CIRCUIT

London

11 rooms · 5 categories · chosen by hand

The guide to recurring culture in London.

Not events. Scenes.

11 rooms

01

Supperclub.tube

The menu rotates seasonally and the scarcity is real: one sitting a night, three nights a week, batch-released bookings. Regulars watch for the drop.

RecurringWalthamstow (Pumphouse Museum)Good alone

02

Death Cafe Walthamstow

The conversation is remade every time by whoever shows up, and regulars use it as a standing place to process what daily life gives no room for.

RecurringWalthamstow (East of Eden)Great alone

03

London Writers' Café

Reading slots are scarce, three per session, so you come back to workshop your next chapter and to repay the feedback you took. Lisa Goll has moderated the table since 2010 and it shows.

RecurringClerkenwell / Barbican / Aldgate pubsGreat alone

04

Suppers by Rosie & Virgi

The quarterly cadence is the format: each supper marks the season turning, and 32 covers keeps it a table, not a venue.

RecurringForest Gate (East London)Fine alone

05

Uyen Luu Vietnamese Supper Club

It is a fixture, not a pop-up: the menu moves with the seasons and the studio table feels more like a standing invitation than an event.

RecurringHackney (London Fields, chef's studio)Fine alone

06

Come Together Project

The format asks something of you: a recipe, a story, sometimes a hand in the kitchen. Rooms that ask come to feel like yours.

RecurringHackney / Forest GateGood alone

07

Khao Suppers

Every supper has its own theme, venue and menu: mango season one month, an anniversary collaboration the next, on a roughly monthly rhythm.

RecurringRotating East (Mare Street Market; Spitalfields; Camden)Fine alone

08

The Nickel

The programme turns over constantly, with a real film print at least weekly and recurring mystery screenings, so regulars treat it like a repertory habit.

RecurringClerkenwellGreat alone

09

Jay's Fengzhen Supper Club

Family-style service forces the table to talk, and the menu shifts between visits, so regulars treat it like a rotating dinner party they lucked into.

RecurringCrystal Palace (chef's home)Fine alone

10

Eleven98

The hyperlocal rule means the menu literally changes with the neighbourhood's growing season, and a single shared table turns strangers into a dinner party.

RecurringWalthamstow Village (chef's home)Good alone

11

Shanghai Supper Club

The six-to-eight-week rhythm makes each dinner an occasion rather than a routine, and the shared table means the menu and the company both change every time.

RecurringMarylebone (The Royal Oak, York Street)Fine alone

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