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Head off towards the back of Regents street and you’ll find a maze of roads intertwining with one another; filled with boutiques and wine bars. It was down Ganton Street I found my most recent coffee shop discovery: Sacred Café. With the weather today being unnaturally hot for this time of year, we were lucky to find that the café also had outdoor seating (a major plus point).

The inside of the café was brilliantly decorated with a menu that extended across the entire wall behind the cash desk. There was a laid back atmosphere to the place which was welcome, but also somewhat odd bearing in mind its position near to one of the busiest places in London. It may have been the weather, or the friendly staff in this New Zealand run café, but I felt relaxed for the short time that I was there. The position of Sacred Café is in fact perfect, as it is a great hide away for weary shoppers and business people who need a caffeine boost and a chance to rest their feet.

The price for a small flat white coffee as with Nude Espresso, was £2.50, which I am starting to see as a standard price now in most of the coffee shops I have seen. The coffee itself was also good, I did not enjoy the taste of it as much as I have others but it was still enjoyable. Though then again, this is just my personal preference (and I know nothing about coffee tasting).
What I loved the most about this place was its location, (just off of Carnaby Street, down a small side road, quiet and hidden). Not being from the city myself,  I really do appreciate anywhere I can find to get away from the stress of living in London. Sacred Café is definitely worth a visit if you are ever near the Oxford Street / Regent Street area, so if you plan on going, check on the map down the right hand side of the page to see how to get there.

sacred cafe coffee shop
inside sacred cafe
teapot outside sacred cafe

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I re-visited the famous Flat white coffee shop in Soho about a month ago after an afternoon shopping on Oxford Street. I arrived at around 6 in the evening and the place was reasonably quiet, and as soon as I walked through the door was welcomed by the staff. It is a shop which must lose count of the number of customers coming through its doors, yet they still perfect the art of making every customer feel at home. I was given a choice of seating and then was brought over my flat white (you can’t go to a place named after the beverage and not have one!) which was of course excellent. Flat White has always been one of my favourite places to stop and relax in central London. Places like this are life-savers, especially in our British winter. It is somewhere where you are able to escape from the elements and the hectic streets of the city, and for a short time stop to collect your thoughts over a great cup of coffee.

I have no photos of Flat White at the moment, though plan to go there again within the next few weeks. For now, here is one I found online:

 

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The London Coffee Guide provide on their website a list of the ‘Allegra top 30 independent coffee shops.’ I have decided to use this extremely useful list as my starting point and provide reviews of the coffee shops named on it, from my own perspective. Visit the website and register (as it is restricted to members only- but its free) to view some of the coffee shops that I will be covering over the next week!

I aim to go for a visit to Brick Lane tomorrow, so I just might be visiting some there – check back tomorrow to find out!

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