LDNReview
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Chishuru
Included In
Oxford Street has the air of a scraggy cat that refuses to die. It’s taking Wahacas for its stomach, Primarks for its fur, a rub of Intimissimi here, a drop of Simmons there. Perhaps this faltering heartbeat of a destination should place its faith elsewhere. In something more independent. In a restaurant brimming with life, flavours, and genuine verve. Because unique experiences aren’t easy to come by in London, but Chishuru is one of them.
London is blessed with plenty of West African options, but none of them are like this place. Joké Bakare’s cooking had people flocking to its pint-sized original Brixton location and its two-floor evolution on Great Titchfield Street has got the room to seat them. The terracotta tones are warm, the spicy okra martinis lethal, and the peppersoup broth is the drinkable kick up the arse that everyone needs. There isn’t a similar restaurant in Fitzrovia, nor the whole of London.
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
A meal at Chishuru hums rather than hurtles. It’s a set menu affair, at lunch and dinner, with a careful rhythm to everything that comes out. The maisonette setup means lunch is best enjoyed upstairs, while the moodier basement has a cave-like booth that begs you to explore the low-intervention French wine list. There are touches of personality to be found all over. From Joké’s tableside chats and embrace, to the exhibition of chic crockery put in front of you.
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Only an idiot would come to Chishuru for one meal. The menus comprise 12 exceptional dishes, so two visits are essential. But outside of that logistical necessity, every sauce, every spice, every morsel needs to be tried. Ekuru, a wild watermelon seed cake, is ingeniously paired with mellow waina, a sweet rice and coconut ball. At dinner moi moi, a bean cake, with duck liver and a pungent duck egg sauce stands out. Lunch can certainly be enjoyed solo, but dinner here should be with multiple people—if only to guarantee a taste of each of the three different mains.
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
If Oxford Street is dying, then it needs Chishuru on drip. It’s not showy. Nor is it seamless. Instead, Chishuru seems to hone in on being consistently impressive. Of course, it might help that it's located in a quagmire of chains and Sour Patch Kids vendors. But put Chishuru in any part of London and it would be a destination, no matter what.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Lunch Set Menu
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Dinner Set Menu