Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Caravel
100ptsSmall-Room Precision Dining

About Caravel
Caravel on Shepherdess Walk is a compact, deliberately low-profile tasting menu room in Hoxton, N1. Booking is rated Easy relative to London's most-sought restaurants, making it a practical option for food-focused diners who want an intimate, course-driven evening without the months-long wait. Best for two; not suited to large groups or those after a high-production atmosphere.
Caravel, London: Quick Take
Seats at Caravel on Shepherdess Walk are limited by design, and that scarcity is the first thing to understand before you try to book. This is a small-room operation in Hoxton, N1, which means the window between deciding you want to go and actually getting a table can close faster than you expect. Book as soon as the date is in your mind.
The Space and What It Signals
The address, 172 Shepherdess Walk, puts Caravel in a quieter corridor of Hoxton, away from the louder hospitality clusters around Old Street and Shoreditch High Street. Venues that choose this kind of location tend to be doing so deliberately: they are counting on the food and the room to do the work, not footfall or tourist traffic. The physical setup here is compact and close, the kind of room where the architecture of an evening matters because there is no noise or distraction to fill the gaps between courses. If you are coming for a tasting menu experience, that spatial intimacy is a feature, not a compromise. If you want a big, energetic room, look elsewhere in our full London restaurants guide.
Who This Is For
Caravel is a reasonable target for a food-focused explorer who wants something a step removed from the obvious London circuit. If your frame of reference includes places like L'Enclume in Cartmel or Moor Hall in Aughton, you are likely the audience this room was built for: someone who reads the progression of a meal as a sequence with intent, not just a series of dishes. Equally, if you have worked through the obvious London tasting menu options and want something lower-profile, Caravel is worth the effort of tracking down a reservation.
For a special occasion, the intimacy of the room works in your favour. The setting is considered and quiet enough that the meal itself carries the weight of the evening. It is not a room designed for large groups, and the more people you add, the harder it becomes to maintain the focused, course-by-course rhythm that small-format venues like this depend on. Two to four is the practical sweet spot.
Booking and Logistics
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which is genuinely useful information: you are not competing with the months-long queues that apply to CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury. That said, Easy does not mean walk-in friendly for a venue of this scale. Give yourself a minimum of one to two weeks, and more if you have a specific date in mind. The venue is in N1, accessible from Old Street or Angel on the Northern line, or Hoxton on the Overground.
No phone number or website is publicly listed in our current data, so your leading approach is to search directly for current booking channels or check third-party reservation platforms. Confirm dietary requirements at the time of booking rather than on arrival: at a venue operating at this scale, the kitchen needs that information in advance to accommodate you properly.
Context in the Wider Tasting Menu Scene
London has a deep bench of tasting menu restaurants across every price tier. At the leading end, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay and Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library offer formal, high-production experiences with the service infrastructure to match. Dinner by Heston Blumenthal skews more accessible in atmosphere while remaining technically serious. Caravel sits in a different register from all of these: smaller, less produced, and oriented toward an audience that wants proximity to the cooking rather than the theatre of a grand dining room. For UK-wide context, venues like hide and fox in Saltwood or Hand and Flowers in Marlow occupy a comparable position outside London: serious, chef-driven, deliberately modest in scale.
If you are travelling specifically around food, our full London hotels guide and full London bars guide are useful for building the rest of the trip around a Caravel booking.
The Verdict
Book Caravel if you want a small-room tasting experience in London without the six-week lead time that the city's most-discussed restaurants now require. The location is deliberate, the room is intimate, and the format rewards guests who engage with it on those terms. If you need a large table, a buzzy atmosphere, or a room with name recognition for a corporate occasion, this is not the right fit. For two people with a serious interest in how a meal is structured, it is worth pursuing.
Explore More in London and Beyond
Compare Caravel
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caravel | Easy | — | |||
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Modern British | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Contemporary European, French | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Modern French | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | ££££ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Modern British, Traditional British | ££££ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
How Caravel stacks up against the competition.
More restaurants in London
- CORE by Clare SmythClare Smyth's three-Michelin-star Notting Hill restaurant is one of London's most credentialled tables, holding La Liste 98pts, World's 50 Best #97, and a 4.7 Google rating across 1,460 reviews. The à la carte runs £195 per head; the Core Classic tasting menu is £255. Book Thursday or Friday lunch for the best chance of a table — dinner is near-impossible without 6–8 weeks' lead time.
- IkoyiTwo Michelin stars, No. 15 on the World's 50 Best in 2025, and a dinner tasting menu at £350 per head before wine: Ikoyi is one of London's hardest bookings and one of its most credentialed. Jeremy Chan's West African spice-led cooking applied to British organic produce is genuinely unlike anything else in the city. The express lunch at £150 is the entry point if the dinner price is the obstacle.
- KOLKOL ranked #17 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 and holds a Michelin star — the most compelling case for a progressive Mexican tasting menu in London. Booking opens two months out and sells out almost immediately, so treat it like a ticket release. If the dining room is full, the downstairs Mezcaleria offers serious agave spirits and kitchen-quality small plates as a genuine alternative.
- The Clove ClubHoused in the former Shoreditch Town Hall, The Clove Club holds two Michelin stars and has appeared in the World's 50 Best Restaurants list consistently since 2016. Isaac McHale's tasting menus draw on prime British ingredients — Orkney scallops, Herdwick lamb, Torbay prawns — handled with technical precision and a looseness that keeps the cooking from feeling ceremonial.
- The LedburyThe Ledbury holds three Michelin stars and the #1 Star Wine List ranking in the UK — making it the strongest combined food-and-wine destination in London at the ££££ tier. At £285 per head for the eight-course evening menu, it rewards occasions where both the kitchen and the cellar need to perform. Book months ahead: availability is near impossible, especially at weekends.
- Hélène Darroze at The ConnaughtThree Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 95 points make Hélène Darroze at The Connaught one of London's clearest cases for fine dining at the top price tier. The tasting menu builds intelligently across courses, the redesigned room is warm rather than stiff, and the service is precise without being suffocating. Book months ahead — midweek lunch is your most realistic entry point.
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