
### The First Meal of the Day Decides Whether You Rule Lagos—or Get Ruled By It
Let me paint you a picture.
5:47 AM. The Lagos sun hasn’t even decided to show up yet, but the city’s already screaming. Danfos belching black smoke. Okadas weaving between potholes like they’re auditioning for *Fast & Furious: Third Mainland Bridge Edition*. Your phone buzzing with WhatsApp groups blowing up before the rooster’s finished his first crow.
This is Africa’s most ambitious city. Raw. Unfiltered. Hungry.
And in this chaos—this beautiful, brutal symphony of survival—most men make their first catastrophic mistake of the day before they’ve even brushed their teeth.
They grab *akara* from a roadside vendor whose hands haven’t seen soap since Goodluck Jonathan was president. They choke down instant noodles in a room that smells like damp concrete and regret. They call it “hustle.” I call it surrender.
Because breakfast isn’t fuel. Breakfast is a declaration.
It’s the first contract you sign with reality each morning. And if you sign that contract kneeling in the dust, don’t be shocked when the universe treats you like dirt the rest of the day.
Which brings me to Koriko & Co.
Upper ground floor of the Lagos Marriott Hotel Ikeja.
6:30 AM sharp.
Walk in here and the city’s madness doesn’t disappear—it gets *managed*. Air-conditioning hits your skin like a cold slap of sanity. White tablecloths. Real cutlery that doesn’t bend when you press down on eggs. Staff who look you in the eye and say “Good morning, sir” like they actually mean it—not like they’re calculating how much *dash* they’ll need to survive till lunch.
This isn’t a meal. It’s a recalibration.
—
### Why 99% of Lagos Breakfasts Are Weakness Incarnate
Let’s be brutally honest: Lagos has a breakfast problem.
You’ve got the “I’m-too-busy-for-breakfast” crowd surviving on Indomie and existential dread. The “I’ll-just-grab-something-on-the-way” guys who end up eating *moi-moi* wrapped in plastic that tastes faintly of yesterday’s exhaust fumes. And the “I’m-rich-so-I-order-room-service” crowd getting lukewarm scrambled eggs delivered by a tired waiter who’s already been stiffed three times this week.
All of them are losing.
Because breakfast in Lagos has become an afterthought—a transaction instead of a ritual. A compromise instead of a conquest.
Weak men accept compromise. Strong men engineer excellence.
And at ₦13,500 per person (yes, you pay for it—real value always costs something), the Koriko & Co breakfast buffet isn’t just the best in Lagos. It’s not even close. It’s the only one operating on a different frequency. Note the price can go up to N35000 during the weekend!!!
—
### The Spread That Separates Men From Boys
Walk the line. Slowly. Don’t rush excellence.
**The Continental Section:**
Fluffy scrambled eggs cooked to order—no gray, rubbery nonsense. Crispy bacon that actually *crackles*. Sausages that taste like meat, not mystery. Toast points cut with surgical precision. This isn’t “Western food.” This is *standards*.
**The Nigerian Power Zone:**
*Akara* so light they float off the plate. *Moi-moi* steamed in proper leaves—not plastic bags. Jollof rice at 7 AM because real Lagosians know the day demands celebration from minute one. Plantains caramelized to perfection. This isn’t fusion. It’s respect—for where you come from *and* where you’re going.
**The Live Stations:**
Omelets built to your command. Pancakes poured fresh. A chef who asks “How many eggs, sir?” like your preference actually matters. In a city where everyone’s shouting to be heard, this quiet attention to detail screams louder than any danfo conductor.
**The Fruit Temple:**
Watermelon so cold it shocks your system awake. Pineapple that tastes like sunshine concentrated into edible form. Papaya, mango, grapes—all chilled, all perfect. Hydration isn’t an afterthought here. It’s architecture.
**The Beverage Arsenal:**
Freshly squeezed orange juice that hasn’t seen a powder mix since forever. Proper coffee—hot, strong, no apologies. This isn’t caffeine delivery. It’s neurological warfare against mediocrity.
—
### The One Crack in the Armor (And Why It Proves My Point)
Let’s address the pastry situation.
Most of them—dense. Heavy. Like someone tried to bake bread but forgot the part about *air existing*. A betrayal of the French art form. Unforgivable in a five-star setting.
