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A Flavour of Wiltshire's Best - #MeetTheMichelin Richard Davies at Selfridges

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Words & Photography by Marina Benjamin and Luiz Hara

Richard Davies is the third Michelin chef in as many weeks to take over the kitchen at Selfridges’ The Corner Restaurant for the #MeetTheMichelins dinner series. This is a fabulous initiative by Selfridges giving some of the most talented UK chefs a platform to demonstrate haute cuisine from outside London. With a beautifully balanced six-course menu (priced at £75, with an additional £35 for the wine flight), Richard Davies treated us to a taste of Wiltshire – not least its tasty locally-reared pigs.


Before the meal began Davies popped out of the kitchen to meet everyone – he informed the assembled foodies that he hoped we’d like the pork belly dish he’d selected as a main course.  As he talked, lines of waiting staff emerged from behind him with plates of curling prawn crackers and boules of lightly whipped taramasalata, they meandered around the tables pouring glasses of the store’s own-label Adami Prosecco. This was distinctly peachy, and a wonderful companion to the intensely-flavoured crackers and salty roe. You could feel diners relax, and the volume of chatter rose accordingly.

At the Bybrook Restaurant at the Manor House Hotel (part of the Exclusive Hotels Group) near Bath, Davies has become known for his French-with-a-twist leanings, and for his lightness of touch. These qualities were in evidence here in spades, beginning with the loose heap of finely chopped beef tartare – which came with asparagus shavings, a quail’s egg, and smoky charcoal mayo.


It was melt-in-the-mouth delicious, and so summery and light that the sommelier paired it with a medium-bodied white wine, a blend of viognier and sauvignon blanc by Montesco Verdes Cobardes. It worked a treat and retails for a snip in the store (£16.99).


Staying with terroir, we moved onto duck – slices of smoked breast meat and a croquette of duck leg confit cooked with pickled shiimeji mushrooms. The textures were fabulous, when combined with crunchy candied macadamias and yielding vanilla-poached pears.


We drank a perky Beaujolais (Moulin a Vent Thibault Ligerbelair) that gave off banana on the nose and was riddled with liquorice and redcurrant (£26.99).


The mackerel dish that followed didn’t quite hit a high note for me. Though the fish was succulent and sweet-cured, the watercress velouté lacked bite and the celeriac remoulade made with horseradish instead of mustard needed more heat. The flavours melded harmoniously, but I was after a marriage of opposites.


The accompanying Austrian Hirtzberger Riesling Federspiel however, was flawless (£49.99).


Davies’ pork belly did not disappoint. It was succulent and full-flavoured, and a super-intense celeriac purée and apple compote really made it sing.


Heritage carrots completed this wonderful dish, as did the complex and deep-flavoured 2012 Quadratur from Coume del Mas, Cote de Roussillon (£34.99).


After a refreshing yoghurt and blackcurrant palette cleanser, the menu was rounded off with a Valrhona Chocolate tian, with cherries 3 ways – boozy in the middle, jammy in the obligatory smear, and with a few marinated halves for contrast. It was heaven on a plate, and a perfect end to the meal.


Selfridges’ in-house sommelier Dawn Davies pulled yet another rabbit out of her hat with a delicious chilled Spanish dessert red from Mataro Alta Alella, that was neither cloying nor fortified, but had enough strength to hold its own against the powerful cherries (£27.99 for 500ml). Excellently judged wines lifted this meal to really superlative heights.


I strongly suspect that dinner bookings at the Bybrook Restaurant will be in sore demand from Londoners with a newfound zest for Wiltshire’s best.


Wonders from Windermere at London's Selfridges

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Words & Photography by Su-Lin Ong and Luiz Hara

This is dinner #4 in Selfridges’ inspired Summer series, #MeetTheMakers, and the surprises become ever more dazzling.  You’d be a lucky diner if you managed to be quick enough to book all five dinners. Indeed there have been some who have enjoyed every one in this real treat of a tour of unexpected UK culinary hotspots; the best kind of gourmet staycation, for sure.

Chef Conor Toomey and Head Sommelier Dawn Davies

Tonight’s guest chef is Conor Toomey, Head Chef at The Restaurant at Storrs Hall in the Lake District.  His usual dining room has huge picture windows and dreamy views rolling down to Lake Windermere.  His team of five have swapped it for Selfridges glossy mirrored Corner restaurant.  We are all set for six very English courses and a flight of wines from round the world to match – selected by Selfridges head of wine Dawn Davies, who is our sommelier for the night.

Conor’s written menu is a handy fast read for those of us impatient for our dinner: Avocado – Octopus – Veal – Huntsham farm pork – Peach – Coffee and chocolate.  Somehow we know that each course is much, much more than that.  These are dishes that are an artwork and feast in themselves.

Throughout this colourfully textured dinner, we can spot the tricks and tactics which Conor adores using to make each course flow.  We marvel at his imagination and skills in freeze drying and dehydrating to create airy powders and granules.  It seems he can work magic on anything – we taste almond, tarragon, raspberry and even chocolate, all creating delicate magic veils across our dishes.

Our first course is a silky milky avocado cream, aged parmesan and lacy shavings of summer truffle surrounding a precision cut spearhead of baby artichoke.  You want to disassemble the chef’s creation and savour each on its own to get the purity of his chosen flavours.


To accompany this, our wine is an uplifting Chilean that’s all fresh gooseberry and garden grassiness - Vina Litoral Ventolera Sauvignon Blanc.


The next dish has every nuance of savoury saltiness.  Slow cooked octopus, baby heirloom tomato, a smoky chorizo jam, peculiar salty fingers that pop delicate saltmarsh brininess, and a hint of anchovy.  Chef adds his wispy cress-like pennywort, foraged from the Lakes.


Partnering the octopus, we drink a deep mature Rioja viura with surprising freshness.  This 2004 has an oaky depth that balances the saltiness of the food: Bodegas R Lopez de Heredia, Vina Gravonia Blanco Crianza.


Tastes become richer and textures more diverse, as we are served roast veal sweetbread with an unsuspecting cube of beef shortrib, crunchy baby beetroots and delicate anise-like tarragon.


Our first red arrives.  The Cambridge Road Pinot Noir 2011 is a confidently rich New Zealand wine from Martinborough in the south of the north island and a great match to the roast sweetbread.


The hearty, elegant main course is pork served three ways and comes as a butter-soft bar of belly, plus 55 day aged middle white pork laid on a cushion of pulled shoulder.  Rings of barbecued onions and an intense velvety apple sauce accompany it.


With this comes an unusual South African Swartland wine: Three Foxes The Castillo 2009 Syrah.  It is a slightly cloudy style; very natural, and showing very little intervention.


There are two desserts – perfect for every dinner when it’s impossible to decide upon fruity or creamy.  An unusual peach melba experience presents us with meltingly baked peach, raspberry sorbet and pink wafer shards with the taste of pressed candy floss. The treasure is a soft crushed raspberry which lays hidden.  It floats in a pool of the most translucent, coolest custard imaginable.


Giving away no hints on the nose, but yielding explosive fragrant sweetness on the palate, is a Clos Lapeyre ‘La Magendia de Lapeyre’ 2011 Jurancon from SW France.


Finally, our Windermere dinner draws to a reluctant close with frozen coffee cream, aerated sponge and creamy chocolate Namelaka.


We sip a Sercial 10 year old vinhos Barbeito: a medium sweet Madeira which enhances the dessert flavours with a caramel lushness.


Three hours later, and we feel the evening has just started.  We’ve been busy figuring out every note of taste and nuance of skill, but that hasn’t distracted from the sheer easy pleasure of enjoying this symphony of a dinner.

Chef Conor Toomey and his team


#MeetTheMakers at Selfridges' The Corner Restaurant
The six-course dinner was priced at £75, and including wine flight, £110. For more information about the series of #MeetTheMakers dinners, visit the Selfridges website here.

Typing Room - A Symphony of Flavours & Textures and Possibly One of the Best Tasting Menus in Town by Lee Westcott

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Where: Town Hall Hotel, Patriot Square, Bethnal Green, London E2 9NF, http://www.typingroom.com

Cost: The a la carte menu consists of four snacks (£5), four starters (£5 - £15) and six mains (£19 - £26), all made with local and seasonal British produce, with a seven-course tasting menu also available at £70 per person, with a wine-pairing supplement of £50.

About: After Nuno Mendes left the Town Hall Hotel in Bethnal Green, home to his Michelin-starred Viajante restaurant to open the hugely popular Chiltern Firehouse, the premises were taken over in May 2014 by Jason Atherton's protégé Lee Westcott.

Still in his twenties, Westcott has some very big shoes to fill, but he is proving to be just the man for the job. He has worked alongside some of the world’s most innovative chefs including the Galvin brothers, Michelin-starred chef Tom Aikens (whose eponymous restaurant he headed for two years), stages at Per Se and Noma as well as helming two of Jason Atherton’s restaurants in Hong Kong.


Typing Room is located in East London’s fabulous Town Hall Hotel, built in 1910, the restaurant is named after the building’s original typing room in which all communications from the mayoral, council and judicial system were put to ink. It is an elegant restaurant, with a clean design and light, soothing colours – I like the Scandinavian style furniture, the white marbled tables, the parquet flooring and most importantly the open plan kitchen!


What We Ate: We opted for the tasting menu. I never write much about bread baskets, but Typing Room’s surely deserves a mention – this included a wonderfully fresh and aromatic brioche and a superb hot sourdough roll, with a delicately marmite-flavoured butter with crispy chicken skin. These were excellent.


From the choice of snacks, I opted for the courgette & basil profiteroles with black olive while Dr G went for the cumin lavoche (flatbread), with crab, sweetcorn & curried egg. These were also very good, and rather clever in my opinion – the idea of savoury of profiteroles and the intricate presentation and flavours put together over that flatbread were great appetisers for the meal to follow.


From the non-optional part of the tasting menu, we had what I thought was one of the best dishes of the evening - mackerel with passion fruit, burnt cucumber and radish. This dish had a wonderful combination of tantalizing flavours and textures from the crispy toasted mackerel skin, the sweetly but sharp passion fruit cream, the raw crunchy radish and fresh mackerel.


Readers of this site know that I can't resist a good steak tartare, and so I asked the restaurant to squeeze in an extra dish from the a la carte menu – again a very beautifully presented dish with myriad flavours of fresh raw beef, crunchy turnip, sorrel and smoked beetroot.


Another favourite was the yeasted cauliflower with raisins, capers and mint. I was pleased that this was one of the non-optional items on the menu, as I would have probably not ordered it. This would have been a pity as it turned out to be one of the highlights of our dinner – this was a dish of cauliflower served several ways - raw and wafer thin, deep fried until crunchy, chargrilled florets and a yeasted cauliflower puree. I never thought that the humble British cauliflower could taste so good!


This was followed by a fish course of turbot with heritage fresh red, green and sundried tomatoes, served with coiled courgette wafers and grilled squid, and a heavenly courgette and basil puree. With a scattering of samphire, an octopus carpaccio, and an intense, water-white tomato consommé this was an exquisite dish - light yet satisfying, palate stimulating and thought-provoking. It is to eat dishes like this that I go to restaurants, and it is a rare joy indeed to taste cooking of this calibre.


Our meat course was lamb with smoked aubergine, wild garlic, yoghurt and onions. The smoked aubergine was represented in a mahogany swirl around the lamb rump and belly, which were unctuous and perfectly cooked, with little green dots of a highly concentrate sauce and with the colour of parsley chlorophyll.


The pre-dessert was a palate-cleansing combination of pineapple, basil and ginger sorbets. Lastly, we were served a delicious dessert of amaretto ice cream, rich chocolate mousse, and almond crumble, which continued the menu's consistent theme of contrasting flavours and textures, being also a fitting end to our splendid meal.


What We Drank: We kicked off with a couple of cocktails (£9).  The Vesgroni is a colourless Negroni made from clarified Campari, Peg & Patriot London Dry Gin and Vermouth.  Served in an elegant 1920s-style glass with a strip of lemon, this was deeply fragrant with citrus notes with just the right amount of bitterness from the campari. The Rice Rice Baby is a blend of roasted rice ice cream liqueur, which sounded weird but tasted delicious - off dry, it really did taste of toasted rice.


There is a wide selection of wines and sparkling wines by the glass, from £5 to £15. In bottles, white wines start at £27 for a Picpoul de Pinet, and reds at £23 (for a merlot from Domain Montrose, Cotes de Thonghe). The selection is mostly from France, Italy and Spain, with some options from the New World, including unusually a Tannat from Uruguay and a white Chateau Musar from Lebanon. 

For the wine choice, we put ourselves in the capable hands of the head sommelier Miguel Gomez who personally paired all our dishes. Barcelona-born, Gomez has a long history working in some of London’s most prestigious restaurants, including Zuma, The Square and Clos Maggiore.

With the mackerel, we had a glass of English Bacchus. With a New World nose of nettles and gooseberry, this had fresh acidity and yet was just off-dry, and picked up nicely the notes in the mackerel dish. 

With the cauliflower, we had a Petit Clos 2013 Pinot Noir from the Sancerre vigneron Henri Bourgeois' estate in Marlborough, New Zealand. This was very good, with medium body and lovely redcurrant notes, with balancing savoury qualities on the finish. 

With the lamb, we had a carignan, syrah and grenache blend from Camins del Priorat, from Alvaro Palacios in northeastern Spain, 2012. This was a massive wine, intense, crimson in colour, with a chalky nose, and long minty finish.

With dessert, we had a glass of Pedro Ximenez El Maestro de la Sierra NV, from Jerez (15%). Aged in American oak casks for oxidation, this can age for 12 years. With flavours of almond, caramel and raisins.


Likes: Excellent value 7-course tasting menu with matching wines at £120 per person. Impeccable service, well informed, enthusiastic. Fantastic choice of wines, very well judged to match the food. Superb cooking skills and understanding of contrasts of flavour and texture.

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: One of the most interesting meals I have eaten in a long time, and at £70 per person for the 7-course tasting menu represents excellent value for the exceptionally high level of cooking skill. I cannot recommend Typing Room highly enough - go now before it gets the Michelin stars that will surely follow and becomes booked up and unaffordable!

Fera at Claridge's & Simon Rogan's Epic Tasting Menu

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Words & Photography by Greg Klerkx and Luiz Hara

Most days of the week, lunch can be satisfied with a decent set menu and a nice glass of wine…perhaps a bottle, if it’s been that sort of week. Then there are other days: when you’ve landed a big project, when a long-lost friend is in town, when the sun is shining just so. On those days, when you’ll want something special, Fera at Claridge’s makes a very strong case.


Fera, under executive chef Simon Rogan, takes over the space formerly ruled by Gordon Ramsey at Claridge’s: the dining room, though extensively renovated, retains many of that once-lauded restaurant’s grand Art Deco fittings. Yet Fera is somewhat softer, more inviting: less intent on slapping you about with greatness, real or perceived. The food reflects the environs: understated yet complex, elegant yet playful…though less rugby scrum than a summery game of boules.


We opted for the full tasting menu (£105 + £95 wine flight) though Fera also offers a more modest three-course lunch for £35, sans wine, and an a la carte menu with starters ranging from £16-23 and mains from £24-38 (as of late August…the menu changes frequently depending on season and produce.) Whichever menu you choose benefits from Fera’s micro-universe of growers and suppliers, including a 12-acre smallholding owned and managed by Rogan. The result is a consistent note of freshness and care at Fera: despite the regal surroundings, one gets the sense of dining in someone’s very grand personal home, with all of the personal touches one might expect.


The full tasting menu we had consisted of six snacks and eight courses. Our menu was accompanied by a traditional yet well-judged wine flight, mostly Old World, all gentle and elegant in keeping with the tasting menu. A la carte, Fera’s wine ranges from about £8-26 per glass; prices start at £29 per bottle but average around £50, quickly going up into the three and four figures from there.


Our meal opened with a lovely glass of Bugey Montagnieu (Franck Peillot, Savoie), a sparkling wine with no added sugar, giving it a dry, almost tangy minerality. This was a fine accompaniment to our first snack, Puffed barley, smoked eel, ox-eye daisy, which looked very like something you’d pick up off the forest floor – woody and gnarled-looking, but light, crispy and smokily delicious.



Stewed rabbit with lovage cream was an earthy delight, the rabbit encased in tiny balls of lightly fried tapioca, the effect being the crispiest and gentlest of rabbit croquettes. Squid, alexander and ling roe featured tender, slightly macerated pieces of squid sandwiched between feather-light crisps of ling roe: a quick, fresh explosion of the sea.


By this point we had moved, wine-wise, to a delicately honeyed Muscadet ‘Fief du Breil’ (La Louvetrie, Loire Valley, 2011) that paced the increasing depth and complexity of the menu.


The squid snack was followed by perfectly judged Scallops and peas in buttermilk served in the shell, then the arguable star of the snack flight: a mousse of savoury Winslade cheese and potato in which sat a tiny, flavourful morsel of duck heart, deliciously rich.


The final snack – Crab, rhubarb, verbena and pork fat – was a lovely bridge between the sturm und drang of the duck heart and the first of the main tasting courses, Aynsome soup, mustard cream, soft herbs and flowers.


Cornish lobster, pickled golden beetroot, dittander and sea herbs was well paired with an unusual wine – Etna ‘Vinujancu’ (Vigneri, Sicily 2011): grown from black soil vines at the foot of Mount Etna, the smoky, almost charcoal notes of this unfiltered delight came alive against the meaty richness of the generous chunks of lobster in this course.



Surprisingly savoury was a grilled salad course: salad crisped over embers with sunflower seeds and a truffle custard, served in a beautiful, hand-carved wooden bowl and tossed to taste via a small spade and fork, also hand-carved. We shifted to reds here, beginning with Valtellina ‘Carteria’ (Sandro Fay, Lombardy 2010), made from 100% Nebbiolo, which was a firm, licoricy accompaniment.



