Quantcast
Channel: The London Foodie
Viewing all 444 articles
Browse latest View live

The Fabulous 10-Course Chinese New Year Menu at HKK - A Culinary Journey Through China

$
0
0
Words & Photography by Matthew Brown and Luiz Hara

Name:HKK

Where: 88 Worship Street, London EC2A 2BE, http://hkklondon.com/

Cost: HKK is a banqueting restaurant, and in the evening diners choose between different tasting menus. Until the end of February, there will be two Chinese New Year menus, of 8- and 10- courses, priced at £68 and £98. Full vegetarian alternatives are offered for both, and a wine flight is available for an additional £58.

At lunchtime diners are able to order additional courses from the à la carte menu (most starters are around £15, and main courses, £30). There’s also a 4-course lunch menu for £29, or £48 with an additional course of the restaurant’s signature black truffle duck.

About:HKK is the newest London restaurant from the Hakkasan Group; it opened in December 2012 and received a Michelin star the following year. It is located in the City, and despite having a more corporate atmosphere than the other Hakkasan restaurants, it’s also more theatrical.


Having worked for 11 years at the Hakkasan restaurants, the group's Executive Head Chef Tong Chee Hwee wanted HKK to tell the story of Chinese cooking. The immaculately clean open kitchen and carving table in the centre of the room allow diners to marvel at the preparation of the food; and with choice in the evening restricted to the exquisitely presented tasting menus, no-one escapes this culinary theatre.


Until the 28th February 2015, HKK is celebrating Chinese New Year (the year of the Sheep) with a culinary journey through China. The menu pays homage to the eight culinary traditions of China with courses focusing on the dishes of each of the provinces, from the mountainous Anhui Province to the coastal regions of Jiangsu and the cosmopolitan city of Beijing in Shandong, followed by two unique desserts.


What We Ate: The meal began with two small cubes of marinated pork and Osmanthus wine jelly. The smoky flavour of the meat, offset by the tartness of the jelly, gave a glimpse of the combination of richness and delicacy that would characterise this journey through the cuisines of China’s eight most important culinary regions.


Things accelerated dramatically with the second course: cherry-wood roasted Peking duck, served 3 ways. Beautifully arranged, the trilogy was comprised of very crispy skin, sliced breast and a rolled pancake, every piece of which melted on the tongue, helped by a simple accompaniment of brown sugar and hoi sin sauce. This was an outstanding dish and possibly our favourite of the entire menu. HKK offers a 5-course duck lunch menu for £48 which includes their signature dish "HKK black truffle slow cooked duck" I am now dying to try!

Our crispy duck course being plated up!

This was followed by another trilogy - of dim sum made with crab, prawn & goji berry, and truffle chicken. In order not to drown their flavour, we were given brushes to paint the dumplings with soy sauce, rather than dip them. Sadly, this lightness of touch did not extend to the dumpling cases, which we felt were a tad too thick for their fillings. The fillings themselves were excellent though - the crab was rich and creamy, and the goji berry was the base for an excellent sauce.


Next was the soup course - named Monk Jumps Over the Wall, after a Buddhist monk who was said to have been so enticed by the smell that he jumped over a wall just to try it. This dish offered a beguiling combination of textures - from the soft sponge of sea cucumber to fleshy mushroom, suspended in a broth delicately balanced between warming umami and sharp acidity.


This was followed by pan-grilled Chilean seabass in a Sha Cha sauce. Though grilled, the seabass was moist and soft, and served wrapped around spring onions and chilli, giving an enjoyable crunch at the centre.


Served in a stack, the Jasmine tea smoked poussin in a truffle sauce was served with the soft breast meat mixed with crispy skin - ensuring that every mouthful was as smoky and aromatic as the last.


At this point the meal seemed to have reached its climax, however it took a dramatic swerve into the very different cuisines of Zhejiang and Szechuan. A course of braised King Soy Wagyu beef with merlot was at once both strange and familiar. Thanks to the soy marinade and the marbled fat of the beef, the sauce was sweeter and more luxurious than we anticipated.


