Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
12 seats, one menu, book now.

Evelyn's Table is a Michelin-starred, 12-seat counter in the cellar of The Blue Posts pub on Rupert Street, Soho, offering a five-course Modern British menu at £135 per person. Chef Seamus Sam, who joined in 2024, has maintained the OAD Casual Europe top-250 ranking and the kitchen's reputation for technically precise, seasonally driven cooking with serious wine pairings. Book several weeks ahead — availability is tight.
If you're considering Evelyn's Table, the first thing to know is that the 12-seat counter runs two evening sittings a night and Saturday lunch only — and it books out well in advance. The practical move: secure a reservation as soon as your dates are known, check in at The Blue Posts pub upstairs if you arrive early, and request the Saturday lunch sitting if weeknight travel is difficult. Lunch gives you the same five-course menu in a slightly less pressured atmosphere, and the cellar room feels different at 1 PM with natural light filtering down the stairs.
Evelyn's Table sits directly below The Blue Posts pub at 28 Rupert Street, on the eastern fringe of Chinatown in Soho , and the location is not incidental to what happens here. The proximity to Gerrard Street's Chinese restaurants is something the kitchen leans into deliberately: a Peking-style mallard has appeared on the menu as a direct nod to the neighbourhood. This is not a restaurant that could exist anywhere else in London. It is physically and culturally embedded in one of the capital's most compressed and diverse food corridors, and the cooking reflects that compression , Modern British technique running up against East Asian influence, the result tidier and more considered than the concept sounds.
Chef Seamus Sam arrived in mid-2024, having come from Muse, and the transition has held. The Michelin star earned before his tenure remains in place for 2024, and Opinionated About Dining's Casual Europe ranking moved from #274 in 2024 to #243 in 2025 , a small movement that points to continued momentum rather than plateau. At £135 per person for five courses, you are paying for a tasting format that requires commitment: there is no à la carte option, the menu is served simultaneously to all diners, and punctuality is not optional. If you need flexibility in what or when you eat, this is not the right booking.
Twelve seats at a counter in a former beer cellar is an arrangement that produces a particular kind of atmosphere: close, attentive, deliberately unhurried. The brigade of chefs handles both cooking and service, describing each dish directly to each diner without performance. The energy is low-key rather than theatrical , this is a space where conversation with your dining companion is easy early in the sitting, and where the food itself commands more attention as the evening progresses. Google reviewers rate it 4.8 from 1,171 reviews, a figure that holds across a meaningful sample size.
For solo diners, the counter format is one of London's better arguments for eating alone at a fine-dining level: you face the kitchen, you are part of the room, and the chef-as-server dynamic gives you natural points of engagement throughout the meal. For couples, the intimacy of the space works in your favour. For groups larger than four, this is not a viable option , the entire counter seats twelve, and there is no private dining arrangement. If you need a group setting in this price bracket, Kitchen Table or CORE by Clare Smyth offer more flexibility on capacity.
The five-course menu at £135 per person is the only format available. Wine pairings are described across multiple sources as clever and thought-provoking, with no-alcohol and low-alcohol options available alongside a full list that reviewers characterise as impressively varied but priced at a premium. Budget accordingly: the final bill with pairings will sit meaningfully above the menu price. The cooking draws on prime British ingredients , Herdwick lamb, Cornish fish, seasonal British produce , and applies technique that is confident without being ostentatious. Dishes have been noted for intuitive balance: British sourcing, occasional Asian inflection, presentation that is considered rather than decorative. For food and wine enthusiasts looking for depth rather than spectacle, this is a format that delivers both.
The wine programme earned Evelyn's Table a White Star listing on Star Wine List, which is a useful signal for anyone prioritising the list alongside the food. The no and low options are a practical note: this is one of the better fine-dining addresses in London for non-drinkers who do not want to be an afterthought at a tasting menu.
