The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting | Wine writing competition

​Jago E1 – restaurant with an office attached

• 4 min read
Image

This is a version of an article also published by the Financial Times. 

There were at least three different reasons why, on the basis of my first visit, I could choose not to return to Jago, a restaurant that opened six months ago on the ground floor of Second Home, a collective for new creative businesses just off Brick Lane in east London.

The first was that on that Tuesday evening only four other tables were occupied. More memorably, we were at a table where my guest sat at an orange wooden banquette that ran the entire length of the room under a curved perspex roof, a combination of colour and contour that reminded me of the 1968 futuristic film, Barbarella. Finally, there was the sight through the windows into the offices on the first floor of cleaners working energetically at 9 pm with large mops.

But it is these facts that are the obverse of what makes further visits to Second Home so fascinating, together with the charms of Jago’s food and wine list. They also present its chef Louis Solley, the son of a wine-loving QC, and restaurateur Hugo Thurston with a particular set of management challenges.

The striking interior is the work of Spanish architects Selgas Cano, who in their first space outside Spain have transformed what was a disused five-storey carpet factory into a series of offices and creative hubs. Second Home has been brought to life by Sam Aldenton and Rohan Silva, with subsequent sites already under discussion in San Francisco and Amsterdam. Their energy and foresight have been matched by an investment of over £3 million from equally committed funders.

The first two floors are occupied by 30 companies in the tech, finance and media fields and it was fun to walk through their empty offices after dinner, where every chair is different and where a large horseshoe-shaped conference table is suspended directly underneath the ceiling so that during the evening the room can be used for more sociable purposes. It is these offices that are by night the cleaners’ domain.

Jago, named after a fictional description of this part of London that has never been short of characters or history, occupies the front half of the first floor and has to serve several different functions. It is open from breakfast, throughout the day and then into the evening.

As a result, Solley, formerly at Ottolenghi in Notting Hill Gate, has to write a series of concise menus that probably get the attention they deserve only at night as during the day Jago is principally a staff canteen with a daily changing Worker’s Lunch (£5 for the regular size, £8 for the large).

Over dinner four of us began with top-quality Cantabrian anchovies and large green Gordal olives before three successful first courses – chargrilled calcots, the thin Catalanleeks, with pungent romesco sauce, sardines with tomato and lemon, and broccoli with a poached duck egg and anchovy dressing – and a disappointing combination of grilled beetroot polenta with goat’s curd. The same success ratio applied to our main courses: skate with monk’s beard, a veal cheek goulash and pressed pork belly with hispi cabbage were excellent while a cauliflower and gruyère croquette was much less precisely judged. Our two desserts, a chocolate tart with sea salt and an orange cake with caraway seeds, were first class.

Thurston, who was at Morito, the busy tapas bar in Exmouth Market, has put together a well-priced wine list that simultaneously offers a great range by the glass to the neophyte yet will enthuse anyone more experienced to ask for guidance in choosing from a range of quite obscure wines. We drank a bottle of the charming and highly versatile 2013 Rosso di Valtellina from ARPEPE (£39).

During a return visit for a plate of the Worker’s Lunch, a copious dish of beef curry, basmati rice, sultanas and fried onions, everything looked very different. The offices were packed, evoking the overall impression that the place was little more than an Apple showroom, and as the customers poured into the restaurant and joined a long queue for takeaway helpings of the beef curry, Thurston’s face took on an increasingly worried look.

In the end the service went extremely smoothly (the industry phrase for when things do go wrong is, at its most polite, ‘in the mire’) and Thurston relaxed. But he admitted that the transition for him and Solley from a restaurant background to one where a restaurant sits alongside a staff canteen within an original office setting has not been easy.

'At the outset', Thurston explained, 'Louis and I concentrated on the fun stuff, writing the menu and wine list. But that wasn’t enough to attract the numbers at lunch so at Second Home’s initiative we came up with the idea of the Worker’s Lunch. We would have liked to price it a little higher but it does draw the crowds'.

Having to staff a station that offers tea and coffee free of charge for anyone working there also frustrates Thurston, but not quite as much as the white paint chosen by the architects for the floor of the restaurant, which, not surprisingly, shows up every speck of dirt.

