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Cocochan

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SquareMeal Review of Cocochan

“A great hangout place between or after shopping”, this high-design proposition just behind Selfridges appeals to those with trim figures by touting contemporary Asian fusion small plates and exotic mains. Dim sum is an affordable sharing treat for retail-therapy refugees, while main courses keep it appealingly simple and eclectic – larger plates of black cod in miso and kimchee lamb cutlets interspersed with lighter bites including yellowtail carpaccio, shumai beef dumplings and the popular seared tuna tataki offer something for everyone. The striking, modernist interior is divided into three distinct spaces (‘dekoros’) coloured purple, white and gold respectively – all festooned with a riot of geometric screens, moody lighting, mirrored latticework and black bamboo tabletops. Terrific clued-up staff are also spot-on when it comes to suggesting innovative cocktails from the bar.

Good to know

Average Price
££££ - £30 - £49
Cuisines
Food Hygiene Rating

Location

38-40 James Street, Marylebone, London, W1U 1EU

020 7486 1000 020 7486 1000

Website

Opening Times

Mon-Sun 12N-11pm (Sun -10.30pm)

Reviews

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3 Reviews 
Food/Drink
Service
Atmosphere
Value

Roshni P

05 June 2015  
Food & Drink 3.5
Service 4
Atmosphere 3.5
Value 3.5
Nice food and great staff
Had a lovely birthday meal here, the staff were friendly and helpful when recommending dishes. My sister was given a complimentary cake with a candle for her birthday. Very nice touch.

Andrew M

24 December 2014  
Food & Drink 4
Service 5
Atmosphere 4
Value 4
Just lovely
Was a perfect venue and lovely food and great service with perfect suggestions for cocktails to finish a lovely lunch ..

Sabrina G

10 February 2011  
Food & Drink 3
Service 3.5
Atmosphere 3
Value 3
I did feel that the 2 bouncers and the guestlist girl on the door was a bit much… after all, Cocochan isn't exactly Chinawhite! Inside, the PR girls hover from table to table standing over guests as they dine. It's all too much for me because all I wanted to do was sit, eat and get out. The table we were seated at had an inexplicable constant vibration. The wall and floor was also vibrating. Resting my arm on the table resulted in said arm going completely numb… when I asked the staff why the table is vibrating, I was told “But it's a good vibration, no???” I politely reassured them that it was rather more of an uncomfortable, unpleasant vibration. Bizarre. A reduced menu was the order of the day; I'm told the Chef was in New York and so they were only offering a reduced menu until next week; lucky old me, eh? The usual Pan-Asian suspects appear on the menu making it a hybrid of Hakkasan, E&O and Ping Pong all rolled into one. Duck and watermelon salad was not unpleasant, garnished with a purple edible flower (I'm thinking this kind of detail won't last very long) but the duck was tasty, chunky and not fried to death like many crispy duck salads tend to be. Chilean Seabass and chilli bean dumplings were melt in the mouth encased in green rice pastry but with the curious addition of semi-cooked carrot replacing the chilli bean; placed not in the seabass filling itself but actually on the pastry. The ‘XO’ prawn dumplings did not deliver and had a very heavy pastry casing with a tough seafood centre. The scallop and prawn dumplings topped with tobiko fared somewhat better, but still not a patch on the delicate offerings of Hakkasan. Our last dish of Hamachi, tobiki with a truffled mirin dressing was a bit of a disaster. There was no tobiko to be found anywhere on the plate and the truffle was a distant flavour in the background, not enough to warrant the hefty £8.75 price tag for five coin-sized slivers of Hamachi. What completely overpowered the delicate flesh of the fish was the addition of raw shards of green beans that attacked and killed off any remnant of fish/truffle flavour in your mouth and certainly weren't mentioned as part of the meal. Overall the experience was ok… but its abundantly clear to see that they are trying way too hard already to build an air of exclusivity on site when if they could simply brush up on a couple of dishes and pay a little more attention to preparation and ingredient use, they will probably do quite well in the long term. The staff are really very nice if not a tad too over-ethusiastic (a syndrome on new eateries) but they would do good to observe the term ‘less-is-more’ at Cocochan and peel away the PR girls, bouncers and door bunnies, fix the inexplicably vibrating tables and concentrate on serving simple pan-asian fare. Because the reality is that with Ping-Pong literally across the road, the competition looks to be stiff!

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