Volcanic Wine Awards | The Jancis Robinson Story | Mission Blind Tasting

Sri Lanka in London and New York

• 5 min read
Food at The Tamil Prince

A column with its origins in a most unusual setting, which served up the spread above.

It’s almost impossible to get a booking in a relatively new restaurant in a former pub once called The Cuckoo in Islington, north London, with an unusual name that matches exactly the style of cooking on offer. There’s an overspill space under white tenting along one side that accommodates six tables of four on the pavement, but if this review whets your appetite you’ll have to jump on the restaurant’s website exactly a month before your chosen date – preferably early in the morning.

Welcome to The Tamil Prince on Hemingford Road, which opened as recently as June 2022. It still looks very much like a dark pub with a busy bar on the right and a very busy kitchen at the far end clearly visible through a large window under which we sat at table 6 with a great view of the rotis being lovingly rolled out and folded before being put on the griddle.

Tamil Prince kitchen

This is the second restaurant (Tamila in Hackney was their first) from chef Prince Durairaj (born in Tamil Nadu, southern India) and general manager Glen Leeson, who met at the well-known Roti King in Euston – outside which there seems to be a perpetual queue. The Tamil Prince is so incredibly popular because this duo have concentrated on the essentials. Little of the interior has been changed and the menu is printed on a single sheet of paper. Instead, everything has been spent on ensuring that the food is authentic and that it is served by knowledgeable, enthusiastic waiting staff.

The menu offers six small plates, six large plates, a couple of extras which include the unmissable ‘buttery, flaky roti’ and four desserts. The four of us ordered all the small plates, the Thanjavur chicken curry and the paneer butter masala, four rotis and two desserts. Following Tam’s advice in a forthcoming podcast that we’ll be releasing later this year that rosé is the perfect accompaniment to such spicy food, we shared a bottle of pink Côtes de Provence 2021 (£33) and a couple of desserts before I paid my bill of £144.59, which included a Cobra beer for one of our party.

All the small plates were excellent. The tiny okra fries were crisp and spicy. The onion bhajis were almost sweet – much less greasy than most – and the dhal was thick and pungent. The pulled-beef uttapum was the slow-cooked meat crammed into an uttapum, a southern Indian dosa, that was irresistible and made even more so by a chili coconut chutney, a dish that contrasted well the crisp chicken lollipop. Best of all, unexpectedly, was the Indian desi salad, a simple compilation of finely diced kidney beans, cucumber, tomatoes, coriander, green chilli, spicy seeds and topped with sweetened lemon juice.

The main courses and desserts were just as good but what I will remember for a long time about my meal were the smiles on all of those who work here. Our well-placed table allowed me to spend most of the evening with one eye glued to the kitchen where even the man in charge of the boiling hot, remorselessly busy roti grill was smiling. As were all the waiting staff we encountered. This is impressive.

One of the misapprehensions that I was labouring under was cleared up a few days later over a beer at Hoppers, King’s Cross, with Karan Gokani, the man who, when not talking and smiling at the same time, founded Hoppers restaurants in Soho in 2015 when he reopened the site that had been Alastair Little’s restaurant way back when. The restaurants are named after Sri Lanka’s famous egg hoppers, pictured below.

egg hopper

Gokani, who now supervises a 160-strong team since opening two other Hoppers, in Marylebone and King’s Cross, was born in Mumbai. After completing a second degree, in law at Cambridge, he moved to London to work for Linklaters and it was here that the Sri Lankan bug first bit. His subsequent marriage to Sunaina Sethi, the female, wine-loving member of the team behind JKS Restaurants, led him to become a hospitality professional.

‘Our food and that of the increasing number of Sri Lankan restaurants across the UK is not strictly Sri Lankan’, he explained to me patiently, ‘but it is Sri Lankan/southern Indian. A lot of our ingredients are shared.’ This explains why the Thanjavur chicken curry we enjoyed so much at The Tamil Prince is named after the biggest city in Tamil Nadu.

When I asked Gokani to name some specific Sri Lankan ingredients, he jumped up, strolled quickly across to the reception area and picked up a copy of the recently published Hoppers cookbook, which weighs in at an impressive 1.5 kg. Opening his book at the Larder chapter, he listed several ingredients which are specific to Sri Lanka. ‘There is jaggery, of course, the ultra-sweet, boiled sap of the coconut, palmyra or kithul flowers; there are Sri Lankan chillis, which tend to be stronger in intensity than chillis from other countries; jackfruit; and also goraka, the de-seeded segment of a fruit found in the south of the island. But then, most particularly, there are the Maldives fish which, as in Japan, are like dried bonito flakes and contribute umami and are added to give sambols their authentic flavour.’

I have to admit that I have trouble resisting another southern Indian dish, the bone-marrow varuval (fried), whenever I visit a Hoppers.

Such has been the acceptance of Hoppers as an expression of fun, excitement and a close association with Sri Lankan food and colour that Gokani decided that the time has come to proclaim this by, as it were, going on the offensive – not least because Sri Lanka itself is in such a parlous state today.

