Ergon, 19 Picton Place, London W1U 1BP
30/03/2014
She said: His mum was in town and we
wanted somewhere close as she’d hurt her ankle. We opted for Ergon, a
relatively new Greek restaurant just off the crazy, tourist-ridden St. James
Street. Ergon has two floors with a deli in the basement and the restaurant at
ground level. The space is modern and bright and when we went, busy but not
noisy. The menu was great; lots of choice of small, creative plates so we
ordered a mix of seven. The food didn’t disappoint, every dish was full of
flavour including juicy grilled shrimps, oozing cheese pies, a creamy goats
cheese and lentil salad and a roasted aubergine spread that you wanted to keep
scooping up. But there is a but…The portions. For £16 I was expecting our
salmon to be a main course and not the single, tiny (though tasty) strip that
sat lonely on the plate. For £13 I think we got 6-8 shrimp; and cheekily they charge
£3 for bread (whereas half a mile down the road any Middle Eastern restaurant
on Edgware Road will include a bucket of bread with every order. Shame really
as Ergon is a lovely place with great food. There are reasonably priced mezzes
on the menu so I would still recommend Ergon but maybe stick with the veggie
options.
He said: The Real Greek did a hell of a
lot to upgrade the knackered image of Greek food this side of the Balkans, and
Ergon has now raised the game a few more notches. The only things Greek here
you can either eat or drink. No balalaikas nailed to the wall, or
blue-and-white stripy anything. From the outside you can’t really tell what
you’re getting yourself into – it just looks like a nice, inviting, modern
joint. So I walked in with no expectations, but I walked out really impressed.
The food had the fresh, healthy zing of classic Mediterranean food, which Ergon
delivered with a modern twist. And the drinks were really impressive too, like
the excellent Rouzo cooler, and the martini made with grapa. I liked every dish
and would gladly go back again and again. The only false note was that when
ordering a dip, like the delicious roasted aubergine, bread is charged
separately for an extra £3. If you’re going to charge for it then the bread had
better be the best damned bread, which this definitely was not. Otherwise it
comes across very Ryanair, really desperate and stingy. So just include it and
charge more for each plate. Pricing is maybe a touch high, but this is W1 and
the quality is very high. Ergon’s a hit with me.
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