A highlight was Hake in caramelised cabbage, potatoes in chicken fat with nasturtium: beautifully presented, the title of the dish neglects the absolutely delicious crisped chicken skin that added crunch to the firm, moist hake.


The mains concluded with Dry-aged Herdwick hogget, beetroots and watercress, the hogget aged for 21 days and served with a sundried beetroot jus that was absolutely wonderful. A marvellously thick, brambly Maule Valley Carmenere (Clos Ouvert, Chile 2011) was a perfect wine pairing and brought out the depth of the meat.



A trio of desserts finished our meal. Pineapple weed ice cream with butterscotch and celery retained strong notes of all three signature ingredients and made for a surprisingly delicate, and delicious, combination.


Less successful was Hereford strawberries with meadowsweet and linseeds: not a miss, just not a stand-out, the whole being so subtle as to practically disappear in the mouth. Sheep’s yoghurt, milk flakes, black cherries, Douglas fir – was held together solely by the last ingredient, which lifted what otherwise might have been another slightly underwhelming dessert.


The desserts were matched with two lovely wines – indeed, head sommelier Riccardo Marcon didn’t hit an off note with any pairing. The Arbois ‘Fleur de Savagnin’ (Domaine de la Tournelle, France 2011), was golden, light and florally lovely; the Jurancon ‘Marie Kattalin’ (Domain de Souch, France 2011) was buttery and ever so slightly savoury, which worked surprisingly well with the black cherry dessert.


As mentioned earlier, Fera’s menu changes with seasons and produce so your menu will almost certainly be different than ours. But given the quality of ingredients and the exceptional skill in their preparation (and the understated yet consistently attentive service) you can be assured that your special lunch, or dinner, will be well worth it.

Roll out the tinsel! Christmas 2014 is looking delicious - and here's why

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Words & Photography by Felicity Spector

Outside it was a blazing 25°C and London resembled a furnace on overdrive. What better day to sample an entire range of Christmas goodies from some of the country’s biggest supermarkets and brands? The fake snow was swirling, the cardboard reindeer were sporting painted-on smiles, and I was game for anything.

First, Marks and Spencer- a vast array of rooms showcasing everything from stunning winter coats to festive homeware and food. I began with the café range, and a huge selection of different Christmas sandwiches - secretly my favourite part of the season.

Alongside the traditional turkey sarnies was a protein-packed three bird roast in a flatbread wrap - and an excellent vegetarian sandwich, pairing roasted carrot with chestnut stuffing and cranberry sauce: it was satisfying, creamy and full of flavour. Another innovation - red crisps, although I have to say they did taste the same as the regular kind.


For the main event - along with some handy pre-prepared vegetable sides, M&S is offering a range of turkeys, from a ready-stuffed and rolled breast joint to a free-range bronze from an Oxfordshire farm, and even a goose. There are some spectacular pies, too - including one with a whole pear in the centre, which looked very dramatic cut in half.

I was most impressed with the selection of breads and desserts: especially a Christmas pudding boule which tasted delicious as it was, or toasted with a decadent amount of butter - a dense, dark and rustic loaf packed with dried fruits and a hint of spice. I’ll be making some rather special turkey sandwiches with that one.


From a luscious range of desserts, I loved the mini Portuguese custard tarts, crisped up after a few minutes in the oven, a very rich and moist chocolate stollen and the ‘hero’ piece: a cone-shaped chocolate brownie fudge cake with praline frosting, complete with ‘five gold rings’ made from spray-painted chocolate. As rich as it sounds, it will retail for £18.


Onto Waitrose, which was promoting the very current Middle Eastern/Asian trends: pairing turkey with dukkah and pomegranate molasses, and some dense and fruity stuffing balls fragrant with gingerbread and apricot. Sprouts were shredded and stir-fried with tiny shards of bacon, and roasted root vegetables were spiced up with an Indian inspired blend of seeds.

Chefs from the store were busy smoking huge turkey breasts in a Green Egg smoker, which made it beautifully moist with a good depth of flavour, paired with a scoop of smoked mash and some buttery gravy.

The Heston range was given a room of its own: highlights were a very rich sticky toffee apple pudding and, best of all, a new frozen dessert called the ‘Ultimate chocolate bar’ - many layers of chocolate, praline and caramel parfait, sandwiched by thin layers of chocolate cake and a shiny smooth chocolate glaze. I predict that one, at £9.99, will be flying off the shelves.


Of the other cakes and desserts, some new square shaped mince pies were an interesting take, with brown-sugar crusted walnuts on top, and the mincemeat mixed with apple to lighten it up. Waitrose pastry chef Will Torrent fried up some mincemeat hotcakes, a great idea for using up leftovers, especially served with some spiced sugar and a huge dollop of one of the store’s alcohol-laced creams.


Over at Asda, where food and drink was displayed in giant igloos, there was a really retro feel to the sweets and biscuits: children will love the giant gingerbread men, and the store has been careful to keep an eye out for cost-conscious customers - their layered chocolate cake, which serves 16, will be on sale for a price-conscious £4. I queued up for one of their most exciting new innovations - a 3D model of myself - the team is taking its special scanner to selected stores around the country and for £60, you’ll be sent a ceramic replica which looks uncannily lifelike. I heard the girl in front of me ask “Can it make me thin?” No promises there: it’s not magic!


The Co-Op, trying hard to rediscover its traditional values after a slightly rocky time - to say the least - has clearly put lots of thought into its Christmas collection. I was really impressed by a platter of six enormous scallops, ready to be seared and finished with garlic butter - they’ll be on sale for just £5, although they are flown in from Japan. Sustainably sourced, though.


The Co-op has also put together some decent festive sandwiches, and a decadent range of desserts including a Christmas pudding cheesecake studded with spices and dried fruit, with a base made of pudding rather than biscuit, which was a novel touch.

And there was a magnificently melting whole camembert, ready to be baked in its box, topped with pancetta and cranberries - all of it just £3.


At the more luxury end of the scale, Fortnum & Mason showed off a magical display of beautifully designed packaging and perfectly composed hampers: there were magnificent pies, bejeweled chutneys, and luxury chocolates. For the ultimate tree decorations, you can pick up an embroidered Big Ben or a London taxi.


Cheese specialists Paxton and Whitfield will also make up hampers to order, from £48 - and other gift ideas include a cheese-making kit and a little notebook where you can record your favourite cheese experiences.


We sampled a wonderful range of British and European cheeses - from an incredibly creamy Italian three milk cheese called La Tur, to St Egwin - nutty and clean tasting, and made on a farm in the Vale of Evesham. You can complete your cheese board with some of their seeded or charcoal crackers and some robust ale chutney or cucumber pickle.

There have to be chocolates, of course - and for the most spectacular creation you could hope to find - La Maison du Chocolat has constructed a vast and intricate Christmas tree: at £700, it’s certainly a work of art in its own right. If your budget doesn’t quite extend that far, then their festive range of chocolates won’t disappoint: a mandarin puree was sharp, intense and smooth as velvet, while a hazelnut praline studded with dates paired the dark chocolate couverture with a fudgy sweetness.



It’s a competitive market out there - and the big stores and brands will be going all out to impress, whether it’s by dreaming up new versions of traditional favourites, or providing the best possible quality and value for money they can. All of which is good news for consumers. And after my whirlwind preview, I'm dreaming of a bright Christmas - as far as the food goes, at least.

Michelin Accomplished - Martin Berasategui Revisited

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Where:  Loidi Kalea, 4 - 20160 Lasarte-Oria (Gipuzkoa). San Sebastian, Spain, http://www.martinberasategui.com

Cost: The 12-course Grand Tasting Menu was priced at €195 per person (not including wines).

About: Martin Berasategui is the chef at his eponymous restaurant which opened in 1993, and has held three Michelin stars since 2001. Martin Berasategui was reviewed for this site in 2012 by one of our contributors (see review here), and having read it, I could not wait to pay it a visit in person.


Berasategui has nearly 40 years experience in the industry, having trained at cookery school in France in 1977, he worked over the next four years in several prestigious kitchens, including those of Michel Guerard and Alain Ducasse in Monaco. In 1981 he took charge of his family restaurant, el Bodegon Alejandro, earning its first Michelin star in 1986.

Paying my respects to the man himself - Martin Berasategui at the end of service

The restaurant occupies a large building in a quiet suburb 20 minutes drive from the Old Town of San Sebastian. Surrounded by lush green grass and shrubs, the dining room is situated on the raised ground floor. It has an elegant and sober decor, with a tiled stone floor and widely spaced tables, each covered with a starched white linen tablecloth.


Views of Martin Berasategui's restaurant grounds
On each table was a large bowl of tall white orchids, and there was no music to distract from anything else but the food.  Service was discreet and very efficient, all the waiters dressed in black suits and speaking perfect English.  It was truly impressive that our waiter (Wander, from the Dominican Republic) noticed that I am left-handed and without prompting, reorganised my cutlery and glasses throughout the duration of the meal.


What We Ate and Drank: We opted for the 12 course Grand Tasting Menu, comprising 10 savoury items and 2 desserts. Each dish is described on the menu with the date of its first creation, giving an idea of the evolution of Berasategui's culinary style and inspirations from 1993 to the present day.

We also decided to have the 100% Spanish matched wine flight.  This started with a classic Cava - Subirats Parnet Brut Nature – crisp, with refreshing acidity, this was a really good palate refresher, and an ideal start to our lunch.


The tasting menu during our visit started with "1995 Mille-Feuille of Smoked Eel, Foie-Gras, Spring Onions and Green Apple". This was exquisite, with very fine layers including crisp caramel and microns-thick slices of bright, crisp and vibrantly green apples to contrast with the unctuous foie-gras and eel.


Next was "2001 Squid Soup" - creamy squid ink ravioli served with squid crouton.  The raviolo must be eaten whole, because it "explodes" in the mouth! This was an intensely rich and clear lobster consommé, with a ravioli filled with squid ink, and a crispy wafer of rice and squid ink that brought another layer of texture to the dish.


To follow, we had "2011 Oyster with Cucumber, Kafir and Coconut". This had the addition of chlorophyll extract for a vivid green colour. Two plump poached oysters were perched on a cucmber and oyster jelly, with a flavoursome coconut cream infused with kafir lime leaf, and a judicious scattering of shiso leaf. Magnificent.


With the oyster, we had Picarana 2011, made near Madrid from the rare Albillo grape. This grape is only used in the Madrid D.O., and this example came from 60 year old vines. It had intense stone-fruit flavours, richness and minerality, and great length.


With the following two starters, we had the Trio Infernal 2011 – a delicious blend of Garnacha Blanca and Macabeu from Priorat.

The "2013 Sautéed Black Garlic with Beet Ceviche, Ice Radish and Raifort Cream" had mounds of purple beetroot foam, set over a puree of black garlic, with horseradish cream. This was visually stunning, and delicious with earthy notes from the beetroot and black garlic, lifted by the light acidity and heat of the raifort (horseradish) cream.


The "2009 Little Pearls of Raw Fennel, Risotto and Emulsion" was a clever dish, with fennel served three ways. Fennel in tiny pearls as a risotto, finely sliced for pasta, and in an intense emulsion.


Next was the "2013 Roast Foie Gras with Seaweed”. Resting on horseradish curd, with a fermented soy broth and hazelnut salt, this resembled an intense Japanese dashi stock, spiked with a hint of ginger. It was one of my favourite dishes.


With the foie gras, we had a glass of El Rocallis 2008, made from the rare Incrozzio Manzoni grape in Penedes.


To follow, we had the "2011 Gorrotxategi Egg Resting on a Herb Liquid Salad and Dewlap Carpaccio". This paired creamy egg yolk with paper thin pork chin, and a jade green herb liquid salad - stunning both to the eye and palate.


With the Garrotxatgei, we had a glass of Pagos de Galir Crianza 2009, made from 100% Mancia - a Pinot Noir like grape from Galicia. This had intense damson-fruit characteristics, and a herbaceous nose that stood up well to the creamy egg and pork.


Next came the "2001 Warm Vegetable Hearts Salad with Seafood, Cream of Lettuce and Iodized Juice". Almost too beautiful to eat, this was like a work of art. Myriad vegetables, baby leaves, herbs and flowers of many colours were served with lobster, prawns and scallops, over an intensely flavoured, colourless tomato jelly.


The "2013 Red Mullet with Edible Scale Crystals, Soybean Sprouts, Wheat Semolina and Cuttlefish” was also a delicious dish, with varied textures and flavours that was skilfully partnered with a glass of Quinta Quietud 2005 from Toro.


Made from Tinta de Toro, this had an intense red-cherry quality on the nose and palate, with well integrated tannin and great length.  I spent a week sampling the wines of Toro over ten years ago, and judging by this wine, they have made huge improvements since then. It was an unusual but inspired choice for fish, but complemented the savoury notes of the cuttlefish very nicely, without overpowering the red mullet.


For our main course, we had the 2013 Pigeon with Mushrooms, Caperberries, Manchego Cheese and Asparagus. The ballotine of pigeon was meltingly tender, with just a hint of gaminess contrasting with the crunchy asparagus and caperberries, in a rich jus.


The first dessert was  a very refreshing "2013 Blood-Orange Ice Cream and Slush over Liquified Tubers, Muscovado Sugar Jelly, Yogurt and Pepper", partnered with a glass of Casta Diva 2009 from Alicante, made from 100% Moscatel, which worked well with the ice cream.



The second dessert and last course was a more robust "2013 Mist of Coffee and Cacao over Banana with Whisky Sorbet and Slush". This had some of my favourite flavours – coffee, chocolate and banana, and was my preferred dessert. With it, we had a glass of sweet red Olivares Dulce  2010 from Jumilla, made from the Monstrell grape.

Likes: The food is outstanding in skill of execution, presentation and flavour. An elegant and beautiful restaurant and gardens with the most impeccable service. The 100% Spanish wine flight was also exceptionally good.

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: Martin Berasategui’s grand tasting menu was one of the most memorable meals of my life. This is an outstanding restaurant near the beautiful seaside town of San Sebastian. With superb service, setting, food and wine, it is in my opinion one of the best Michelin starred restaurants in the world, and worth a trip to Spain in its own right. Very highly recommended.

Fête Accompli - Portman Village Bakes up a Storm

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Words & Photography by Felicity Spector


Talk about a dream assignment. Would I like to judge a baking competition, alongside Great British Bake Off winner Frances Quinn, involving head chefs from some of London's top restaurants and hotels? I couldn't book the day off work fast enough.

It was all hosted by Portman Village, the not-quite Marylebone, not-quite Marble Arch part of central London just behind Selfridges. Local businesses have been holding a street party every summer, and given the nation's current love affair with cake, they decided this year's would kick off with their very own local Bake Off.

It was a blazing hot day and Portman Square was decked out like a proper village fete: there was bunting. There were tea urns. And - glory be - a large white marquee with trestle tables laden with cakes and desserts.


A quick rendevouz with Frances and the organisers to determine the rules:  and we were off, starting with best 'Native dessert'. We tucked into a gigantic lemon ice-box pie from The Lockhart, a dream of a dessert with an impeccably crunchy ginger biscuit base, glorious lemon curd and a vast pile of mallowy meringue. It was difficult not to just stop right there and finish the entire thing - but we had 35 more entries to go, and it seemed judicious to pace ourselves.


I was particularly taken with a moist, nutty banana bread from Daisy Green - and there was a  spicy ginger molasses loaf from Lanes of London which also scored well. A cheesecake beautifully decorated with berries was another favourite - surviving surprisingly well in the blazing heat - although we did deduct a few marks for the soggy bottom. Harsh - but fair.


On we went. The 'Tastiest Cake' category beckoned - and there was one outstanding winner for all of us - The Grazing Goat's dark, rich flourless chocolate cakes topped with a perfect quenelle of almond-butter mousse: think peanut butter taken to the next level.


We went back for more, just to make sure they really were that good. Daisy Green's 'Mega banana bread' made a reappearance, this time stuffed with copious amounts of whipped cream and strawberries. Mega was the word.


By this stage, the cookie category seemed like light relief. Some strawberry shortcake cookies from Lanes of London scored well for the buttery, short biscuits, but were let down by a too-sweet strawberry filling.


Top marks went to the Grazing Goat again, for some utterly perfect chocolate chip cookies: melting chocolate, soft centre, crisp around the edge. Exemplary.


The contest wasn't just open to chefs: some local businesses had also got involved - and we had especially high praise for Zora Govorusa from Zoki Couture for her crumbly pecan-based cookies - along with some attractive looking creations in the best Decorated Cake category.

By the end we were all surfing on a massive sugar high and a large queue of punters were impatiently lining up, waiting to be allowed into the tent to try the entries for themselves, once we'd awarded the prizes. Frances and I may have sneaked back for another spoonful of the chocolate cake - before announcing the winners. The Lockhart for their lemon icebox pie, and the Grazing Goat for their cookies and their flourless chocolate cakes.

By this time the square was full of the happy buzz of families enjoying the other activities, from a 'pin the beard on Paul Hollywood' game to stalls raising money for a local homeless charity, the West London Day Centre. Local restaurants and cafes were staying open late into the night, offering special menus, cocktails, special discounts and live music.

Reluctantly, though, we had to leave: Frances and I were due at another event involving - yes - more cake. But what an afternoon we had: I'm already looking forward to another Portman Village Bake Off next year.

