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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    The 10 Cases

    400Pearl Points

    Rotating wines by the glass, honest bistrot prices.

    The 10 Cases, Restaurant in London

    About The 10 Cases

    The 10 Cases in Covent Garden runs a 23-bin rotating wine list — all available by the glass, carafe, or bottle from around £33 — alongside a short French bistrot menu. Ranked #1 by Star Wine List in 2023, it is the practical choice for drinking well in central London without the usual West End markup. Book the Bistrot or walk into the Cave à Vin next door.

    The Verdict: A Wine Bar Worth Revisiting

    Bottles from around £33 and a short, rotating 23-bin list make The 10 Cases one of the more honest value propositions in Covent Garden. You are not paying for a brand-name cellar or a trophy producer list. You are paying for genuinely considered wine choices, simple French bistrot cooking, and a room that knows exactly what it is. Star Wine List ranked it #1 in 2023. That is the credential that matters here.

    Book if you want to drink well without the markup that usually comes with a central London address. Skip it if you are hunting allocated Burgundy or want a formal dining occasion.

    What The 10 Cases Actually Is

    The format drives everything. Owners Will Palmer and Ian Campbell buy precisely 10 cases of every wine on the list, offer all of them by the glass, carafe, and bottle, then retire each wine when stock runs out. The result is a list that changes constantly and rewards return visits — which is exactly the point. A bottle of 2014 Morgon Les Charmes from Château Grange Cochard, a richer and more structured style of Beaujolais than most drinkers expect, gives you a sense of the range: quality-focused, slightly off the beaten track, genuinely good value relative to what comparable wines cost elsewhere in WC2.

    There are two ways to use the venue. The Bistrot at 16 Endell Street takes bookings and serves a full menu of French classics. Next door, the Cave à Vin wine bar is walk-ins only. Both run off the same wine list. Which you choose depends on whether you want a meal or just a glass or two.

    Planning Multiple Visits: The Multi-Visit Strategy

    The rotating list is the main reason to come back more than once. Because no wine is restocked, the list you drink through in October will look different in January. First-time visitors should use the Bistrot with a booking, work through two or three wines by the glass alongside the food, and get a feel for the style of the curation — it skews toward lesser-known appellations and producers making quality wines outside the commercial mainstream.

    On a second visit, the Cave à Vin walk-in format makes more sense. You already know the curation approach, so you can drop in without a reservation, order a carafe of whatever is new, and spend less time second-guessing the list. The cave format also suits solo visits or pairs better than groups, since the walk-in dynamic rewards flexibility.

    A third visit is where you start noticing what has gone. Wines sell through at different speeds depending on how the floor team talks about them and how the list is positioned against the food. If something caught your attention on a previous visit, there is no guarantee it will still be there. That scarcity is a feature, not a frustration, it creates a reason to explore rather than default to the familiar.

    The Food

    The kitchen runs French bistrot classics at prices that match the wine positioning. Smoked duck breast with rémoulade and candied walnuts, steak frites with peppercorn sauce, cod cheeks in a tempura-style batter with vadouvan mayo, and a whole roasted pork T-bone chop for two are the kinds of dishes that exist to support the wine list rather than compete with it. Rillettes, Padrón peppers, panna cotta, treacle tart with crème fraîche: the cooking is competent, direct, and priced to encourage ordering without anxiety. Do not come expecting a destination kitchen. Come expecting food that makes the wine taste better.

    Practical Details

    The 10 Cases is at 16 Endell Street, London WC2H 9BB, a short walk from Covent Garden tube station. The Bistrot takes bookings; the Cave à Vin next door is walk-ins only. Wines are available by the glass, carafe, and bottle, starting from around £33 per bottle. Booking difficulty is low, this is not a venue where you need to plan weeks ahead for the Bistrot side, but the Cave à Vin walk-in format means peak evening times can get busy. Covent Garden is well-served by public transport, with Leicester Square and Holborn also within walking distance.

