Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Kudu
590Pearl PointsMichelin-backed braai worth the Marylebone price.

About Kudu
Kudu delivers South African braai cooking at a level that justifies its Marylebone address and dual 2025 Michelin recognition (Plate and Bib Gourmand). Chef Katlego Mlambo's sharing menu centres on open-fire technique, with the bread, beef fat fingerling potatoes, and an all-South African wine list among the standouts. Book two to three weeks ahead for weekend dinner; weekday lunch offers the same kitchen at a lower price point.
Verdict: Book Kudu for a special occasion dinner — it earns its Michelin recognition and then some
Kudu is the right call if you want South African cooking done at a level that justifies a Marylebone address and a £££ price tag. Chef Katlego Mlambo's 2025 consolidation of three Peckham originals into a single W1 flagship has produced something more focused and more ambitious than any of the predecessors. It holds a Michelin Plate and a Michelin Bib Gourmand for 2025 — a rare double that signals both quality and value awareness , and a Google rating of 4.7 from nearly 1,000 reviews backs that up with real diner consensus. If you are choosing between this and a standard Marylebone brasserie, Kudu wins on originality and cooking precision. If you are comparing it to the £££££ crowd, it is meaningfully better value without the booking battle.
The Restaurant
Braai , South African barbecue over open fire , anchors the menu, and that matters for how you plan your visit. The smoke and char that come off the grill inform the whole room: this is a kitchen that works with fire as a primary technique, not a garnish. The open kitchen is visible from certain seats, and it is worth requesting one if you want to watch the braai in action. The room itself is a step up from Kudu's Peckham origins , smarter, more considered, and pitched at an occasion rather than a casual neighbourhood drop-in. The move to W1 has raised the bar on both the setting and the price, but the cooking has followed upward accordingly.
The menu is built for sharing, with a South African lens running across breads, braai centrepieces, and sides. The Kudu bread with cultured butter (described in Michelin notes as a standout opening) is the right way to start, both for the quality of the bread itself and because it signals the kitchen's approach: South African pantry staples treated with technical care. The beef fat fingerling potatoes are flagged as a must-order alongside the braai mains , the poussin and the pork chop are the centrepiece options worth knowing about. The wine list is entirely South African and is explained well by the team, which makes it genuinely useful rather than a gimmick. For a diner unfamiliar with South African wine, this is one of the better introductions you will find in London.
Lunch vs Dinner: How the Two Experiences Compare
Kudu's Bib Gourmand recognition , Michelin's signal for good food at moderate prices , makes lunch worth investigating seriously. Michelin awards the Bib on the basis of menu value across service periods, which typically means a lunch offering that delivers the kitchen's quality at a lower spend than dinner. If your priority is hitting the cooking at the lowest price point, a weekday lunch is the strategic call. The room will be quieter, the pace more relaxed, and the bill meaningfully lighter than a full dinner with South African wines.
Dinner is where Kudu justifies its special occasion billing. The Michelin Plate recognition, the sharing format, and the open kitchen make for an evening that builds properly over time , bread and cultured butter, braai mains, sides, and a wine journey through a list the team clearly knows cold. For a date, a birthday, or a business dinner where the food needs to carry the conversation, the evening service is the right choice. Lunch is better value; dinner is the fuller experience. Both are worth your time depending on what you are optimising for.
Special Occasion Suitability
Kudu works well for dates and celebratory dinners at the £££ tier. The sharing format encourages the kind of back-and-forth that works for two people but also scales to a group of four or six without the evening feeling transactional. The room has genuine warmth , Michelin's own language describes a welcome that makes the space feel like a neighbourhood restaurant that happens to cook at a high level, which is the right register for an occasion that should feel celebratory without being stiff. If you want white-tablecloth formality, look at CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury. If you want something that feels alive and specific, Kudu is the better answer at this price point.
For South African cooking at this level, the London comparison set is thin. La Colombe and Salsify at the Roundhouse in Cape Town represent the benchmark for the cuisine at its most refined, but within London, Kudu is doing something genuinely specific. The Peckham origins gave it a cult following; the W1 move has given it the kitchen and the room to match the ambition that was always there.
