Skip to main content

    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Delaunay

    310pts

    Reliable all-day café, no special occasion needed.

    Delaunay, Restaurant in London

    About Delaunay

    Delaunay is a reliable grand café at Aldwych delivering mittel-European cooking — schnitzels, wieners, and an all-day menu — in a busy, high-energy room. A Michelin Plate (2025) and 4.5 Google rating across 3,700+ reviews confirm consistent quality. At £££, it's a strong mid-upper choice for atmosphere-forward dining in central London without the commitment of a ££££ fine-dining booking.

    Is Delaunay worth booking for a proper sit-down meal in London?

    Yes, if you want a reliable, all-day grand café experience in central London at a price point that sits below the city's top-tier restaurant scene. Delaunay at 55 Aldwych delivers mittel-European cooking — schnitzels, wieners, and the kind of menu that reads like it was designed for a long, unhurried meal — in a room that earns its reputation for atmosphere and a recognisable crowd. At £££, it's not a budget call, but it's a meaningful step below the ££££ tier that dominates London's award-heavy dining conversation.

    The Room and the Energy

    The first thing to understand about Delaunay is that the room does a lot of the work. It's a high-ceilinged, marble-counter, all-day café in the European grand tradition, and the sound level reflects that: animated, busy, and at peak hours genuinely loud. If you're planning a quiet conversation over dinner, manage your expectations or book early. The energy suits confident solo diners, business lunches where the buzz provides cover, and groups who want to feel like they're somewhere rather than just eating somewhere. It's the kind of room that makes an ordinary Tuesday feel like an occasion without requiring you to dress for one.

    The atmosphere is the venue's clearest point of differentiation from its sibling, Cafe Cecilia or quieter neighbourhood options. Delaunay trades in buzz. That's a feature, not a flaw, as long as you know what you're booking into.

    The Food and What the Awards Tell You

    Delaunay holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, which means Michelin inspectors rate the cooking as good without awarding it a star. That's a useful calibration: this is a kitchen producing consistent, well-executed food in a format (all-day, European brasserie) that doesn't chase tasting-menu complexity. The Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe Recommended recognition from 2023 reinforces the same read: this is a venue that performs reliably at its category, not one trying to climb into a different one.

    The mittel-European menu focus , schnitzels, wieners, the kind of cooking associated with Vienna's Café Central tradition , means the kitchen has a clear identity. Under chef Christian Turner, the menu leans into that identity rather than hedging toward a generic modern European offering. For the food-focused traveller or Londoner who wants something more specific than a standard brasserie, that specificity is worth something. With a Google rating of 4.5 across more than 3,700 reviews, the consistency of the experience is well-documented at scale.

    On Takeout and Off-Premise

    The editorial angle here matters: Delaunay's cooking is built around the full in-room experience. Grand café food , schnitzels, egg dishes, pastries, cold-cut boards , can travel reasonably well compared to, say, a tasting menu or dishes dependent on precise plating. But the honest answer is that Delaunay's value proposition is heavily weighted toward eating in the room. The atmosphere, the service, the sense of occasion: these don't transfer to a delivery bag. If your situation genuinely requires off-premise dining, the mittel-European menu style means the food won't fall apart in transit the way a more technically precise kitchen's would. But you'd be paying £££ prices for food stripped of the context that justifies them. Book a table or consider whether a different format better suits your needs that day.

    Booking and Logistics

    Delaunay is open seven days a week, running from 7am on weekdays and 8am Saturdays, closing at 10:30pm across the week with an 11am Sunday start. That all-day window is one of its practical strengths: breakfast, lunch, afternoon, and dinner are all viable options, which gives you flexibility that most of its higher-priced peers in London don't offer. Booking difficulty sits at moderate , plan ahead for evening slots, particularly Thursday through Saturday, but the all-day format means off-peak windows (early lunch, late afternoon) are more accessible than at starred restaurants where a single dinner service fills quickly.

    The Aldwych address places it conveniently for pre- or post-theatre dining, a use case that suits both the menu style and the room's energy. If you're pairing it with a West End show, the 10:30pm close works on most standard curtain-down times.

    How Delaunay Compares to London Peers

    See the comparison section below for a full breakdown, but the short version: Delaunay sits in a different category to CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury. Those venues are destination-dining propositions at ££££. Delaunay is a strong all-day grand café at £££ that happens to hold Michelin recognition for its cooking quality. The comparison that matters most is against other London brasseries and all-day venues, not against the city's starred fine-dining tier.

    For food-focused travellers exploring the broader London dining scene, Story and Dysart Petersham offer more technically ambitious cooking if that's the priority. Row on 5 and 104 are worth considering if you want something with a different format or neighbourhood feel. Our full London restaurants guide covers the broader field. For other London planning, see our guides to hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences.

    If you're travelling from outside London and building a broader UK dining itinerary, venues like The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood represent the country's broader fine-dining geography. For European context, Frantzén in Stockholm and FZN by Björn Frantzén in Dubai show what the grand-café-adjacent fine-dining format looks like at its most ambitious internationally.