Reservations: Book as far ahead as possible , several weeks minimum is a reasonable expectation for a 12-seat room at this price point and profile. Hours: Monday to Friday 6 PM–11 PM (two sittings); Saturday 1 PM–3 PM and 6 PM–11 PM; closed Sunday. Budget: £135 per person for the set menu, plus wine pairing on leading , allow for a substantial addition if you take the full pairing. Dress: Smart casual is the expected register for a Michelin-starred counter at this price; nothing in the venue record specifies a formal dress code, but the room's intimacy and price point suggest erring towards neat rather than casual. Getting there: 28 Rupert Street, W1D 6DJ , walking distance from Leicester Square and Piccadilly Circus. Group size: Parties of one or two are ideally suited to the counter. Three or four is workable. Larger groups should look elsewhere. On arrival: If you are early, head to the top-floor bar of The Blue Posts pub above , the restaurant is punctuality-sensitive given the simultaneous service format.
If Soho is your base and you want to understand what is happening in London's Modern British counter-dining space more broadly, the relevant comparisons beyond the immediate neighbourhood include Portland and Trinity for a less formal but similarly ingredient-focused approach, and Kitchen W8 for Michelin-quality cooking with easier booking. For the full picture of what London's restaurant scene looks like at the leading of the Modern British category, see our full London restaurants guide. If you are building a longer trip, our guides to London hotels, London bars, and London experiences are worth consulting alongside.
Beyond London, the Modern British counter format has strong practitioners at The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and Moor Hall in Aughton. For smaller-room experiences with a similar intimacy of approach, hide and fox in Saltwood, House of Tides in Newcastle, John's House in Mountsorrel, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, and Hand and Flowers in Marlow all offer comparable levels of intent in different regional settings. See also our London wineries guide if the wine dimension of Evelyn's Table has your attention.
Evelyn's Table is the right booking if you want a Michelin-starred, counter-format tasting experience in central London with a strong wine programme and cooking that is technically grounded without being theatrical. The Soho location, the Chinatown adjacency, and the pub-cellar setting give it a character that most fine-dining rooms at £135 per head do not have. It is a poor fit if you need group flexibility, à la carte options, or a louder, more social atmosphere. Book early, arrive on time, and consider the Saturday lunch sitting if you want the same quality at a slightly lower-pressure register.
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Evelyn's Table | ££££ | Hard | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in London for this tier.
Book at least four to six weeks ahead. With only 12 seats across two evening sittings per night plus Saturday lunch, availability disappears fast — especially at this Michelin-starred level and £135 price point. If you find a short-notice slot, take it: cancellations do surface, but this is not a walk-in venue.
For counter-format tasting dining in central London, yes. The five-course menu at £135 per person is backed by a Michelin star, an Opinionated About Dining top-250 ranking in 2025, and multiple reviewer accounts describing the cooking as thoughtfully composed with genuinely interesting wine pairings. If you want à la carte flexibility or a larger group setting, this is not the right format — but for what it is, the price holds up against comparable London counters.
Dietary requirements are not detailed in available records for Evelyn's Table. Given the fixed five-course format served simultaneously to all 12 guests, contact them directly before booking — this is standard practice at counter-format tasting menus where substitutions require advance preparation.
Saturday lunch is the only midday option, running once a week against five dinner services. Both formats use the same counter and the same five-course menu at £135, so the cooking does not differ. Saturday lunch gives you a quieter Soho and a slightly more relaxed post-meal afternoon — dinner suits those who want the full cellar-counter atmosphere after dark.
At £135 for five courses, Evelyn's Table sits in the mid-tier of London's Michelin-starred tasting menus — notably below CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury at comparable acclaim levels. For a 12-seat, chef-led counter with strong wine pairings and a Michelin star, the price-to-format ratio is competitive. If the cellar setting sounds appealing rather than off-putting, this is a reasonable spend for what you get.
Counter dining is one of the few formats where solo suits the room. All 12 seats face the kitchen, conversation flows naturally along the counter, and the chefs describe each dish directly to each diner. Solo is a legitimate and well-suited format here — arguably more so than a couple at a conventional table.
No dress code is specified in available records, but the setting — a cellar counter below a period Soho pub, Michelin-starred, £135 per head — points toward smart-casual as a reasonable baseline. The tone across reviewer accounts is intimate and relaxed rather than formal, so a jacket is not required, but this is not a casual drop-in.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.