    Quick reference: Covent Garden, WC2H 9BB | Bistrot (bookings) + Cave à Vin (walk-in) | Bottles from ~£33 | Star Wine List #1 2023 | Easy booking

    Explore More in London

    If The 10 Cases has you thinking about where else to eat and drink in the city, Pearl has full guides to help: our full London restaurants guide, our full London bars guide, our full London hotels guide, our full London wineries guide, and our full London experiences guide. For higher-end dining occasions in the UK, 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 are all worth considering. International benchmarks for serious wine-led dining include Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at The 10 Cases?

    Lean into the wine-first format: ask the floor what's closest to selling out, since those bottles won't be restocked. On the food side, the kitchen runs French bistrot staples — steak frites with peppercorn sauce and the shared pork T-bone chop are the kind of dishes that justify the format. Small plates like cod cheeks and rillettes work well as openers while you work through the wine list.

    Does The 10 Cases handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu leans heavily French bistrot — meat, fish, and dairy feature throughout — so strict vegans or those with complex dietary needs may find the options limited. The venue database doesn't document specific allergy protocols, so contact the Bistrot directly before booking if restrictions are a deciding factor for your group.

    What should I wear to The 10 Cases?

    The room is small tables, low lighting, and blackboard menus — relaxed and neighbourhood in feel. Casual or put-together casual both work; this is not a white-tablecloth setting, and there's no indication in venue records of a dress code.

    Is The 10 Cases good for solo dining?

    Yes, particularly the Cave à Vin next door, which is walk-in only and lends itself to solo wine drinking without the formality of a booked table. If you want a full meal, the Bistrot's small tables and wine-focused crowd make solo dining comfortable rather than awkward.

    What should a first-timer know about The 10 Cases?

    The name explains the model: owners Will Palmer and Ian Campbell buy exactly 10 cases of each wine on the 23-bin list, serve everything by the glass, carafe, and bottle from around £33, then move on when it's gone. The Bistrot takes bookings; the Cave à Vin next door is walk-in only. Come expecting to drink something slightly outside the mainstream at a fair price — the list is built for curious drinkers, not trophy hunters or bargain seekers.

    Can The 10 Cases accommodate groups?

    The Bistrot is a small room with small tables, so large groups will likely need to split or book in advance and confirm capacity. For groups of 4 or more, booking ahead is advisable — walk-in availability at the Cave à Vin next door is better suited to pairs or solo drinkers than to groups wanting to eat together.

    Can I eat at the bar at The 10 Cases?

    The Cave à Vin next door operates as a walk-in wine bar, but the full bistrot food menu is served in the Bistrot side, which takes bookings. If you want the kitchen's French bistrot food, book the Bistrot rather than relying on a walk-in at the Cave à Vin.

    Location

    16 Endell St, London WC2H 9BB, United Kingdom

    London, United Kingdom

    Compare The 10 Cases

    Full Comparison: The 10 Cases
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    The 10 CasesEasy
    CORE by Clare SmythModern BritishMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Restaurant Gordon RamsayContemporary European, FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryModern FrenchMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The LedburyModern European, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalModern British, Traditional BritishMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between The 10 Cases and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    The 10 Cases and its London peers are not really competing for the same occasion. CORE by Clare Smyth, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, The Ledbury, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal are all ££££ destination restaurants where the kitchen is the main event and the wine list supports it. At The 10 Cases, the relationship is inverted: the wine list is the reason to be there, and the kitchen supports it. If you are deciding between them, the question is whether you are planning a formal dining occasion or a wine-led evening where food is part of the experience rather than the centrepiece.

    On value for money, The 10 Cases is the clear choice in this peer set. Bottles from around £33 and a walk-in wine bar option mean you can spend a genuinely good evening here for considerably less than a cover at any of the four-£ venues above. CORE, Gordon Ramsay, and The Ledbury all require planning weeks or months ahead and carry significant per-head costs. The 10 Cases has low booking difficulty and a format that accommodates spontaneous visits on the Cave à Vin side.

    For a food-forward occasion where wine matters but is secondary, Dinner by Heston Blumenthal or The Ledbury will deliver more kitchen ambition. For an evening where the wine list is the point and the food is honest French bistrot rather than a performance, The 10 Cases is the more honest choice at a fraction of the cost.

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