Fowlds Cafe

Coffee Shop in London, United Kingdom. People talk about espresso martini, yummy banana bread and delicious avocado on toast. See reviews and...

Fowlds Cafe - Home | Facebook

And wafer-thin And what’s with the door-handl e in this place that means every *single* customer grapples to get in, or out?

nice, but this place needs a massive soul injection.

http://www.fowldscafe.com

Reviews and related sites

Fowlds Cafe in Camberwell | Borough | Stockwell | Walworth ...

Review analysis
drinks  

Fowlds cafe, owned and run by Jack Wilkinson and partners was founded in 2013 and opened it's doors in early March 2014.

Their ambition is and always has been to provide high quality, great tasting food, coffee and drinks to residents and visitors to Camberwell.

3 Addington Square has been home to the Fowlds upholstery family business since 1926.

When you visit us, you will see that the café takes over the front space of the working upholstery workshop.

During the day Fowlds Cafe offers delicious coffee, cakes, pastries, fresh bread and a daily seasonal changing menu of home-cooked food.

Burgess parkrun Review | AnnaTheApple

Review analysis
facilities   location  

Anyway, this one, Burgess parkrun, is written by the lovely Gemma (@peeriegemgem), an avid runner and Twitter friend.m Location: Burgess Park is in Camberwell, South East London and is the Southwark boroughs largest park.

Along with Southwark parkrun it can claim to be the most central of London parkruns.

On bus, locate Citymapper to stop on Camberwell/Albany Road as this is the nearest entrance to start/finish of the run.

(pic shows entrance) Parking: Being in Central London, parking is on the limited side although the website does note there is some spots available in Addington Square and on Albany Road and this is free for up to four hours.

I may be slightly bias as this is my first parkrun and where I have done the most runs, but it remains one of my favourite runs.

Double Skinny Macchiato: The Caffeine Chronicles: Fowlds Cafe

Review analysis
food   location   facilities   staff   desserts  

There is a notorious vacuum of good coffee in south-east London but some good friends of mine have just moved to Camberwell and recommended a cafe called Fowlds, near Burgess Park.

Fowlds is based in a 144-year-old upholsterers on a quiet square near the west side of Burgess Park.

I took a seat inside and ordered a macchiato (£2) and a sea salt chocolate ristretto ice cream (£2.50) — because why not?

So delicious in fact, that the friendly resident cat, Toby, seemed to have designs on it.

Essentially, then, Fowlds is a really lovely neighbourhood spot and it makes me sad that Camberwell isn't quite in my neighbourhood; Bermondsey could definitely pick up a few tips on that front.

Fowlds Cafe – Square Mile Coffee

Review analysis
food   drinks  

Tucked into a side street just 100 yards away from the busy Camberwell Road, it’s eleven or so seats feel like a spotlight of calm among the crowded bus stops and hammering building sites of the roiling London hubub.

It’s a credit to the team here that during our visit, every indoor seat is filled, meaning latecomers have to choose between getting their coffee to go or taking a seat in the crisp autumn air outside (thick knitted blankets are provided).

The scarcity of the indoor seats breeds a fun, clan mentality amongst those lucky enough to have snagged one.

A further remarkable thing about this small cafe is the variety of customers that have bustled in and out while we’ve been quietly sat here.

One of the customers queuing to order is already casting hungry glances towards our table space.

Louie Louie, London: restaurant review | Jay Rayner | Life and style ...

Review analysis
drinks   food   value   menu   ambience   cleanliness  

On the corner of a busy road in south London, Louie Louie is a decent café by day which really comes to life after dark Louie Louie, 347 Walworth Road, London SE17 2AL (020 7450 3223).

Full meal for two without wine £60- £80; with wine £100 - £120 There is nothing manicured about south London’s Walworth Road.

And there, on a corner opposite a branch of Iceland, is a café by day, restaurant by night, where they can get things they really should want.

And then, in the name of some disfigured obsession with the word “natural”, you’ve written a wine list short on choice, heavy on price and occasionally cratered by the noxious and foul.

Wright’s Food Emporium, in Llanarthne, Wales, is another café by day which on Friday and Saturday nights becomes a restaurant.

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