Moshi Moshi - Twenty Years On & Still Going Strong

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Where: Liverpool Street, Unit 24, Liverpool Street Station, London, EC2M 7QH (above platform 1, behind M&S), http://www.moshimoshi.co.uk/index.htm

Cost: Sushi from the conveyor belt is priced according to the colour of the plate - from £1.90 to £5. Sushi sets made to order vary from £10 to £15, while the mixed Omakaze (chef’s choice) sashimi and sushi platters cost from £25 to £45 or £30 to £50 respectively. A ‘meaty platter’ of gyoza, pork tonkatsu and chicken yakitori is £12.50, and a tempura platter is £14. There is a selection of hot seasonal dishes ranging from £10 to £14. There is a seasonal platter available for £27. This comprises seven dishes including appetisers, a main dish, soup and dessert. Desserts are all £8.50.

About: Moshi Moshi was opened in August 1994 by Caroline Bennett, at a time when Japanese restaurants in London were rare and frighteningly expensive eateries in and around Piccadilly. It is situated in the heart of Liverpool Street Station over one of the train lines.


The design is eye-catching, with tables resembling pods because of the curved wooden surrounds, giving an intimate feel to the dining area. The counter facing the conveyor belt is also perfect for the single diner.


Moshi Moshi is celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2014. It was the UK's first conveyor-belt sushi restaurant.  One of the trademarks of this City institution is its ethos of using sustainable produce of known provenance.


The restaurant serves fish and seafood entirely from sustainable sources, including diver-caught scallops from Isle of Mull. The eggs and meat are free range, the latter coming from a family farm in Essex. Caroline is prominent in campaigns to protect fish stocks, and has been given an RSPCA Award for Animal Welfare. She sits on the board of Slow Food UK.  The restaurant was one of the first in the UK to achieve Marine Stewardship Council accreditation.


Twenty years on, during the busy Friday evening we visited, Caroline was there to greet and wait on us and all her other customers, with a hands-on attitude which I can’t help but feel is part of Moshi Moshi’s success.


What We Ate: We were served two black lacquered boxes, containing a selection of three different zensai (appetisers) each (£7.50 per box), including vegetable tempura, mackerel and cucumber salad, tofu with shredded daikon radish and ponzu, prawn head crispies, as well as ankimo (monkfish liver), and bacon and asparagus. I particularly enjoyed the ankimo, which I serve often at my Japanese supperclub, but had never eaten it outside of Japan. The prawn heads were also a welcome surprise, and deliciously crunchy.


We then shared a couple of hot seasonal dishes – the first of these was a 21-day hung Suffolk grass-fed rib eye steak in teriyaki sauce with matchsticks of crispy carrot and potatoes (£14). This well made with tender and flavoursome meat.


Our second dish was my favourite of the two – a lovely vegetarian option of aubergine, broccoli and deep fried mochi (rice cake) in tempura batter served in a rich vegetarian dashi broth (£10). The aubergine had been coated in potato flour, then deep fried, it was soft and full of earthy flavour and went well with the mochi.


Omakase is the traditional way to order in Japanese food, leaving it for the chef to present the best options of the day.  So we trusted him to conjure up his recommended sushi platter (£30) which included spider crab, inside out rolls of shiso leaf, cucumber and umeboshi (sour cherry) paste, Loch Duart Salmon, Isle of Mull scallop, and tempura prawn. These were expertly done – perfectly cooked sushi rice topped with ultra-fresh fish and seafood that melted in the mouth.


For dessert, we shared a couple of scoops of refreshing green tea and yuzu ice creams.

Any Train Spotters Out There? Moshi Moshi Has The Table For You!

What We Drank: There is a selection of beers, sake, and wines starting from £20.50 (white) and £21.50 (red), with Laurent Perrier Champagne available for a reasonable £49.

We started with a couple of glasses of Prosecco Brut, Terra di Sant'Alberto (£6.80).  With our meal, we had a glass of Le Chaz, Beniot Chazallon (vermentino, chardonnay and sauvignon blanc) for £5.70, and a Croix des Champs Sauvignon de Touraine 2011, for £5.90. Both had green fruit character well matching the weight of the sushi.

Likes: Delicious sushi and sashimi, a good selection of set menus, reasonably priced food options, wines and Champagnes. The setting is quirky, overlooking the train tracks, is intimate yet allows a variety of options for people dining alone, in couples or in larger groups.

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: Moshi Moshi is a London dining institution, as well as being the pioneer of kaisen (conveyor belt) sushi eating in the Capital. It offers some of the best quality and value sushi and sashimi in London, from sustainably sourced fish. Highly recommended.


Lima Floral - Peruvian Encore in Covent Garden

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Where: 14 Garrick Street (Floral Street entrance), Covent Garden, London, WC2E 9BJ, http://www.limafloral.com

Cost: The menu is small, with a choice of 8 starters priced from £7-10, and 7 mains from £15 to £24. Peruvian cocktails are priced from £7.50 to £10. Wines are priced from £19 upwards.

About: Opened in July 2014, this is the second London restaurant for Peruvian superstar chef Virgilio Martinez, and the latest one in an expanding group. His first London restaurant in Fitzrovia Lima London gained a Michelin star within months of opening, and the flagship Central in Lima is currently ranked number 15 in the 2014 San Pelligrino 50 Best Restaurants of the World list.



A little more casual than Lima London in Fitzrovia (reviewed here and here), the new addition aims to have a relaxed environment in a restaurant of 60 covers and a basement bar serving a selection of Peruvian piqueos (tapas), as well as Pisco Sours and other cocktails.


Having confirmed my booking that day, we were surprised to learn as we arrived at the restaurant that no table had been reserved for us. The staff however were helpful and it did not take them too long to find us a table.


What We Ate: Before ordering, we were served some crusty bread with a creamy sauce of maca (Peruvian root, a super food known locally as the Peruvian Viagra), mayonnaise, coriander and olive oil.

For starters, we had the Sea Bream Ceviche (£10) and the Escabeche Salad (£10). The ceviche had leche de tigre (the ceviche juices used to marinade the fish), creamed avocado, crispy onions and cancha corn.  This was good, with fresh fish that had been marinated just the right amount of time, with an exhilarating zing from the lime and lovely crunchy elements from the onions and fragments of corn.


We wanted to order the tiradito, but were disappointed to learn that both the ceviche and tiradito were made from sea bream, which we thought was a bit limiting. I’ll have to order the tiradito on my next visit.

The escabeche salad was described as having 'beef crudo' (crudo as in raw) with algarroba syrup (also known as Peruvian carob, algarroba is an extract from the pods of the mesquite tree). The beef was in fact served seared and pink, cut into thin slices with a dressed herb salad. This dish was disappointing and unexceptional.


For mains, we started with the Grilled Monkfish (£20) – and again I was in for a surprise – expecting grilled fish, I was instead served a bowl of broth containing the promised monkfish with aji amarillo, courgette, green and red leche de tigre, herbs and green leaves. The broth was fragrant, delicately flavoured and lightly spiced, and delicious I must admit. There were some generous nuggets of meaty monkfish and crunchy vegetables, it was a very lovely dish.


Next was the Rump of Organic Lamb (£22) accompanied by dried potato, queso fresco, black quinoa and crispy blue potato. This was an excellent choice - the lamb was very tender and well seasoned.


The side dish of dried Andean potato with a cream of sweet cancha corn and toasted quinoa was utterly delicious, and a great illustration of why there is such excitement about the 'superfoods' and unique produce of the high Andes in Peru.


There is a choice of four Peruvian desserts, all priced at £6. We opted for the Suspiro Ardiente, and the Chirimoya.

The Suspiro was made from dulce de leche, beetroot, dry Limo chilli pepper.  Despite the total lack of beetroot flavour, it had an intense purple colour from the vegetable.  The thin sheets of meringue were infused with slices of chillies, the heat, sweetness and constrasting textures making for a delicious dessert.


The Chirimoya dessert was made from chirimoya (custard apple) mousse, maca root and purple potato. Served with a crumble of maca root, this had dried crisps of purple potato, making for an intriguing, unusual but delicious native South American dessert.


What We Drank: To start our evening, we had a couple of cocktails. The Maracuya Pisco Sour £9.50 was made with Pisco, passion fruit, lime, sugar, egg white and Angostura bitters. This was delicious and very well made, with the classic frothy head.

The Casi Peruano (£8.50), made from Pisco, Campari, sweet vermouth, lime, tonic water and bitter orange was even better, with real appetite-stimulating astringency from the Campari and bitter orange.



The wine list starts at entry level with a South African Chenin Blanc for £19, and a Spanish Garnacha/Tempranillo blend also for £19. It includes a white and a red option from Peru, but otherwise is very international, while including several bottles from Argentina, Chile and two Uruguayan red wines.

We opted for a bottle of Gotes 2012, from Priorat, Spain (£31). This was straightforward, slightly purple reflecting its youth, fruit driven, and with very soft tannins.


Likes: Both the main dishes we had were excellent, and the sea bream ceviche was well flavoured. There is a good selection of Peruvian cocktails, and service is friendly and informed, and our waiter Karell was happy to take any questions he could not answer to the kitchen.

Dislikes: The acoustics are not ideal, with low ceilings, and no fabrics on the tables or floors to soak up sound. This means that the room reflects and amplifies all the chatter and clatter of the restaurant, making it quite difficult to hold a conversation without raising the voice.  Tables are fairly tightly packed. The menu descriptions were somewhat lacking if not misleading.

Verdict: These are early days, but Lima Floral is a promising addition to the growing range of Peruvian restaurants in London. It features a selection of authentic Peruvian and Andean ingredients normally only found in South America, along with great British organic meat and fish. Recommended.


L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon - Michelin Starred French Cuisine Gone Japanese!

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Where: 13-15 West Street, London, WC2H 9NE

Cost: There are a number of menu options, including set menus of 2, 3 or 4 courses for £31, £36 and £41 respectively.  There are 2 tasting menus, with options of 5 or 8 courses, priced at £95 or £129, with optional accompanying wine flights. There is also an a la carte menu, and an extensive menu of small tasting dishes, priced from £15 to £22.

About: Joel Robuchon held three Michelin stars in Paris until his retirement in 1996. In 2003, he opened the first in a series of more informal restaurants called L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon, including in Paris, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Singapore and Las Vegas. The concept of these restaurants was that diners would sit at a bar, inspired by Japanese sushi counters, round an open kitchen, and meals would be served on a first-come, first-served basis.

The London branch opened in 2006, a few doors down from The Ivy, is headed by chef Xavier Boyer and his team. On the ground floor is L'Atelier (one Michelin star), with its counter-serving concept. Here, modern French dishes are served in large or tapas-sized portions over the rosewood counter, with diners on red leather stools, sitting at what is in effect a giant chef's table.


The setting is strikingly dark, with black, grey and red being the predominant colours, and little or no natural light. The first floor restaurant (La Cuisine de Joel Robuchon) has more traditional tables, but still has an open-plan kitchen and wood-fired oven, and a menu that changes with the seasons.


On our visit, we had ring-side seats at the counter of L'Atelier. One of the nice things about the set up is that although we were alone for the first part of our evening, by the time it came to the main course and desserts, the counter seats were all occupied, and we spent the evening deep in conversation with diners either side of us. This is a very unusual experience in a Michelin starred restaurant in London, and made it feel more like a very top notch supperclub.


What We Ate:  The amuse bouche was a royal of sweetcorn, with popcorn, aged port reduction and parmesan foam - a lovely dish with a palate great combination of crunchy textures and umami flavours.


Next came a series of tapas-style dishes:

We kicked off with a yellowtail carpaccio with orange zest, lemon dressing, sesame seeds and Espelette pepper – the Basque pepper and orange zest worked a treat (heady scent and flavours) here with the meaty yellowtail.


Sea scallops cooked in the shell with lemongrass and seaweed butter (£18) came next – I very much enjoyed the flavour of nori seaweed in the butter, a great idea which I will try and replicate at home.

This was followed by gyoza of veal shank with red miso which was rich and delicious, girolle mushrooms and a flavoursome harissa sauce, with coriander, parmesan foam (£21).

We also ordered a lovely crab salad, served on a savoury sablet and topped with guacamole, cucumber mousse and fresh herbs (£19). This was also excellent, refreshing and light.

Next came a series of 'middle courses' - effectively small main courses:

The langoustine ravioli with Savoy cabbage and foie gras sauce (£26) was decadently delicious.

Next came the pan-fried foie gras with fresh almonds (£18) - served with a confit of rhubarb, rhubarb puree, and mango coulis, the tartness of the rhubarb was a fitting contrast to the fatty liver, although the fruit coulis reminded me of the Nouvelle Cuisine style of the 1990s - a little too sweet for my palate.

Better still were the veal sweetbreads cooked teppanyaki style (grilled on a hot plate), with Roman lettuce stuffed with deglazed onion, bacon and bayleaf emulsion (£22) – this was superb with sweetbreads being very soft and creamy.


One of my favourite courses was Joel Robuchon’s beef and foie gras sliders with lighly caramelised bell peppers and served in a delicious brioche bun and with French fries (£21).


The meat dishes were served with the signature Joel Robuchon mashed potatoes, a dish of legendary reputation, made with 50% butter, it was utterly sublime.

For dessert (all priced at £11), we had:

Le Chocolat Tendance, with chocolate mousse, dark chocolate sorbet and Oreo cookie crumble – decadently chocolatey, this was a rich dessert with contrasting textures.

La Sphere - Lemon bubble with lemon custard, yuzu marshmallow with lemon sugar and yoghurt ice cream – my favourite dessert, this was refreshing and with a great scent and flavour from the Japanese yuzu citrus fruit.


La Cerise, Black Forest mousse, Tahitian vanilla whipped cream and chocolate liqueur biscuit – beautifully presented and the fanciest (and nicest) Black Forest Gateaux I have ever seen.


What We Drank: We started the evening with a couple of glasses of the house Champagne, Veuve Cliquot NV (£17 each).

The restaurant has a wide selection of wines and sparkling wines by the glass, from £8 to £24. In bottles, white wines start at £29 for a Picpoul de Pinet, and reds at £39 for a Recantina from the Veneto. Prices escalate steeply from there, and there is a special selection of French iconic wines going as far as the vertiginous £2,900 bottle of Chateau Petrus 1996. The selection is mostly from France, Italy and Spain, with some options from the New World, including unusually a Tannat from Uruguay, and a white Chateau Musar from Lebanon.

We put ourselves in the hands of Sabrina, the sommelier on the evening of our visit.  Wines were mostly served in Riedel glasses.

With the yellow carpaccio, we had a glass of Domain de Menard Cuvee Marine, from Cotes de Gascogne (£29 per bottle). Made from colombard, sauvignon blanc and the Cognac grapes uni blanc and gros mansang, this was an aromatic, elegantly crisp wine, with an intense nose of tropical fruit and grapefruit, refreshing acidity and good length. Off dry, it stood up wonderfully to the orange zest in the carpaccio.

With the crab salad, we had a glass of Godello 2012, from Viña Godeval in Galicia (£44 per bottle). Made from one of my favourite grapes, albariño, this was well structured, with a good minerality and delicate lemon fruit.

To accompany the scallop, we had a glass of Macon Loche 2012 from Domaine Corder (£59 per bottle), a classically elegant Chardonnay from the Maconais.



With the gyoza, we had a Vorberg Riserva Cantina Terlan 2010 (£16 per glass) from the South Tyrol, Italy. An elegant wine made from Pinot Bianco, this was rich, well structured and with sufficient stone fruit on the palate to stand up to the veal shank.

To accompany the foie gras main course, we had a glass of Pacherenc du Vic-Bilh "Brumaire" 2009 (£64 per 50cl bottle). From the southwest of France, this was a wonderfully rich, sweet and satisfying wine, and a nod to the classic Sauternes/foie gras combination.


With the langoustine ravioli, we had a glass of Les Grenouilleres Montlouis Demi-Sec 2009 (£68 per bottle) from Domaine La Grange Tiphaine in the Loire. Made from 100% Chinon Blanc, this was a lovely off-dry wine, with aromas of apple, dried and citrus fruits.

Matching the sweetbreads, we had a glass of Cerasuolo di Vittoria Classico 2011 (£69 per bottle) from Sicily. Made from Nero d'Avola and Frappato grapes, this wine is aged in pot amphora buried underground. Light in colour, it had intense, richly savoury qualities of leather, tobacco as well as red berry fruit, and structured tannins. It was superb in its own right, and a great partner for the veal sweetbreads.


With the burger, we had a Ribera del Duero: Resalte Crianza Tinto 2009 (£78 per bottle). Made at Bodegas Resalte de Penafiel, this was made from 100% Tempranillo matured in American oak. It was savoury, intense and delicious.

Likes: The counter-top service allows diners to experience all the activity in the kitchen from close up. The food is excellent and I would be hard-pushed to fault it. There is a range of menus across a wide range of budgets, including some very good value pre- and post- theatre options. The wine list is thoughtfully constructed and innovative, with some really unusual wines mainly from Europe.

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: Stunning food, great service and a casual but elegant restaurant set-up, L’ Atelier de Joel Robuchon chef’s table is one of the most coveted in London, and deservedly so. I thoroughly enjoyed my dinner there and cannot wait to return. Highly recommended.

Meating in the City at Forge

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Name:Forge

Where: 24 Cornhill, London, EC3V 3ND, http://www.forgedinlondon.com

Cost: Starters range from £5.50 to £8.50 while mains are priced from £11.50 for the Forge Burger or a ½ spit roast chicken to £50 for a 20-ounce (567g) tomahawk steak for two with all the trimmings.

About: After a £2 million refit of late Abacus Bar just metres away from the Bank of England, Forge opened in 2013 as a bar and restaurant specialising in flame-grilled meats.


With a zinc bar overlooking the grills, one of those intricate Victorian black and white tiled floors, long wooden tables, black painted ceiling with exposed pipes and cables, Forge has an eclectic style that looked better than it sounds. As most City’s bars and restaurants, Forge is closed on Saturdays and Sundays.


