Corleone
The Corleone is Italian restaurant in Colliers Wood providing every guest with an authentic Italian dining experience
Corleone Restaurant - home of Italian food in Colliers Wood - Home
The Corleone is italian restaurant who delight in providing every guest with an authentic Italian dining experience.
We are proud to offer a varied menu of freshly prepared dishes that will tempt all palates from fish to pizza and meat to pasta.
We offer you a wide selection of carefully and beautifully presented authentic Italian pizzas, pasta dishes, antipasti and main dishes.
Ideally situated opposite of Colliers Wood tube station, we offer in a warm, home-like Italian atmosphere where all are welcomed as family and friends.
Reviews and related sites
Tom Parker Bowles reviews The Frog: The Frog that's already a ...
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But since then, macaroni has crossed the Atlantic, gained a Southern drawl, put on a few pounds and become mac ’n’ cheese, an American staple so downhome and familiar that it has little need for the rigidities of grammar.
But as one delves in, instead of the usual stolid resistance, the fork glides straight through a cheesily diaphanous cloud, stopping only at individual macaroni, each handfilled with an intense cheddar and Parmesan sauce.
And to the left, a plain glass frontage, leading to a small, boxy room, with basic bar, blackboards, tables, and a shiny open kitchen.
Bar snacks are a mere £4 a pop, including ‘Beer, Beef, Chilli’, an immaculately seasoned tartare of lovingly diced fillet of perch atop a posh, yeasty prawn cracker.
Winter is kept at bay, though, by a blast of vinegar from pickled girolles, the crunch of something small and deep-fried, and the verdant joy of peas and broad beans.
Mennula, 10 Charlotte Street, London W1 | The Independent
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When I told my friend we would be meeting at a Sicilian restaurant, he made the obvious gag: "I'll be disappointed if there isn't a gun taped to the back of the cistern."
There may be nothing particularly Sicilian about the décor of Mennula, but the menu has the smack of authenticity.
Prices are on the high side and if four courses feels a little extravagant, there's a set menu offering two for £17.50 or three for £19.50.
For my main course, I have calf's liver served on a little mound of mashed potato and accompanied by spinach, onion marmalade and speck, while my friend has pork belly with polenta, black cabbage and apple chutney.
About £100 for two, including wine and service In the shadow of the castle, a restaurant-with-rooms whose quirky Anglo-Italian menu is executed with considerable panache; word is spreading – book ahead A brilliant Italian; it's especially praised for its range of daily seafood specials, but offers great meat and pasta too The décor may be a bit self-conscious for some, but even those who rarely go to anything resembling a chain are swept away by Jamie O's Italian – a sort of better Carluccio's; pity about the long queues
Reviews - Miso Noodle Bar - Chinese, Restaurant, Food & Drink ...
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Had a lovely lunch at Miso today roast duck was the best I had eaten outside of Chinatown.
Service was also quick and polite.
I fully understand issues have to be dealt with in any business but in the middle of the restaurant during lunch service is not on.
I have given it 5 stars for quality of food and service as would not be fair to mark it down.
A seriously cool male grooming salon in west London | How To ...
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In Francis Ford Coppola’s epic trilogy, Genco was an olive oil company set up as a front for money-laundering by a young Vito Corleone; but its leafy west London namesake is a seriously cool and equally up-and-coming male grooming salon.
The hair wash and head massage has always been my favourite part of the cut, but at Genco not only do they blissfully take their time, they literally shift it up a gear, with a pulsating massage chair working up and down your spine.
Parmar worked in the advertising industry before setting up shop in June 2007.
However, it’s not just about the haircut; Genco is a male grooming salon and last summer one of London’s top men with a cut-throat razor, Frank Bertorelli (first picture), joined the team.
And if you still think the idea of a male grooming salon sounds a bit too “metro” for you, just remember the scene were Marlon Brando has his nails done at the end of Part One; there’s nothing metro about Don Corleone.