Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Casa Fofò
880ptsFerment-forward set menu, hard to book.

About Casa Fofò
Casa Fofò is a Michelin-starred, no-menu tasting restaurant in Dalston delivering eight fermentation-led courses for £65 — among the sharpest value at this level in London. Chef Adolfo de Cecco's kitchen sends dishes directly to the table; a £49 natural wine pairing is available. Reservations are hard to get and essential to have.
The Verdict
If you have been to Casa Fofò once, you already know the fundamental terms: no printed menu, eight courses of ferment-forward Modern European cooking, a £65 set price, and chefs who deliver the food themselves from an open kitchen on Sandringham Road in Dalston. What keeps people coming back is not the element of surprise — that fades after the first visit — but the consistency of technical ambition at a price point that has no real equivalent in this part of London. For a special occasion dinner where the conversation is part of the experience and the cooking will actually give you something to talk about, book it. If you want a menu you can preview beforehand, or a room that reads as conventionally celebratory, look elsewhere.
Portrait
Casa Fofò holds a Michelin star (2024), sits at #385 in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe ranking for 2025 (up from #470 in 2024), and carries a Google rating of 4.7 across 593 reviews. That is a credible combination for a neighbourhood restaurant operating out of a small shopfront parade off Dalston High Road, supplemented by a covered outside space and a cellar. The room is cosy in a way that either reads as intimate or tight depending on how generous you are feeling , either way, it is not the kind of space that performs occasion in the manner of a West End dining room.
What the space lacks in grandeur it recovers in atmosphere. The open kitchen means the smell of the evening's cooking arrives before any dish does , the particular sharpness of fermentation working alongside the deeper registers of aged protein and reduced stock. Chef Adolfo de Cecco, previously of Pidgin, has built a menu architecture around fermentation: beef garum, fish scales, fermented tomato skins, and umeboshi all appear in documented iterations of the menu. This is not fermentation as garnish but as a structural flavour principle, which makes the cooking either compelling or demanding depending on your appetite for that register.
The eight-course format includes snacks, a pre-dessert, and petits fours, all delivered by the kitchen team rather than front-of-house staff. Documented dishes give a reliable picture of the style: aged Cornish mackerel, almond anolini, lamb appearing first as broth then as three cuts, a pollock course, and an eight-week aged dairy cow with Jerusalem artichoke and umeboshi sauce. These are not safe choices. They reward attention and a degree of culinary curiosity , which is precisely why this works as a date or a serious celebration dinner rather than a corporate or family occasion.
The Wine Programme
The wine pairing at Casa Fofò is £49 and covers a list of around two dozen natural wines selected to match the food's fermentation-led character. This is where the editorial angle matters most for your decision. The list is coherent in concept: natural wines and heavily fermented food share a flavour logic, and the kitchen has clearly thought about how acidity, oxidative notes, and low-intervention production styles interact with garum, umeboshi, and aged proteins. In that respect the pairing works harder than a conventional list would at this price tier.
Caveat is practical and worth flagging before you book: the sommeliers' depth has been noted as an area where the experience falls short of the food's ambition. Many wines on the list are obscure producers, which is fine in principle, but without strong floor guidance you may find yourself consulting your phone rather than being led through the pairing. If natural wine is already your territory, this will not be a problem , you will likely find the list interesting on its own terms. If you are coming to the wine pairing primarily as a support structure for a special occasion and want to be guided confidently through each pour, factor that into your expectations. The £49 price for a pairing alongside a £65 menu represents solid value by London standards regardless of the guidance gap.
For context on how wine programmes operate at this level elsewhere in the UK, Aulis London and L'Enclume in Cartmel both carry more extensively guided pairing experiences, though at higher overall price points. If wine depth is the primary criterion rather than a supporting consideration, those are better-matched options.
Booking and Logistics
Reservations at Casa Fofò are hard to secure. The small room , with outside covered space and cellar as overflow , means availability is limited, and the venue's Michelin recognition has not reduced competition for tables. Book as far in advance as the booking window allows. Wednesday through Friday evenings run 6 PM to 9:30 PM; Saturday and Sunday offer both a lunch sitting (1 PM to 2 PM) and an evening service. Monday and Tuesday are closed.
The Saturday lunch sitting deserves specific attention for occasion dining: a shorter, potentially quieter slot that delivers the same format at a time of day when the energy is different. If a weekend evening table proves impossible, this is the right fallback. Walk-ins are not a realistic option given documented booking difficulty.
For broader London dining context, see our full London restaurants guide. If you are planning a longer trip, our London hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the wider picture. For occasion dining elsewhere in the UK that shares Casa Fofò's technical ambition, Moor Hall in Aughton, The Fat Duck in Bray, and Gidleigh Park in Chagford are worth considering depending on format preference. In Europe, La Rei Natura by Michelangelo Mammoliti and Oak Gent occupy a comparable fermentation-led Modern European space at the Michelin level.
Address: 158 Sandringham Rd, London E8 2HS. Price: £65 set menu, £49 wine pairing.
Can I eat at the bar at Casa Fofò?
There is no documented bar counter seating at Casa Fofò. The venue operates a set-menu format served to the whole table, so walk-in bar dining is not part of the model. If counter dining in a similar register appeals, Aulis London is built specifically around counter seating for a chef's table format.
What should I order at Casa Fofò?
There is no ordering at Casa Fofò , the kitchen sends eight courses with no menu shown in advance. The wine pairing at £49 is the main decision you make on the night. Given that the list is built specifically to match the food's fermentation character, it is worth taking unless you have strong preferences around natural wine styles you would rather avoid.
