Tuesday, February 16, 2010

LHR: Gaylord Restaurant

Hello!

London is known for great Indian food, so now that we're at the new hotel (Melia White House), I asked the concierge for a recommendation. He sent me to Gaylords.

Gaylord Restaurant
79-81 Mortimer Street, London, W1W 7SJ
London Tel: 0207 636 0808
Tel: 0207 580 3615
http://www.gaylordlondon.com/
info@gaylordlondon.com
google walking directions

Our group of 5 promply trucked off down Great Portland Street for the 11 minute walk (0.6 miles). It's very easy to find. Just go south on Great Portland Street and hang a left on Mortimer Street. The restaurant is on the south side just 100 feet from the intersection.

Me and 'not-chuck-berry'We met with the manager, Mr. Sameer Berry, pictured with me to the right. Chuck Berry is not his brother, as our inquisitive crew found out. However, he did offer a 15% discount for United Airline Crews. Thank you very much Mr. Berry and the Gaylord staff! Sameer also mentioned that he will work on getting a standard group menu together, so that you don't have to spend a lot of time menu surfing. With the group plan, you'll eat an assortment of Gaylords best entrees family style, and paying the bill will be easy as it will be evenly split among your group. If I remember correctly, Sameer also said the group plan will include a beer, but best check with him before you sit down.

The food at Gaylords was excellent! It definitely ranks among the top of the Indian restaurants that I've tried in my life. From the naan to the vindaloo, every dish tasted great and was artfully prepared.

Gaylord's atmosphere was superb and the wait staff very helpful and friendly. Be sure to say hi to Mr. Sameer Berry, and mention that you saw this post on Crewtips! Enjoy!



Our group with the standard 'lazy susan' in the middle, perfect for the family style scarfing.

Full beers and and assortment of great Indian food! Priceless!


This dish was an excellent assortment of Tandoori meats. I wish I could remember what it was called! It came with its own charcoal warmer thingie, so the food stayed warm.

LHR: Melia Neighborhood Report

(Here's the neighborhood report someone put together - enjoy! Tim)

NEW LONDON MELIA HOTEL NEIGHBORHOOD

Here’s a very quick thumbnail sketch of the new neighborhood. The new hotel is palatial. The rooms are small but luxuriously appointed. Good discounts, a free drink chit for now (don’t tell), good HVAC, funky programmed elevators, very upscale clientele. It is a definite change for the better from the Hilton. The neighborhood is fantastic.

LOCATION

The hotel is at the very southeast corner of Regent’s Park, half a block north of Marylebone Rd (become Euston Rd. 1 blk. East). Walking-distance times are as follows:

Oxford Street 10 mins
Oxford Circus 11 mins
Berwick St. – Soho – Ch-town 15 mins
Covent Garden 20 mins
Piccadilly Circus 17 mins
Marble Arch 17 mins
London Hilton 15 mins
Big Ben - Westminster 30 mins

There are three tube stations within a five-minute walk:

Great Portland St. – Circle, Hammersmith, Metropolitan lines
Warren St. – Northern, Victoria lines
Regent’s Park – Piccadilly line

The Baker St., Euston, Euston Sq. and Goodge St. tube stations are within a 10 minute- walk. Grab your Oyster card and be at Harrods in 15 minutes, Notting Hill & Queensway in 10 minutes, and Tower Hill in 15 minutes. Busses all over London are plentiful on Marylebone, Baker Street and Tottenham Court Road. Night busses serve Tottenham Court Rd and Baker Street.

Of course there is Regent’s Park and the London Zoo right there. No roller blades in Regent’s Park. Along the north edge of the park is the Grand Union Canal and Walkway. Follow the canal from Camden Town to Little Venice. Extremely scenic walk any time of the year.

Avoid some of the neighborhoods to the northeast of the hotel. Stick to Albany Street or Hampstead Road if you are going to Camden Town.

NEW DINING VENUES AND PUBS

The Concierge pointed me to three areas.

1. Great Portland Street (GPS) and Totenham Court Rd. Both run south from Marylebone and have the typical commercial and touristy London fare with a few glamorous pricey ones mixed in. Sorry, Pizza Express and Angus Steak House just don’t do it for me, but they’re there.