    The Verdict

    Book Delaunay if you want a dependable, atmosphere-forward grand café meal in central London at a price that doesn't require a special occasion to justify. The Michelin Plate and the 4.5 Google rating across nearly 3,700 reviews confirm you're not taking a risk on consistency. The mittel-European menu is specific enough to feel considered rather than generic. Go for the room and the food together , that combination is what the price is buying you.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • What should a first-timer know about Delaunay? Delaunay is an all-day European grand café, not a fine-dining destination. The mittel-European menu , think schnitzels and wieners alongside classic brasserie dishes , is the draw, alongside a busy, high-energy room at Aldwych. At £££ per head, it sits comfortably in the mid-upper tier for London. A Michelin Plate (2025) confirms the kitchen is producing good cooking; you're not paying for starry ambition, but for reliable quality in a room with real character.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Delaunay? Lunch is the stronger call for most diners. The room is slightly calmer, the all-day format means you're not competing with a full evening rush, and the European café menu plays well at midday. Dinner works for theatre pre-/post-visits given the Aldwych location and 10:30pm close, but the noise level rises later in the evening. If atmosphere over food is your priority, dinner delivers more energy; if conversation matters, lunch is the better choice at £££ prices.
    • Is Delaunay good for solo dining? Yes. The grand café format suits solo diners well: the room provides enough ambient energy to make eating alone feel natural rather than awkward, and the all-day menu gives you flexibility on timing. The counter or bar-adjacent seating, typical of venues in this style, makes solo visits practical. London's grand café format is generally more solo-friendly than the city's tasting-menu restaurants, where solo bookings can be harder to secure.
    • Can Delaunay accommodate groups? The venue's size and grand café format suggest it can handle groups, though specific private dining details aren't confirmed in available data. For groups, book well ahead, particularly for evening slots Thursday through Saturday. At £££ per head, a group dinner here is a manageable cost for a central London occasion. Contact the venue directly to confirm group booking arrangements and any room options.
    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Delaunay? Delaunay is not a tasting-menu venue. Its format is all-day European brasserie: à la carte, with a menu that spans breakfast through dinner. If you're specifically seeking a tasting menu experience in London, CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury are the relevant comparisons, both at ££££. Delaunay's value is in the flexibility and the room, not a set tasting format.
    • Is Delaunay worth the price? At £££, yes , with the right expectations. The Michelin Plate, 4.5 Google rating across 3,700-plus reviews, and Opinionated About Dining recommendation confirm the kitchen delivers. You're paying for consistent cooking in a high-quality grand café environment in central London. It won't compete with the city's ££££ starred restaurants on technical ambition, but it's not trying to. For an all-day European meal with atmosphere and reliable food, the price is justified.
    • Does Delaunay handle dietary restrictions? The mittel-European menu has a clear meat-forward identity , schnitzels and wieners are signature , but a kitchen of this size and all-day format typically accommodates standard dietary requests. Specific dietary menu options aren't confirmed in available data. Contact the venue directly before booking if dietary restrictions are a key factor, particularly for complex requirements.

    Compare Delaunay

    Quick Value Check: Delaunay
    VenuePriceValue
    Delaunay£££
    CORE by Clare Smyth££££
    Restaurant Gordon Ramsay££££
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library££££
    The Ledbury££££
    Dinner by Heston Blumenthal££££

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should a first-timer know about Delaunay?

    Delaunay runs an all-day menu from 7am to 10:30pm on weekdays, so you are not locked into a single service window — that flexibility is part of the appeal. The cooking holds a Michelin Plate for 2024 and 2025, meaning inspectors rate it as good without awarding a star. The mittel-European menu — schnitzels, wieners, egg dishes — is the focus, not a broad modern European spread. Come for the room and the format as much as the food.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Delaunay?

    Lunch is the stronger case: the grand café format works well in daylight, the room is easier to get into, and the all-day menu does not change significantly between services. Dinner is perfectly viable at the £££ price point, but Delaunay is not an occasion restaurant in the way The Ledbury or CORE by Clare Smyth are — if you want a formal dinner experience, those are different propositions. For a relaxed central London lunch near Aldwych, Delaunay is a dependable choice.

    Is Delaunay good for solo dining?

    Yes — the grand café format, with counter seating and an all-day service from 7am, is well suited to solo visits. You are not expected to commit to a full multi-course meal, and the atmosphere supports dropping in for a single dish or a coffee and pastry at the £££ price range. The Opinionated About Dining recognition for 2023 reflects a venue that functions as a proper café, not just a destination restaurant.

    Can Delaunay accommodate groups?

    Groups are workable here, but Delaunay is not primarily a group-dining destination — the grand café layout prioritises atmosphere over private space. For parties of four to six, booking a table in the main room is straightforward given the long operating hours. Larger groups wanting a dedicated private dining set-up should look elsewhere; Delaunay's strength is the shared room experience, not event-format dining.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Delaunay?

    Delaunay does not operate a tasting menu format — it runs an all-day à la carte in the European café tradition. If a structured tasting menu is what you want, Sketch's Lecture Room and Library or Restaurant Gordon Ramsay are the appropriate comparisons at a higher price point. Delaunay's format suits those who want to order freely rather than commit to a fixed progression.

    Is Delaunay worth the price?

    At £££, Delaunay sits below London's top-tier restaurant scene and delivers consistent Michelin Plate-level cooking in a high-ceilinged European café room in central London. The value case is strong for what it is: an all-day venue where you can eat well without a special-occasion budget. It is not trying to compete with starred restaurants, and the pricing reflects that — which is precisely why it works as a regular option rather than a once-a-year booking.

    Does Delaunay handle dietary restrictions?

    The mittel-European menu — built around schnitzels, wieners, and egg dishes — is meat-forward by design, so it is not a natural fit for vegetarians or vegans as a primary choice. No specific dietary accommodation details are recorded in the available venue data. If dietary requirements are a priority, it is worth confirming options directly before booking, as the core menu format has limited flexibility compared to broader modern European restaurants.

    Hours

    Monday
    7 am–10:30 pm
    Tuesday
    7 am–10:30 pm
    Wednesday
    7 am–10:30 pm
    Thursday
    7 am–10:30 pm
    Friday
    7 am–10:30 pm
    Saturday
    8 am–10:30 pm
    Sunday
    11 am–10 pm

    Recognized By

    More restaurants in London

    Keep this place

    Save or rate Delaunay on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.