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London’s 10 best old school Italian restaurants

by News Room
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Italian food in London goes back a long way. For more than a century the capital has been home to delis and osterias, trattorias and ristorantes. It’s hard to spend a better £10 than in Terroni in Clerkenwell, Italia Uno in Fitzrovia or Bar Italia in Soho. All will bring you a mighty sandwich — ciabatta usually — fine espresso or a jovial spritz. Why anyone ever goes to Pret outside a train station is one of life’s great mysteries. Just head to Bar Bruno for a whopping great chicken Milanese.

Those who require a proper lunch or dinner, these are 10 of London’s greatest old school Italian restaurants. Sadly, we’ve had to remove the wonderful Da Maria in Notting Hill as founders Pasquale and Maria Ruocco decided to retire in February 2026 after more than 40 years.

The Garden

The Garden

There is a cafe and deli on the island of Ischia, off the coast of Napoli, which I think might be the inspiration behind Il Giardino, one of Peckham’s most joyful restaurants. Like Ischia’s Serpico Specialit, Il Giardino is beautiful: outside, it’s a soft mustard yellow, with green shutters and a green and white awning that hangs stiffly over a few alfresco tables. Inside, find a riot of old pine — the soft, curved kind that smells a bit like the back room of a church — paper napkins and dim lighting. There’s exposed brick, stumpy thick wine glasses waiting for inoffensive house wine, and a dainty bar. Nothing much has changed since 1987, including the food. Don’t deviate from one of the pasta dishes, most of which are softened by a fair amount of cream. There’s spaghetti with garlic, chilli and mussels; penne with smoked bacon and a snappy tomato sauce; or, my favourite — a perfect representation of Italian-British cooking in London — the tagliatelle with chicken, ham, peas, and a little chilli. One more thing: Il Giardino remains wonderfully cheap. Everything is under £20, trout and roast lamb included.

Ciao Bella is interesting because it has in recent years transcended being a local, neighbourhood restaurant and become a relatively famous London one. It’s a destination, a place for which people travel across town. Why? Here since 1983 and under the stewardship of Felice Pollano since 1999, it’s probably the best of old-school Italian kitsch: pictures of film stars on the walls, flimsy blue tablecloths, smart waiters and that sugary sort of affordable glamour. But it might also be the location in haughty Bloomsbury — to that end it’s a little glitzier than most. Obviously, the place isn’t really about the food, though something should be said about the portion sizes, ever-commendable. Stick to the Italian-British classics like tagliatelle with salmon, spaghetti and meatballs and grilled sea bass, and prepare to be unadventurous with wine — a bottle of Gavi for £36 is okay. Ciao Bella is a little more expensive these days — popularity partly the cause, most likely — but it’s still a magical restaurant, a London institution all should experience at least once.

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