Kala is Gary Usher’s Manchester outpost, and if you know anything about Usher’s restaurants, you know what you’re getting — proper bistro cooking, seasonal ingredients, and a total rejection of fine dining stuffiness. Like his other places (Hispi in Didsbury, Wreckfish in Liverpool, Burnt Truffle on the Wirral), Kala was crowdfunded. Thousands of people put money in before it even opened. That tells you something about the loyalty he’s built.
The King Street location is smart but relaxed. White tiles, an open kitchen, and a buzz that feels like a neighbourhood restaurant dropped into the middle of the city centre. The menu changes regularly but leans on things like slow-cooked meats, seasonal fish, and starters that punch well above their weight. The bread and dripping is legendary. The Sunday roast has a serious following.
What to Order
Whatever’s on the specials board. Seriously. The kitchen runs with what’s good that week. The set lunch is excellent value — two courses for around twenty quid in the middle of King Street. Evening mains sit around eighteen to twenty-eight. Wine list is well chosen without being intimidating. Kala proves you don’t need tablecloths and a sommelier to eat really well. Just good ingredients, good cooking, and a chef who genuinely gives a damn.