The following course, Szechuan char-grilled scampi, was totally different. Sweetness was replaced with the dry-heat of Szechuan pepper, and a sauce of great lightness. The dish’s admirable achievement was to maintain just the right level of spice from the Szechuan pepper, without interfering with the meaty flavours of the thick New Zealand scampi.


The desserts were similarly light and refreshing. A trio of dark chocolate dumplings was served in a ginger and yuzu infusion that cut through the rich cocoa with a sweet sharpness.


The three beautiful pink dumplings had all of the freshness of their colour, and none of the heaviness typical of a chocolate pudding.


Likewise, a sheep’s milk mousse served with pandan curd sorbet was bracingly tart and gorgeously presented.


What We Drank: We began with two very different drinks from the creative and distinctly Chinese cocktail list. 

The French Quarter - served hot or cold - combined the floral qualities of Hennessey Fine De Cognac with Cynar (an artichoke spirit), cinnamon and cloves to create a warming aromatic drink, whilst the Bitter Fortune was a delightfully zingy aperitif made from pink grapefruit, No.10 Tanqueray gin, Aperol and rhubarb liqueur among other ingredients.


Facing the challenge of complementing a very varied menu, the drinks pairing selection was not always consistent. It began with a Yang Walker - a small cocktail made using the astringent Chinese spirit baiju and Johnnie Walker Black Label. The resulting taste was original, both woody and sherberty, but despite the mixologist’s best efforts, the baiju’s near-toxic aroma will, I think, still be too strong for many. 

Better was the first wine, a 2013 Pinot Noir from Stepp, in Pfalz. Unusually deep in colour and rich in berries but still light and dry, it went well with the pork and even better with the duck, standing up to their aromatic flavours.


The dim sum course was paired with a small serving of the Bitter Fortune, which, though refreshing, felt like a step backwards - who, once the wine flight begins, wants to get off? 

We were glad for the next glass, a 2011 Chardonnay from Ramey in California. Golden in colour, this wine was warm with cinnamon and spice, matching the sweet Sha Cha sauce, but still dry enough to cut through it and complement the fish. The Jasmine-smoked poussin was served with sake - the exceptionally dry and traditional Dewazakura ‘Izumi Judan’ Ginjo. This was an inspired deviation from the grape, adding new aromas to one of the meal’s most powerful dishes.


The next wine - a 2010 Chateau Simone - had to do the job of standing up to the dark soy Wagyu and hot Szechuan scampi. The sandalwood and mushroom notes of this Old World blend gave depth, but a balanced acidity gave it the sharpness to match the seafood.


The final wine, a Vajra Moscato d’Asti, was  vibrantly sparkling and sweet, with notes of peach and apricot. 

Likes: This 10-course tasting menu really does provide a journey - through very different regional cuisines, with some exceptional dishes such as Peking Duck and Szechuan scampi. Diners aren’t only educated, they are also given control over many of the dishes - able to add sweetness and acidity to taste. 

Dislikes: Although I loved the wine flight, the mixture of wine with cocktails and hard spirits feels less of a good idea the morning after.  

Verdict: HKK’s Chinese New Year Tasting Menu offers a great opportunity to enjoy some of the city’s best and most indulgent Chinese cooking, whilst learning more about the country’s cuisine. With January now over, this is a chance to celebrate New Year all over again, and in fantastic style. 


Celebrating the Year of the Sheep at Yauatcha!

$
0
0
Words & Photography by Greg Klerkx and Luiz Hara

Name:Yauatcha

Where: 15-17 Broadwick Street, London W1F 0DL, http://www.yauatcha.com/

Cost: The Chinese New Year menu at Yauatcha features through 28 February, costing £70.50 per person (including Yang Walker cocktail).

About: The Year of the Sheep is nearly upon us, and there’ll be no shortage of Chinese restaurants in London offering special fare to ring in the New Year. Few are likely to match Soho’s venerable Yauatcha for quality, cleverness and value.