2. Cleveland Street runs south from Marylebone between Portland and Totenham, and is where the local residents and students from the University of London go. No tourist traps – very affordable. Within six blocks there are two Thai restaurants (very inexpensive)( Lotus Thai / Melonbee), a Chinese sit-down and take-away that is dirt cheap (Friendship), two affordable Greek restaurants (4 Lanterns / Vasis), an Indian restaurants (Ragam - inexpensive), a Chippie (very inexpensive), an affordable Turkish restaurant (Istanbul Mezze) and an affordable Italian restaurant (Monte Blanco). Most of the restaurants on Cleveland don’t open for dinner until 1800 hours.

3. Warren Street runs east-west parallel to Marylebone just one block south behind the Volvo dealership. There is the Smuggler’s Tavern which like Churchill’s and Windsor Castle is a typical pub with a Thai kitchen. A little further to the east is Lord’s Indian Restr which had reasonable prices. The pub I’ll call my new home on cold winter nights is The Prince of Wales Feathers, located one block further east on Warren Street across from the Warren Street Tube Sta. It is a typical new-style pub with four or so flat screens for sports and a kitchen menu that is four pages long. What’s so special is that every day they have a meal and drink special that runs either 5.99 or 6.99 for a FULL meal and a drink! They also have a very extensive menu with London Pride on tap. It’s jam-packed, friendly, with sharing tables, great digital juke box (70’s & 80’s). Very much like the Pride of Paddington on Praed Street – just better!

4. Other areas nearby: The Great Portland Street tubestation has a Coffee Stop on the outside with freshly made breakfast and lunch sandwiches for 2.00 or less. Yes, a real bacon roll for 2 quid. Starbucks and Pret a Manger are both directly east of the hotel on Marylebone (two blocks) or go two blocks down Great Portland St. (south). Behind the G.P.S. tube station is the Albany Pub. Huge, popular, crowded, loud. . . For a more quintessential old London pub, go two blocks down G.P.S., turn right on Devonshire to the Mason’s Arms.

5. Food Shopping. Tesco Express is right behind the G.P.S. tube station (1/2 block from hotel), and Sainsbury’s local is two blocks down Great Portland St. A full-size traditional Sainsbury’s is down Tottenham Court Rd, about a block south of the Warren St. tube station (seven minutes walk from hotel)

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

LHR: Melia White House Hotel

Melia White House Entrance Hello folks!

You won't believe this, but I had the distinction of being the very first crew to check in at the Melia White House hotel! We were received very warmly by the Director of Sales, Kati Sadchikova. She even took us around on a personal tour of the hotel grounds and the amenities.

The hotel is located east of Regents park, one small block north of Euston Road (behind a church). It is near the Great Portland Street Tube stop, which services the Circle, Hammersmith, and Metropolitan lines.


View Larger Map

The hotel is very well appointed. The lobby is impeccable, with marble floors and a clean design. Interestingly, there is no ramp, so you need to schlep your bags down a couple of stairs to get to the counter.





The small size of the rooms at the Melia White House are the biggest disappointment. They are a very tight squeeze in all respects. You no kidding only have about 18" of space between the foot of the bed and the opposite wall. The desk takes up the entire window wall, and there is almost not enough room to scoot the chair back far enough to sit down at the desk. The other beef is the pillows, which seemed very flat and unsupportive. The bed itself was fine, but not the best I've slept in. The thermostat is on the wall, but the fan speed is by the bed.



The bathroom, in keeping with the theme for the rest of the room, was small, but very well appointed.



You get free internet, wired and wireless. They'll give you a code upon check-in. If you're using the wired (ethernet), it's really tough to find where to put the code. You need to click on an obscure link at the bottom that says something like 'I already have a code.'

There are the standard meal discounts. I would think that we'd eat there a bit more than at the Metropole since most of the restaurants are a bit of a walk.

The gym is adequate. They have 3 treadmills, one elliptical, 2 bikes and 1 rower. There are dumbell weights, with the heaviest only being about 45 lbs or so. They really need to get at least a lat pull-down machine as a minimum, so let's bug them to put that in.

One of the best deals that they are giving aircrew is 2 for 1 at the bar from 4pm until 6pm. So, don't forget to stop by and kickstart your layover with a pint or two.





The Melia White House is a change of pace from the Metropole, and about a 5 minute extra van ride. Overall, it is a well appointed hotel that is conveniently located. The room size is the biggest detractor, but at least they are comping the internet. Have fun and be sure to post your comments on the hotel so we can get extra observations...