For two days this week, people will be able to try one of the world’s best (and most expensive) tasting menus for a fraction of the price.
Ikoyi, which currently ranks 35 in the World’s Best Restaurants, has teamed up with Uber Eats to offer a scaled back version of its £320 dinner.
Executive chef Jeremy Chan says the five-course delivery is probably the most “technical and refined” takeaway in the city, though some of the original dishes have been tweaked so they travel better.
To compensate for this, and for the trouble of having to fill up your own water after each sip, your bill will come in at a less eyewatering £60 per person.
But if you’re thinking this venture is a concession to those who baulk at the price of Chan’s two-Michelin starred menu (which comes in at almost £100 more than those at similarly lauded Core by Clare Smyth and The Ledbury)… it’s not.
“I don’t think people pay enough money for food, I think we charge too little, [but] we want to always be accessible to as many people as possible, we’re always trying our best to do that,” Chan tells the Money blog, before offering a detailed response to a (perhaps) hypothetical customer who wonders why a plate of fish is so expensive.
“You’re paying the fishermen, you’re paying for the person that’s transporting it. You’re paying for the logistics company, dry cleaning for the towels used to dry the fish, the paper towels that are being used to clean the guts of the fish, then waste disposal.”
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The fish then goes through a five-day aging process.
“We have three dry-ageing chambers that are used to store exceptional produce from very, very small producers and just the running costs of those alone [are very high].”
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He goes on: “So, that single piece of fish has gone through many, many steps to go from fishermen to me, and you haven’t even thought about the years of research and relationship building with the supplier. You can’t just call a wholesaler and say, give me the turbot that Ikoyi is using.”
All of which doesn’t cover Chan’s own work with the ingredients.
“I’m the one who peels the quail eggs. It’s not just boiled, peeled and put on a plate… the owner of the restaurant is standing there for four hours perfectly peeling these quail eggs.
“Think about the time – that’s the biggest cost in a restaurant that people don’t think about, one’s life, it’s my life.”
It’s perhaps no surprise, in light of all the above, that Chan sees his collaboration with Uber Eats as a one-off.
On the menu is:
Mutton merguez sausage with a green goddess slaw
Fried chicken with smoked scotch bonnet and raspberry
Jollof rice and crab custard
Suya tamari pork with mustard greens and kumquat
Flower sugar cake with batak berry and Garigette strawberry
Image: Pic: ely.bsc_photography
It’s the second Michelin tie up for Uber Eats after its £200 two-person tasting menu offering from Ynyshir in Wales, which was named best UK restaurant in 2022 and 2023.
The food will be delivered by a regular rider/driver, so Chan and his team have had to put thought into the ingredients.
“Everything on the menu has been designed to retain heat.
“For instance, the Merguez is made with a beautiful aged mutton shoulder, which has such deep, intense flavour. I don’t have to worry too much about the cooking temperature because it’s so fatty.
“We’re going to make a little note [for the customer] that says ‘quickly flash in the pan to bring it back to life, and it will still taste great’.
“A radicchio is obviously hearty, so it’s not going to break down.
“All the dishes, if people eat them cold, they are still going to be tasting nice and they’re also structurally sound so they don’t require assembly – we’re making something that can just be eaten straight away out of the box.”
The Ikoyi tasting menu is available in central London to Uber One customers on Friday and for everyone on Saturday, between 5-10pm.
A professional footballer has been jailed for causing the death of a cyclist in a car crash.
Mansfield Town forward Lucas Akins crashed into Adrian Daniel in his Mercedes G350 in Huddersfield on 17 March 2022, while taking his daughter to a piano lesson.
Leeds Crown Court heard that Mr Daniel, 33, suffered catastrophic head injuries and died 10 days later.
Akins, 36, played in Mansfield’s 0-0 draw with Wigan on 4 March, hours after pleading guilty at Leeds Crown Court to death by careless or inconsiderate driving.
The footballer has continued to play for Mansfield since the incident.
Judge Alex Menary said on Thursday that he had considered imposing a suspended sentence, but had concluded that only an immediate sentence of 14 months’ imprisonment was appropriate.
Image: Mansfield Town’s Akins. Pic: George Wass/PPAUK/Shutterstock
A spokesperson for Mansfield Town FC said it “acknowledges” the court’s decision and offered the club’s “sincere and deepest condolences to the family of Adrian Daniel at this difficult time”.
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“The club is considering its position with regards to Lucas and will be making no further comment at this stage,” the spokesperson added.
‘Like hell’
Prosecuting, Carmel Pearson said it was a “difficult junction to emerge from” but that the defendant “did not stop at the give-way sign”.