Yauatcha has long been a go-to place for top quality Chinese food, particularly for dim sum and its award-winning handmade sweets. It is also a favourite haunt of mine reviewed here last yearCreated by Alan Yau, the man who also launched the high-flying Hakkasan (reviewed here) with HKK being the latest addition to the group (reviewed here), Yauatcha is one of a handful of Chinese restaurants in London to have earned a Michelin star, which it has held for nearly a decade. Under head chef Tong Chee Hwee, the restaurant continues to be one of Soho’s most popular: we dined on a cold, bleak Tuesday evening and the restaurant was packed from start to finish.


The Chinese New Year Menu at Yauatcha (through 28th February 2015) offers a comfortable tour through the dishes that have made the restaurant’s reputation, though in truth it’s less a menu – each dish is priced a la carte – than a carefully curated package: some dim sum, some wok dishes, and the inevitably sweet (and delicious) finish. If you’ve never been to Yauatcha, the menu is an excellent way to ensure that you’ll want to come again.


What We Ate: Our meal used the Chinese New Year Menu as a starting point, with the joy of several additional dishes showing up at unpredictable intervals along the way. The first dish wasn’t on the Chinese New Year Menu: Baked venison puff (£5), a char siu dish that substituted barbecued venison for the more usual minced pork filling, to good effect; the puff pastry was flaky and flavourful, the sesame notes delicate but clear.


Szechuan dumplings (£4.95) were also not on the New Year menu, though they should be: the dumplings were melt-in-your-mouth and moreish, the pork filling tender and moist, the Szechuan sauce packed with zing. They also rather overshadowed the Goldfish dumplings (£6.80) that followed, which were on the menu. They were cute to look at, but far more plain on the palate.


Prawn and bean curd cheung fun (£8.00) was another off-menu treat. Much as a Thai restaurant’s reputation lives or dies by its Pad Thai, one can gauge the quality of a Chinese restaurant on the strength of its cheung fun, a ubiquitous dish in China made from rice noodles, rolled until almost translucent, and typically filled with fish, meat and/or vegetables and served with a sweet soy sauce.


In the wrong hands, cheung fun can be glutinous or sticky, the filling grainy or flavourless. No such problems at Yauatcha: the thin rice roll was velvety and smooth, the prawn filling rich and flavourful. The bean curd was lightly fried and wrapped between the rice roll and prawn, giving the cheung fun a wonderful, and unusual, crunch.  It was a highlight of the meal, and not to be missed. Next, we had a gorgeously presented steamed dumplings of prawns and tobiko eggs.


At this point in our meal, the Chinese New Year Menu reasserted itself with two excellent wok dishes. Mongolian lamb chop (£18.80) was sticky, smoky and fall-off-the-chop tender, and presented a strong case for foregoing utensils for fingers, the better to clean each chop of every bit of deliciousness.


Even better were the fried prawn balls with salted egg yolk (£17.80), which were positively decadent, the salted egg yolk infusing the crisped prawn filling with a deep, almost earthy flavour.


Here, the Chinese New Year Menu was to have moved onto dessert but we ordered two additional dishes to finish our savoury course with a bit of heat. Soft-shell crab with almond (£13.50) served its signature ingredient lightly-fried on a generous bed of spiced almond slivers, which allows the diner to effectively decide how much heat they desired with each bite of perfectly judged crab.


Spicy aubergine, sato bean, okra and French bean with peanut (£12.20) was our only purely vegetarian dish of the evening, though Yauatcha offers a good selection therein. Its heat punch was more pervasive than that of the crab, but the dish had such depth of flavour  - the strong, somewhat acidic sato bean played a big role here – that the spice never overwhelmed.


It could hardly be a Year of the Sheep menu without that lucky beast popping up somewhere, and Yauatcha served up not one but two sheepish desserts. Dulce de leche macarons (£1.80) were delightful: caramelised sheep’s milk coated with oats, crispy and chewy in exactly the proportions one would hope for. Sheep’s milk yoghurt bavarois (£8.80) was less successful. It was beautiful to look at and the lemon curd filling was fresh and tangy. But as a whole, there wasn’t quite enough dynamic range to this dish, either in taste or texture.