The menu is a meat lover’s treasure trove, with many items that grabbed my carnivorous attention including BBQ pulled pork with toasted walnut bread (£5.50), the cider belly of pork (£13) or the Coca-Cola glazed gammon served with a spit roast pineapple (£11.50), all to be tried on my next visit. All spit grilled meats are served with thick cut chips, apple and fennel coleslaw, chilli and coriander corn.


On the midweek evening we were there, The London Essentials band was performing, and they certainly knew how to work a room of City midweek diners and boozers into a frenzy, with a medley of hits from Michael Jackson, and Lulu to Dolly Parton.


There is a range of attractions throughout the week to tempt diners in. Mondays see a 2 for 1 offer on meats, on Tuesdays, cocktails are priced at £5 all night. Wednesday sees The London Essentials live band strutting its stuff, while on Fridays, DJs take centre stage to see in the weekend.


What We Ate: On the midweek night we ate there, we were lucky enough to meet Head Chef David Jordan and dine at the 6-seater Chef's Table for a ring-side view of his entire kitchen, including a blazing grill and spit roast.


We kicked off with the 7-hour, Coca Cola-braised Jacob's Ladder - a very tender and flavoursome beef short rib that was sweet and sticky from the Cola marinade, served with tangy mustard mayonnaise (£6).


We also had the tempura soft shell crab (£8.50) - this was crispy in a wafer-thin batter, and served in a tiny deep-frying basket on a fresh banana leaf, with confit new potatoes, and a little dipping bowl of soy and sesame sauce.


But the star of the show was undoubtedly the Tomahawk steak (£50 for 2). A richly flavoured Scottish beef supplied by Fairfax Meadow (David told us that only 16 of these steaks are supplied to the restaurant each week), this American-style cut was grilled, carved for us at the table, and cooked medium rare as requested.


Served with horseradish onion bhajis, a tomato fondue, watercress, confit red onion and thick cut chips, there was a wonderful beef jus to bring out the rich flavours of the meat. The Scotch beef was tender, thoroughly marbled with the softest of fat, and imbued with an unbelievable intensity of flavour from the rib against which it had been grilled.


For dessert, we had the signature strawberries and cream sundae (£6). With a generous serving of strawberries, vanilla panna cotta, vanilla bean ice cream, pistachio praline and cream, this was a tad disappointing as the cream tasted as if it had come straight from an aerosol. Better was a well made pineapple creme brûlée (£6) which was creamy and rich in vanilla seeds with a wonderfully crunchy burnt sugar topping.


What We Drank: There is a range of cocktails from £8.50, and unusually each has a number rather than a name. White wines start at £21 for a Vin de Pays d'Oc Marsanne-Viognier blaned. Entry level reds start with a Montepulciano d'Abruzzo for £18. If you are pushing the boat out, there are some very nice options like a Hermitage from Chapoutier for £100, and Champagnes like Pommery Brut and Moët et Chandon NV for £55 and £58 or Veuve Cliquot NV for £65.


We kicked off with a refreshing No. 61 cocktail, made from Aperol, Campari, Galliano, lemon juice and sugar syrup (£8.50).


To accompany the meat, we opted for a bottle of 2009 Barolo Enrico Serafino (£47.50). Ruby coloured and quite light in density, this had medium red berry fruit, and surprisingly youthful tannins, but satisfying length that stood up well to the meat.


Likes: There is top quality beef here, the menu is small but well executed. Cocktails and wines are well chosen, reasonably priced, and give a good range of options from affordable to modestly splurging. The venue is very convenient for London's myriad City workers, or indeed, only 20 metres from Bank station, for anyone else in London. If you have come in just for a drink, there is the popular option of a Forge burger for just £11.50, which is excellent value for the location.

Dislikes: It’s not really a criticism, but the fact is that Forge is predominantly a drinking spot in the City, with a restaurant tacked on the back. That means that the sounds of drinkers' revelling and music, live or otherwise, can be intrusive if a quiet or intimate meal is what you are after.

Verdict: A buzzing City bar and meat grill restaurant with a well thought-out and expertly delivered menu, I loved the Jacob's ladder and the soft-shell crab, but the Tomahawk steak was a thing of wonder. An excellent value option compared with other steakhouses in London. Recommended.


A Bastille Day Celebration - Parisian Flare in the Heart of Pall Mall

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Where: 5 St James Street, London SW1A 1EF

Cost: Bastille Day Menu for 3 courses is offered at £37.50. The Prix Fixe Theatre menus are also available at £19.50 and £24.50 for 2 and 3 courses respectively, and also for Saturday lunch. From the à la carte menu, hors d'oeuvres range from £9 to £17.50, fish dishes are from £19.50 to £27.50, and meat dishes range from £23.50 to £29.50. Desserts cost from £7.50 to £9.50, with French cheeses including a selection of 4 for £16.75.  

About: Marcel Boulestin (1878-1943) was a French chef and restaurateur, who opened his eponymous restaurant in 1927 in Southampton Street, Covent Garden. He was also the world's first TV chef, appearing in 1937 on the BBC. After his death, the restaurant continued under various managements until it closed in 1994.


In September 2013, restaurateur Joel Kissin (co-founder and managing director of Conran Restaurants, now known as D&D London) opened Boulestin in St James as a 60-seat restaurant with a private dining room, an outside courtyard and the bistro Café Marcel. It specialises in the sort of classic French cuisine Marcel Boulestin popularised in the UK, led by Head Chef Andrew Woodford (ex The Wolseley, Colbert and Rules).


The restaurant is at the southern end of St James Street, next door to Berry Bros & Rudd's Wine & Spirits Shop. With a black and white tiled floor, starched white linen tablecloths and green leather chairs, set in a dining room flooded with natural light from the skylight, it's an elegant spot for lunch or dinner. It is only a stone's throw from Fortnum & Mason, Burlington Arcade and the luxury shopping area of Bond Street.

What We Ate: We started with the Jambon Persille, a terrine of ham hock and parsley, this is a specialty of Dijon in Burgundy of which Boulestin’s was a fine example.


We also had a magnificent Octopus Salad which included samphire, tomatoes, potatoes, olives, capers and lemon, this was a delicious dish reflecting the Mediterranean coastline of France, with a generous serving of tender octopus and fragrant olive oil.


For mains, we had one of the restaurant’s signature dishes - Tete de Veau - calves head, tongue and brains, with carrots, potatoes and celery. The Tete de Veau took me straight back to my Cordon Bleu days – classic French cooking at its best. A highly complex dish to assemble and cook (best left to the professionals), Boulestin's appeared effortlessly put together with tender calves’ head meat accompanied by a delicate but intensely flavored broth.


Dr G opted for the Roast Rabbit, served with mustard sauce. The rabbit was attractively presented with Girolle mushrooms, the saddle cooked in a balotine in a water-bath, perfumed with tarragon then wrapped in carrot slivers, and served with a fine mustard sauce, gherkins, capers and parsley. It was tremendous, and a reminder of just how fine a meat rabbit can be when expertly cooked.


Before dessert, we opted for the platter of 4 French cheeses, all from nearby Paxton & Whitfield (£16.75). This included Brillat Savarin, Beaufort, Foure D' Ambert and Mothais-Sur-Feuille. The cheeses were of excellent quality, and perfectly ripe.


For dessert, we had the cinnamon doughnuts and a fruit tart. This was a French tart of crème pâtissière, blackberry, strawberry, raspberry and blueberry, with a perfectly crisp and crumbly short crust pastry base.


The doughnuts were light and airy, with a delicious coating of cinnamon and sugar.


What We Drank: Impressively, the house Champagne is the "R" de Ruinart Brut, available for £14.75 by the glass, or £70 per bottle.  Wines have a strong French influence, but there are also options from the rest of Europe, Australia, South Africa and the Americas. They are priced from £19.50 for whites, £20 for reds (both from Pieno Sud, Sicily, a Trebbiano and Sangiovese respectively).


Our choices on the evening were guided by the friendly and knowledgeable sommelier Alessandro Talento, we couldn’t have been in better hands. We kicked off with an Americano (£12), a cocktail made from sweet vermouth, Campari and a splash of soda.


The vermouth was a Cocchi from Torin, a magnificent sweet, boutique vermouth made from the moscato grape, unlike the big brand vermouths usually made from Trebbiano.  The Americano was a superbly refreshing, and appetite stimulating start to the evening.


With the starters, we had an Albariño 2012 from L&L, Rias Baixas (£42).  With vibrant peach and tropical fruit characteristics and balancing acidity, this was a very good partner to both the ham and the octopus.


To enjoy with the veal and rabbit, we had a glass of Saint Aubin 1er Cru Derriere la Tour 2011, from Domain Jean Claude Bachelet (£59.50).  This was a classic example of pinot noir, with elegant redcurrant and raspberry fruit, light tannins, and great complexity and length.


With the cheese, although we were considering the selection of fine Ports on offer, Alessandro recommended a glass of fine aged Colombian rum - La Hechicera. Aged in sherry casks, it had none of the sweetness or caramel flavours that we usually associate with rum, but instead had nutty and dried fruit flavours, rather like an Armagnac. This was an unusual suggestion to partner our cheese platter, but it worked really well, balancing out the rich (let's be honest, fat) French cheese with a clean but complex spirit.

With the doughnuts, we had a couple of “After Dinner” cocktails. These included a glass of La Pommier, with fresh apple, vodka and eau de vie. With the fruit tart, we had a Sauternes de Luxe cocktail, made from fresh orange, home-made vanilla syrup, bourbon whiskey and Sauternes. Both expertly made and excellent pairing to our puddings.


To finish, we had a small tasting of two Italian artisan amaretto spirits and a fine drink created by Alessandro himself to demonstrate some of the flavours of his loved Italy – with Amaretto, Frangelico, sugar, ginger and cloves. A very fine end to our meal.


Likes: Great cooking, friendly service and a fantastic bar headed by Alessandro Talento.

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: Boulestin serves classic French cooking in an elegant setting in Pall Mall, and from the 14th July 2014 for one week, the Bastille Day menu priced at £37.50 will feature a selection of great dishes from the restaurant's repertoire. Highly recommended.

Seeking the Best Dim Sum in London - Royal China Baker Street

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Words & Photography by Florentyna Leow and Luiz Hara


Where: 24-26 Baker St, Marylebone, London W1U 7AB, http://royalchina.rcguk.co.uk/rcg.html

About: The Royal China Group, founded in 1996, has 6 restaurants in and around London with branches in Queensway, the flagship restaurant (reviewed here), Harrow, Docklands, and Fulham. On Baker Street, there are two Royal China restaurants including the Royal China Club, the premier restaurant of the group and one of my favourite dim sum places in London (reviewed here).


Dim sum at the Royal China Club will cost on average 50% more than you would normally pay anywhere else, but the quality is outstanding and worth the price tag in my opinion. Its poorer sister, the Royal China Baker Street is only a block or so away, and on a recent weekday afternoon with a serious dimsum craving and a little less cash to spare we decided to pay it a visit – even at 3pm, we were impressed to see that it had a steady stream of customers.

Royal China Baker Street looks like a slightly luxe Chinese restaurant, or one that would have been a decade and a half ago - one doesn’t get much carpeting in restaurants these days. It’s clean and large, but the decor is a little faded, and the whole place is a little too dimly lit for my liking.


We ordered a mix of familiar favourites and special items, along with Iron Goddess tea (Tie Guan Yin) to wash it all down. Royal China has a wine list, but Chinese tea is a far more appropriate accompaniment to a dim sum lunch in my opinion. Be sure to prod your waiter/waitress for the various kinds of tea such as Tie Guan Yin and Bo Lei that they will most definitely have, as the menu doesn’t list anything beyond ‘jasmine’ or ‘Chinese’ tea.


What We Ate: Service is fairly fast and efficient. Our plates of dim sum arrived in quick succession - no sooner had we begun on one than a second, third, fourth arrived. Most were good, some utterly delicious and worth repeating. Nothing was below average. One of the highlights of the meal was the pork and radish dumplings (£3.50) - a partially translucent, glutinous skin encasing a pork, chestnut, carrot and coriander filling. It was a crisp-crunchy, delightful excursion in textures, one that the home cook would be hard-pressed to replicate.


Another favourite was the prawn and chive dumpling (£3.80) - fresh and sweet, it was perfect with a dab of chilli sauce. I would have happily ordered a portion just for myself.


The crab meat dumpling soup (£4.80) - which will take around 30 minutes to arrive, so plan accordingly - was also quite lovely, each dumpling stuffed to the brim with crab. Even more enjoyable than the dumpling was the soup it came bobbing in - a sweet and delicate double-boiled broth with the faintest hint of Chinese herbs.


My personal favourite was the deep fried garlic prawn beancurd skin rolls (£5.20). I would recommend this only if you enjoy eating garlic by the mouthful, which I do. It is exactly as its name suggests: sweet, juicy minced prawn and garlic in almost equal measure, wrapped in beancurd skins and deep fried. My mouth waters just thinking about it.


Royal China doesn’t stint on the garlic, particularly on their specials menu. Boiled pork dumplings with chilli oil (£4.90) were also wonderfully garlicky, sweet and a little spicy, and doused in a vinegary sauce which reminded me of the Japanese Nanban style of cooking.


Any good dim sum place should serve up steamed turnip cake (£3.50), and Royal China’s version was a fine one – it had clean flavours and a smooth texture, with lovely crispy fried edges.


The glutinous rice in lotus leaves (£4.20), was a very pretty example, the lotus leaves infusing the surf n’ turf combination of dried shrimp and pork with a subtle earthiness.


If you’re craving a hearty, dry noodle dish, you could order the sliced beef Ho Fun with soya sauce (£8.50), it had decent wok hei (breath of the wok) and was delicious.


The other dishes were good, if not life-changing. Prawn cheong fun (£4.80), for instance, was quite tasty, even if the house-made skin was a little thick for my liking.


The crabmeat XO dumplings (£4.80) were delectable, but could have used more XO sauce for that extra kick.


Spare ribs in black bean sauce (£3.50) - another dim sum classic - were adequate, but not terribly memorable.


There’s usually not much in the way of dessert at Chinese restaurants, but their almond beancurd with fruit cocktail (£3.50) made for a smooth and refreshing end to a meat-heavy dim sum meal.


Royal China’s egg tarts (£3.60 for 4) were well made but compared poorly with the very same tarts served at a few doors down at the Royal China Club.


To celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival, we ordered custard mooncakes, these were baked in-house, were served warm and were rich and scrumptious.


Likes: the pork and radish dumplings, prawn and chive dumpling and crab meat dumpling soup are very good, but the deep fried garlic prawn beancurd skin rolls were exceptional. There are some excellent teas if you ask for them.

Dislikes: their selection of fine Chinese teas available should be readily available in English. Service was efficient but patchy and could have been friendlier at times.

Verdict: The Royal China Baker Street is a good place to enjoy freshly made dim sum in Marylebone, as well as being a more affordable option than the swanky Royal China Club further up the road. Recommended.

Furo-chan, my partner in crime for many London dinners, dim sum lunches and Japanese Super Clubs, you are missed! X

Yashin Ocean House - Japanese Head to Tail Dining and Some of the Best Sushi in the Capital!

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Where: 117-119 Old Brompton Road, South Kensington, London SW7 3RN, http://yashinocean.com

Cost: The dinner menu is small but well thought-out, with appetizers from £4 to £12, sashimi dishes from £8.50 to £32, hot mains from £11.80 to £29. The Omakase Sushi offerings (chef’s choice) are always worth exploring in Japanese restaurants, and at Yashin Ocean House, there are 3 selections of 4, 8 or 11 pieces of sushi (£13.50, £30 and £45 respectively) served with the roll of the day. The Express Lunch Menu is excellent value at £19.50 for 3 courses (appetizer, sushi and main courses) or £24.50 including dessert. An Express Dinner Menu is also available between 6 and 7pm for £24.50 for 4 courses.

About: Yashin Ocean House is situated in a beautifully restored Victorian stables in one of the plusher parts of South Ken. With a large central sushi station surrounded by a turquoise ceramic counter-top and a massive refrigerated cabinet with plate glass for displaying and drying out the fish for which they are known, the restaurant features a rather stunning and contemporary setting.


Opened as recently as 2013 as a sister restaurant to Yashin Sushi & Bar on High Street Kensington, Yashin Ocean House specializes on fish and seafood and the concept of “head to tail” dining which makes use of every aspect of the fish from roe and flesh, to skin and bones to create some of their signature dishes.


In Japan, nothing is wasted and the concept of “mottainai” (waste not!) is something that is deeply ingrained in the national psyche. It is socially unacceptable to be perceived as wasteful in Japanese society, “mottainai” is not only about physical waste, it also refers to thought patterns that give rise to wasteful behaviour.


Yashin Ocean House was founded by business partners Yasuhiro Mineno (ex-head chef at Ubon by Nobu) and Shinya Ikeda (former head chef at Yumi). The kitchen is headed by senior sous-chef Daniele Codini, a talented Italian chef who trained at some of the most prestigious kitchens around the world including L’Atelier de Joel Robuchon in Paris and The Fat Duck in the UK where he worked for the last 3 years before joining Yashin Ocean House.


Service was efficient and discreet - our waitress Paulina was impressively knowledgeable about every aspect of the menu, and gave some very good recommendations for drinks.


What We Ate: The amuse bouche on the evening we were there was sugi white fish with truffle infused soy sauce, sake and mirin, fig compote and pineapple mint, served with a glass of ginger infusion. For me, the myriad flavours in this amuse bouche did not quite come together as a whole – the fish tasted strongly of tinned tuna, and was unfortunately not a great start to our dinner.