Savanna Daniel, Mr Daniel’s wife, told the court it had been “like hell and a nightmare [she is] not waking up from”.
“There was no reason for Adrian to be killed that way,” she said, adding it was “too simple a collision to have taken a life”.
Image: Adrian Daniel. Pic: West Yorkshire Police/PA
Mrs Daniel said she did not want Akins’s children growing up without their father as she did not want “any more lives to be destroyed from this”, but she criticised the defendant for failing to plead guilty at an earlier stage.
Tim Pole, representing Akins, said he was “fundamentally a decent, honest and hard-working individual”.
“I want to publicly apologise on his behalf,” he said.
Mr Pole added that Akins understood Mrs Daniel’s “frustration and anger” over the time it took him to plead guilty.
Handing down his sentence, the judge accepted that Akins’s remorse was genuine but by not admitting to the offence at an earlier stage, he had prolonged Mrs Daniel’s “heartache and grief”.
After the sentencing, Mrs Daniel said “three years of hell” had come to a close, in a statement via West Yorkshire Police.
She said Akins had made a “farce” of the justice system and that his failure to plead guilty sooner “makes a mockery of any remorse that Akins offers for his actions”.
Akins, who has played for Mansfield Town since 2022 and was previously with clubs including Huddersfield Town, Tranmere Rovers and Burton Albion, was also suspended from driving for 12 months.
Much of the UK will bask in warm, sunny conditions at the start of next week, with inland temperatures up to 10C higher than average, but it’s a mixed picture before then.
The first half of spring brought warmth and sunshine for many, but the last 10 days have been more changeable.
Some areas of Ireland, Northern Ireland, southwest Wales, and southwest England have seen much-needed rainfall, whereas parts of northern Britain have observed very little.
Image: Warm, sunny conditions, such as those in Harrogate on Thursday, are expected at the start of next week. Pic: PA
Tyne and Wear in northeast England has recorded just 7% of its average April rainfall, whereas Cornwall in the southwest of the country has already seen 156%.
And the Milford Haven rain gauge in Wales has seen over twice its average April rainfall.
There’ll be more rain over the next few days, mainly in the West, but it looks like high pressure will settle things down from Sunday.
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Temperatures will rise too, becoming widely above average on Monday and Tuesday.
Highs of 22C (72F) to 24C (75F) can be expected.
The highest temperature of the year so far is 24C (75F), seen at Northolt in northwest London on Saturday 12 April.
The settled conditions will bring plenty of sunshine, with UV levels expected to be around moderate.
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It’ll be dry for runners and spectators, with sunny spells and light winds.
Competitors in the Manchester Marathon on Sunday will face similar conditions to London’s runners; it should be dry with sunny spells. The temperature first thing will be around 9C (48F), but it’ll warm up with a high of about 19C (66F).
England’s schools are under fresh scrutiny after government data revealed a sizeable increase in both suspensions and permanent exclusions.
According to the Department for Education, almost 300,000 pupils were suspended during the spring term of 2023/24, an increase of 12% recorded in spring 2022/23.
Suspensions have nearly doubled since spring 2019, surging 93% from 153,465 back then.
Meanwhile, permanent exclusions were also higher and went from 3,039 to 3,107, a 2% rise.
At Lewis Hamilton’s charity Mission 44, chief executive Jason Arthur said: “We are continuing to see the number of children losing learning due to suspensions and exclusions grow year on year – especially for vulnerable learners who face disadvantage or discrimination.”
The reasons for both the suspensions and permanent exclusions were “persistent disruptive behaviour” but many voices from the education sector say the figures tell a deeper story about post‑pandemic pressures.
Mr Arthur said: “Persistent disruptive behaviour continues to be the most common reason – yet taking children out of the classroom often only addresses the symptom and not the underlying causes of poor behaviour.”
Campaigners and unions have also reacted with concern. Head of the Association of School and College Leaders Pepe Di’Iasio warned: “Young people only have one chance at a good education … missing classroom time damages their future.”
He urged ministers to back “early intervention strategies” rather than rely on exclusions as a quick fix.
Paul Whiteman, from the National Association of Head Teachers, echoed the plea, highlighting how poverty, the cost of living crisis and lingering pandemic fallout were fuelling bad behaviour.
He stressed that schools “need funded, specialist help” to tackle the root causes.
Charity director Steve Haines said: “Over 295,000 suspensions is a stark warning: our schools aren’t set up to support all students. Disadvantaged youngsters are four times more likely to be suspended.”
The Education Minister Stephen Morgan acknowledged the “broken system,” vowing that the government’s “Plan for Change” will roll out mental‑health professionals in every school, boost SEND support and expand free breakfast clubs –measures he says will curb the “underlying causes of poor behaviour”.