Randomness Guide to London - Differences between Version 11 and Version 10 of Manchurian Legends, WC2H 7BE
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Chinese restaurant in [[Locale Chinatown|Chinatown]], specialising in Dongbei (northeast Chinese) food. It initially opened on Macclesfield Street <small>[http://www.flickr.com/photos/kake_pugh/6117964712/ photo]</small> on the old premises of Cẩm Phát (previously [[New Laughing Buddha, W1D 5BP|New Laughing Buddha]]), but [http://www.flickr.com/photos/bellaphon/7663227126/ relocated] in mid-2012 to Lisle Street, where Sushi Gaga (and before that [[Okawari, WC2H 7BE|Okawari]]) used to be. It's owned by the Restaurant Privilege group, who also owned Sushi Gaga and who still run [[Leong's Legend, W1D 6AX|Leong's Legend]] and many other East and South-East Asian restaurants around London. |
Manchurian Legends was a Chinese restaurant in [[Locale Chinatown|Chinatown]], specialising in Dongbei (northeast Chinese) food. It has now closed; as of July 2012, Mr Noodles [https://twitter.com/eatlovenoodles/status/226675260303478784 reports on Twitter] that the premises are now occupied by a Cantonese barbecue restaurant. |
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[[Kake]] and [[Sarah]] visited on a Tuesday evening in August 2011, when it was still located in the old premises (we haven't visited the new location yet). |
The information below is retained for people who want to know what it used to be like. |
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<div class="old_info"> Chinese restaurant in [[Locale Chinatown|Chinatown]], specialising in Dongbei (northeast Chinese) food. This is yet another opening from the Restaurant Privilege group, who also own [[Leong's Legend, W1D 6AX|Leong's Legend]] just opposite, as well as many other East Asian restaurants around London. After the previous occupant, [http://www.flickr.com/photos/kake_pugh/4797921574/ Cẩm Phát], vacated the site, there were [http://www.flickr.com/photos/kake_pugh/5751088763/ signs] that a Hong Kong style place called Cafe de Chine would be opening up, but by July 2011 Manchurian Legends was firmly in place (although a month later, "Cafe de Chine" still appeared on their debit card slips). The building is tall and narrow, with seating on three floors. When [[Kake]] and [[Sarah]] visited on a Tuesday evening in August 2011, the ground floor was full (this doesn't take much; it really is small) and we were led to the top floor, where we were entertained during our meal by the sounds of karaoke leaking out from the KTV rooms they have up there. |
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Accessibility: A couple of steps to get in, and much of the seating is up additional flights of stairs. The karaoke rooms are on the top floor. |
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address='16 Lisle Street' category='Chinese Food,Restaurants' |
</div> address='12 Macclesfield Street' category='Now Closed' |
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latitude='51.511064' locale='Chinatown,Soho,WC2' longitude='-0.129175' |
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map_link='http://streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=529810&y=180839' |
map_link='http://streetmap.co.uk/newmap.srf?x=529780&y=180887' node_image='https://farm7.static.flickr.com/6081/6117964712_f8fa49a26b_m.jpg' node_image_copyright='Kake' node_image_licence='https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/' node_image_url='https://www.flickr.com/photos/kake_pugh/6117964712/' |
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os_x='529810' os_y='180839' |
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postcode='WC2H 7BE' summary='Chinese restaurant in Chinatown, specialising in Dongbei (northeast Chinese) food.' |
postcode='' summary='Now closed; was a Chinese restaurant in Chinatown, specialising in Dongbei (northeast Chinese) food.' |
Manchurian Legends was a Chinese restaurant in Chinatown, specialising in Dongbei (northeast Chinese) food. It has now closed; as of July 2012, Mr Noodles reports on Twitter that the premises are now occupied by a Cantonese barbecue restaurant.
The information below is retained for people who want to know what it used to be like.
This is yet another opening from the Restaurant Privilege group, who also own Leong's Legend just opposite, as well as many other East Asian restaurants around London. After the previous occupant, Cẩm Phát, vacated the site, there were signs that a Hong Kong style place called Cafe de Chine would be opening up, but by July 2011 Manchurian Legends was firmly in place (although a month later, "Cafe de Chine" still appeared on their debit card slips).
The building is tall and narrow, with seating on three floors. When Kake and Sarah visited on a Tuesday evening in August 2011, the ground floor was full (this doesn't take much; it really is small) and we were led to the top floor, where we were entertained during our meal by the sounds of karaoke leaking out from the KTV rooms they have up there.
Everything we tried was good. A cold dish of shredded kelp (涼拌海帶絲; £4.50) photo was a very generous portion, and nicely seasoned. Cucumber with mandarin pork (肘花拍黃瓜; £4.50) photo, another cold dish, had great flavour, and although the texture of the meat was as interesting as pork knuckle usually is, we actually ran out of the cucumber part before the pork part.
Pork and pickled vegetable dumplings (豬肉酸菜水餃; £5 for eight) photo were just as they should be, and plain rice (£2/person) was fine. The highlight of the meal, though, was the braised pork with glass noodles (紅燒肉粉條; £8.50); cubes of red-cooked pork belly, braised long enough that the skin was almost as soft as the fat, mixed with a tangle of thin, slippery, chewy potato starch noodles.
Kake's verdict: I really quite liked the food here, though judging by other reviews (linked below) it sounds like there is some inconsistency in the kitchen and we may have been lucky in our ordering.
Accessibility: A couple of steps to get in, and much of the seating is up additional flights of stairs. The karaoke rooms are on the top floor.
See also:
- Photos of the menu as of August 2011: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
- Evening Standard review (by Fay Maschler)
- Observer review (by Jay Rayner)
- Telegraph review (by Matthew Norman)
- Time Out review (by Guy Dimond)
- Chowhound thread
- Come Con Ella review
- Fuchsia Dunlop's review
- Natasha Hughes' review
- Skinny Bib review
- Susan Eats London review
- The Lemurs Are Hungry review
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