@admin : You should give Simpson's in The Strand a visit whilst you are in London. Its been there since the 1840s and has the very best in traditional British food.
Simon,
I didn't make it to Simpson's, but it is on the list for when I come back in October. Yesterday we went to Fox & Anchor for a Full English Breakfast, and I saw they had six rooms upstairs that were quite pleasant, and spontaneously booked another trip.
Today is our last day, with Tuesday being a travel day all day. We stayed in a flat 4 doors down from the Borough Station Underground, which was unfortunately closed until today, so London Bridge (10 min walk) was our home station.
Some eateries we did go to include:
George Inn (Borough) for Sunday Roast
The Trinity Pub (below our flat) - Great Fish & Chips
Monmouth Coffee in Borough Market
Barshu Restaurant in Chinatown - some of the best Sichuan I've ever had.
Sarastro, Covent Garden
The Bridge Tap London Bridge
Prosecco Bar - inside Harrod's for prosecco and pizza
Nobu
Goodmans Restaurant @ Old Jewry
Indian Gourmet London Bridge - some of the best Indian food I've ever had
Rules
Bob Bob Ricard City
Red Farm
Fox & Anchor
Hawksmoor Borough
Coming today for lunch and dinner is St John, and Temper City.
Other stuff
Harrod's
Selfridge's
Warner Brother's Studios Harry Potter Tour
The Play That Goes Wrong - freakin' hilarious!
London Eye
St. Paul's Cathedral
Sky Garden
Buckingham Palace
Westminster Abbey
Big Ben
We also did a private Rock Cab Tour in a Black Cab. It included, the apartment that Mick Jagger and Keith Richards lived in together while forming The Rolling Stones. Then the home Freddie Mercury was living in when he died. Then to Jimmy Page's current house / castle, which was formerly owned by the original Dumbledore of Harry Potter, Richard Harris. After that we saw the apartment where Jimi Hendrix died and then it was onto Abby Road, Paul McCartney's current house, Ringo Starr's apartment which he rented out to Jimi Hendrix. Jimi got evicted for trashing the place, and then it was rented to John Lennon when he left his countryside home when he split with his first wife. That's when McCartney wrote "Hey Jude", which was originally titled, "Hey Jules" for Julian Lennon to console him from his parent's break-up. Next onto the rooftop where the last Beatles live performance was for Let It Be. It lasted 45 minutes before the police shut it down. And last but not least was the iconic Trident Studios where many a major name recorded major hits. This tour was fabulous!