Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
yeni
290ptsBook early. The Josper cooking earns it.

About yeni
Yeni is the most focused Anatolian cooking in Soho, driven by chef-owner Civan Er of Istanbul's acclaimed Yeni Lokanta. A daily-changing sharing menu cooked over oak in a Josper oven, a Turkish-leaning wine list, and Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 make this worth the three-week booking lead time. Book it for the food, not the occasion format.
Should You Book Yeni?
Getting a table at Yeni takes effort. The room on Beak Street is small, the cooking has earned Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025, and the word is well out in London. Book at least three weeks ahead for a weekend table; mid-week is easier but rarely spontaneous. If you can plan around the lead time, it is worth it. If you want Turkish food tonight, Mangal Ocakbasi takes walk-ins more readily. If you want Anatolian cooking at this level of technical intention, there is nowhere closer to book in London.
What Yeni Is
Yeni sits at 55 Beak Street in Carnaby, a pocket of Soho that moves fast and eats well. The restaurant brings the culinary approach of chef-owner Civan Er, who built his reputation at Yeni Lokanta in Istanbul, a restaurant that put modern Anatolian cooking on the map in Turkey. The London address is not a satellite project or a diluted export. It runs a daily-changing menu of sharing plates cooked, in part, over oak in a Josper oven — a setup that produces the kind of char and smoke you cannot replicate on a standard range.
Visually, the room is spare and focused. The Josper sits at the centre of the kitchen's identity, and if you can position yourself to see it work, do. The plates that emerge have the markings of fire cooking: colour, crust, and intensity that tells you immediately this is not Turkish-inflected European fusion. The techniques are Anatolian in origin; the ingredients are sourced with care for the London market. The result reads as specific, not generic.
The menu changes daily, which means there is nothing to pre-order by name. What holds constant is the format: sharing plates, a commitment to Josper-cooked protein and vegetables, and a kitchen that treats Anatolian method as a serious culinary reference rather than a loose inspiration. For the food-focused traveller or London resident who knows the category, that consistency of approach matters more than any fixed dish.
The Drinks Program
Yeni's drinks list is built to match the kitchen rather than compete with it. The wine selection leans into Turkish and broader Eastern Mediterranean producers — a deliberate choice that gives the program a point of view most London restaurants at this price point skip entirely. If you are the kind of diner who eats at Zahter or follows producers from Anatolia, the Aegean, or Thrace, the list here will hold your interest. If you default to French or Italian, it will stretch you usefully.
The cocktail program plays a supporting role rather than leading one. It is coherent and well-made, drawing on the same register of ingredients the kitchen uses, but Yeni is not a cocktail-first destination. The drinks work leading as an extension of the meal. For a food-and-drink explorer, the wine list is the more interesting half of the program , the specificity of origin and producer gives it depth that a generic modern European list cannot match at this price tier.
For comparison, Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library operates at the same price tier with a deeper, more elaborate wine archive, but the focus there is French and classical. Yeni's list is narrower in volume and broader in geographic curiosity. Neither is a substitute for the other.
Value and Positioning
At ££££ in London, Yeni is not cheap. But the price tier here reflects what the kitchen is doing, not a room upgrade or a tasting-menu ceremony. You are paying for technique, sourcing, and the relatively rare thing of a chef with a clear cultural point of view cooking to that standard in Soho. A 4.7 rating across nearly 1,900 Google reviews suggests the price-to-experience ratio is landing well with the people who actually show up.
Compared to Restaurant Gordon Ramsay or CORE by Clare Smyth at the same price band, Yeni operates with less ceremony and more informality. The sharing plate format means the pace is yours to control. If you want the full occasion-dining structure of a starred European tasting menu, this is not the right room. If you want cooking that is technically serious but not theatrically formal, Yeni is a strong call at the price.
For context on what the ££££ tier gets you elsewhere in the UK, compare the structured tasting experiences at Waterside Inn in Bray or L'Enclume in Cartmel. Those are different formats entirely , longer, more sequenced, more service-intensive. Yeni is a sharper, faster, more urban version of the same price commitment.
Who Should Book
Book Yeni if you are a food-focused visitor to London who wants to eat something that cannot be replicated in Paris or New York. The Anatolian framework, the Josper-led technique, and the Turkish wine list make this a distinct proposition in a city that is otherwise well-stocked with competent modern European restaurants. If your goal is ticking off a Michelin name at this tier, there are higher-starred rooms elsewhere. If your goal is eating something with a specific identity and a clear culinary argument, Yeni is worth the booking friction.
For group dining, the sharing format works well for tables of two to four. Larger groups should confirm format and capacity directly with the restaurant. Solo diners who are comfortable at a table rather than a counter can eat here without issue; the room does not penalise the single cover the way some tasting-menu formats do.
For broader context on eating well in London, see our full London restaurants guide. For where to stay nearby, our London hotels guide covers the full range. If you are building a full day, our London bars guide and experiences guide are worth a look.
Quick reference: Book 3+ weeks ahead for weekends; mid-week offers more availability. Sharing plate format, daily-changing menu, ££££ price tier, Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025.
Compare yeni
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| yeni | Turkish | Anatolian-inspired cooking from experienced chef-owner Civan Er, who made his name at acclaimed sister restaurant Yeni Lokanta in his home city of Istanbul. Daily changing menu of vibrant, gutsy, flavoursome sharing plates; techniques are rooted in tradition, with dishes cooked over oak in the Josper oven.; Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Hard | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | Contemporary European, French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | Modern British | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | Modern European, Modern Cuisine | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | Modern French | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | Modern British, Traditional British | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in London for this tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about yeni?
Yeni is a small room on Beak Street built around a daily-changing sharing menu cooked over oak in a Josper oven, drawing directly on the Anatolian tradition chef-owner Civan Er refined at Yeni Lokanta in Istanbul. The format is sharing plates, so come with someone you can order across the menu with — solo dining works at the counter if available, but this kitchen rewards a table of two or more. Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 tells you the cooking is taken seriously; the ££££ price tag tells you to come hungry and committed.
How far ahead should I book yeni?
Book at least two to three weeks out, especially for weekends. The room on Beak Street is small, the Michelin Plate recognition has kept demand high, and a daily-changing menu means repeat visitors come back often. Last-minute availability does appear, but planning ahead is the practical move.
What should I order at yeni?
The menu changes daily, so there are no permanent signature dishes to target. The kitchen's throughline is Anatolian-rooted cooking over oak in the Josper oven, so anything coming off that heat source is worth prioritising. Order broadly across the sharing plates rather than anchoring on one or two dishes.
Is the tasting menu worth it at yeni?
Yeni's format is a daily-changing sharing menu rather than a formal set tasting menu, so the question is less about a fixed tasting experience and more about how much you order across the plates. At ££££, the value sits in the quality of the oak-fired Anatolian cooking, not in a ceremony-driven multi-course structure. If you want a rigid chef's menu with wine pairings as the frame, look at CORE by Clare Smyth or The Ledbury instead.
Is yeni worth the price?
At ££££, Yeni is in London's top spend bracket, but unlike many restaurants at this price point, you are paying for what is on the plate rather than a dining room upgrade or tasting-menu theatre. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a kitchen rooted in a genuinely distinct Anatolian tradition make the price defensible for food-focused diners. If the format or cuisine does not interest you, it is not worth it — but if Anatolian oak-fired cooking from a chef with a serious Istanbul track record is what you are after, yes.
Recognized By
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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