But the biggest difference Thurston has experienced is that Friday lunch, invariably the busiest in any restaurant’s week, is here the quietest. 'They all seem to prefer working from home on a Friday', Thurston commented enviously.

Jago  Second Home, 68-80 Hanbury Street, London E1 5JL; tel +44 (0)20 3818 3241

选择方案
会员
$135
/year
每年节省超过15%
适合葡萄酒爱好者
  • 存取 295,852 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,110 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
核心会员
$249
/year
 
适合收藏家

Everything in “Member”, plus:

  • Early access to the latest wine reviews, 48 hours in advance
  • Early access to the latest articles, 48 hours in advance
专业版
$299
/year
供个人葡萄酒专业人士使用
  • 存取 295,852 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,110 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • Access askJancis, our AI wine assistant
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 25 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
商务版
$399
/year
供葡萄酒行业企业使用

Everything in “Professional”, plus:

  • 可将最多 250 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
  • Access to submit wines for review
  • Offer memberships to your employees and manage them from a single place
  • API access available for an additional fee
Pay with
Visa logo Mastercard logo American Express logo Logo for more payment options
Join our newsletter

Get the latest from Jancis and her team of leading wine experts.

By subscribing you agree with our Privacy Policy and provide consent to receive updates from our company.

More Nick on restaurants

Ballymaloe House May 2026
Nick on restaurants An international institution in the southern Irish countryside. In 2011 I travelled to Ballymaloe House, a 40-minute drive from Cork...
Sally Abé of Teal
Nick on restaurants 伦敦东区餐厅界令人兴奋的新成员。上图,萨莉·阿贝 (Sally Abé)。 萨莉·阿贝 (Sally Abé) 的新餐厅蒂尔 (Teal)...
Saveur des Poissons exterior, Tangier
Nick on restaurants 丹吉尔的鱼之味餐厅 (Le Saveur de Poisson) 绝对值得(稍有挑战性的)一游。 在当今世界的各种餐厅中...
Jack and Will of Fallow and Roe
Nick on restaurants 开设第二家餐厅并不容易,无论第一家有多成功。尼克 (Nick) 从伦敦西区冒险进入伦敦码头区。上图为联合主厨杰克·克罗夫特 (Jack...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Ronan Sayburn MS, Sarah Abbott MW and Hannah Tovey at Icons tastings 2026
Free for all 从世界各地挑选 27 款霞多丽 (Chardonnay) "标志性"酒款,呈献给 18 位认证品鉴师……本文的一个版本发表于金融时报 。另见...
Ried Kellerberg in autumn
Wines of the week 来自奥地利的一款充满石灰气息、活泼清新的白葡萄酒中的夏日梦想,售价 €9.90, £18.37, $19.99 。上图为凯勒贝格...
Diemersdal winemaking team
Tasting articles 在英国及更远地区可购得的优质佳酿——包括一些天然低酒精度葡萄酒。上图,从左至右: 雷昂·里希特 (Reon Richter)、莉娜·科茨...
Alder Springs vineyard
Tasting articles 加州一些最令人兴奋的葡萄酒来自一个远离其他任何地方的葡萄园。上图为阿尔德斯普林斯 (Alder Springs) 葡萄园(图片来源: 娜塔莉...
WWC26 post-submission graphic
Free for all 绝妙的搭配——有如此多的选择!JR 团队向所有人致以诚挚的感谢。 今年的 葡萄酒写作大赛打破了所有记录,收到了超过 400 份参赛作品...
Judges for Chardonnay Icons at 2026 London Wine Fair
Tasting articles 澳大利亚和英格兰在今年伦敦葡萄酒博览会 (London Wine Fair) 的标志性葡萄酒盲品中胜出,评审团由上图中的葡萄酒专业人士组成。...
Poggio di Sotto vineyard
Tasting articles 如果您欣赏能够反映年份和风土的葡萄酒,那么顶级的 2020 年份布鲁内洛 (Brunello) 非常值得购买。上图为索托山庄 (Poggio...
Wine & War book cover
Book reviews 提醒我们葡萄酒在冲突时期恢复人性、幽默和希望的力量。 葡萄酒与战争 法国人、纳粹和法国最伟大宝藏的争夺战 唐和佩蒂·克拉德斯特鲁普 (Don...
Wine inspiration delivered directly to your inbox, weekly
Our weekly newsletter is free for all
By subscribing you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.