It would have been a disappointment to end on this slightly down note, but fortunately Fried sweet black sesame ball (£5.50) was an absolute stunner: crisp, perfectly formed balls of sesame-coated pastry, giving way to a warm, oozing sweet black sesame centre…a delightful finish.


What We Drank: We began with the menu’s signature cocktail, the Yang Walker (£11), a mellow and complex concoction of rosemary, lime, grapefruit juice, Johnnie Walker Black label whisky, ginger bitters, plum sake with a hint of Baijiu, a popular Chinese spirit usually made from sorghum, and which added a woody, smoky note.


Yauatcha features a strong wine list, and a bottle of The Navigator, Alpha Domus (2009, New Zealand; £40) possessed firm tannins and deep tobacco and blackberry notes that worked well across most of the dishes we had, not least the spicier offerings. 

Likes: the prawn and beancurd cheung fun as well as the fried prawn balls with salted egg yolk are not to be missed!

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: The Chinese New Year menu at Yauatcha features through the 28th February 2015, costing £70.50 per person (including Yang Walker cocktail) if you just order the items on the menu. You might want to add an extra dish here or there depending on your appetite, but Yauatcha’s clever, precise food is sure to launch your Year of the Sheep in delicious style.

Hakkasan: For A Very Festive (& Glamorous) Chinese New Year!

$
0
0

Words & Photography by Matthew Brown and Luiz Hara

Name: Hakkasan

Where: 8 Hanway Place, London, W1T 1HD, http://hakkasan.com/

Cost: The number eight is lucky in Chinese culture - and Hakkasan’s Chinese New Year dishes are all centred on this number. The 9-course Signature Sharing Menu is priced at £88.88 per person, including a special festive treat, and is available for groups of three or more. Other New Year dishes are priced comparatively with the a la carte menu, with starters and small dishes from £12.88 to £18.88, and a main dish of Abalone and Dried Scallop Fried Rice, £23.88. 

Hakkasan has an impressive and varied drinks selection - most cocktails from the room-length bar are £12.50, and a New Year special, the Kumquatcha, is £11.88. Most wines are priced at £40 and above, but thankfully many are also available by the glass, both 175ml and 250ml. 

About: The Hakkasan Group is a formidable force in Chinese cuisine, with restaurants in New York, Las Vegas, Mumbai and Shanghai, as well as London. Opened in 2001, Hanway Place was the first Hakkasan, awarded a Michelin star in 2003, it has always been my no.1 favourite restaurant for dim sum and Chinese fine dining in London (reviewed here). 


Hakkasan’s design is as striking and innovative as when it first opened 14 years ago. The Christian Liaigre interior is atmospheric, with beautiful wooden screens and hanging birdcages. The 16-metre bar supplies great cocktails, and gives the dining room a glam atmosphere.


Tong Chee Hwee, Executive Chef at HKK, whose Chinese New Year Menu we reviewed just a week ago (see review here), has also been in charge of Hanway Place since its launch. Thankfully, this means that the two New Year menus he has created are very different, but equally delicious. As you enter the restaurant, the handwritten wishes of other diners hang above you, and the Celebration Menu includes a special secret element! 

What We Ate: Our meal began with a Dim Sum Platter, featuring a scallop shumai and dumplings made with Chinese chive and celery and prawn. We rank Hakkasan as one of London’s best Dim Sum venues, and this trilogy was a reminder why. The scallop was soft and flaked away on the tongue, a rare achievement as they can so easily turn hard and chewy. Elsewhere, the chive and celery flavours gave their respective dumplings a light and fresh flavour, ideal for a first course.


These were followed by a Spicy Lamb Lupin Wrap, served with Hakkasan’s own Hoi Sin Sauce. This was a special alternative to traditional Peking duck and pancakes for 2015, the year of the goat/sheep. The crunchy wrap was cut into easy-to-share pieces, and the lamb filling was mixed with spring onion and chilli, giving it a gorgeous aroma.


