There is something deeply reassuring about a longstanding lunch friendship in London, particularly one forged on the equity sales desk at Lehman Brothers in the years before everyone communicated exclusively through voice notes and performative wellness. Amanda was my very first client back then, and over the decades our lunches have charted the changing contours of adult life with remarkable consistency: impossible bosses, office crushes, married life, reformer Pilates memberships, toddler tantrums and, increasingly, discussions about magnesium glycinate supplements delivered with the gravity once reserved for Japanese chemical conglomerates.
So when we met for lunch at Jusu Brothers – Notting Hill on a sun-drenched afternoon in the middle of May, it felt exactly the sort of place that suits this stage of life perfectly: polished but unfussy, health-conscious without becoming evangelical, and sufficiently civilised to accommodate two women who have spent more than twenty years talking almost continuously.
Tucked along the ever-elegant stretch of Westbourne Grove in Notting Hill, Jusu Brothers possesses the sort of relaxed confidence that so many wellness cafés aspire to but very few genuinely achieve. Bathed in natural light, the interiors are all pale wood, clean lines and quiet good taste, while the atmosphere hums with the easy self-assurance of West London at lunchtime, all impeccably dressed women ordering matcha, freelancers hovering over laptops and impossibly beautiful young people who somehow appear both hydrated and unhurried.
I arrived straight from the gym in that peculiarly virtuous post-workout glow that makes one briefly believe an £11 smoothie constitutes a legitimate life philosophy. Naturally, we both began with punchy ginger shots, vibrant and invigorating in the way only freshly pressed ginger can be, while I ordered the wonderfully named Mr Muscles protein shake, silky, satisfying and unexpectedly delicious, with none of the chalky heaviness that so often accompanies protein drinks.
Before our salads arrived, we shared the soup of the day, a deeply comforting umami-rich broth layered with coconut milk, mushrooms and wakame. Light yet full of depth, it had the sort of restorative quality one imagines very expensive wellness retreats aspire to bottle. It was elegant, soothing and unexpectedly memorable.
The menu leans heavily into nourishing, pan-Asian-inspired dishes and cold-pressed juices, yet crucially avoids the punitive joylessness that can plague wellness-led dining. One never feels one is being punished for past sins; rather, gently restored from them.
I chose the salmon teriyaki salad, which arrived as a gloriously vibrant composition of grilled salmon, spinach, cabbage slaw, feta, cherry tomatoes and roasted pistachios, all brought together with a delicately sweet honey mustard dressing. The salmon itself was beautifully cooked, tender, lightly glazed and deeply flavourful, while the balance of textures gave the dish an almost architectural precision. It managed the rare feat of feeling simultaneously virtuous and indulgent.
Amanda’s kale salad was equally excellent, elevating ingredients that often feel worthy into something genuinely elegant. Lemon-softened kale and spinach were lifted by caramelised onion, pumpkin seeds, feta and nori, resulting in a dish with surprising depth and savoury complexity. We both agreed it was exactly the sort of food that leaves one feeling smug in the most pleasurable possible way.
And that, perhaps, is the particular genius of Jusu Brothers. It understands modern London dining intimately: that we want food which nourishes without depressing us, interiors that are stylish without intimidation, and spaces where one can linger for hours discussing everything from perimenopause to private equity without anyone rushing the table.
As the afternoon sunlight spilled across Westbourne Grove and our conversation drifted, as it always does, between the profound and the entirely ridiculous, it struck me that restaurants like this succeed not merely because of what is on the plate, but because of how they allow people to feel while they are there. Relaxed. Restored. Slightly more optimistic about life than when they arrived.
In a city crowded with transient trends and identikit wellness concepts, Jusu Brothers – Notting Hill offers something rarer: genuine charm, thoughtful food and the kind of atmosphere that invites old friends to stay for just one more conversation.
Jusu Brothers – Notting Hill
Address: 191 Westbourne Grove, London W11 2SB
Website: www.jusubrothers.com
Menu: Jusu Brothers Menu