Luckily, things picked up quickly from there with our choices of appetizers - Zuke Ikura (£11.80) was a stunningly presented little golden bowl of salmon caviar (ikura) seasoned with truffle soy, and delicately smoked, the caviar pearls were topped with a hefty serving of truffle. I had never tried the combination of ikura and truffle before but thoroughly enjoyed this rich appetizer. Perhaps some carbohydrate in the form of rice or some crunchy, julienned daikon might have further enhanced my appreciation of this dish.


The Miso Cappuccino (£3.50) was our 2nd appetizer. Charmingly served in an old English teacup and saucer, this was a delicate but well flavoured miso soup topped with deliciously thick soya milk foam. I loved this and must try and replicate it at home.


To follow, we had the dramatic Omakase Sashimi without Soy Sauce (£32 for 2 people). Beautifully presented on a glass bowl and a great deal of white smoke, this included a selection of 6 different fish, each with a respective accompanying sauce, jelly or other flavouring - yellowtail with homemade kizami wasabi, fatty tuna with truffled ponzu jelly, salmon with Tosazu jelly, wild sea bream with plum sauce and rice crackers, prawn with coriander sauce, and wild seabass with tomato salsa. These were some of the best sashimi I have had outside Japan, warranting a visit to Yashin Ocean House on its own right.


Next came the Cod Cheek with Chilli Amazu (£7.80). The cod had been sliced into bite sized pieces, lightly battered and deep fried, and served in a deliciously chillied sweet vinegar broth (amazu), with a scattering of crispy leeks. Similar to a nanban dressing, lightly sweet but with refreshing acidity and a hint of heat, the dressing cut through the meaty cod cheeks’ crispy batter, this was a delicious dish and one of my favourites of the evening.


The house special, Head to TAI-L (Tai translates as sea bream in Japanese - £26 for two people), featured a whole, dry aged and grilled sea bream, served complete with head and bones. The dish is designed to be eaten to the last morsel - head, bones and all.

The dry ageing made the flesh quite firm, and more intense in flavour, while the grilling of the skin, bones and head made every bit of the fish edible, although the bones were extremely crunchy.


The fish was served with a simple but magnificent dressing of Tosazu jelly and grated daikon radish (Tosazu translates as Tosa vinegar). Tosa is the ancient name for an area in Shikoku (one of Japan's main islands), a place where fishermen have long pulled in bonito (katsuo) - so the name suggests an infusion of primarily katsuobushi (dried shaved bonito) with other ingredients including konbu (seaweed used for making dashi stock), soy sauce, mirin and vinegar. The bonito adds a heady dose of smoke, flavour, and rich umami, which combined with the acidity of the rice vinegar, makes for a delicious and refreshing accompaniment to grilled fish. Yashin Ocean House’s Tosazu jelly brought a wonderful acidity, freshness and texture contrast to the grilled sea bream and we loved it.


Next up, and the last of our savoury courses, was the Omakase Sushi Eleven (£45). This comprised eleven pieces of sushi served with the roll of the day - salmon, cucumber and pickled ginger, with a wasabi dressing.


The sushi was outstandingly good – one of the most important elements of sushi for me is the rice – Yashin’s was well cooked and seasoned, light and with perfect texture. The fish was obviously fresh (a given in any decent Japanese restaurant), and the tiny dabs of relishes, spice or sauce on top of each sushi brought a new dimension and interest - each one unique, like a Faberge egg.


Some of the stand-outs were the Wagyu beef on crispy rice (great flavours and textures), summer truffle and miso foie gras; yellowtail with sun-dried tomato and parmesan (thanks Daniele!); salmon with tosazu jelly; fatty tuna with truffle oil, salt and pepper; razor clams with seaweed butter (a revelation!); grouper with spicy cod roe; wild seabass with dried miso flake; mackerel with grated ginger; shrimp with coriander sauce and rice crackers; and tuna with kizami wasabi.

Desserts were chosen from a refrigerated cabinet surrounding the sushi bar displaying an array of tantalizing choices.


The chocolate and vanilla mousse with candied hazelnuts coated in chocolate, edible flowers and gold leaf, served with vanilla ice cream was a deliciously rich dessert, expertly made and beautifully presented, this is a must to any chocolate lovers.


Our second dessert was a gorgeous and refreshing Yuzu mousse with white chocolate and shochu jelly served with sorbets of watermelon and sochu. We were impressed by both desserts – they were magnificent. I enjoyed the combination of light pastry, crunchy candied nuts, ice cream and jelly, myriad flavours and textures on a single plate – well judged and executed, they showed real skill and a highly sophisticated palate by the in-house Japanese pastry chef Seiko-san.


What We Drank: The restaurant specialises in sake, and has a range of sake cocktails, as well as a comprehensive list of sakes including sparkling sakes, and a flight of three shochu made from sweet potato, barley and shiso for £11.

The house Champagne is a Dosnon & Lepage for £64. There is an extensive wine list, particularly featuring European wines, with whites starting at £28 for a Picpoul de Pinet. Red wines start with an organic Clos du Tue-Boeuf, Cheverny Rouge Rouillon 2010 for £37.

We started with a 300ml bottle of Mio sparkling sake (£23) from Shochikubai Shirakabegura. This is only 5% alcohol, and off dry with fine bubbles and a delicate on the palate.


To accompany the sashimi, sushi and main course, we had the Chavy-Chouet, a Puligny Montrachet 'Les Enseigneres" 2012 (£80) - we had a 375ml carafe for £40.  With a heady nose of apple, citrus and tropical fruit, the palate was richly complex, with layer upon layer of flavour, fresh acidity and a long satisfying finish.  This was about as far from the high street Chardonnay as it is possible to imagine, and utterly magnificent.


We finished with a cocktail - Kagurasaka (£9.50). Yashin's version of a Manhattan, this had single malt Japanese whisky, with Junmai sake, Cointreau and shiso leaves.

Likes: Both the sashimi and sushi Omakase selections were excellent and stunningly presented. Some nicely and quirky presentational touches. A small but well considered Japanese menu. Comprehensive wine & sake lists. Excellent value Express Lunch and Dinner Menus for £24.50 (4 courses).

Dislikes: Some of the stools around the sushi counter are less than optimal if you would like to see the chefs in action, and these were unfortunately where we were seated, so apologies for the poor quality of images in this post.

Verdict: An elegant Japanese restaurant, Yashin Ocean House serves some of the most creative sushi & sashimi I have tried outside Japan, as well as excellent cooked options. With highly skilled cuisine and pastry teams, and superb wine and sake lists, Yashin Ocean House ticks all the boxes for me, and I cannot wait to return. Very highly recommended.

Your Favourite #IrishGrassFedBeef Dish Revealed! (In Collaboration with Grasstronomy/Irish Beef)

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The good people at Grasstronomy (Irish Beef) got in touch asking me to put together The London Foodie readers’ favourite beef dishes, the ones you love cooking at home. I love a good steak, but it was the words “Irish Grass Fed Beef” that really caught my imagination. So how could I resist?

It was tough choosing a favourite among the mouth-watering replies from Twitter, Instagram and Facebook (thank you folks for participating!), but in the end I chose an irresistible Ox Cheek Mac n' Cheese! This heart warming and luxurious version features slow-braised Irish ox cheeks cooked in red wine and spices, topped with macaroni cheese flavoured with mature Parmesan and fresh black truffles. Perfect for the colder months, this is comfort food at its best!


So why all the fuss about Irish grass fed beef? Ireland is blessed among other things with rain, all year round, and this makes for terrific pasture and a rich soil. Grass fed cattle are also thought to be leaner as they work for their food. And it’s reputedly this sweet grass of Ireland that makes some of the most luscious, tender beef in the world – tried and tested, right in my kitchen.


If you would like to learn more about Irish grass fed beef, visit the their website here or on Facebook here. Better still, why don’t you try Irish grass fed beef for yourself? Next time you visit your supermarket or local butcher, look out for Irish beef and try out the recipe below, I look forward to hearing what you think!

Slow-Braised Ox Cheeks in Red Wine & Spices, 
Macaroni Cheese with Mature Parmesan 
and Black Truffles

(Recipe by Luiz Hara)


Ingredients (for 4 people):

For the Ox Cheeks:
  • 1kg ox cheeks
  • 1 celery stick, diced into 1cm cubes
  • 1 onion, diced into 1cm cubes
  • 1 carrot, diced into 1cm cubes
  • 2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
  • 1 litre full bodied red wine
  • Mixed spices - 1 stick cinnamon, 1 star anise. 1-2 cloves and 10 black peppercorns
  • 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • Pinch of Malden salt
  • Freshly ground pepper
  • 25g unsalted butter
For the Macaroni Cheese:
  • 175g mature cheddar
  • 50g Gruyere
  • 50g mature Parmesan
  • 50g white bread, crusts cut off
  • 300g good-quality macaroni
  • 350ml single cream
  • 350ml full fat milk
  • 50g unsalted butter
  • 50g plain flour
  • 1 tsp Dijon mustard
  • 1 small fresh black truffle, thinly sliced (optional)
  • 2 tbsp good quality truffle oil 
Method:

For the Ox Cheeks:

Remove any gristle or nerves from the ox cheeks, cut them up into 5cm pieces, season with salt and pepper, and keep aside until needed.

Peel and wash the carrot, onion and celery and dice them into 1cm cubes. Finely chop 2 garlic cloves.


Pour the red wine into a saucepan, bring to the boil to burn off the alcohol, add the mixed spices - 1 small stick cinnamon, 1 star anise. 1-2 cloves and 10 black peppercorns and reduce by 1/3.

Heat a casserole with the olive oil on a high heat, brown the ox cheeks on all sides, remove the pieces from the casserole when done.

Lower the heat, add 25g butter into the casserole, let it foam (but not burn), then add the diced vegetables and garlic. Sweat the vegetables until lightly coloured for about 3-5 minutes.

Turn up the heat, add a few tablespoons of the spiced red wine and deglaze the pan by scraping the juices from the bottom of the casserole with a spatula.

Return the browned ox cheeks back into the casserole and cover with the remaining spiced wine so that the meat is covered. Bring gently to the boil, cover and place it in a fan-heated oven for 6 hours at 180°C, turning the meat occasionally during cooking. Alternatively, use a pressure cooker at high pressure for 2 hours.


Once cooked and very tender, remove the beef with a slotted spoon and place it on a deep tray (if using a pressure cooker, ensure to release all pressure before attempting to open the pressure cooker). Shred the beef. Pass the jus through a fine strainer into a clean pan, and reduce it slowly until a thick and smooth sauce is achieved. Add the sauce to the shredded ox cheeks, mix well and check for seasoning. Set aside until needed.


For the Macaroni Cheese:

Finely grate all cheeses, keeping them separate. Tear the bread into pieces and whizz in a food processor to coarse crumbs. Mix 25g cheddar and 25g Parmesan into the breadcrumbs.  
Toss the rest of the cheese together in a bowl and set aside. Pre-heat the oven to 190°C.

In a large pan of salted boiling water, add the macaroni cheese and cook al dente according to package instructions (roughly about 8 minutes), stir occasionally to avoid them sticking together. While this is cooking, start the sauce.

Warm the milk and single cream in a small pan.

In a separate pan (big enough to take the macaroni as well), melt the butter in a pan, then stir in the flour. Cook for 1 minute, stirring, then take off the heat. Pour in 1/3 of the warmed milk and cream mixture and beat well with a wooden spoon until smooth – it will be quite thick at this stage. Add another 1/3 – it may go a bit lumpy, but keep beating well and it will go smooth again. Pour in the final 1/3 and keep beating until smooth, a balloon whisk can also help you with this step.

When the macaroni is done, tip it into a colander and drain.

Put the pan with the roux mixture (butter, flour, milk and single cream) back on the heat and cook, stirring, until thickened and smooth. Lower the heat and simmer for about 4 minutes until glossy, stirring every now and then. Remove from the heat and stir in the cheese and mustard, mix well. The consistency of the sauce should be rather thick. Check for seasoning and adjust if required.


Gently stir the macaroni into the sauce and stir to coat completely. There should be enough sauce to coat the macaroni thickly and liberally.

Assembling the Final Dish:

Lightly reheat the shredded ox cheeks and cooking juices and place them in a casserole (large enough to take in the macaroni cheese, and one in which the final dish will be presented at the table).

Gently top with macaroni cheese mixture, scatter over the cheesy crumbs over the top and heat through in the oven for about 12 minutes or until beginning to bubble around the edges. Grill for 3-5 minutes to brown the crumbs to a light golden colour.

Remove from the oven, drizzle 2 tbsp of good quality truffle oil, let it rest for 2 minutes, then scatter the fine slices of fresh truffle over the dish and serve immediately.


    The London Foodie Goes to Italy - Amalfi Coast (Sorrento)

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    Sorrento is a magnificent town 20 miles south of Naples, on the cliffs above its eponymous Bay. Popular since the early 19th century, it has attracted travellers from the wealthiest aristocrats of Europe and beyond to adventurers and traders wanting to tap into the riches of the land and sea.


    Undoubtedly one of the most elegant of Italian towns, Sorrento is also a great base to explore the many sites of Campania. Naples, Vesuvius, Pompeii, the islands of Ischia and Capri and the Amalfi coast are all within a short journey, and the views of the Bay of Naples from all over the town are stunning.

    It is relatively easy to reach Sorrento from London with both EasyJet and British Airways flying directly to Naples. The food and wine are exceptional, but the lemons of Sorrento are the real star, making for the best Limoncello, sorbets and ice creams you will ever taste, more of which later.


    Where to Stay

    Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria

    Celebrating its 180th anniversary this year, the Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria is the top 5-star luxury hotel of the region; it is a member of the Leading Hotels of the World Collection, and one of the most iconic hotels in Europe.


    Just a 20-minute ferry ride to Capri, a little under an hour to the stunning island of Ischia and a quick drive to the amazing Amalfi coast, the Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria has been in the Fiorentino family since it opened in 1834.


    The hotel has welcomed the likes of Richard Wagner, Sophia Loren, Enrico Caruso, Marilyn Monroe, and Queen Margaret and has over the years been featured as a set for movies and television, the video below pays homage to this history and is a great watch.

    Located in Sorrento's town centre, the hotels sits on a high cliff with spectacular views over the Gulf of Naples and Mount Vesuvius. Legend has it that the Roman Emperor Augustus had a villa on this site.

    The hotel is made up of three interconnected nineteenth century buildings, just above the town harbour (there is a private lift from there directly to the bar terrace 100 metres above).


    The property is surrounded by a lush Mediterranean garden of 20,000 square metres, in which also the spa and open air swimming pool are located. The public rooms of the hotel are sumptuous, with two luxurious restaurants, a gym, a piano room and the open-air bar overlooking the harbour.


    Our room had a private balcony with a magnificent panoramic view overlooking the Bay of Naples, and the harbour immediately below.


    The room was tastefully furnished in a combination of pastel blue and yellow, with period antiques and mirrors it was a grand but peaceful spot in which to recuperate from the heat and crowds of Sorrento.


    Breakfast was served in the splendour of the Vittoria Restaurant, with its gorgeous ceiling frescos and panoramic views over the Bay of Naples.


    As well as a choice of à la carte items like porridge, English breakfast and omelettes, there was an excellent buffet. This had a range of juices, cereals, breads, brioches and croissants, as well as fresh fruit salad, cold meats and yoghurts.


    Of note, the cheese platter offered some local specialties including taleggio and caciocavallo cheeses, buffalo mozzarella and burrata, as well as smoked scamorza, all served with a wonderfully fragrant lavender jelly. The local theme continued with the selection of cakes and tarts, such as the Torta Caprese (almond and chocolate pie), strawberry tart, and an excellent Almond and Sorrento Lemon Cake.


    As might be expected from a hotel of this calibre, it has off-street parking, and offers a range of services including yacht hire, personal trainers, child-minding, private excursions and even a personal shopper.


    This trip to Sorrento is one we had long dreamed about, and we wanted to experience the best that the town could offer. The Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria is the top hotel in Sorrento, one of the most iconic hotels in Europe, and made our stay in the Amalfi Coast truly unforgettable.

    The magnificent view from our room at the Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria

    Where to Eat

    Don Alfonso 1890

    Don Alfonso 1890, in the small village of Sant'Agatha, 20 minutes drive from Sorrento, has been run by the Iaccariono family since the original Don Alfonso Iaccariono opened it in 1890. It achieved near mythical status in southern Italy (and three Michelin stars, as well as Relais & Chateaux accreditation) in the 1980s and 90s in the hands of Alfonso and Livia Iaccariono. In recent years the Head Chef post has been taken over by their son Ernesto, although both parents and their other son Mario are very visible in what is today a family-run restaurant with 20 chefs, as well as a hotel and cookery school.


    There are two set menus in the restaurant - the 'Traditional' has 4 courses and cheese for €145, while the 'Degustation' has 6 courses and cheese for €170. On the à la carte menu, antipasti (appetizers) are all €36, primi piatti (starters) are €34, secondi piatti (mains) are €45. Desserts are €26. We opted for the Degustation menu, and settled in for a long and leisurely lunch.


    Starting with a refreshing glass of Ca' del Bosco of Franciacorta DOCG, this is a highly regarded Italian traditional method sparkling wine, the Italian equivalent of good Champagne. To accompany our meal, we chose a local Greco di Tufo, Pietracupa, 2012, for €50. This was delicious, golden in colour, with delicate lemon and green apple flavours and balancing acidity.


    The amuse bouche was a very tempting brunoise of vegetables topped with a buffalo ricotta cream, Parmesan crisp, olive oil and balsamic vinegar.


    Next came smoked Mediterranean yellow tail with wild orange flower with broad bean purée, fennel seed and grapefruit mayonnaise, yoghurt and chives. The fish, only served at its peak of seasonality between May and July, was light and flavoursome, marrying perfectly with a refreshing acidity from the grapefruit grown in the restaurant's own garden.


