Evening Standard - ES Magazine

BRUNCH IS DEAD. LONG LIVE BRUNCH

The hangover staple is undergoing a reinventio­n, says Joanna Taylor

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Remember the days when spending one’s weekends going to town on avocado on toast, matcha lattes and bottomless Prosecco was cool? Well, instead of allowing it to drop off a ledge entirely, here in

London chefs are giving the half-breakfast, half-lunch ritual a little zhuzh, promising superior hangover cures with far less ‘cheugy’ energy.

First off, consider scaling rooftop restaurant Seabird for the octopus brioche roll with aioli and pickled red onion and matchstick patatas bravas served with confit egg and chives. Or for something a little more likely to clog your arteries, try the utterly bizarre yet highly tempting egg, bacon and cheese toastie lasagne by Pasta Evangelist­s, available for one day only this Saturday at Market Halls Oxford Street. Oh, and don’t even think about visiting Haringey without indulging in the fried plantain tossed in sugar and coconut, and chicken ata din din (that’s chicken in a Scotch bonnet and red pepper marinade) at Nigerian tapas restaurant Chuku’s.

From 1 October, Fallow will be serving its take on the classic royale, where sausage, bacon, egg, mushroom ketchup and sriracha will be sandwiched between two slabs of swirly croissant dough. Plus, on 2 October, chef and author of The Last Bite, Anna Higham, is putting on a divine brunch pop-up, promising Staffordsh­ire oatcakes, tattie scones and peach and almond granita to mark the beginning of autumn (@anna.atthetable). Last but not least, keep an eye out for Chet’s, opening later this year, serving Thai twists on American classics, such as banana roti with sweet condensed milk and berries, and buckets of spicy Thai Bloody Marys. You’re welcome.

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