Re-invented Galvin HOP Bistrot & Bar launches new menu

Sister to adjoining Michelin-starred Galvin La Chapelle, Galvin HOP Bistrot & Bar has been re-invented for 2019, recently equipped with a meat and cheese counter and a new menu.

Modelled on the fashionable bistrot and bars of Paris and New York, the Spitalfields restaurant continues to serve brothers Chris and Jeff Galvin’s high-standard of food while acting as a less formal alternative to the likes of La Chapelle or Galvin at Windows on the 28th floor of the Hilton Hotel on Park Lane. Here, the new menu has a prominent focus on cheese and charcuterie from the UK, Italy, France and Spain.

On the introduction of the restaurant’s new meat and cheese counter, co-founder Chris Galvin said: “Charcuterie has changed beyond all measure in the last five years. In particular, there has been a growth of high-quality produce both imported and home grown that just hasn’t been previously available in the UK. We hand source our artisanal meats and unpasteurised cheeses from suppliers we’ve known personally for a long time. Served with pickles and the finest breads on an olive board, this is a great way to eat at any time of the day.”

In addition to the new focus on charcuterie, the wine list also features a number of natural and organic wines, each available alongside a selection of wines on tap, classic and creative cocktails, and Pilsner Urquell unpasteurised beer that’s stored in copper tanks, delivered weekly from the Czech Republic. Alongside the copper tanks acting as an interior feature, the space is also bedecked with a pewter-topped bar and unclothed tables. In keeping with the food and interiors, service is similarly relaxed, albeit efficient.

From the new menu, a recent lunch began with a charcuterie and farmhouse cheese board. With meats and cheeses sourced from Lyon and The Ham and Cheese Co. in Bermondsey – who carefully source produce from small Italian artisans – the jewel in the board’s crown was a rocher of gloriously insalubrious pork rillettes. Slices of peppery Jesus de Lyon, fatty coppa, and faintly salty Prosciutto Marchigiano also featured; plus a wedge of comté and pliable Morbier: all outstanding, delightfully paired with a glass of ‘I wish I was a ninja’ pet nat from South Africa.

To follow, a slab of suckling pig belly was deftly cooked, crowned with a sheet of brittle crackling, accompanied by smoked mashed potato with light, wispy consistency – foamy, almost – and a devilishly rich sauce spiked with Pedro Ximinez. Baked trout, on the other hand, featured a thick tranche of fish with blushing flesh and crispy skin, served over a garden of vivid green peas, pea tendrils and ribbons of wild garlic, drizzled with a subtle butter sauce empowered by lardons of Alsace bacon. A modern iteration of a brasserie classic, ideal for spring. Also seasonally appropriate, a simple dessert combined sweet, juicy Gariguette strawberries complemented by a whisper of basil and crushed pistachio nuts.

“We’ve put a lot of effort into researching the needs of our customers who might be local residents, city workers or destination diners,” added Chris Galvin. “The re-imagined Galvin HOP is already wildly popular but we never stop looking at areas we can improve.”

Galvin HOP can be found at Bishops Square, 35 Spital Square, London, E1 6DY.


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Jon Hatchman

Jonathan is Food Editor for The London Economic. Jonathan has run and contributed towards a number of blogs, and has written features for publications such as Eater London, The Guardian, i News, The Independent, GQ, Time Out London and more.

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