    To follow, we had deep fried lobster with two accompanying sauces, one sweet and the other sour. I enjoyed the paper-thin and crisp tempura-style batter, and the clever take on a classic oriental sauce.


    The pasta course was a magnificent home made spaghettoni with clams, mussels, broccoli leaves, paprika and lemon zest. Encapsulating some of the best produce of the region, this had wonderful rich flavours from the shellfish leavened by the freshness and aromas of the exquisite local lemons.


    Next came some delicate capelli, stuffed with buffalo meat and served with a mousse of pecorino and onion sauce, and a crocante of carrot, courgette and onion. The crispy vegetables were sliced micron-thin, and dehydrated so that they were still bursting with the flavour of the native vegetable. The buffalo meat was tender and well flavoured.


    The main course was Lauticauda lamb, from the mountains of Campania, served with finely sliced baby artichoke, a garlic sauce, and a sauce of fresh Mediterranean minced herbs. The lamb was delicious  - tender, served medium rare, and accompanied by mint and other local herbs.


    To accompany it, we had a glass of Rosso del Conte, Sicily 1997. A blend of Nero d'Avola and Pericone grapes, this was brown-tinged from ageing and fully mature, with complex notes of red berry fruit, as well as stewed fruit, very soft tannins, and great length.


    The pre-dessert was sorbet of lemon and strawberry, with mint foam, eaten from a mother of pearl spoon. The flavours were tremendous, and banished from memory the sharp and thin granitas I have had too often in London.  The lemons were from the Massa Lubrense region close to Sorrento, which some argue are the best in Italy.

    For dessert, we ordered the 'Concert of lemon, fragrance and flavours', (seriously, one can never have enough lemons in the Amalfi Coast!), and the 'Neapolitan sfogliatella pastry perfumed with vanilla and cinnamon', both utterly sublime.



    As an unexpected bonus, we were also served the 'Impressionistic view of espresso dessert', with coffee zabaglione cream, made with eggs from the family farm. Coffee and zabaglione, a wonderful combination and I cannot think of anything more Italian than this lovely dessert.


    With our coffees, we were served a glamorous selection of petit fours served over bubbling and steaming vapour. These were a mousse of mint cream, Neapolitan canoli, and salted praline ice cream on a stick, coated in chopped hazelnuts.

    After the meal, I was lucky enough to have a tour of the cooking school, where many people come as part of a hotel, food and learning package.  I also viewed the truly breathtaking cellars with over 10,000 bottles of wine.  The deepest parts of the cellar date back over 2,000 years to pre-Roman times. There is a small boutique hotel over the restaurant, with a selection of very comfortable rooms with en-suite bathrooms and an eclectic combination of antiques.


    Don Alfonso 1890 is a must for any foodie visiting the region. Three, four or five-night packages including dinner, bed & breakfast as well as a cooking class (from €1,125 to €3,100) are also well worth considering. In addition to spending time at the beautiful family farm and grounds of Don Alfonso, the opportunity to cook with the wonderful produce of Massa Lubrensa as well as learning from the very best chefs are gastronomic experiences not to be missed.

    Terrazza Bosquet - Grand Hotel Vittoria Excelsior

    One of only two Sorrento restaurants with Michelin star status, Terrazza Bosquet is headed by 34-year old Chef Luigi Tramontano, from Gragnano (Italy’s pasta capital) who took charge of the hotel as recently as March 2013, and was awarded its first star 6 months later.

    Chef Luigi Tramontano had an early start in the kitchen – at the age of 13 he assisted his chef father, and by 18 was working as a chef at the Quisisana Hotel in Capri, a 5-star Leading Hotel of the World property. After further training at Rocco Forte’s Hotel de Russie, another 5-star and arguably the best hotel in Rome, he returned to the Amalfi Coast, this time at the 3-Michelin starred Don Alfonso. Talking with him, it was clear these experiences had a great impact on him in understanding the sourcing and cooking of the best ingredients of Italy.


    Chef Luigi Tramontano’s latest restaurant, Terrazza Bosquet’s dining room has large plate glass windows with stunning views across the Bay of Naples to Mount Vesuvius. The restaurant offers a Gourmet Mini Set Menu for €90 per person, or a Large Gourmet Set Menu for €120 per person as well as individual à la carte options.

    To start the evening, we had a glass of Franciacorta sparkling wine (the Italian Champagne equivalent), made by traditional method, from Chardonnay and Pinot Noir grapes.


    We started with a beautifully presented caponata of vegetables, celery sorbet, and celery gillet. With exhilaratingly vibrant flavours, this set our taste buds tingling for the dishes to follow.


    Opting for the Gourmet Mini Set Menu (€90), this kicked off with tuna marinated in pistachios from Bronte in Sicily, served with intense orange-flavoured jelly squares, with dots of raspberry and redcurrant sauces. This had great flavours and textures and was stunning to look at.


    Next came homemade seaweed pasta with venus clams, sea urchin and chives. This was a light, well made pasta, the sauce giving an intense flavour and aromas of the sea from the clams and sea urchin; it was served alongside a fresh sea urchin in the shell, with just a splash of Sorrento lemon juice. These were exquisite ingredients, minimally messed about.


    The main course was pan-fried fillet of red snapper from the Bay of Naples, served on Neapolitan endive and almonds, accompanied by crispy vegetables and a lemon confit. I thought this was a stunning dish, the fish having a crisp skin yet with perfectly cooked soft flesh, served with crunchy vegetables, and a microns-thin slice of lemon confit(ed) for 48 hours at 50°C.


    Pre-dessert was a glass of multi-vitamin juice, served alongside a dessert of carrot tart with carrot mousse, with orange sorbet and lemon cream. Light and delicious, this featured the excellent citrus fruit of Campania.


    For dessert, we had an Easter cake reinvented by Chef Luigi Tramontano, with puffed wheat, ricotta and orange cream pudding with marmalade topping, served with an orange and fennel jus, orange tart and an ice cream of honey and orange flowers. Served with tiny sprigs of dill, this was an outstanding, multi-layered dessert.


    On the wine front, we were in the capable hands of Head Sommelier Nicoletta, winner of the Italian Sommelier of the Year award in 2007. She is also the wife of the Head Chef Luigi Tramontano - I can only marvel at the education their bambini will have!

    To accompany our food, Nicoletta recommended a bottle of Greco di Tufo 2010, Terrantico Etichetta Bianca for €40. Golden in colour, this had rich intense flavours of lemon, apple and mineral, like an aged Mersault. With dessert, we were served a dessert wine, 'Mel' - a sweet Fiano from Cantine Antonio Caggiano. This had luscious aromas of apricot and peach, with counter-balancing acidity. We noted the very reasonable mark up of the wine list, just a little over prices we had seen at some of the town’s wine shops.


    For cooking of a very high calibre, using the best ingredients of Campania, I cannot think of a better place in Sorrento than Terraza Bosquet. And with a view of Vesuvius thrown in for good measure, what more could one wish for? Highly recommended.

    What to Do

    Visit Pompeii

    Only 17 miles from Sorrento, and a 1-hour drive, Pompeii was one of Campania's most important commercial centres, which was largely destroyed by an earthquake in 63AD, and then sixteen years later in 79AD finished off by the eruption of Vesuvius. Fortunately most of the population had already been evacuated before the eruption, but it is thought that around 2,000 people were asphyxiated by the toxic fumes of the volcano. Today, it offers a unique insight into the ordinary life of Roman citizens during the imperial era, because it froze the way of life as it stood at the time. The site is large, and merits at least a whole day's visit. For more information on Pompeii, visit www.pompei.it.

    Discovering the Wines of Campania at The Corner Shop, Sorrento

    The Corner Shop is a wine merchant in Sorrento, opened by Giovanni who lived in London for many years and speaks excellent English. We went into his shop to buy a bottle of Prosecco, but were lucky enough to meet him and learnt so much about the wines of the region.


    His knowledge and enthusiasm for the local wines and limoncello were contagious, and we spent a most interesting hour or two in his company at The Corner Shop. I highly recommend a visit to learn more about the local Greco di Tufo, Fiano d’Avolina and Aglianico grapes, as well as sparkling wines.


    We also learnt a lot about Franciacorta (a DOCG from Lombardy), the Italian equivalent to Champagne which made our trip to Italy all the more enjoyable from then on!

    Sail to Capri

    Just 20 minutes by fast ferry from Sorrento, Capri was a playground to the super-rich in years gone by, but now makes its living largely from day-trippers from the mainland, although it is possible to stay in one of the hotels on the island.


    The town of Capri is nestled between the two mountains on the island, featuring the central main square, Piazza Umberto with its many cafes and restaurants, surrounded by winding lanes leading into the hills.


    The island's other main settlement is Anacapri, one of whose highlights is the magnificent Villa San Michele, which once belonged to the Swedish physician and writer Axel Munthe. It is filled with Roman artefacts, busts and bronzes, and has magnificent views over the whole island. I would highly recommend a visit. To learn more about Villa San Michele, visit www.villasanmichele.eu

    Day trips to Capri are easy to arrange. There are two companies, one operating a ferry that takes 40 minutes, the other a fast boat that takes 20 minutes, and they both leave frequently from the harbour beneath the Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria. Tickets can be purchased on the day, although to be sure of getting the crossing of your choice, it is advisable to purchase the day before. Any hotel will have the timetables.

    Discover the Lemons of Sorrento

    In the centre of Sorrento, I Giardini di Cantaldo is a lemon grower and producer of artisan limoncello, ice cream, jams and everything else that it is made from the amazing lemons of Sorrento.


    Guided tours can be arranged, as well as free tastings, and a visit here is a wonderful experience for anyone interested in learning more about this local gastronomic delicacy. You will never think of lemons in the same way again.  Recommended.


    Visit the Amalfi Coast

    Sorrento is the major town of the Amalfi Coast, so is a good spot from which to tour this stunning part of Italy either in your own hire car, or on organised trips. The towns, including Positano, Ravello and Amalfi, are scattered along the stunning coast connected by a rather narrow winding road, are very picturesque and well worth a visit.


    Travel Essentials

    The nearest airport to Sorrento is in Naples, to which direct flights are possible from Easyjet and British Airways.

    Grand Hotel Excelsior Vittoria
    Piazza Tasso, 34
    80067 Sorrento
    Italy

    Don Alfonso1890
    Corso Sant'Agata, 11/13 - 80064
    Sant'Agata Sui Due Golfi
    Naples
    Italy
    info@donalfonso.com; donalfonso@relaischateaux.com

    The Corner Shop
    Via San Francesco 21/23
    80067
    Sorrento, Italy
    +39 081 878 3322

    Azienda Agricola I Giardini di Cataldo
    Via Correale, 27
    80067 Sorrento (NA) - Italy
    Tel: +39 (0)81.8781888
    info@igiardinidicataldo.it
    www.igiardinidicataldo.it/gb/

    The London Foodie Goes to Italy – Amalfi Coast (Ravello)

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    The Amalfi Coast has for centuries been one of the most popular parts of Italy for visitors from Europe and beyond. Originally a series of simple fishing villages which clung precariously to the steep hillsides which run from Sorrento to Salerno, they were joined together by the creation of a narrow winding road in the 19th century.


    Today, this collection of stunning villages includes names to conjure with, like Amalfi, Positano, Praiano, and of course Ravello. Many artists, writers and celebrities have chosen to make their homes on the Amalfi coast, and it is a very popular destination during the summer season from May to October. Only a short drive away from Naples airport, the Amalfi coast and its towns make a wonderful place to visit for a week or two.


    After a couple of days in the largest town in the Amalfi Coast, the beautiful Sorrento (reviewed here), we made our way along the coastal road until we reached Ravello, the last of the Amalfi towns.


    Where to Stay

    Belmond Hotel Caruso, Ravello

    The Belmond Hotel Caruso in Ravello is a former palace dating back to the 11th century, although most of the current building dates to the 18th century. Set in a commanding position on cliffs overlooking the Mediterranean Sea, it was purchased by the Belmond luxury hotel group in 2000, and is today part of the much-coveted Leading Hotels of the World Collection.


    Hotel Caruso underwent years of restoration before re-opening in 2005 with 50 rooms, each one unique in its features and layout. The building's ancient walls and fresco-covered ceilings have been preserved, making it a remarkably beautiful and historic venue.



    Strolling through the extensive terraced gardens overlooking the sea, or lounging beside the stunning infinity pool, rank among the most breathtaking moments we enjoyed during our trip on the Amalfi Coast.


    Our suite was one of the most spacious I have ever stayed in, and set over three levels amidst the terraced herb and flower gardens overlooking the sea.

    Roman Ruins on Site at Hotel Caruso

    The foundations of this suite were discovered beneath the terraces around the old hotel in 2000, and date back to Roman times.



    The suite had a wisteria-covered veranda with stunning sea views, and was elegantly furnished with tasteful Roman-style artwork blending in with state of the art facilities, including the Belmond signature TV which, at the touch of a button, popped up from a wooden cabinet at the foot of the bed.


    The bathroom was vast and set out over three levels, with a separate shower, three sinks and a large jacuzzi with its own TV, with all the toiletries supplied being by Bulgari and Penhaligon’s.


    The really fine details like the turn down room service each evening made our stay at Hotel Caruso very special. We were delighted to find an array of chocolates and freshly baked pastries at night as we returned to our room.


    In fact, the wonderful smell of freshly baked pastries pervaded the hotel each afternoon in preparation for this service.

    View of the Amalfi Coast from our suite's veranda at Hotel Caruso
    Breakfast was served in the dining room, either inside or on the terrace, depending on the weather. There was a wonderful buffet of fresh fruit, cereals, cheese, hams, salami, and cakes and bread baked in house.


    Campania is home to some of the best mozzarella in Italy as well as the sweetest tomatoes the land can offer, and shamelessly, I had platefuls of both during our stay there.


    There was a particular emphasis on local produce – especially cheeses and pastries. A variety of freshly cooked items were available to order, including Caruso Eggs - poached, then grilled under a slice of mozarella, and served on a fine layer of toast.


    While taking breakfast, the eyes feast on the spectacular views of Ravello and the Amalfi coast below.


    Ravello is one of the most ravishing towns of the Amalfi Coast, and in my experience, there have been few hotels that exude such a sense of place and history as the Belmond Hotel Caruso. If you are planning a visit to Ravello, I would highly recommend it.


    Where to Eat

    Lunch at the Belvedere Snack Bar (Poolside Restaurant), Hotel Caruso

    After a morning on the hotel's yacht viewing the villages from Amalfi to Positano, we returned hungry to the hotel. The poolside restaurant beckoned, and we went there for a light lunch before taking a dip in the infinity pool. 

    We started with a Caruso Spritz – the hotel’s adaptation of an Italian classic, given an ‘Amalfitana’ twist – this had one part each of sweet Limoncello and bitter Campari to three parts of Aperol, topped up with Prosecco and soda water. While deciding what to order, we had some delicious pastry canapés with tomato salsa and Parmesan cheese.


    The sous-chef Salvatore de Luca explained that their pizza dough is left to prove for 48 hours with very little yeast, and this helped to make the base light and easy to digest. Taking heed, we ordered a seafood pizza, served with fresh lobster, mussels, clams, prawns, squid, parsley and olive oil, which was indeed magnificent.


    Our 2nd choice, Pizza Caruso had tomato, mozzarella bocconcini, capers, anchovies and black olives. Much simpler in conception, this was also excellent with a light and well-textured base, and toppings of very high quality.


    We enjoyed a bottle of a local beer 'Birra', brewed in the nearby town of Tramonti with spelt and orange zest, which had a deliciously rich and aromatic flavour. In Italy, pizza is generally enjoyed with beer, not wine.


    We finished with a Café Machiatto, some squares of chocolate and lemon cake, and a glass of extremely chilled Limoncello from Ravello.


    Writing this, and looking back at all the pizze I have consumed during my many trips to Italy, I daresay that Hotel Caruso’s pizze are probably the best I have ever eaten. The dough was so light yet had such wonderful texture, and their toppings were of the best quality. The pizze at Hotel Caruso warrant a visit to this poolside restaurant in their own right.

    Dinner at The Belvedere Restaurant, Hotel Caruso

    I was fortunate to find time in Head Chef Mimmo di Raffaele's diary, to chat with him about Italian cuisine and the food he serves at his restaurant.


    Mimmo (short for Domenico) is originally from Casserta, near Naples. He trained in Switzerland and France, and then worked in Milan and Rome before settling at the Hotel Caruso in 2007.

    He has had some interesting assignments along the way, including being summoned to the Imperial Palace in Tokyo to cook for the President of Italy and the Emperor of Japan in 2010. Arising from his time in Japan, he loves to serve what his mama calls 'Susho' - sushi made from Italian ingredients.

    Despite his love of Japanese food, at the hotel he likes using the produce of his beloved Campania, in particular the lemons, anchovies and mozzarella, for which the region is famous throughout Italy. 

    Pre-dinner drinks and ‘aperitivi’ are a serious matter in Italy, but Hotel Caruso’s exceeded expectations - we had a selection of local appetizers including sfogliata (the most popular of Naple’s delicacies, this is a many-layered pastry), butterflied prawns fried in maize flour, ricotta cheese from Tramonti with marinated anchovies from Cittara and tomato confit, as well as fried anchovies with a purée of tomatoes from San Marzano.


    Moving on to the main affair i.e. dinner, we put our wine choices in the hands of sommelier Alfonso Somma, with the sole instruction being that we wanted to taste exclusively wines of the local Campania region.

    We kicked off with a Frisella di Agerola - bread with endive cream, tomato, capers, olives and raw amberjack fish. This was a refreshing dish with contrasting textures, and Chef Mimmo’s Japanese twist made for an elegant sashimi-come-panzanella creation.

