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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Pique-Nique

    250pts

    Rotisserie sharing plates, surprising Bermondsey setting.

    Pique-Nique, Restaurant in London

    About Pique-Nique

    Pique-Nique is worth booking if you want French-influenced, rotisserie-led cooking in a genuinely characterful setting. The converted park lodge in Bermondsey, sharing-format chalkboard menu, and veal en croûte alone justify the visit. Easy to book, warm in atmosphere, and best approached across multiple visits to cover the full range of what the kitchen does well.

    Is Pique-Nique worth booking? Yes — especially if you want French-inflected cooking in a setting that London rarely offers.

    Pique-Nique sits in a converted park café lodge on a small garden square in Bermondsey, SE1, tucked behind a children's playground. That address sounds unpromising on paper, but the seclusion is the point: this is a dining room you have to seek out, and arriving feels like a find rather than a transaction. If your benchmark is a slick Bermondsey Street restaurant with a well-oiled front-of-house, reset your expectations. If your benchmark is somewhere with real personality, a rotisserie-focused menu built for sharing, and an atmosphere that generates a full house on most nights, Pique-Nique is worth your time.

    The Space

    Vintage French posters, Tudor-style timberwork, and festive fairy lights give the dining room a tavern warmth that still reads as occasion-appropriate. It is secluded enough to feel like a destination rather than an overspill from the street, yet convivial enough that the sharing-format chalkboard menu makes sense in context. The room evokes the kind of relaxed French provincial eating that is genuinely difficult to find in London without spending considerably more. The physical setting is a strong argument for booking: the combination of garden square, former lodge architecture, and deliberately warm interior creates a mood that the food then has to live up to.

    The Food

    The menu is built around rotisserie cooking and structured for sharing, which means the table dynamic matters. A salad of crisp lettuce, Jersey Royals, and salted ox heart dressed in a Roquefort sauce has drawn consistent praise for its balance. The lobster, served with chard and a tarragon-cut bisque, is a strong order at any visit. The standout is the veal en croûte: a log of flaky, patterned pastry sliced tableside to reveal meat rolled in pine nuts and mushrooms. It is technically accomplished cooking with a home-cooked register, which is harder to pull off than it sounds. Desserts have been less consistent — the blueberry beignets, noted as arriving tepid on at least one occasion, underwhelm relative to the savoury courses.

    Service is warm but uneven in confidence. The drinks list covers wine and aperitifs at accessible price points. Neither service nor drinks are weak enough to be a reason not to book, but go in knowing the kitchen is the reason you are here.

    Multi-Visit Strategy

    First visit: anchor on the veal en croûte and the Roquefort salad. These are the dishes that define what the kitchen does well, and both work for a group of two or four. Second visit: the lobster with tarragon bisque is worth ordering properly when you are not also trying to track three other plates. Third visit: give the desserts a second chance and work through more of the chalkboard, which changes to reflect what is seasonal and available. The format rewards repeat visits because the menu does not stay static , the sharing structure means you can cover more ground across two or three evenings than in a single sitting.

    Pique-Nique is run as a sibling to Bermondsey's Casse-Croûte, which sits just around the corner. If you want a sense of how the two compare: Casse-Croûte is tighter, more intimate, and harder to book; Pique-Nique is more expansive, more group-friendly, and has the edge on atmosphere for a table of four. For anyone working through the full range of what London's French-leaning neighbourhood restaurants offer, both are worth a visit on separate evenings.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: Tanner St, London SE1 3LD
    • Neighbourhood: Bermondsey, SE1
    • Setting: Former park café lodge in a garden square, behind a children's playground
    • Menu format: Chalkboard, sharing-focused, rotisserie-led
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins may be possible, but the restaurant regularly runs a full house; booking ahead is advisable
    • Leading for: Groups of 2–4, French-inspired sharing meals, occasion dinners that do not require formal surroundings
    • Sister venue: Casse-Croûte, Bermondsey Street (same ownership, different format)
    • Getting there: London Bridge station is the nearest major hub; Bermondsey tube (Jubilee line) is also close

    How Pique-Nique Fits the Wider London Dining Picture

    Pique-Nique occupies a different tier and register from London's headline restaurant names. For context on where it sits relative to the city's most-discussed tables, see Pearl's guides to CORE by Clare Smyth, Restaurant Gordon Ramsay, The Ledbury, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library, and Dinner by Heston Blumenthal. For the full picture across categories, browse our London restaurants guide, London hotels guide, London bars guide, London wineries guide, and London experiences guide. If you are building a wider UK trip, Pearl also covers The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood. For international comparison, Le Bernardin in New York City and Atomix in New York City represent the kind of technically precise, format-driven dining that shares DNA with what Pique-Nique does at a neighbourhood scale.

    Compare Pique-Nique

    Is Pique-Nique Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Pique-NiqueEasy
    CORE by Clare Smyth££££Unknown
    Restaurant Gordon Ramsay££££Unknown
    Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library££££Unknown
    The Ledbury££££Unknown
    Dinner by Heston Blumenthal££££Unknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Pique-Nique and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to Pique-Nique in London?

    Pique-Nique's closest natural comparison is its own sister restaurant Casse-Croûte, which is just around the corner on Bermondsey Street and runs a similar French register in a slightly busier setting. For French cooking with more formal ambition, Sketch's Lecture Room is a different price bracket entirely. If the appeal is the secluded, occasion-in-a-neighbourhood-you-wouldn't-expect format, that combination is genuinely hard to replicate elsewhere in London.

    Is Pique-Nique good for solo dining?

    The chalkboard menu is explicitly built for sharing, which makes solo dining a less natural fit here. Portions and dishes are designed to move around the table, so a single diner would miss the format the kitchen is structured around. Solo diners after French cooking in the area would be better served by Casse-Croûte, where the counter dynamic is more accommodating.

    What should I wear to Pique-Nique?

    The room mixes vintage French posters, Tudor-style timberwork, and fairy lights in a converted park lodge — the tone is relaxed but occasion-appropriate. Neat casual works well; there's no signal in the venue's character that formal dress is expected or that overly casual attire would feel right for an evening visit.

    What should a first-timer know about Pique-Nique?

    The menu is structured for sharing, so come with at least one other person and be prepared to order across several dishes rather than pick a single plate. The setting — rear of a children's playground in Bermondsey, SE1 — reads more destination than destination, so don't expect to stumble across it. The veal en croûte and the Roquefort salad with Jersey Royals and ox heart are the dishes that define what the kitchen does well; anchor your first visit there.

    Is Pique-Nique good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with the right expectations. The dining room has genuine occasion warmth — fairy lights, timberwork, a secluded garden square setting — without the formality or price tag of a destination restaurant. It works for a birthday dinner or a date where you want atmosphere over prestige. Service has been noted as friendly but variable, so it's better suited to occasions where the food and room are doing the heavy lifting rather than white-glove service.

    Does Pique-Nique handle dietary restrictions?

    The menu centres on rotisserie meat and French-leaning dishes, and the sharing format means dishes arrive communally rather than individually tailored. Detailed dietary accommodation information is not in the available venue data. check the venue's official channels via Tanner St, London SE1 3LD before booking if restrictions are a deciding factor.

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