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Food & Wine: The London restaurant revolution

The city has become the centre of the pop-up world of supper clubs, a culinary trend in which the recession has played no small part, which is driven by social networking and happening in an apartment near you

Something strange is happening on the London food scene. New dining locations are emerging in unlikely, out-of-the-way neighborhoods, where paying guests turn up to eat in someone's private home. Elsewhere, established chefs are taking over a temporary dining venue to cook large no-choice meals for 30 guests for one or two nights, only to disappear again.

A recent event took place above the Violet Cakes Shop (www.violetcakes.com) in a nondescript office block in east London. Here, nearly 30 people ate a specially created meal from Chris Lee, one of the former stars of Chez Panisse, California's most influential restaurant. "I bake cakes all day long," explained Claire Ptak, formerly pastry chef at Chez Panisse, "and I missed the interaction you get by working with great chefs, so I arranged for a series of pop-up dinners, starting with Chris and then Joseph Trivelli from the River Cafe."

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