    To accompany, we had a glass of Greco di Tufo DOCG 2012. From Tufo, a small village in Avelino, this was golden in colour, with fresh lemon flavours, crisp acidity and minerality.


    The next dish was 'Spring Time in the Garden'. Almost too beautiful to be eaten, this was an assortment of locally grown vegetables and fish including turnip tops, cicerchie beans, herb sprouts, carrots, an artichoke mousse and anchovies. Elegantly presented, the vegetables were at their peak of freshness and flavour, served in simple dressing of light olive oil and balsamic vinegar.


    To accompany it, we had a glass of Fiano d'Avelino DOCG 2012, from Joaquin, Della Stella. There are only two wine regions in Campania that reach the DOCG appelation - Fiano d'Avelino and Greco di Tufo. This Fiano was a very fine example, with tropical notes of pineapple and mango, with minerality and balancing acidity. The Fiano grape is considered to be the best grape of Campania, being a half-aromatic (like Sauvignon Blanc, in contrast to fully aromatic wines like Gewürztraminer).


    To follow, we had cream of artichoke with Parmesan fritters, bread croutons with shrimps and a tartare of langoustine.  The croutons were crunchy and each had a tiny raw shrimp on top. The raw langoustine had been formed into a little quenelle, perched on top of a tiny baby artichoke heart. The Parmesan fritter was a tasty little ball of flavour, savoury and delicious – a medley of flavours and textures, this was another excellent dish.


    With this, we drank a glass of Costa d'Amalfi, Fiordu DOC, from the town of Furore, just 20 minutes from Ravello. The vines from the Amalfi Coast were never affected by the phylloxera pest that destroyed much of Europe's vineyards in the 20th century, and so many vines are over 100 years old. For this wine, the grapes (Ripoli, Fenile and Ginstra) were dried on straw for one week, and then matured in new French oak. The result was a golden, rich, powerful wine of great complexity, with crisp acidity, apricot flavours and a long finish.


    Our next course was spaghettoni with Venus clams and black truffles – the ingredients in this pasta speak for themselves. Heaven.


    For main course, we had suckling pig with apple sauce, spinach and langoustine. This dish featured the famous black pig from Casserta (chef Mimmo’s home town), cooked for 18 hours at 60 degrees. The resulting suckling pork was sensationally delicious, crisp on the outside, very soft and unctuous from the melted fat inside. I loved the marriage of top quality pork and seafood as well as the stunning presentation of this dish. Top marks.


    Suckling pig can go well with white or red wine, but the sommelier selected an excellent red Montecorvo DOC Costa d'Amalfi. This is a natural wine made from Aglianico, Piedi Rosso and Tintore grapes. It was medium bodied to match the weight of the suckling pig, with ripe cherry and vanilla flavours, and high acidity counterbalancing the richness of the pork.


    In preparation for dessert, we were offered a sweet wine - an Eleusi Passito 2006 from the Villa Matilda winery in Roccomonfina (a coastal village near Casserto in Campania). The combination of volcanic soil, sea air and large temperature variation from day to night gives the perfect conditions for the development of complex flavours in the Falanghina grapes that are partially dried in the making of this dessert wine.

    The first dessert served was 'Strawberry Emphasys' - strawberry parfait, a 'Basmati' rice cream, and a wild alpine strawberry salad scented with ginger, yoghurt and basil ice cream. This was a beautifully presented dessert but it was the unusual combination of basil and strawberry that was a real revelation for me.


    Our second dessert was equally striking - a chocolate sponge case, with dark chocolate mixed with fried aubergine purée, ricotta ice cream and candied lemon. The combination of aubergine and chocolate was created in the small village of Minori on the Amalfi Coast, where slices of fried aubergine are smothered with chocolate and served rather like a sweet ‘melanzane alla Parmigiana’ with chocolate instead of cheese and tomatoes. I loved this sophisticated version created by Chef Mimmo.


    Our meal at The Belvedere Restaurant was one of the highlights of this trip to Italy. Chef Mimmo di Raffaele’s cooking reflects a passion for the produce of his native Campania and extensive knowledge of other cuisines through his travels. I highly recommend a visit before the Michelin stars start raining down and prices become inaccessible.

    What to Do

    Take a Yacht Excursion along the Amalfi Coast

    The Hotel offers a fantastic complimentary yacht excursion that runs each morning along the Amalfi Coast to Positano, with guides speaking very good English. It is breathtaking to see the villages from the perspective of the sea.


    Being in the heart of the Amalfi coast, it is quick and easy to take a complimentary shuttle bus for a stroll in nearby Amalfi. And just a little further afield, around 90 minutes' drive, lies Roman Pompeii.



    Relax by the Infinity Pool at the Hotel Caruso

    The village of Ravello has a picturesque small piazza, from which streets with boutiques and artisan shops meander, and can be visited in an hour or two. What better to do after this than to relax by the Infinity Pool at the Hotel Caruso?

    Ravello's Main Piazza


    Set at the highest point above the town of Ravello, the hotel's infinity pool is breathtaking, with stunning views over the Amalfi coast. The pool is heated, and there is the Belvedere poolside restaurant offering some of the best pizze in Italy.


    Fitness Centre at the Hotel Caruso

    After all that pizza, you might like to work out at the hotel’s fully equipped air-conditioned gym, with a range of range of cardio equipment and weight machines, all positioned in front of windows with a panoramic view of the coastline.  The hotel also has a qualified personal trainer.


    Visit Naples

    Naples is around 90 minutes from Ravello by car, and is just a few miles beyond Pompeii, so at a push the two could be combined in a single day.  We did not have long, but called in on Naples to have lunch in the home of pizza on our way to the airport.

    The magnificent Mount Vesuvius

    Brandi is a pizza restaurant near Piazza Plebicito in Napoli, which came highly recommended by a number of Italians we spoke to. It has been in existence since the 19th century, and claims to have invented the Margarita pizza, for Queen Margarita on one of her visits to the city.


    A selection of pizze was presented, and her favourite was named in honour of her - it combined the three colours of the Italian flag - red tomato, white mozzarella and green basil.  We had a Don Vincenzo (€9), with tomato, Fior di latte cheese, anchovies, capers and olives. This was ok, but did not come even close to the standard of the pizza at Hotel Caruso.


    Our other choice was a Don Raffaele, (€10), with Fior di latte cheese, Parmesan, Provolone, Gorgonzola and basil. The cheeses were delicious, but sadly the dough was a tad undercooked.  These were washed down with a half bottle of Greco di Tufo 2013, Terredora, for €8.


    Travel Essentials

    Flights are available from London to Naples with British Airways or Easyjet, and it is then a 90 minute car journey to arrive in Ravello.

    Belmond Hotel Caruso
    Piazza San Giovanni del Toro 2, 84010 Ravello (SA), Italy
    Email: reservations.car@belmond.com

    Rooms cost from €455 to €2,500 per night, although there are discounts of up to 33% if staying 3 or more nights. Like most hotels, shops and restaurants in Ravello, the hotel closes from November to March each year.

    Brandi Pizzeria
    Salita Sant’Anna di Palazzo, 1-2, 80132 Naples, Italy
    +39 081 416928


    The London Foodie Goes to France - Biarritz and the French Basque Region

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    One of the most beautiful seaside towns in France if not in Europe, Biarritz has been an upmarket holiday destination for nearly 200 years, but more so since 1854, when Napoleon III had a summer palace built for his wife Empress Eugenie (now the Hôtel du Palais).


    Thereafter, a stream of European royalty, politicians and the rich and famous flocked to Biarritz, giving the town a glamorous reputation that only a few other places in the world have enjoyed.


    Nowadays, Biarritz is an elegant town, offering a beautiful seafront and wide promenade, along with some great shops, bars and restaurants. And today, you do not need a royal entourage to get there, with daily direct flights from Stansted with budget airline Ryanair.


    Biarritz also has the closest international airport to the food Mecca of San Sebastián in Spain, around 40 minutes away by car, where we headed for the second part of this trip (to be featured soon).


    Where to Stay

    Hôtel du Palais (a Belmond Associate Hotel)

    Built as a summer residence by Napoleon III for his Spanish wife Eugenie in 1854, the palace was sold and re-opened as Hôtel du Palais in 1893. The first guests were the royal families of many countries in Europe like the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII) as well as some of the most prominent people of their times including Sarah Bernhardt and Omar Sharif.


    One of the most historic spots in town, Edward VII took an annual holiday at the hotel for a number of years, as did his son Edward VIII with Wallis Simpson, before and after his abdication.


    Today, Hôtel du Palais is a Belmond associate hotel as well as a member of the coveted Leading Hotels of the World Collection, which include the most iconic hotels around the world. The hotel overlooks the Atlantic Ocean, at the end of the Grande Plage, Biarritz' main beach, and is an opulent building, visible from all over town. It has 120 rooms and 30 junior, royal and imperial suites, decorated in the style of the Belle Époque, a most impressive foyer, a bar and three restaurants.


    Close to the lobby, the glamorous Imperial Bar is Biarritz’ favoured place for cocktails for locals and guests alike. We enjoyed some lovely drinks and aperitifs there one afternoon, and it is a great place for people watching and to soak up the wonderful atmosphere of the hotel.


    The main restaurant, La Rotonde, had huge plate glass windows overlooking the ocean, offering the most beautiful views, and was where breakfast, lunch and dinner were taken.

    The magnificent La Rotonde Restaurant at Breakfast

    For a fine-dining experience, there was the one Michelin-starred Villa Eugenie restaurant. Next to the open air, heated salt-water pool was the informal Hippocampe restaurant, open only during the summer for informal buffet lunches.

    Hippocampe Restaurant at Hotel du Palais

    Great views of the sea, swimming pool and promenade from our suite at Hotel du Palais
    We stayed in one of the hotel's sea-front Royal suites, the magnificent Sarah Bernhardt. Part of the original palace, the sumptuous and spacious living room had commanding views over the Grande Plage and its promenade, as well as the town centre.


    With a classic French design, as well as opulent Louis XV furniture, crystal chandeliers, velvet drapes, antique mirrors and original artwork, the suite was one of the most elegant and luxurious I have stayed at.


    The bedroom had a terrifically comfortable king-sized bed with silk drapes, a huge plasma screen TV, as well as original oil paintings and led to a magnificent marble covered, spacious bathroom, with separate bath and shower.


    The hotel added a well-equipped five-floor spa in 2006, with a large indoor swimming pool, jacuzzi, sauna and gym.


    There was also a Guerlain beauty parlour for a range of spa treatments and massages as well as a hair-salon.


    The extensive grounds of the hotel included a small golf course, a children’s playground area, a gorgeous outdoor heated swimming pool and a private entrance to the promenade.


    Breakfast at Hôtel du Palais, served at la Rotonde Restaurant, was probably one of the best meals of the day – there were various tables containing an assortment of local items including hams, cheeses, freshly cut fruit and juices.


    Of note was an entire table dedicated to local cakes, tarts and pastries including my favourite gateau Basque au cerise which I could not get enough of.


    The hot buffet was also excellent, even the scrambled eggs were consistently creamy which is quite an achievement when catering on this scale, I enjoyed a “Full Biarritz” both the mornings I was at the hotel.


    The Full Biarritz
    Possibly one of the most iconic hotels I have stayed in, Hôtel du Palais is the top hotel in Biarritz, and I cannot think of a better place to stay to soak up some of the history and glamour of this wonderful French seaside town.


    Sunset at Hotel du Palais
    Where to Eat

    La Villa Eugenie, Hôtel du Palais

    The Hotel's fine-dining, one Michelin-starred restaurant is La Villa Eugenie, run by Head Chef Jean-Marie Gauthier, who has been at the hotel since 1991. On the evening of our visit, there was a private dinner occurring at La Villa Eugenie, and so we ordered the restaurant's tasting menu (Menu de l'Imperatrice, €135 per person) served in the hotel's sea-front restaurant La Rotonde.

    One-Michelin starred Eugenie Restaurant at Hotel du Palais


    After a glass of Larmandier-Bernier Champagne (€20 per glass), and a couple of amuse bouche including some ethereally light allumettes of Parmesan, and creamy mussel and pumpkin veloute, we were served our first course – foie gras.

    The duck foie gras from Landes was poached in Sangria, and served with fresh fig, desiccated fig and fig chutney. Beautifully presented with little squares of Sangria jelly and cracked black pepper, the foie gras was light and creamy and served with toasted brioche.


    With it, we had a glass of Pinot Blanc from Alsace, Domain Barmes Buecher 2012 Rosenberg (€11 per glass) - a lovely off-dry wine with apricot flavours, good minerality and crisp acidity.


    The fish course was Banka trout with olive oil, a Biscay tomato, onion and piquillo pepper sauce, and an emulsion of sweet green chilli piperade from Anglet, candied vegetables, and ham from local producer Michel Goicoechea. The trout was expertly cooked - still pink in the middle, and tasted delicious with the crispy ham and fried quail egg that accompanied it.


    The wine for this course was an Orthogeneiss, from Domaine de l'Ecu, from Muscadet de Sevre en Maine, an organic wine (€11 per glass), made from Melon de Bourgogne grapes. With crisp, clean minerality, I found this was quite austere in contrast to the sweetness of the trout and candied vegetables.


    The main course was veal sweetbreads, with sautéed butter, coriander, Paris mushrooms and nuts. The sweetbreads were splendid, creamy and delicately beefy in flavour, with delicious crystals of salt to tingle the tongue, and just a hint of ginger.


    With the veal, we had a 2010 Marsannay, Pinot Noir, from Burgundy (€14 per glass). From brother and sister winemakers Meo-Camuzet, this was light in weight and tannin, but with plenty of red berry fruit flavours.


    The cheese course came on a barrel-shaped trolley, mostly local but all from France, with cherry jelly. The selection of blue, soft and hard cheeses from cow, goat and sheep were excellent, and served at the peak of their condition.


    For dessert, we had an apple vacherin, with apple tatin ice cream and honey granita. Creatively presented with sticks of white nougat, ropes of caramel and gold leaf, this was a clever way to present apple in a variety of textures. I enjoyed this with a glass of Jurancon, Camin Larredya from Jean Marc Grucette 2011, made with Petit Manseng and Gros Manseng grapes.



    Our meal at La Villa Eugenie was excellent, and very well executed. This is a great choice in Biarritz, whether you are a hotel resident or not, and I highly recommend it.  

    L'Impertinent

    A 10 minute walk from the Hôtel du Palais, L'Impertinent is a small restaurant run by Sarah and Fabian Feldmann, and is the only other one-Michelin starred restaurant in town. We opted for the 7 course tasting menu, for €89 per person.

    This kicked off with a stunning selection of amuse bouche including chickpea croquettes, duck ham with fig and celery, potato foam, smoked anchovy, cucumber and kimchi.


    Next came steamed squid with green, yellow and red tomatoes, girolles and trompette mushrooms served with a highly intense tomato consommé.


    To follow, we had smoked eel with fresh julienned apple, quince puree, beetroot leaves and brown millet (a cereal grain). I love eel, and it was a great treat to have it well prepared, outside the context of Japanese cooking. The acidity of the apple against the fish was a great combination.


    We then had turbot from the nearby fishing port of Ciboure, roasted with coco bean and a quenelle of green peppers, cinnamon and basil with coconut milk, which was sublime.


    After a palate cleanser of vodka sour, with mint granita, lemon sorbet and vodka meringue, we were on to the main course - squab pigeon of Madame Dibon, roasted on coals with cabbage, kale, beetroot and juniper. It is always such a lovely surprise to have well cooked pigeon, and this was a fine example - beautifully presented, flavoursome and with an excellent jus.


    The menu included two desserts – the first was a kiwai (a miniature kiwi), with verbena granita, white chocolate ice cream, butter milk sorbet, avocado cream, and the aromatic herb agastache. This was followed by a chocolate and malt ice cream with Islay Whisky, sweet chestnut sorbet, whisky granita, moscovado crumble, ganache and honey cream.


    Finally we had a selection of petit fours, including fruit pie with passion fruit and mango, chocolate truffle and saffron, and a Troprezienne brioche with white chocolate. The brioche is a cream-filled number invented in St Tropez, and was superb.


    The food at L'Impertinent, Biarritz was excellent and at €89 for the seven course tasting menu, it was also good value. I highly recommend it.

    Chez Albert

    Chez Albert is a quayside fish restaurant recommended by Helene Darroze as one of her favourite spots in Biarritz. We enjoyed a lovely lunch there on our last day just before leaving for San Sebastian.


    We started with a tartare de poisson (€16) with sliced tomatoes, Espelette pepper and green salad.  The raw fish tasted fresh but was sadly lacking in seasoning.


    A better choice was Dr G’s langoustines with garlic mayonnaise (€22), which were also very fresh and well cooked.


    For main, I went for pan-fried hake cooked Spanish style (€22), with crispy Bayonne ham and romesco sauce and served with a creamy mashed potato, which was also excellent.


    We also had the sole meurniere (€28), a classic dish – simple in conception but one of the trickiest to deliver – Chez Albert’s was faultless.


    All in all, this was a great lunch in a great location, although prices were on the steep side considering the simplicity of the menu choices.

    What to Do

    There is plenty to do in and around the Hotel du Palais, as well as in the town of Biarritz. Most people come for the beach, and as well as swimming and sunbathing, there are numerous surf schools able to teach and equip those wanting to surf.


    Unlike many seaside spots, Biarritz is a fully functioning town that continues to thrive even outside high season, and there are many bars, cafes and shops that are worth exploring. It is also a wonderful place from which to explore the Basque country, as well as being the closest international airport to San Sebastian in nearby Spain.

    Visit Biarritz’ Covered Food Market - Les Halles (Les Halles 64200 Biarritz)

    Near the old town, the food market is a great place to wander around, with superb quality fish and seafood, meat, cheeses, charcuterie and bread.  There is a great variety of fruit and vegetables, including fresh truffles and French patisserie.

