Sit at the counter if you can, that’s where we sat and talking with the chefs about seafood is part of the pleasure. The whole place is nice and relaxed, low-key dining, no need to dress up. They call it a “fish butchery” to emphasise the idea that they use all the parts of all the seafood, focusing on sustainability and good sourcing. Can’t quite say local sourcing, given how far Cambridge is from the sea! But it’s all British.
We start with the prawn toast, which is epic. Juicy diced up prawn squished down onto a slice of fried milk bread, topped with plenty of scrunchy sesame furikake and then given an extra oceanic hit of oyster sauce. Absolutely the Rolls Royce of prawn toast.Next up, some slices of raw pink bream with the skin torched to a lovely bitter black, dressed with salty soy-miso and fragrant lime oil, added scrunch from popped brown rice. It’s all flavour, flavour, flavour here – very well balanced and grounded in some beautiful bits of seafood. Lovely bream.
The flavours got really serious with the lobster rice. A perfectly gooey risotto-like concoction flecked with plentiful bits of toothsome lobster meat, but where the lobster really shone was in the roasted sauce and oil that bound the rice together. Absolute monster of a seafood risotto. Fragrance this time from highly scented tarragon cream on top.
Our final sharing plate could hardly improve, but absolutely matched the rest. Beautifully cooked chunks of monkfish on a lovely cafe-creme-coloured cream sauce made from the roasted bones, set on some puy lentils and wilted greens for balance, plentiful shavings of truffle on top. Everything full-flavoured and spot-on. A side dish of heritage tomato salad we ordered came with basil and sweet nectarine to set off the very excellent tomatoes, very much a side dish worth its salt.We enjoyed a couple of glasses from the good selection of wines – it was definitely a chilled white kinda day, still around 30C in the evening! And then we wandered home, absolutely delighted at a great find. I think £50 each would be a solid meal for two, without drinks, and the sheer quality of the cooking and the seafood is well worth it. I’ll hope for a London outpost to pop up! Or find an excuse to return to Cambridge.

