*Except one.*
A single berry Danish hiding in the corner like a secret weapon. Flaky layers that shatter when you bite. Jam that bursts with actual fruit—not chemical sweetness. For one moment, you taste Paris. Copenhagen. Civilization.
And here’s the lesson most men miss:
**Perfection isn’t the absence of flaws. Perfection is the presence of *one thing* so exceptional it makes you forgive everything else.**
That Danish isn’t an accident. It’s a test. It’s the universe whispering: *”You see? Excellence exists here. Now go find it in the rest of your life.”*
Weak men fixate on the dense croissant and declare the whole experience “meh.” Strong Slaylebrity men taste that one perfect Danish and understand: *This place knows what greatness looks like. They’re just still working on scaling it.*
That’s called growth. That’s called potential. That’s called a place worth returning to—because you know next time, the whole pastry section might just catch up to that one Danish’s standard.
—
### Why This Buffet Costs More Than Your Weekly Fuel—and Why That’s the Point
₦13,500.
I can hear the broke philosophers already: *”Abeg, wetin be this price? I fit buy full chicken for this!”*
Exactly.
You *could* buy a whole chicken. And spend your morning negotiating with a roadside vendor who’ll shortchange you by ₦200 while pretending his scale is accurate. You’ll eat with your hands on a plastic chair while breathing in generator fumes. And you’ll call it “smart budgeting.”
I call it poverty mindset dressed up as pragmatism.
That ₦13,500 isn’t for food. It’s for:
– 90 minutes of mental clarity before the city tries to steal it
– A reminder that you deserve order in a chaotic world
– The psychological advantage of starting your day *winning* instead of scrambling
– Proof that Lagos *can* deliver world-class experiences—if you know where to look and refuse to settle for street-level standards
You don’t become a billionaire by saving ₦500 on breakfast. You become a billionaire by investing in environments that reinforce your dominance.
This buffet is that environment.
—
### The Real Reason You Haven’t Been Here Yet (And It’s Not the Price)
Let’s cut the spiritual cord.
You haven’t eaten at Koriko & Co because you’re afraid.
Afraid that if you experience real excellence this early in the day, you’ll have to raise your standards for *everything else*. Your office. Your relationships. Your self-talk. Your entire life.
Comfortable misery is safer than disruptive excellence.
But Lagos doesn’t reward safety. Lagos rewards audacity. Lagos rewards Slaylebrity men who walk into a five-star hotel at 7 AM not because they’re tourists—but because they’ve decided to *own the room* before most people have finished arguing with their alarm clocks.
This buffet isn’t about food.
It’s about installing a new operating system in your mind before the day’s chaos tries to install its own.
—
### Final Word
Koriko & Co. serves breakfast from 6:30 AM to 11:00 AM. Upper ground floor. Lagos Marriott Hotel Ikeja.
Pay the ₦13,500. Sit down. Eat slowly. Look around. Notice how the light hits the tableware. How the staff moves with purpose. How your body feels *lighter* after 45 minutes of intentional nourishment.
Then walk back out into Lagos—not as another victim of the traffic and noise—but as a Slaylebrity who has already won his first battle of the day.
The city hasn’t changed.
*You* have.
And that changes everything.
—
*P.S. Don’t come here looking for “vibes.” Come here looking for victory. The pastries might disappoint you. The rest of the spread will recalibrate your entire understanding of what’s possible before noon. Book ahead. Wear something that reminds you who you are. And for God’s sake—don’t take a selfie before you’ve tasted the jollof. Some rituals demand reverence.*
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Contacts and location DEETS
The main phone number for reservations and inquiries (widely listed for dining and the hotel):
+234 813 984 4850
Other numbers for dining/reservations:
• +234 908 999 1082 (hotel main line, often used for restaurant bookings)
• WhatsApp number +234 913 814 6920 for bookings.
• Full address
Koriko & Co
Lagos Marriott Hotel Ikeja
122 Joel Ogunnaike Street
Ikeja GRA
Lagos 100271, Nigeria
You can book a table online directly through their official reservation system
PS: If you will like to join Slaylebrity VIP social network pls contact sales@slaynetwork.co.uk and include referred by chudiokoye in your subject cheers!