    Boozy Canneles

    Stuffed Mozzarella
    It is an ideal place to buy wonderful produce for a picnic, at very affordable prices, and is a must for any foodie wanting to learn more about the Basque country’s local produce.


    Hire a car and visit the towns of the Basque Country

    There is plenty to occupy several days in Biarritz, but if you would like to explore the towns nearby, hiring a car probably makes sense.  There are some great foodie things to do in the surrounding French Basque region.

    Bayonne

    Around 15 minutes drive by car, Bayonne is a beautiful medieval town with a gorgeous Cathedral, surrounded by meandering shopping streets, restaurants and cafes. The home town of the famous Bayonne ham, there are many places to try this fine local delicacy.


    It is worth considering a visit to Pierre Ibaialde, a ham producer who offers free tours and tastings as well as the opportunity to buy direct from a producer. His shop is at 41 Rue des Cordeliers, 64100 Bayonne. www.pierre-ibaialde.com.


    Espelette

    Espelette chilli peppers are a key part of Basque cuisine, and we went to pay homage to its birthplace. This little town is picture postcard in appearance, and is also the main market town for the surrounding fields that grow the famous peppers.


    Originally grown from a Mexican clone in the 17th century, the peppers have evolved to be somewhat milder than their Mexican cousins, and are prized for their delicate, fruity flavour in French cooking. There are many shops there that sell Espelette chilli peppers, either in powdered or whole dried form, and it is a great place to stock up for a third of the price you would pay in the UK.

    Espelette chillies drying outside locals' homes

    Sare

    The small town of Sare is on the road between Espelette and St Jean de Luz and is a hiker’s paradise with more than 150km of marked hiking routes and caves, most of which were used by smugglers as the town is a mere couple of kilometres from the Spanish border.


    My reason for visiting Sare was however a much less vigorous one – I was told that the best Gateau Basque were to be found there. And rightly so, the whole town smelled of this heavenly tart the moment we stepped out of our car!


    Hotel Arraya at the town’s main square has an outdoor stall selling the gateau in different sizes filled with either pastry cream (au crème) or cherry jam (au cerise). These were exceptionally good – the pastry was dense and rich made from flour, ground almonds and plenty of butter and sugar.


    This tart is so special that it has a museum dedicated to it in Sare – Le Musée du Gâteau Basque(www.legateaubasque.com). Highly recommended.


    St Jean de Luz

    A few miles away from Biarritz, heading south towards the border with Spain is the pretty fishing village of St Jean de Luz, with a magnificent sea front and sandy beaches.


    Still a working port with fishing nets strewn across the harbour, this is also a lively town with lots of bars and restaurants serving the freshest and most local of fish.


    Travel Essentials

    There are direct flights with Ryanair from Stansted to Biarritz, and the airport is situated only a couple of miles outside the town centre.

    Hotel du Palais (a Belmond Associate Hotel)
    642000
    Biarritz
    France

    Room rates vary from €475 per night for a classic Biarritz view, to €650 for an ocean view double room. Suites are at a range of prices according their size and location, from €860 for a Biarritz view to €1,700 for an Imperial Suite, and the Royal Suites are priced on application.


    L'Impertinent
    5 Rue d'Alsace
    64200 Biarritz
    France

    Chez Albert
    Port des Pecheurs
    64200 Biarritz
    France

    The London Foodie Goes to Peru - The Sacred Valley Aboard the Hiram Bingham Train

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    For the Incas, the Urubamba was known as the Rio Sagrado or Sacred River, and reflecting this belief, many temples, ancient dwellings and agricultural sites were built in the surrounding valley.


    The Sacred Valley is only 30 miles away from the Inca capital, Cuzco (reviewed here), and links that city with Machu Picchu, along the banks of the mighty Urubamba River.


    As most archeological remains of interest beyond those in Cuzco and Machu Picchu lie in the Sacred Valley, for this part of our trip, we spent a couple of nights there to visit these sites. This is also where we planned to board the magnificent Belmond Hiram Bingham Train (former Orient Express) to Machu Picchu, more of which later.


    Where to Stay

    Belmond Hotel Rio Sagrado

    The Belmond Hotel Rio Sagrado is situated in the heart of the Sacred Valley, on the banks of the Urubamba River, in a wonderfully peaceful spot that offers a complete contrast to the hustle and bustle of Cuzco.


    Part of the Belmond Collection, Hotel Rio Sagrado is set among green fields and snow-capped mountains. It has extensive, well tended gardens alongside the river, with baby alpacas and llamas roaming freely around the site.


    There is also an outdoor heated swimming pool with stunning views of the valley, and it is a great place to cool off after a day’s trekking, horse riding or sightseeing.


    Our Garden Junior Suite was elegantly designed with neutral cream and white tones contrasting with vibrant traditional Peruvian colours and décor in the soft furnishings. It had a huge, floor to ceiling glass window and door accessing a private terrace, which overlooked the hotel’s fields and the Urubamba River.


    To maintain a sense of tranquil relaxation befitting its location, the hotel has a policy of no TV in its rooms. But the suite was by no means Spartan; it featured heated wooden floors in the bathroom, an iPod docking station, and a well-stocked minibar.


    Breakfast was taken in the El Jardin restaurant, and included a generous array of breads, juices, yoghurts and made-to-order eggs and pancakes, as well as excellent coffee.


    The flower-beds outside the restaurant's windows attracted a lot of humming birds, and it was a great treat to be able to observe them so closely over a morning coffee.


    The Belmond Rio Sagrado Hotel is an idyllic spot in which to recharge the batteries before or after a trip to Cuzco or Machu Picchu and I highly recommend it to any travellers in the region.


    Where to Eat

    Dinner at El Huerto Restaurant, Belmond Hotel Rio Sagrado

    Dinner is served in the warm glow of candlelight at this restaurant in the gardens of the hotel or outdoors, despite the chill of high altitude, thanks to the large wood fire that is lit each evening.

    The menu featured a number or traditional Peruvian dishes with a contemporary interpretation including Aji de Galina and Cui (roasted guinea pig) both ordered. Starters were all priced at £10 while mains ranged from £15 to £20.

    We started with Panquitas – these are traditional Peruvian pancakes made from creamy corn and Parea cheese. The Panquitas were delicious, seared and served with a fragrant Huancaina sauce (made from fresh white cheese, aji amarillo, evaporated milk and salt, this tastes better than it sounds!).


    Our second starter was a delicious Aji de Galina, one of my favourite Peruvian dishes – this is a creamy yellow chilli (aji amarillo) chicken stew made among other things with Parmesan cheese, eggs, potatoes and olives.


    For main course, we had a delectable alpaca tenderloin (£15) served with quinoto (a risotto made from quinoa and cream), this was flavoursome and perfectly cooked - pink and tender. To accompany our meal, we shared a bottle of Tahuam 2011 Malbec, from Mendoza Argentina (£48), with stalky berry fruit flavours and plenty of tannin, it partnered particularly well with the alpaca tenderloin.






    We finished our meal with a refreshing and aromatic dessert made from baked strawberries with rosemary, thyme, white wine and eucalyptus, served with vanilla ice cream (£7).


    Lunch at Sol y Luna Hotel, Sacred Valley

    Just a half a mile's walk or a short taxi ride away from the Hotel Rio Sagrado is the Sol y Luna Hotel. French owned since 1996, and a Relais & Chateaux property, this hotel started as a private house, and has grown over the last twenty years into the luxury hotel it is today.


    The hotel has two restaurants headed by Peruvian Chef Pedro Miguel Schiaffino. There is a fine dining option at the Killa Wasi Restaurant, or a more casual choice at the hotel’s open air restaurant and wood oven cooking, and it was here that we headed to.


    This restaurant is also a great place to enjoy the display of dressage by four horses and their poncho-wearing riders, with musical accompaniment, which the hotel offers during lunch hours.


    The set lunch is priced at US$60 (around £40) per person, and started with freshly baked bread and local empanadas which were delicious, as well as a tomato and avocado salad.


    To follow, we had a platter of antecuchos de corazon (skewers of marinated beef heart) tamales and fresh corn. We had a variety of aji sauces, of which I particularly enjoyed Chalacita, made from aromatic rocoto chillies, salt and pepper, onion and coriander.


    Next came the selection of meats and fish, including suckling pig and chicken, along with rainbow trout, all grilled over hot coals and served with a variety of local native potatoes baked in the wood oven.


    The lunch finished with a platter of fruit, mousse of physalis and whole physalis coated in chocolate, and freshly baked biscuits.


    With coffee, we had some hot picarones – ring-shaped Peruvian doughnuts made of pumpkin, deep-fried and served with a generous coating of sugar molasses. Picarones were among the best sweet treats I found in Peru.


    If you are there at the weekend, or at any time if you are in a group of at least 10, it is possible to enjoy the fabled Pachamanca - a traditional Peruvian feast in which an oven-like cavity is dug in the ground and filled with an array of beef, chicken, alpaca, many types of potato, cheese, sweet potato and corn.  These are then buried to cook under scalding hot stones. Sadly this is to be tried on our next trip to Peru.

    Pachamanca oven built underground

    What to Do

    Visiting the many sites in the Sacred Valley

    To visit most of the archeological sites and museums in and around Cuzco, a Boleto Turistico del Cuzco (Cuzco Tourist Voucher) is useful. At a cost of around £30 per person, it is valid for 10 days and allows entry to 16 sites in Cuzco and the Sacred Valley. A half ticket is also available for 1 day only, which gives entry to up to 6 sites at a cost of £17. These are available from the Tourism Office near the Plaza de Armas.


    We covered some of the sites in Cuzco Part 1 (see review here). During our time in the Sacred Valley, we made good use of our Tourist Voucher to explore the many fascinating sites in the region. Although it is possible to use the luxury vehicles and guides from the hotel, it is actually very easy and extremely cheap to flag down the collectivo vehicles which ply up and down the road behind the hotel, linking the main sites of the valley.


    Pisaq

    The magnificent ruins at Pisaq are well worth a visit. Its massive agricultural terraces are still in use today, and there are Inca religious buildings, and a fortress much of which was destroyed by Pissaro's men during the Spanish conquest.


    In the new town of Pisaq, the alongside and behind the “Mercado de Abastos de Pisaq” is a market with hundreds of stalls selling local artifacts and food.


    There is also a bakery selling wood-oven baked breads, cakes and guinea pigs.


    Ollantaytambo

    The massive fortress of Ollantaytambo was built in the mid-15th century, by the Inca emperor Pachacuti, who undertook extensive works of terracing and irrigation in the Urubamba Valley.


    It fell to the Spanish in 1540, and today, it is still a beautiful site to visit for its terraced fortifications and commanding views of the surrounding valleys.


    Tambomachay

    Also in the Sacred Valley is the important religious centre of Tambomachay, in honour of the water goddess.


    The remains are a fine example of Inca architecture made up of platforms, niches and fountains which still function today, as water flows down through them from a spring higher up in the hills.


    Moray

    An insight into Inca agricultural methods is to be found at the impressive and mysterious circular terraces at Moray, which has a sophisticated irrigation system.


    Because of the design and orientation of the terraces, there is a temperature difference of 15 °C between the top and the bottom. Some believe therefore that the terraces were used by the Incas to study the effect of different climatic conditions on crops.


    For foodies, it's worth noting that very close to Moray is the otherwise unremarkable town of Maras, from where derive the lovely soft crystals of Maras salt beloved of the top chefs in Lima.


    Take an Excursion from the Belmond Hotel Rio Sagrado

    The hotel offers a wide range of activities for those who want to do things beyond acclimatizing and soaking up the atmosphere in this beautiful and peaceful part of Peru.  These include horse riding along the river or to the Maras salt mines, or to the archaeological site at Pumawanka. White water rafting is also offered, and off-road driving with a quad-bike. There are guided walks in the valley, cycling tours to the Inca site of Moray, as well as guided visits to the many Inca sites of the valley.

    Leaving the Sacred Valley Aboard the Belmond Hiram Bingham Train (formerly Orient Express)

    For our journey to Machu Picchu from the Sacred Valley, we took the spectacular Belmond Hiram Bingham Train. Deciding that it was unlikely I would be returning to Machu Picchu, I thought that there would be no other way to make this trip truly unforgettable than to arrive by this train.


    Taking in the sights aboard the Belmond Hiram Bingham Train
    The train is named after the American academic and explorer who first brought Machu Picchu to global attention in 1911 using the guidance of indigenous farmers who took him there.


    Originally a collection of 1920s wooden train carriages from South Africa, the Belmond Hiram Bingham train was transported to Peru and restored to its former glory, with polished wood and brass, and large comfortable armchairs.  Today, the train has two dining cars, an observation/bar car and a kitchen car, and can carry up to 84 passengers.


    Passengers are seated in the dining cars, at tables set with gleaming crystal and polished cutlery. The maître d' then offers a gastronomic dinner, with cocktails and wines included in the ticket price of £250.


    We were served an impressive four-course dinner that included a wonderful leek and potato soup made from dried and rehydrated morada potatoes cultivated at an altitude of 3000 metres, as well as a magnificent tenderloin of alpaca with all the trimmings.


    Guests are invited to the bar car, to enjoy cocktails and live music. This was a lot of fun, with many passengers getting up to dance and play percussion.


    The only other experience I have had which is anything like this was the Orient Express Train in London (reviewed here), and it really is an unforgettable journey that will add the finishing touch to any trip to Machu Picchu.

    Putting your dancing shoes on aboard the Belmond Hiram Bingham Train

    Travel Essentials

    Belmond Hotel Rio Sagrado
    Carretera Urubamba-Ollantaytambo
    Valle Sagrado
    Cusco
    Peru

    Our Garden Junior Suite is currently being advertised at a rate of £190 per night.

    Hotel Sol y Luna
    Fundo Huincho lote A-5
    Urubamba
    Cusco
    Peru

    Tickets for the Belmond Hiram Bingham trains are available from purchase online direct from Peru Rail at: www.perurail.com. If yo would like to learn more about the Belmond Hiram Bingham Train, visit their website at http://www.belmond.com/hiram-bingham-train/

    Prices vary somewhat depending on the time and day of travel, and the Hiram Bingham train costs in the region of £250 per person including dinner and alcoholic drinks. 


    India Pale Ale - The Belgian Connection?

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    Words & Photography by Greg Klerkx and Luiz Hara

    Beer is seemingly everywhere on London’s fine dining scene these days. It’s no longer odd for a Michelin-starred sommelier to recommend a fruit-infused brew instead of, say, a Muscat to finish, or even to hear the more heretical suggestion of a witbier to start. Craft brewpubs abound, growlers are the new must-have foodie toy, and everyone and their beer-making mother is trying to hop (no pun intended) onto the beery bandwagon.

    Uber-hip Belgian brand Vedett has been a fixture on the discerning beer drinker’s scene for longer than most, though many Londoners may only have encountered Vedett’s squat, cheerily-coloured bottles with their moules et frites at the local Belgo. Until now, Vedett, a self-described ‘cult’ brand in the larger Duvel group, has made only two beers and made them very nicely indeed: a hop-tastic, aromatic and eminently drinkable Extra Blond and a lightly fizzy, almost candied Extra White. So far, so Belgian.

    This month, the laid-back label is taking a much bigger leap into the fray with the launch of Vedett Extra Ordinary IPA. IPA beers aren’t unknown in Belgium, though they are a fairly recent development and tend to be bolder, darker and punchier in flavour and alcohol content – Vedett’s is a hefty 5.5% – than English IPAs. They most closely resemble American IPAs and often use American hop varieties, as does Vedett’s.


    Vedett offered a chance to sample its new IPA and other beers at Cinnamon Kitchen, the suit-and-tie branch of Vivek Singh’s very successful Indian restaurant empire. The intent was to show off great beer and great food, but also to demonstrate the versatility of beer as a stand-alone food beverage – suitable not just as a novelty against one course, but fully capable of carrying a sophisticated four-course menu.

    The Vedett Extra Ordinary IPA featured twice during our meal, initially with a some rather delicious canapés that showed Cinnamon Kitchen to very good advantage. Particularly delicious was baked tilapia with Bengali mustard and sweet pepper coulis, which managed the difficult feat of packing a huge flavour punch whilst not steamrolling the delicate tilapia. Potato and green pea cakes with tomato chutney were also lovely: robust and zingy, moist and crispy in the right proportion.

    As for the IPA, it was absolutely delicious: not as overwhelmingly hoppy as some IPAs, yet still firm and treacly, dark gold in colour and eminently drinkable. Though the Vedett representatives on hand were somewhat modest about their entry into the crowded IPA field, they should feel very confident. This one deserves to be a hit.

    The evening’s other beer-food pairings also worked a treat. Vedett’s workhorse Extra White provided a gently fruity, slightly lemony complement to Tandoori salmon with dill & mustard, served with a wasabi-infused green pea relish.



    The smoother, somewhat more elegant Vedett Extra Blond held up nicely against a Chargrilled chicken with yoghurt & coriander, and also went well with a rich, kicky black lentil daal served with naan bread between courses.


    Cinnamon Kitchen’s shining moment of the evening came with its main course, an absolutely gorgeous Chargrilled lamb fillet with mint & onion sauce that was succulent and perfectly spiced, the lamb falling apart on the fork (and very quickly disappearing from the plate.) If the intention of the lamb course was again to show the Extra Ordinary IPA to good effect, it worked: the IPA was just as compelling here as it was at the beginning of the evening.



    We finished with Shrikhand cheesecake, ginger & fennel seed crumble and glasses of iced Liefmans Fruitesse, a refreshing cherry-and-berry-infused beer that is a favourite at The LondonFoodie Supper Club. By that point in the evening, the point had been proved: the beer revolution in fine dining is here to stay, and justly so.


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