Is lunch or dinner better at Casa Fofò?
Dinner is the primary format Wednesday through Friday. Saturday and Sunday lunch (1 PM to 2 PM) runs as a shorter sitting. If booking a weekday evening proves difficult and you want the full occasion experience, the Saturday lunch slot is worth taking , same kitchen, less competition for the table. Evening service provides more time and a setting that reads as more celebratory for a special occasion dinner.
Is Casa Fofò good for a special occasion?
Yes, with one qualification. The Michelin-starred, chef-delivered eight-course format at £65 is a strong occasion structure: the cooking is technically ambitious, the intimacy of the room works for a couple or a small group, and the no-menu format creates a shared experience that holds attention through the meal. The qualification is room scale: this is not a venue that performs occasion visually. If the celebration requires a grand room or a conventional fine-dining atmosphere, The Ledbury or CORE by Clare Smyth deliver that more reliably, at a higher price.
Is Casa Fofò good for solo dining?
The format works for solo diners in principle , the open kitchen and chef-delivered courses create natural engagement points that make eating alone feel active rather than isolated. The small room means you are unlikely to feel overlooked. That said, the venue does not have documented bar or counter seating, so solo booking follows the same reservation process as any other table. Booking difficulty remains the main obstacle regardless of group size.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Casa Fofò?
At £65 for eight courses including snacks, pre-dessert, and petits fours, Casa Fofò is among the better-value Michelin-starred tasting menus in London. Add the £49 wine pairing and you are at £114 per head all-in , a price point that would not buy you a comparable level of technical ambition at Clipstone or 10 Greek Street with equivalent award recognition. The menu is worth it if fermentation-led cooking and the surprise format appeal to you. It is not worth it if you need to know what you are eating before you sit down, or if you find heavily fermented flavours fatiguing.
What are alternatives to Casa Fofò in London?
For technically ambitious tasting menus at a lower price point than the West End Michelin tier, Clipstone and 10 Greek Street are the closest comparators in neighbourhood-restaurant format. For a chef's counter experience with more guided wine service, Aulis London is worth considering. If the occasion requires more room presence and you are prepared to spend at the ££££ level, The Ledbury is the natural step up in Modern European terms. Chiltern Firehouse and Bill's serve a different function: accessible, lower-pressure dining for occasions where the room matters as much as the cooking.
Quick reference: £65 set menu / £49 wine pairing / Wed-Fri 6-9:30 PM / Sat-Sun lunch 1-2 PM and dinner 6-9:30 PM / Mon-Tue closed / reservations essential.
Compare Casa Fofò
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Casa Fofò | £££ | Hard | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Casa Fofò measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Casa Fofò?
There is no bar counter service at Casa Fofò. The format is a set eight-course surprise menu served at tables, with chefs delivering the courses themselves. The small room is supplemented by a covered outside space and a cellar, but all seating is for the full tasting menu experience — there is no drop-in option.
What should I order at Casa Fofò?
There is no ordering at Casa Fofò — the kitchen decides. The £65 set menu runs to eight courses including snacks, a pre-dessert, and petits fours, with no printed menu handed out. The £49 wine pairing is worth taking: the natural wine list of around two dozen bottles is chosen specifically to match the fermentation-led food, and it represents solid value at that price point.
Is lunch or dinner better at Casa Fofò?
Dinner is the core format and runs Wednesday through Sunday. Saturday and Sunday lunch (1–2 PM) is available, but the kitchen runs the same surprise menu concept — this is not a shorter or lighter midday offering. If flexibility matters, the lunch slots may be slightly easier to book than prime Friday or Saturday dinner slots.
Is Casa Fofò good for a special occasion?
Yes, if the person you are celebrating with appreciates adventurous, technique-driven cooking — beef garum, fish scales, and fermented tomato skins are all fair game. The Michelin star (2024) and OAD Casual Europe #385 ranking (2025) give it genuine occasion weight. It is not the right choice if your guest expects a classical or crowd-pleasing menu, in which case The Ledbury or CORE by Clare Smyth would be safer bets.
Is Casa Fofò good for solo dining?
It works well for solo diners. The open kitchen and chef-served format mean there is always something to watch, and the no-menu concept removes the social obligation of discussing dishes. Booking a single seat may also be marginally easier to secure than a table for two or more in a room this small.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Casa Fofò?
At £65 for eight courses from a Michelin-starred kitchen, the price-to-credential ratio is strong for London. The food is daring — fermentation techniques are central, not decorative — and the cooking is ingredient-led with a clear point of view. Add the £49 wine pairing and you are at £114 per head, which is significantly below comparable starred restaurants in the city. If you want a more conventional tasting menu experience, Dinner by Heston Blumenthal gives you a polished, explanatory format at a higher price.
What are alternatives to Casa Fofò in London?
For fermentation-led, chef-driven cooking at a similar price point, Pidgin in Hackney (where chef Adolfo de Cecco previously cooked) covers comparable territory. For Michelin-starred tasting menus with more classical structure and wine service, The Ledbury or CORE by Clare Smyth are the natural step up — at a significantly higher price. If the no-choice format is the concern rather than the style, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay or Sketch's Lecture Room offer structured menus with more conventional framing.
Hours
- Monday
- closed
- Tuesday
- closed
- Wednesday
- 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Thursday
- 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Friday
- 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Saturday
- 1 PM-2 PM 6 PM-9:30 PM
- Sunday
- 1 PM-2 PM 6 PM-9:30 PM
Recognized By
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