
British Food, Pubs & Afternoon Tea
British food's dated 'bland and beige' reputation hasn't been accurate for a couple of decades โ London is one of the world's genuine food capitals. Don't miss fish and chips, a proper Sunday roast, a good curry (arguably Britain's real national dish at this point), and a traditional afternoon tea. A pub meal runs $12โ22 (ยฃ10โ18), a sit-down restaurant $20โ40 (ยฃ15โ32), afternoon tea $35โ65 (ยฃ28โ50) per person. Order and pay at the bar in most pubs โ table service isn't the default.
Every country has a food stereotype attached to it, and Britain's has been out of date for a genuinely long time โ modern British cooking, and London's food scene specifically, is excellent and hugely diverse. Here's what to actually order, roughly what it costs, and the pub etiquette that trips up almost every first-time visitor.
Myth vs. reality: is British food actually bad?
No โ that reputation traces back to postwar rationing decades ago and just never fully updated in the public imagination. London alone has dozens of Michelin-starred restaurants and one of the most diverse food scenes on the planet (a legacy of empire and immigration that means genuinely excellent Indian, Caribbean, and Middle Eastern food is as 'British' at this point as a Sunday roast). The traditional dishes below are also worth trying on their own terms, not as a punchline.
Must-try dishes
| Dish | What it is | Approx. price |
|---|---|---|
| Fish and chips | Battered fried fish (usually cod or haddock) with thick-cut chips | $14โ22 (ยฃ11โ18) |
| Sunday roast | Roasted meat, potatoes, vegetables, Yorkshire pudding, gravy โ traditionally eaten (as the name suggests) on Sundays | $18โ30 (ยฃ14โ24) |
| Chicken tikka masala / a proper curry | Widely joked about as 'Britain's true national dish' โ the country's deep Indian and South Asian food culture runs genuinely deep, not just as a novelty | $14โ24 (ยฃ11โ19) |
| Full English breakfast | Eggs, bacon, sausage, beans, toast, and grilled tomato โ a hearty start to the day | $12โ20 (ยฃ10โ16) |
| Pie and mash | A savory meat or vegetable pie with mashed potatoes, a classic working-class London dish | $10โ16 (ยฃ8โ13) |
Pub culture โ the rules nobody explains

- Order and pay at the bar โ most pubs don't have table service unless clearly marked. Walk up, order, and pay before your drink arrives.
- No tipping at the bar โ it's not expected, though rounding up or offering to buy the bartender 'one for themselves' is a nice, optional gesture.
- 'Last orders' โ pubs announce a final call for drinks (often with a bell) roughly 15โ20 minutes before closing; don't be caught without a drink in hand after it's called.
- A pub quiz โ many pubs run a weekly trivia night, usually early in the week; a fun, low-key way to experience genuine local pub culture rather than a tourist-facing one.
Afternoon tea

A proper afternoon tea โ finger sandwiches, scones with clotted cream and jam, pastries, and a pot of tea โ is a genuinely lovely, if touristy, thing to do once. Book ahead for well-known hotel teas (the Ritz, Claridge's) since they sell out weeks ahead; less famous but excellent versions exist all over London and beyond at a fraction of the price.
Cream tea etiquette: Cornwall says jam first, then cream; Devon says cream first, then jam. It's a genuinely long-running, good-natured regional rivalry โ pick a side if you want to sound like you did your homework.
Where to find great food

- Borough Market, London โ a historic food hall packed with stalls; go hungry and graze rather than aiming for one big meal.
- Fish and chip shops near any coastal town tend to outdo the London versions โ a genuinely worthwhile detour if you're near the seaside.
- Curry houses on London's Brick Lane, historically the city's South Asian food hub, for one of the more authentic versions of the dish.
Dietary needs
Vegetarian and vegan travelers do very well in the UK โ most pubs and restaurants have a dedicated plant-based section on the menu, and it's one of the higher rates of vegan dining options in Europe. Halal food is widely available in most cities, particularly London, Birmingham, and Manchester. Always flag nut and shellfish allergies directly with staff, since 'may contain traces' labeling is common but not always obvious on a pub chalkboard menu.












































