Iran shock hits Reeves just as UK seemed to turn corner

2 days ago
A picture

‘Nigel is mad to accept his money’: who is Christopher Harborne, the mystery billionaire bankrolling Reform?

2 days ago