Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Camille
230ptsProper French lunch, no drama booking.

About Camille
A Michelin Plate French bistro at Borough Market doing pared-back classical cooking without ceremony or inflated prices. Book it for a serious sit-down lunch in SE1 when you want technique over theatre. At £££, it delivers more than the neighbourhood competition and earns its 4.4 Google rating across 174 reviews.
Should You Book Camille?
Getting a table at Camille is easier than most restaurants worth your time in London — but don't mistake moderate booking difficulty for a fallback option. This is a deliberate, well-executed French bistro at Borough Market that earns its Michelin Plate (2025) through restraint and consistency, not spectacle. Book it when you want proper French cooking without the formality or the four-figure bill.
What Camille Is
Camille sits at the entrance to Borough Market on Stoney Street, SE1 — one of the most food-saturated addresses in the city. The setting is rustic and compact, the kind of room where the menu arrives written on a blackboard rather than handed over in a leather binder. That's not an aesthetic choice for its own sake: it signals that the kitchen is working with what's good right now, not locked into a printed menu designed six months ago.
The cooking is French, pared back, and deliberately unpretentious. Dishes like pâté-en-croûte and whole mackerel with café de Paris butter tell you exactly what this kitchen values: classical technique applied to honest ingredients, without elaboration for its own sake. Pâté-en-croûte is a demanding preparation , pastry, forcemeat, aspic , done well, it rewards both the kitchen that makes it and the diner who orders it. Café de Paris butter, a compound sauce with a long Franco-Swiss lineage, brings depth to a whole fish without burying it. These are satisfying, well-made dishes, not safe ones.
The service is described as friendly and cheery, which in a Borough Market setting matters more than it might elsewhere. This is a neighbourhood that draws both serious food enthusiasts and tourists looking for a quick lunch between market stalls. Camille's tone steers clearly toward the former without making the latter feel unwelcome.
The Brunch and Weekend Case
For food-focused visitors treating a Saturday or Sunday visit to Borough Market as a half-day eating exercise, Camille offers something harder to find than a great market snack: a sit-down meal with structure. Borough Market itself is exceptional for grazing, but if you want to eat properly , a full plate, table service, a glass of something French , Camille is the sensible answer without needing to leave the postcode. The changing blackboard format means weekend menus reflect what's available and in season, which aligns well with the market ethos surrounding it. For a food enthusiast building a day around SE1, Camille is worth anchoring your lunch around.
The price point of £££ positions it as a mid-range commitment: more than a market lunch, less than a destination restaurant. For the Borough Market area, where options lean heavily toward street food or tourist-trap casual dining, that's a meaningful position to occupy.
Booking It
Camille sits at moderate booking difficulty. You are not competing with the weeks-out wait lists of CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury, but walk-in availability on a Saturday , particularly during Borough Market's busiest hours , should not be assumed. The practical advice: book a few days ahead for a weekday, and aim for a week or more out if you want a specific weekend slot. The intimate room size works in your favour once you're inside, but against you if you leave it to chance on a Friday evening.
No phone number is publicly listed in our data. Check the restaurant's website directly or use a reservations platform to secure your table. Hours are not confirmed in our current data, so verify before visiting.
Ratings and Trust Signals
Camille holds a Michelin Plate for 2025 , a signal of quality cooking that doesn't yet reach star level but clears the bar for consistent, well-executed food. It carries a Google rating of 4.4 from 174 reviews, a score that reflects genuine satisfaction from a real diner volume rather than a handful of enthusiastic early visitors. For context, the Michelin Plate is awarded to restaurants producing good cooking: it is a positive credential, not a consolation prize.
Among French options in London's mid-range, Camille sits alongside Chez Bruce and Galvin La Chapelle as a restaurant where French technique is taken seriously without requiring a grand occasion to justify the spend. If you want to understand how this style of cooking scales upward, the Michelin-starred end of the French spectrum in the UK includes places like Le Gavroche, Pétrus by Gordon Ramsay, and beyond London, The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and Moor Hall in Aughton. Camille is not competing at that level , and doesn't need to. It's doing something different and doing it well.
Who Should Book
Book Camille if you are a food enthusiast visiting Borough Market who wants a proper sit-down French lunch rather than market grazing. Book it if you want Michelin-acknowledged cooking at a mid-range price in a room without ceremony. It works well for two people who want to eat seriously without the weight of a special-occasion meal. It is less suited to large groups , the intimate room will limit that , and it is not the right choice if you want a formal setting for a milestone celebration. For that, consider 64 Goodge Street or step up to Pétrus by Gordon Ramsay.
