Ethiopian Chicken Stew (Doro Wett)
Ethiopia
guides you to the best local dishes & drinks in
125+ cities. See map now
Now on Amazon.com!
Download our new London Food & Travel Guide to your Kindle, smartphone, or tablet and get the inside scoop on the best British foods in London, plus a bonus restaurant guide and 7-day EYW itinerary. $3.99
EYW wants your food photos!
EYW wants your food stories!
Hey guys I am a traveler who loves to explore different places around the world. I often visit outside of Canada, So whenever I have to travel around the world I always book my flight tickets from the... Read more
What: Bone marrow, typically used to flavor and thicken stews and stocks, in general has made a big comeback as a standalone dish in the culinary worlds at both ends of the Atlantic, and we have London’s Fergus Henderson to thank. Since opening his landmark St. John restaurant in 1994, chef Henderson has served roasted veal marrowbones—still in the bones, with parsley salad, gray sea salt, and toast—on its menu, just one of the dishes that’s come to embody his back-to-British-basics nose-to-tail cooking. Today, we’d argue that roast bone marrow is a signature dish of not only the restaurant, but also the city of London itself.
Where: In the East End neighborhood of Clerkenwell, St. John (26 St. John St., map) is a no-frills, white-walled affair housed in a former smokehouse, around the corner from the 800-year-old Smithfield meat market.
When: Mon-Fri, noon-3pm and 6pm-11pm; Sat, 6pm-11pm; Sun, 1pm-3pm. The bar is open Mon-Fri, 11am-11pm; Sat, 6pm-11pm; Sun, noon-5pm. (During bar hours, a limited bar menu, including this dish, is available beginning at noon, while elevenses alone is offered before noon.)
Order: The roast bone marrow and parsley salad (£7.50) is St. John’s signature dish, always present on the otherwise-changing seasonal menu, and the same one Anthony Bourdain has famously claimed as his “death-row meal.” Four roasted veal bones, bold in their simplicity, are joined by a bright, lemony parsley salad, with sliced shallots and capers; a pile of gray sea salt, crunchy and damp; and two slices of toasted, crusty sourdough bread. The idea is to spread the hot, meltingly rich marrow onto the bread—baked at sister bakery St. John Bakery—top it with a pinch of salt and parsley salad, and enjoy. It’s a primal, indulgent, memorable dish.
Alternatively: This particular dish has inspired many copycats—again, on both sides of the Atlantic—but we say there’s none like the original.
©2025 Eat Your World, LLC - All Rights Reserved