London's not short of cake shops and tearooms - something we're grateful for everyday - but when you're looking for somewhere a little off the beaten track, these are your best bets:
Unless someone told you about it, you'd be unlikely to ever stumble across the Basement Tea Rooms in Camden Market.
In fact, even knowing about it, it can be tricky to find (go down the
steps by the Amy Winehouse statue and The Cheese Bar, and when you get
to the bottom do a U-turn to your left. Then follow your cakenose along
the wooden-floored corridor to the very end. You're welcome.).
Among the street food stalls of the area, The Basement Tea Rooms is a
refreshingly calm change. This corner of Camden Stables Market is
still configured like its namesake stables, and while you're not exactly
dining on haystacks, the old-fashioned barriers, leather booths and
floor-to-ceiling wood look more like something out of a western film
than a trendy London market. Colourful bunting and rails of retro
clothing ensure that you don't forget you're in Camden, while you tuck
into coffee, cakes, afternoon tea or an all-day breakfast. There's often
showtunes playing, portion sizes are generous, and the vintage china is
an Instagram bonus.
That's right — fashion chain Oasis has a tea room tucked away upstairs in its Tottenham Court Road store. Saucer & Spritz
deals in cakes and cocktails in equal measure, and although it
describes itself as a cocktail bar foremost, we've always found the
kitsch interiors perfectly conducive to a mid-shop cake stop.
Floral wallpaper, decadent lighting and colourfully-tiled tables make
for a feminine atmosphere, while the delicate bars at one end of the
mezzanine cafe give the illusion of eating in a giant bird cage, while
shoppers browse below.
Afternoon tea needs to be pre-ordered, but cream teas, cakes,
brunches and hot and cold drinks can be enjoyed on a walk-in basis. And
if you do end up washing it down with a cocktail or two... well, who are we to judge?
As with all of the best hidden treasures, we stumbled across this one
quite by accident while wandering among the dying embers of Columbia
Road flower market mid-afternoon one Sunday. Vintage Heaven is an independently-owned vintage shop specialising in crockery, china, glass and kitchenalia.
Of course, the next step for a place with so many dainty dishes, twee
teapots and cute crockery is a vintage tearoom... and that's exactly
what you'll find if you head to the rear of the shop. Cake Hole
is a kitsch and cosy place, with vintage mirrors and artwork lining the
walls, and a mixture of wooden chairs and church pew-style seating.
The menu reads like a who's-who of the London cake scene: cakes from
Primrose Bakery, scones from Rinkoff Bakery, and jam from English
Preserves of Borough Market.
Note, Vintage Heaven and Cake Hole are only open at weekends, like many of the businesses on Columbia Road.
Most people don't even know that London has a Fan Museum, let alone that said museum is home to a beautiful, elegant tea room. The Orangery
is a conservatory-style dining room You need to pay museum admission in
order to visit The Orangery, but once you're in, you find yourself
tucking into traditional cakes, sandwiches and scones. You're surrounded
by beautifully detailed murals and overlooking a secret, Japanese-style
garden — and all just a five minute walk from Greenwich station.
If you're at all familiar with Hammersmith, Betty Blythe
will come as no surprise — the vintage tea room sits proudly on the
corner of a residential road in Brook Green, tempting punters in with is
cake counter and chandelier.
But unless you've been inside, you won't know about the gorgeous
downstairs room, a beautifully decorated but petite space, which you
might have completely to yourself if you time your visit right.
The downstairs room can host tea parties for adults or kids. Photo: Betty Blythe
It's themed like a private dressing room, with vintage clothes and
jewellery strewn artistically about the place — items which you're
allowed, nay, encouraged, to try on. The fancy dress box consists of
dresses, hats and other garments from the 1920s and 1930s — plenty for
you to hold a full-blown photoshoot between courses.
Also keep an eye out for... Soho's Secret Tea Rooms
Photo: Soho's Secret Tearoom
A time of writing, Soho's Secret Tea Rooms is closed due to the fact that the pub above which it resides has changed hands. Keep an eye on the Facebook page to find out where and when it'll make a comeback.