For those building a wider London food trip, our full London restaurants guide covers the full range of options. You can also explore London hotels, London bars, London wineries, and London experiences through Pearl. If French cooking abroad interests you, Pearl also covers Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and L'Effervescence in Tokyo for international reference points. And for strong regional UK cooking, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood are worth knowing.
Quick reference: Camille, 2-3 Stoney St, London SE1 9AA. French bistro. £££. Michelin Plate 2025. Google 4.4/5 (174 reviews). Moderate booking difficulty , reserve a few days to a week ahead. Hours not confirmed; verify before visiting.
FAQ
What should I order at Camille?
- The blackboard menu changes regularly, so there is no fixed dish list to prescribe. Based on the kitchen's known style, anchor your order around the classical French preparations: pâté-en-croûte if it is available is a strong signal of kitchen confidence, and whole fish dishes with compound butters reflect the kitchen's approach to technique over trend. Follow the blackboard rather than arriving with a fixed agenda.
Is Camille worth the price?
- At £££, yes , for what it is. You are getting Michelin Plate-acknowledged French cooking in a no-ceremony room at Borough Market. That combination is genuinely hard to find at this price tier in London. If you want starred French cooking, the price jumps sharply: Pétrus by Gordon Ramsay and Galvin La Chapelle sit at ££££ and deliver a different register of experience. Camille is the right call when the food matters more than the occasion dressing.
Is Camille good for a special occasion?
- It depends on what the occasion requires. Camille works well for a low-key celebration between two people who prioritise eating over atmosphere , the food is good enough to justify it, and the service is warm. It is not the choice for a formal milestone where the room itself needs to do work: for that, look at Chez Bruce or step up to the ££££ tier.
Can Camille accommodate groups?
- The intimate room size makes large group bookings unlikely to be direct. Camille suits parties of two to four more naturally than larger tables. If you are planning a group dinner in London's French tier, Galvin La Chapelle has more capacity and private dining options worth investigating.
Can I eat at the bar at Camille?
- Bar seating is not confirmed in our current data. The room is described as intimate, which suggests limited counter options if any exist. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm before planning around it.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Camille?
- A formal tasting menu format is not confirmed for Camille , the kitchen operates with a changing blackboard menu, which suggests an à la carte or daily-set structure rather than a multi-course tasting progression. If a tasting format is your priority, CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury deliver that experience at the leading of the London market, and L'Enclume in Cartmel is worth the trip if you want the leading tasting format currently operating in the UK.
Compare Camille
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camille | £££ | Moderate | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ | Unknown | — |
How Camille stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Camille accommodate groups?
Camille is described as an intimate bistro, which typically means limited cover count and tables suited to pairs and small groups. Parties of four should be fine with a booking; larger groups should check the venue's official channels before assuming availability. This is not a venue built around large-group dining.
Is Camille good for a special occasion?
It works for a low-key celebration — an anniversary lunch or a birthday dinner where the priority is good food and relaxed atmosphere over theatrical presentation. The rustic interior and pared-back cooking ethos are not the setting for a milestone event requiring ceremony. For that, The Ledbury or CORE by Clare Smyth in London will fit the brief better.
What should I order at Camille?
Stick to the blackboard menu and order whatever is on it that day — the menu changes regularly, which is the point. Expect dishes in the vein of pâté-en-croûte or whole mackerel with café de Paris butter: French bistro classics executed cleanly rather than reinvented. If you are unfamiliar with the format, ask the staff — the service is friendly enough that it is worth doing.
Can I eat at the bar at Camille?
Bar seating availability is not confirmed in the venue data, so treat it as uncertain rather than assumed. If you are planning to drop in solo or as a pair and prefer counter seating, call ahead or arrive early — the bistro format at Borough Market is busy enough that relying on walk-in bar availability at peak times carries risk.
Is Camille worth the price?
At £££, Camille sits in the mid-range for London, and the Michelin Plate for 2025 confirms it is cooking at a consistent level for that bracket. Compared to a market graze at Borough, you are paying for a proper sit-down meal with attentive service and a rotating French menu. If you want star-level cooking at the same address, you will need to look elsewhere — but for what Camille is, the price holds up.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Camille?
Camille's format is a regularly changing blackboard menu rooted in unpretentious bistro cooking — there is no evidence of a set tasting menu in the venue data. If a tasting format is your priority, Camille is likely not the right fit; look instead at London options like Sketch's Lecture Room or Dinner by Heston Blumenthal where structured tasting menus are core to the offer.
Recognized By
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