There’s a moment just before the first bite when everything else fades. The warm flatbread in your hand, the perfume of spiced meat and garlic sauce rising up, the crunch of fresh pickles against tender, slow-roasted meat. If you’ve ever had a truly great Lebanese shawarma in London, you know exactly what we mean.
At Maroush, we’ve been making shawarma the authentic Lebanese way since 1981. Over four decades on, we still approach every spit with the same care and pride Marouf Abouzaki brought to Edgware Road all those years ago. So let us take you inside what separates a genuinely great shawarma from everything else.
The Origin of Shawarma
Shawarma traces its roots to the Ottoman Empire, where large cuts of seasoned meat were stacked on a vertical spit and slow-roasted over an open flame. The name itself comes from the Turkish çevirme meaning “turning.” From Istanbul it travelled south through the Levant, and nowhere did it find a more passionate home than in Lebanon.
In Beirut, shawarma became a street-food institution. Every neighbourhood had its own shawarma master, its own closely guarded spice blend, its own devoted following. When Lebanese families began building a community in London particularly along the Edgware Road they brought that tradition with them. And so the story of Lebanese shawarma in London began.
Chicken vs Lamb Shawarma
This is the great debate of every Lebanese table, and we love it.
Chicken shawarma is marinated in a bright, aromatic blend think lemon, garlic, turmeric, cinnamon, and a whisper of allspice. Cooked on the spit, the outside chars beautifully while the inside stays extraordinarily juicy. It’s lighter, slightly more subtle, and endlessly satisfying.
Lamb shawarma is richer, deeper, more complex. The fat layers built into the stacked spit bastes the meat as it rotates, creating that gorgeous caramelisation on the outer slices. The spice profile leans warmer coriander, cumin, black pepper, a touch of clove.
Both are extraordinary. Which do you reach for first?

The Marinade: Where the Magic Begins
A mediocre shawarma is usually a failure of marinade too little time, too few spices, no real love in the making of it. An authentic Lebanese marinade is generous and unhurried.
The foundations are always:
- Acidic tenderiser: lemon juice or white vinegar to break down the proteins and carry flavour deep into the meat
- Warm spice blend: cinnamon, allspice, coriander, cumin, turmeric, and cardamom in carefully balanced proportions
- Aromatics: garlic, onion, and fresh herbs to lift the whole blend
- Fat: olive oil or a small amount of yoghurt to keep the meat succulent through the long cook
At Maroush, our marinades have been developed over generations. Nothing is measured carelessly. The meat rests in the spice blend overnight so that by the time it meets the heat, every fibre is flavoured all the way through.
The Spit: Slow Cooking Explained
The spit is the soul of shawarma.
Seasoned meat is stacked in careful layers thighs, shoulders, and carefully trimmed cuts built into a cone that self-bastes as it rotates. The heat source sits beside the meat, not beneath it, so the exterior caramelises without the interior drying out.
The carver works continuously, slicing thin ribbons from the outer edge as the spit turns. Each slice is crisp at the edges, tender within the direct result of patience and proper heat control. You cannot rush a good shawarma. It takes time, attention, and genuine craft.
This is why the best shawarma in London is never found in a place that’s cutting corners. The spit tells you everything.
The Best Shawarma in London
What makes the best shawarma in London isn’t one single thing. It’s the accumulation of all the things done properly: the overnight marinade, the quality of the meat, the patient rotation, the fresh bread, the house-made sauces, and the care of the people making it.
The late food writer AA Gill was among those who recognised what Maroush had built on Edgware Road a genuine piece of Beirut in the heart of London. Our chicken shawarma in London and lamb shawarma in London have been refined over more than 40 years of daily service, guided by the same authentic Lebanese recipes that Marouf Abouzaki brought from Beirut when he opened our doors in 1981.
We use fresh ingredients every single day. Our bread is baked to order. Our sauces are made in-house. There are no shortcuts there never have been.