With the
gentrification of South and East London, as well as the docklands area, significant socioeconomic and demographic changes have occurred in the London neighbourhoods traditionally most associated with pie and mash. Through the 2020s, industry experts continue to note that affluent new locals are now more interested in "lattes and paninis" than a dish typically associated with working-class Londoners. As a result of the declining customer base, historic and famous pie and mash shops including L. Manze in Walthamstow have been forced to close, and their premises are taken over by new incumbents. In May 2023, for example, the iconic
Grade II listed
art-deco building at 9 Broadway Market in
Hackney, which had been home to F. Cooke's pie and mash shop for the previous 120 years, was taken over by
Cubitts, a company that designs and handcrafts bespoke
eyewear. Five shops closed in 2025, but some new pie and mash shops have opened, including Barney's in Walthamstow (opened in 2018) and Bush (2021), in
Shepherd's Bush. Some establishments only accept payment in cash. W.J. Arments Eel and, Pie House at Walworth, founded in 1914, with its glazed tiled walls, marble table tops, opening sash windows and a floor covered with sawdust, is one of the few shops to have thrived in the changing socioeconomic climate. Some pie and mash shops have become fertile territory for
social media purveyors, which can be beneficial for the profiled businesses. In February 2025, 15 producers settled on a standard recipe of minced beef in flaky pastry with liquor and mash to support the TSG application. ==References==