The Sea, The Sea Hackney
London, Hackney - Seafood - Restaurant - £££
Best Front Row Seat 2024 *Chef Leandro Carreira is leaving at the end of March 2024. The restaurant is changing too: following Carreira's departure, it will become a 'chef's table pop-up and residency space'. * The Hackney sibling of The Sea, The Sea in Chelsea falls somewhere between a Berlin nightclub and The Starship Enterprise. You have pumping electronic beats, exposed ducts, bare brick walls, a ring of light, glass fish-ageing rooms and the polished arc of a 14-seat counter that serves as Portuguese chef Leandro Carreira’s command centre. It’s a unique, immersive showcase for what is primarily a seafood wholesaler with a fishmongers attached. It might be intimidating were it not for the warm welcome and sheer novelty of the experience. Front of house was a team of one when we visited, and the manager put the motley crew of strangers (solo diners, couples, friends) at ease around the counter in no time. A drink always helps: some go for the natural wines so belo...
*Chef Leandro Carreira is leaving at the end of March 2024. The restaurant is changing too: following Carreira's departure, it will become a 'chef's table pop-up and residency space'. *
The Hackney sibling of The Sea, The Sea in Chelsea falls somewhere between a Berlin nightclub and The Starship Enterprise. You have pumping electronic beats, exposed ducts, bare brick walls, a ring of light, glass fish-ageing rooms and the polished arc of a 14-seat counter that serves as Portuguese chef Leandro Carreira’s command centre. It’s a unique, immersive showcase for what is primarily a seafood wholesaler with a fishmongers attached. It might be intimidating were it not for the warm welcome and sheer novelty of the experience. Front of house was a team of one when we visited, and the manager put the motley crew of strangers (solo diners, couples, friends) at ease around the counter in no time. A drink always helps: some go for the natural wines so beloved of this locale; others find a more classically made bottle (priced from £36 upwards). Carreira gets things going with a cup of fish-bone broth. What follows is essentially a 10-course omakase or tasting menu, experienced communally. The chef explains his thinking, his methods, his ideas, as we go along. There are some dishes that stun us all into silence: a miniature seaweed taco with exceptional British chutoro tuna; grilled scallops, firm and fat after four-and-a-half hours in a dehydrator, with a flavoursome sauce of their skirts and caramelised lactose; and seven-day, dry-aged monkfish with caviar and a buttery sauce, smokey with eel skin. Other dishes get us talking: raw squid with nutty goma dofu (sesame 'tofu') divides opinion, as does as similarly polarising semifreddo-style palate cleanser of rice koji with kaffir lime. The menu changes daily, with the exception of the brilliant, delicious pão de ló sponge cake with fennel-seed ice cream and caviar, which Carreira is not allowed to take off the menu. As a chef, he could play it safe, keep it simple – he has some of the best seafood in the country at his disposal – but he’s too curious a cook to do so. He wants to push himself and push his customers. With his small team, he’s created a space where it feels comfortable to sit with some new ideas, new ingredients, new people. An invigorating experience.
VENUE DETAILS
020 7824 8090
OTHER INFORMATION
Counter seating, Wheelchair access, Family friendly, Credit card required, Pre-payment required