Booking and Practical Details
Booking difficulty is moderate. The 2025 move to Marylebone and the Michelin recognition will have increased demand, so plan at least two to three weeks ahead for weekend dinner. Weekday lunch is likely easier to secure at shorter notice. The address is 7 Moxon St, London W1U 4EP, placing it in Marylebone's restaurant cluster, well-served by Baker Street and Bond Street Underground stations. Dress code is not formally stated, but the room's ambition and price point suggest smart-casual is appropriate , not a jeans-and-trainers evening. For broader London dining options across all price points, see our full London restaurants guide. If you are building a wider London trip, our London hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the full picture.
If Kudu is fully booked or you want to benchmark it against the wider UK South African and fire-cooking scene, The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, hide and fox in Saltwood, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford represent different points on the UK fine dining spectrum worth knowing about.
Quick reference: Kudu, 7 Moxon St, London W1U 4EP | £££ | Michelin Plate + Bib Gourmand 2025 | Moderate booking difficulty | Book 2–3 weeks ahead for weekend dinner.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Kudu?
Seating specifics are not confirmed in available venue details, but Kudu does have an open kitchen and the venue encourages asking for counter or kitchen-facing seats when booking. If bar dining matters to you, mention it when reserving — the 2025 Marylebone fit-out was designed to be a more considered, deliberate space than the former Peckham locations, so options are likely limited rather than abundant.
Does Kudu handle dietary restrictions?
Braai is the centrepiece of the menu, which means meat and fire are central to the experience — if you're vegetarian or vegan, this is probably not your best option at the £££ tier in Marylebone. Specific dietary accommodation details are not in Kudu's public record, so check the venue's official channels before booking to confirm what substitutions are possible, especially given the sharing-plate format.
What should a first-timer know about Kudu?
Kudu moved from three South London sites to a single, more ambitious Marylebone address in 2025, so if you've been before, expect a notably different and pricier experience. The menu is sharing-style with South African braai at its core, meaning the meal works best when you order across several dishes rather than treating it like a conventional two-course dinner. Book at least two to three weeks ahead given the Michelin Plate and Bib Gourmand recognition.
What should I wear to Kudu?
Kudu's Marylebone W1 address and £££ pricing suggest a dressed-up casual approach — think the kind of outfit you'd wear to a confident neighbourhood wine bar rather than a formal tasting-menu room. The space is described as elegant and ambitious post-2025 relocation, so jeans are probably fine but tracksuits are not. No dress code is formally published, so err on the side of looking considered.
What should I order at Kudu?
Start with the bread and cultured butter — Michelin's own notes single it out — then anchor your order around the braai dishes, which are the reason to be here. If poussin or the pork chop are on the menu, the beef fat fingerling potatoes are a confirmed companion worth ordering alongside them. The wine list is fully South African, which is a genuine point of difference at this price point, so lean into it rather than defaulting to what you already know.
Location
7 Moxon St, London W1U 4EP, United Kingdom
London, United Kingdom
Compare Kudu
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Kudu | £££ | |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| The Ledbury | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | ££££ |
What to weigh when choosing between Kudu and alternatives.
Also Consider
- CORE by Clare Smyth, Modern British, ££££
- Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Contemporary European, French, ££££
- Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, Modern French, ££££
- The Ledbury, Modern European, Modern Cuisine, ££££
- Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, Modern British, Traditional British, ££££
At £££, Kudu sits a full price tier below the London special-occasion heavyweights. CORE by Clare Smyth, The Ledbury, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal all operate at ££££ and require more planning, more spend, and in some cases months of lead time to secure a table. If your priority is a genuinely impressive occasion meal at a spend that does not require a full commitment to fine dining pricing, Kudu is the more practical answer. Its Michelin Plate and Bib Gourmand double for 2025 puts it in the conversation with venues that cost significantly more.
On cuisine specificity, Kudu has no direct London competitor at this price point. The ££££ options above all work within Modern British or French frameworks, which are well-represented across the capital. South African braai cooking at this level of technique and ambition is something Kudu does without meaningful competition in London, if that is the experience you are after, there is no equivalent alternative to consider. For the benchmark version of the cuisine itself, La Colombe and Salsify at the Roundhouse in Cape Town are the reference points, but within London, Kudu operates in a category of one.
For booking difficulty, Kudu sits in the moderate band, harder than a standard neighbourhood restaurant following the 2025 Michelin recognition and Marylebone move, but nowhere near the multi-month waits that CORE or The Ledbury can require at peak times. If the ££££ venues above are fully booked or over budget, Kudu is not a fallback, it is a considered first choice for diners who want a specific, well-executed cuisine and good value for the occasion spend.
Recognized By
Explore London
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