Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Tuesday 08 March 2016 6:46 pm

Damien Hirst restaurant Pharmacy 2 review: Why this Pharmacy is a cure for your foodie ills

By: Steve Dinneen

Life&Style Editor

Add as a preferred source on Google

I feel like I should start this review with a personal anecdote about Damien Hirst. Everybody seems to have one, like the time he pulled his foreskin through a hole in his trousers, pretended it was a blob of chewing gum and got people to try to brush it off. My anecdote would recall a time we clashed over a philosophical point while enjoying shepherd’s pie at the Ivy in the mid-1990s. It would end with him, Damien, my friend Damien, learning something about himself, or the world, and with me proving my status as the alpha-male of the London restaurant scene. That’s what AA Gill would do.

But I’ve never met Damien Hirst. I was still a teenager when he opened the first Pharmacy restaurant, in Notting Hill Gate in 1998, alongside PR-man Matthew Freud. I never got to eat there before it closed in 2003, which is, by most accounts, no great loss.

Now Hirst has opened Pharmacy 2 in his Newport Street Gallery in Vauxhall, which I think is rather brilliant, and I have no clever personal hook to draw you in. So I thought I’d make one up. What if Damien had joined me for dinner last week? It might have happened something like this.

“Hi there Damien Hirst, who I definitely know. How are you?”

“I’m fine, Steve, thanks for asking. Welcome to my new restaurant, which I’ve filled with lots of things that I have made.”

“Yes, I see it’s packed with the pharmaceutical paraphernalia that’s been a recurring motif in your work since the 1980s.”

And so it is: medicine cabinets adorn the walls; the bar looks like a drug-store counter, its glass top revealing syringes and rubber tubes and latex gloves; the word “prescriptions” glows above it in neon tubing. There’s a medical waste sign on the door to the kitchen. Pills – real and depicted – are everywhere: the floor and the wallpaper and the chairs and the menus. Even the bar stools are giant pills; vivid, multi-coloured things, consumerist delicacies to pop into your mouth to make yourself feel better (I suppose it’s not a great philosophical leap from “pills” to “food”).

“Originally I wanted to fill the whole restaurant with live butterflies,” said Damien, “But Mark wouldn’t let me. Said it might interfere with the food.”

He’s talking about his Pharmacy 2 partner Mark Hix, the chef and serial restaurateur behind a small empire of venues bearing his name, all of which are excellent. The pair have been friends for years and Hirst made a formaldehyde “Cock and Bull” for his Tramshed restaurant in Shoreditch.

“He wouldn’t let me install my 1990 piece A Thousand Years, either,” continued Damien sullenly. “He was worried about the flies escaping and laying eggs.”

“Probably wise,” I nodded as a bowl of dainty cuttlefish croquettes arrived, followed by crispy kale and shards of pork crackling, all from the “snax” (which I think is supposed to rhyme with “Hix”) section of the menu.

The exterior of Damien Hirst's Newport Street Gallery

“You have to try the cod chitterlings,” said Damien. “I wanted to pickle them in formaldehyde but…”

“Yeah, yeah, Mark again.”

Cod chitterlings are, for want of a better phrase, sacs of cod spunk that, through some culinary alchemy, end up as delicate, nugget-sized balls the consistency of sweetbreads or brains, with the faintest taste of a fish supper. They’re always delicious but these ones are transcendental, served with thick, chewy guanciale – cured pig’s jowl-fat, hailing in this case from Ulster – and sea purslane.

“And you can’t miss the brik a l’oeuf de canard,” Damien went on.

“Let me see… That’s duck egg in a thin sheet of pastry (traditionally warka but filo will do), right?”

“That’s the one.”

Read more: Why Trader Vic's might be the worst restaurant in the world

Wow. Slicing through this crispy, dinner plate-sized parcel to release the burnt-orange egg yolk lurking inside is my single most satisfying food moment of the year.

“I planned to cut that dish in half and suspend it above the plate…”

“Shut up, Damien.”

Other highlights included the Hix staple Heaven and Earth – soft, creamy black pudding with apple-sweetened mashed potato – and an excellent dessert of poached rhubarb with saffron ice cream. My only criticism is of the duck curry, which never quite gelled from its constituent parts into the satisfying whole it seemed to promise.

We enjoyed a lovely meal, my imagination and I. While the décor is as bright and gaudy and opulent as you’d expect of Hirst, the food is simple and precise, prepared by a chef who rarely puts a foot wrong.

And then, just as we were finishing off a Willie’s Peruvian chocolate mousse (which, at only £4, represented exceptionally good value – value that’s apparent throughout the menu), Damien and I clashed over an intellectual point. We argued long into the night about life and death and art and, most importantly of all, about food.

I won’t bore you with the details – they’re all made up anyway – but it ended with Damien coming round to my way of thinking. He really learned something that day. I wish I hadn’t tried to help out with the chewing gum, though.

PHARMACY 2, Newport St, SE11 6AJ, 020 3141 9333

FOOD ★★★★☆ | VALUE ★★★★☆| ATMOSPHERE ★★★★☆

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Categories

  • Food
  • Life&Style

Trending Articles

  • Exclusive: Big Four giant KPMG to cut more jobs

  • Music tycoon Simon Cowell sued by prominent City lawyer

  • The former African gold miner taking on the billionaire Issa brothers

  • Tesco ‘in talks’ to exit eastern Europe

  • Easyjet agrees to £5.7bn Apollo takeover

More from City PM

  • Inside the trippy French vineyard owned by ousted Claridge’s billionaire 

    Life&Style
    Former Claridges billionaires French vineyard with lush grapevines and scenic landscape in a business feature.
  • Boots moves closer to London float but billionaire Westons circle

    Retail
    A pair of stylish and durable boots showcased on a wooden floor, highlighting their craftsmanship and premium leather qual...
  • Australian pharma giant Sigma quits Boots takeover talks

    Retail
    Anthony Hemmerdinger will take over the role from Seb James later this year.
  • Boots eyes £7.5bn sale in blow to hopes of London IPO

    Retail
    Boots remains one of the group’s best performing business lines, with a London float suggested as recently as last year. (Photo by Oli Scarff/Getty Images)
  • Ynyshir: Gareth Ward’s shrine to heavy metal cooking

    Food
    Gareth Ward at Ynyshir restaurant, showcasing culinary excellence, credited to Lafont Hospitality.
  • Ikoyi founder Jeremy Chan: ‘Eating my own food is forbidden’

    Life&Style
    Jeremy Chan, business professional, confidently delivers a presentation at a corporate event, wearing a tailored suit and ...
  • Exclusive: Richard Caring in talks to buy City icon 1 Lombard Street

    Life&Style
  • ‘It’s military precision’: meet the chefs crafting summer’s £6k corporate hospitality dishes

    Life&Style
    Chefs preparing gourmet dishes for corporate hospitality at prestigious events like Silverstone and Ascot

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy · Facebook