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| My Review |
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A restaurant, even a chippie, which has been in continuous operation since 1914 must be doing something right. The Golden Hind has no prententions, but its brightly lit, basically decorated dining room was doing a roaring trade this evening.
A scampi starter (£3.60) had tolerable batter but perilously little in the way of langoustine (barely 1/10), while prawn cocktail (£3.20) was similarly very limited, with a few small shrimps and a bland Marie Rose sauce (0/10).
However the haddock and chips (£7.70 for the fish, £1.70 for the chips) was an altogether better affair, the batter crisp, the fish inside cooked through nicely, without skin (comfortably 2/10). Chips were hand-cut and tolerably crisp (2/10). Peas on the side (£0.90) were sadly tasteless (0/10).
Service was friendly. There are no alcoholic drinks served, but you are invited to bring your own wine, and there is a Nicolas wine merchant less than a minute away with a surprisingly good selection of refrigerated white wines on offer.
I would stick to the fish and chips based on this visit, but if you restricted yourself to these then you would have a perfectly enjoyable meal. It is remarkably hard to find even competent fish and chips in London, and the Golden Hind certainly delivers in this regard. |
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07/02/2011 00:38:16 - Andy Hayler (UK)
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| Yes, and the experience felt similar to me i.e. good fish and chips but the other things I tried seemed very ordinary. I'd happily go back for the fish and chips there. |
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06/02/2011 22:18:58 - Patrick (United Kingdom)
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| Have you tried Masters Super Fish in Waterloo? It's my favourite in London |
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