Vegan London: Purezza



What’s the deal?
Purezza was the first vegan pizzeria in the UK. Originating in Brighton, this Italian pizzeria serves homemade pizzas made with passion that are just as it happens also completely and utterly plant-based. Purezza pizzas are made using hemp flour and are topped with a delicious mozzarella fermented from Italian brown rice milk. These delicious pizzas don’t scrimp on flavours, but are somehow half the calories and fat - and the Purezza chain recently won the title of ‘best pizza in the UK’.
Purezza is aiming to make a plant-based menu ‘superior to the traditional alternatives’, and we have not been disappointed on the many, many occasions that we’ve frequented.




What to eat?
Here Comes Truffle
Black Truffle base with tofu, mushroom, herbs and mozzarella. One of the best truffle pizzas we have ever had!
Price: £13.95
Not to be outdone by the pizzas, this garlic bread is loaded with rosemary and garlic puree in abundance. Delicious.
Price: £5.95

#FLODown: Whether you’re vegan or not, Purezza has some of the best pizzas in London. Plus, with an award to prove it who are we to argue?
What you should know?
Purezza operate on a walk-in basis, and as their space isn’t the biggest it can mean a short wait during peak hours. However, bookings can be made for six or more diners. Purezza is a cashless venue.
Purezza have some cool offers available including:
10% off the food bill for students and NHS staff.
‘Power hour’ between 4-5pm on a weekday for free garlic bread or a glass of wine when you order anything off the main menu.
*Subject to conditions on their website
Location:
43 Parkway, Camden Town, NW1 7PN
Nearest Station:
Camden Town
Opening Hours:
7 days a week – Midday – late.
Autumn is always a busy time for art in London, with Frieze Week in October drawing international attention. But beyond the fairs, the city’s museums and galleries are offering a strong line-up of exhibitions worth seeing. From the V&A’s exploration of Marie Antoinette Styleto Tate Modern’s major survey of Nigerian Modernism, there is much to engage with. Dirty Looks at the Barbican…
The timing of this exhibition could not be better. At the end of a long winter, and egging on London’s reluctant spring, the Saatchi Gallery brings us FLOWERS in full bloom…
The Royal Academy Summer Show has returned for its 257th exhibition. Curated under the theme of ‘Dialogues,’ the 2025 edition is coordinated by internationally acclaimed architect and Royal Academician Farshid Moussavi and explores art’s capacity to forge dialogues and build sensitivity towards societal concerns such as ecology, survival and living together…
In a world that rarely pauses, home has become more than a backdrop. It’s a place to exhale, recalibrate, and reconnect with ourselves. Whether you live in a compact East London flat or a sprawling Georgian town house, creating a sanctuary is more about intention than scale…
Explore the top reasons visitors prefer cab services in the UK. Get insights into airport taxis, professional drivers, easy booking, and comfortable travel…
With shows ranging from historical military art to queer talismans, pop protest, and the power of drawing, here is our guide to the art exhibitions to see in London in July 2025…
Marylebone’s best-kept secret, Portman Square Garden, is once again set to bloom with life and laughter as Summer in the Square returns in July 2025. Now in its 11th year, this free community festival transforms the usually private garden into a lively…
The South London Gallery will open Thrill, Fill, Spill, a major solo exhibition by internationally acclaimed artist Yto Barrada, on 26 September 2025. Renowned for her cross-disciplinary practice that weaves together sculpture, textiles, film and painting…
Tate Modern will unveil Nigerian Modernism, the first major UK exhibition to chart the evolution of modern art in Nigeria. Opening in October 2025, the show will present more than 250 works by over 50 artists, exploring a rich period from colonial rule through independence and into the global present…
Edward Burra described painting as a ‘sort of drug’, a tonic to the rheumatoid arthritis that plagued his daily existence. Under its influence, he became one of the great observers of the twentieth century, creating vivid and surreal scenes that captured a rapidly changing society. The latest exhibition of Burra’s work at the Tate Britain…