LDNReview
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Hafez
Included In
While the usual narrative when dining out is not to fill up on bread, at this Persian restaurant on a quiet street in Notting Hill, you absolutely should. Especially when that bread is fresh out of a clay oven and dipped in spicy mirza ghazemi. Hafez is a homely and endearing spot where your meal will be 70% dips, 25% buttery kebabs, and 5% pure charm.
A huge part of Hafez’s appeal is that the interiors look like they belong on the set of a romcom starring Cameron Diaz—in a small town with a ruggedly handsome man she’s pretending to hate, duh. And it has the same feelgood energy. The spacious dining room has charming touches like rows of books underneath the benches along the side of the restaurant, and the kind of rusty-looking cutlery you’d find in the nice drawer of your grandparents’ house, hanging on the walls. There’s enough space that you can rely on it for a last-minute weeknight dinner, or often to rock up without a reservation. But you should know about the little nook at the front. It’s perfect for a three-way catch up, or an intimate date over salad-e olivieh and insisting they have the last piece of golden jujeh.
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
At Hafez there’ll be couples who couldn’t get a space at Alounak down the road, and groups with a mission to order everything from the hot dips section, as well as lone diners who’ve popped in for a skewer of tender kubideh and a comforting guarantee that they’ll leave satisfied and full. One thing every table will have in common is the glorious, freshly baked Persian bread. Blistered, slightly charred bread that’s crispy in the middle, with thick doughy corners, pre-cut into easily accessible, addictive rectangles. Even if you’re only with one other person, you’ll be ordering a second basket 20 minutes into your starters.
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Give us that freshly baked bread and we can get through an obscene amount of dips here. Blended, puréed, gently mashed with a fork—if it’s scoopable with a piece of warm bread, we will wipe that bowl clean. From cold, refreshing mast o khair, to salad-e olivieh that would make a great sandwich filling, and warm smoky kashk-e bademjan. But as much as we’d stan a dip-only meal, the grilled meats are also reliably good. The boneless chicken is charred and zesty, while the chenjeh, a middle neck fillet of lamb, is meaty and tender and comes with a mountain of saffron rice. So over-order on dips, don’t be shy to ask for another basket of bread, get some grilled meats, and always say yes to taking any leftovers home. We can confirm that the salad-e olivieh does indeed make an excellent sandwich filling.
Food Rundown
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Freshly Baked Persian Bread
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Mast o Khair
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Salad e Olivieh
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Kashk e Bademjan
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch
Boneless Chicken
photo credit: Aleksandra Boruch