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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Tamil Prince

    415pts

    Michelin-noted Indian at pub prices in Islington.

    Tamil Prince, Restaurant in London

    About Tamil Prince

    A Michelin Plate holder in 2024 and 2025, Tamil Prince brings southern Indian cooking — anchored in Tamil Nadu, with northern excursions — to a revived Barnsbury pub at ££ per head. The Chettinad lamb curry, chana bhatura, and buttery roti are the dishes to build a visit around. At this price and quality level, it is one of the most repeat-visit-worthy Indian restaurants in London.

    The Verdict

    At ££ per head, Tamil Prince in Barnsbury is one of the most considered value propositions in London's Indian restaurant scene right now. A Michelin Plate holder in both 2024 and 2025, it sits in a former Islington pub and delivers southern-leaning Indian cooking with enough technical confidence to convert sceptics and reward repeat visitors. If you want serious regional Indian food without a Mayfair price tag, book here before the word spreads further. Google reviewers back this up: 4.5 stars across 1,909 ratings is not a fluke.

    What Tamil Prince Is

    Tamil Prince occupies a revived neighbourhood pub on Hemingford Road in Barnsbury, one of Islington's quieter residential pockets. The interior leans into the bones of the old building — dark walls, weathered bare-wood floors — while a bamboo-shielded terrace out front adds a layer of casual charm that suits the neighbourhood. Bar counter seating means solo diners are well accommodated without the awkwardness of a table for one. The space reads as a local with genuine culinary ambition, which is exactly what it is.

    The kitchen operates under the influence of Tamil Nadu but does not treat that geography as a rigid boundary. Northern dishes appear when they earn their place: the chana bhatura, a huge puffed deep-fried bread served with chickpeas and raita, is described by Michelin as a showstopper, and that assessment holds. The Chettinad lamb curry , a dish rooted in one of south India's most spice-forward culinary traditions , arrives with depth and exhilarating spicing. The Thanjavur chicken is an equally assertive option. Roti, made with evident care, is the kind of accompaniment that elevates every other dish on the table and should not be skipped.

    The drinks programme is a genuine differentiator at this price point. Wine opens at £29 a bottle (£8 a glass), cocktails and mocktails carry Indian-inflected flavours, and the whole setup is designed to complement food rather than compete with it. The fact that you can drink a pint alongside onion bhajis in a space that has kept the pub's original character is, as Michelin noted, an obvious pairing that somehow remains rare in London.

    Multi-Visit Strategy

    Tamil Prince rewards return visits more than most restaurants at this price point, because the menu spans enough ground that a single sitting only covers part of it.

    First visit: Anchor around the dishes with the clearest regional identity. The Chettinad lamb curry is the centrepiece , order it. Add the fried prawn and curry-leaf varuval to start, the chana bhatura to share, and the buttery roti as a non-negotiable side. Finish with gulab jamun, which reportedly carries a firmer, more satisfying texture than the usual rendition. This visit maps the Tamil Nadu core of the menu and gives you the baseline for everything else.

    Second visit: Shift attention to the northern-leaning dishes and the butter masala paneer, which uses candy-like chunks of paneer in a preparation that sits slightly apart from the rest of the menu's direction. Use this visit to test the cocktail programme properly , the rebooted Piña Colada with cinnamon, toasted coconut and lime zest has drawn specific Michelin attention. If you came with two people last time, bring four this visit and order wider.

    Third visit: Sit at the bar counter or take the terrace in warmer months. At this point you know the menu well enough to order around a theme: all the snack-format dishes alongside drinks, or a focused run through the curry section with different accompaniments. Tamil Prince is designed for the kind of neighbourhood regulars who come often and order differently each time. At ££ per head, that kind of repeat-visit habit is financially realistic in a way it simply is not at the city's Indian fine-dining addresses.