So a year ago he teamed up with Shake Shack, the American burger chain, and launched a special cheeseburger topped with curry-braised short rib, coriander chutney mayonnaise, mustard cream, pickled red onion, fresh coriander and green chilli. When we met, Gokani had just returned from New York, where this so-called Lankan Shack has been on the Shake Shack menu and it was encouraging to see, Gokani reported, how Sri Lanka was becoming ‘a platform that people were talking about. It was as if we were flying a flag for a nation.’

At the same time, Gokani has begun to use financial contributions from Hoppers to send much-needed food parcels to Sri Lanka. After a chance meeting in the restaurant with a senior executive with Hemas, a leading Sri Lankan company focusing on healthcare, in February 2022 Gokani set up Feeding the Future, a programme that, via contributions of a £1 a table as well as staff contributions, has so far sent over £30,000-worth of care packages to schoolchildren in Monaragala in the south-east of Sri Lanka.

Rambutan resto

Finally, comes another Sri Lankan cookbook and a new Sri Lankan restaurant in London, both called Rambutan and the creation of the charming Cynthia Shanmugalingam. As the surname would suggest, Cynthia is of Sri Lankan origin, although born to parents who emigrated to Coventry in the British Midlands from Sri Lanka in the 1960s. The restaurant will open shortly at 10 Stoney Street, close to London Bridge.

Meanwhile, her cookery book will have to suffice. Subtitled Recipes from Sri Lanka, this book definitely has a more homely feel than the Hoppers cookbook. I found the recipes for a burnt aubergine sambol with coconut milk, the Jaffna crab curry and the mango fluff pie enticing and likely to turn up on our table quite soon.

London is fortunate to have such a range of Sri Lankan food on offer at the moment and one that is likely to grow, I am delighted to say.

The Tamil Prince 115 Hemingford Road, London N1 1BZ

Hoppers restaurants 49 Frith Street, Soho, London W1D 4SG; 77 Wigmore Street, Marylebone, London W1U 1QE; Unit 3, 4 Pancras Square, King’s Cross, London N1C 4AG

Hoppers: The Cookbook, Karan Gokani (Quadrille, 2022) 352 pp, £30/$42

Rambutan: Recipes from Sri Lanka, Cynthia Shanmugalingam (Bloomsbury, 2022) 336 pp, £26/$35

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 294,691 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,077 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
核心会员
$249
/year
 
适合收藏家
  • 存取 294,691 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,077 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
专业版
$299
/year
供个人葡萄酒专业人士使用
  • 存取 294,691 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,077 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 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
  • 存取 294,691 条葡萄酒点评 & 16,077 篇文章
  • 存取《牛津葡萄酒指南》《世界葡萄酒地图集》
  • 提前 48 小时获取最新葡萄酒点评与文章
  • 可将最多 250 条葡萄酒点评与评分 用于市场宣传(商业用途)
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

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...
Yquem boutique
Nick on restaurants 向客人销售葡萄酒比向远方客户销售要容易得多。波尔多一直在向酒店业开放。上图,一对伊甘 (Yquem)...

More from JancisRobinson.com

Fernando Mora MW and Mario López of Bodegas Frontonio
Tasting articles A close look at three of Zaragoza’s most important projects. Above, Fernando Mora MW (left) and Mario López of Bodegas...
Ungrafted monastrell vines in Jumilla
Free for all 4 June 2026 In advance of the 2026 Old Vine Conference on June 8, we’re republishing this overview of our...
Acered vineyard
Tasting articles 为庆祝阿拉贡即将进入即将出版的 《世界葡萄酒地图集》 ,费兰 (Ferran) 探索萨拉戈萨的葡萄酒。上图为卡拉塔尤德 (Calatayud...
Alexandre Delétraz's (Cave des Amandiers) vineyards in Valais @ Leif Carlsson
Tasting articles 红酒、白酒、新酒、陈酒——瑞士葡萄酒在多样性和美味方面毫不匮乏。你只需要找到它们……上图为亚历山大·德莱特拉兹 (Alexandre...
Mt Ararat overlooking vineyards
Tasting articles 喝更多雷司令 (Riesling) 的理由;最佳购买选择;以及远方发现 – 一个月品鉴的亮点。上图为亚美尼亚的阿拉拉特山 (Mount...
Dar Sinclair, Tangier
Don't quote me 本月海外旅行占了很大比重,包括上图俯瞰丹吉尔 (Tangier) 的别墅。但这远非全部。 我希望你注意到我在年初几乎没有旅行...
Institute of Masters of Wine logo
Free for all 随着我们的萨姆·科尔-约翰逊 (Sam Cole-Johnson) 和其他216人准备参加下周的MW考试...
The Bull interior
Free for all 在英格兰乡村享受美酒和馅饼。 查尔伯里 (Charlbury) 几乎是从伦敦向西逃离时遇到的科茨沃尔德 (Cotswolds)...
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.