Borough
- Food served: Sun–Thu noon–10pm; Fri/Sat noon–10pm. [weekend brunch served 7–5pm]
- Bar open: Mon–Sat 11am–1am; Sun noon–1am
- Number of wines sold by the glass: 3
- No. overnight rooms: 11
- Also offers: Children's portions, Children's high chairs, Wheelchair access, Live music
- Music on stereo: Gotan Project
- Capacity: 65
- Largest group: 65
- Open since: 2001
- Average price 2 courses:
£17.50 (lunch)
£17.50 (evening meal) - House wine: £13.45 per bottle
This review appears in the The List's Eating & Drinking Guide 2008 – in the shops now or buy online.
Borough has long been one of Edinburgh's best-kept secrets, serving up cocktails and chilled beats, but just beyond the retro chic of the bar rests a small but perfectly formed restaurant. Mellow lighting from a galaxy of small, scattered light bulbs shines gently down on dark green or burgundy C-shaped booths and just a couple of open tables. Get a booth if you can – they're comfortably intimate without being claustrophobic – and relax. Borough is nothing if not easy-going, and the laid-back vibe is reflected in the menu, a soul-enriching collection of indulgent comfort food. Starters are particularly strong, with special mentions for the deliciously gamey chicken liver pâté and a Greek salad topped with smoky, char-grilled halloumi. Mains suffer a little by comparison, but certainly make up for it in quantity – the sausages and mash are incorrigibly plural, with six bangers vying for attention on a mattress of potato, and even the salmon fish-cake is the size of a small country. The restaurant has recently done away with its à la carte and focused instead on upgrading its bar food, making it ideal for a relaxed meal or Sunday brunch.
- High point: Cocktails that put George Street to shame
- Low point: Quantity sometimes outdoes quality
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