    For context on the broader Indian dining spectrum in London: Trishna operates at a higher price point with a coastal Indian focus; Amaya and Benares both occupy the Mayfair tier where a meal costs considerably more. Ambassadors Clubhouse and Babur are worth knowing if you want south-east London alternatives. For Indian cooking at a globally ambitious level, Trèsind Studio in Dubai and Opheem in Birmingham represent what the category looks like with a much larger budget and higher ambition.

    At a Glance

    • Price: ££ (accessible; multi-visit friendly)
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024, Michelin Plate 2025
    • Google Rating: 4.5 / 5 (1,909 reviews)
    • Cuisine: Indian , Tamil Nadu-rooted with northern excursions
    • Address: 115 Hemingford Rd, London N1 1BZ

    Booking

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy. That said, Tamil Prince has developed a strong following among Islington locals and food-aware visitors since earning its first Michelin Plate , do not assume a same-day table is guaranteed, particularly on weekends. The bar counter is your leading option for walk-in or last-minute visits. Book a few days ahead for a weekend table; weekday dinners are more forgiving. No booking website or phone number is currently listed in our data , check Google or the venue directly for current reservation options.

    Practical Details

    Getting There

    Barnsbury sits between Caledonian Road and Highbury and Islington tube stations. Both are within walking distance. The address is 115 Hemingford Rd, London N1 1BZ.

    Logistics Comparison

    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyFormatLeading For
    Tamil Prince££EasySharing plates, pub settingRegional Indian, value, repeat visits
    Trishna£££ModerateÀ la carte, coastal IndianUpscale Indian without full fine-dining spend
    Amaya££££ModerateGrill-focused sharingMayfair occasion, larger groups
    Benares££££ModerateÀ la carte, tasting menuFormal Indian fine dining

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    Compare Tamil Prince

    How Easy to Book: Tamil Prince vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Tamil PrinceIndian££Easy
    CORE by Clare SmythModern British££££Unknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, French££££Unknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern French££££Unknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern Cuisine££££Unknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional British££££Unknown

    Comparing your options in London for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Tamil Prince?

    Start with the onion bhajis — they pair well with a pint and set the tone. The chana bhatura (deep-fried bread with chickpeas and raita) is a showstopper, and the Chettinad lamb curry is the dish most worth returning for: deep spicing, tender meat, serious depth. Don't skip the roti; chef Prince Durairaj's background at Roti King shows in every serving.

    Is Tamil Prince good for solo dining?

    Yes — bar counter seating makes solo visits practical rather than awkward. At ££ per head with a Michelin Plate and a concise menu, it's one of the more comfortable solo options in Islington. Order two or three dishes and you'll cover the menu's range without over-committing.

    What should a first-timer know about Tamil Prince?

    The menu is nominally Tamil Nadu-inspired but ranges across India, so expect both southern dishes like the Chettinad lamb and northern staples like chana bhatura. It occupies a former pub in Barnsbury, which means the atmosphere is relaxed rather than formal. Budget ££ per head, book ahead (it has built a strong Islington following since earning its Michelin Plate), and treat the roti as essential rather than optional.

    Does Tamil Prince handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu includes vegetarian options — the paneer butter masala and chana bhatura are both plant-based dishes that feature prominently. Specific allergen and dietary accommodation details aren't documented in available venue data, so check the venue's official channels before booking if you have serious requirements.

    Can I eat at the bar at Tamil Prince?

    Yes — the venue includes bar counter seating, which is particularly suited to solo diners or couples who want a more casual format. The bar also serves cocktails and mocktails with Indian flavour profiles, and the wine list opens at £29 a bottle (£8 a glass), so drinking well while you eat is straightforward at this price point.

    How far ahead should I book Tamil Prince?

    Booking is rated Easy, but Tamil Prince has a loyal local following in Barnsbury and its Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) brings in food-aware visitors from across London. A week's notice is usually sufficient for midweek; aim for two weeks if you want a weekend table. Walk-in availability at the bar counter is possible but not guaranteed.

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