The third and final starter, golden fried soft shell crab, was served with an incredible nest of egg floss that added to the crab’s delicate bite. This dish, glistening with a sweet glaze and topped with a curry leaf, is exactly the kind of thing you leave the house to eat - complex and satisfying at the same time.


The five different main courses arrived at once, and were served to share. Spicy prawns, served with almond and lily bulb, were thick and fleshy. The curry sauce in which they were served was just enough to give them a creamy but intense heat.


Stir-fried black pepper beef was soft and untextured, lacking the bite and crunch of the prawns. The merlot and black pepper sauce was rich and sweet, however, and the beautiful vermicelli cone in which it was served add some needed texture.


Better still was the grilled Chilean sea bass in honey, its soft flesh glistened under the marinated skin. The stir-fried lily bulb and garlic shoot was a great accompaniment, it was crunchy with fried chilli and salty with soy; utterly addictive.


The best, though, was the abalone and dry scallop fried rice. Beautifully creamy, and with the clean, salty flavour of the scallop and the softness of the abalone, this is a very special dish indeed. If you visit and don’t opt for the Celebration menu, then don’t fail to order a bowl of this succulent rice to accompany your meal.


The theatricality stepped up a gear with dessert. A wishing tree arrived with two bright orange caramelised macadamia nuts hanging from it and an envelope containing a gift from Hakkasan to each diner!


The plate itself was decorated with a dusted cocoa tree, alongside servings of chocolate ganache, kumquat sorbet and cocoa rocks. The mixture of cocoa and citrus works beautifully, and the kumquat flavour and biscuity cocoa are truly innovative elements.


What We Drank: We began the meal with a Kumquatcha, a cocktail made with Brazilian cachaça, campari, kumquats and lime. This is the perfect drink for lovers of caipirinhas, with the kumquats adding a whole new level of flavour and colour.


For the wine, we ordered a 2013 Albarino “Marinero” Terras Gauda from Rias Baixas in Spain. The combination of roundness and acidity makes the Albarino grape a suitable match for both seafood and Chinese cooking, and it is no surprise to find it on the wine lists of many top Chinese restaurants.

We ended with a dessert wine - a glass of the Tokaji Late Harvest ‘Bodvin’, with a wishing tree on the table, we couldn’t resist the urge to celebrate! This is a complex glass, and the notes of oak, honey and apricot added new elements to an already fantastic final course.

Likes: This Chinese New Year Celebration Menu is a fantastic chance to try some of Hakkasan’s best dishes (the dim sum and garlic shoot and lily bulb especially) alongside an incredible new dish, the abalone and dry scallop fried rice.

Dislikes: None. 

Verdict: The Chinese New Year Celebration Menu is a great way to experience Hakkasan, with the atmosphere at its warmest and a strong selection of its best dishes available to share. It’s a fantastic insight into the power of the traditional elements of Chinese New Year, from kumquats to abalone, to public wishes and surprise presents, all of which combine to offer real festivity. 

Barolo, White Truffles and Nutella: The London Foodie Goes to Piedmont, Italy

$
0
0

I always wondered what all the fuss is about where truffles are concerned. A luxury food item only a few can afford, does the particular flavour and aroma this fungus brings to a dish justify its exorbitant price tag? Or is it all about the bling?


An invitation from Celebrity Cruises fuelled my curiosity – I was to accompany their executive chef John Suley to Alba, the Italian capital of white truffles. There I would learn about this magical fungus, cook with it, eat copious amounts of it, and even bid for it, but more of that later. So this is what happened.

1 kg white truffle piece auctioned at the World Truffle Auction in Alba

The town of Alba is in the northwestern Commune of Piedmont (or Piemonte in Italian), one of the 20 regions of Italy. As the name suggests, Piedmont (at the foot of the mountain) is a hilly, mountainous region that is completely landlocked. Perhaps because of this, Piedmont is not one of the most well known regions with most foreign travellers preferring to stay put in Liguria’s neighbouring stunning Riviera.


But this all changes when Alba’s white truffle season is on. Between the end of September and January each year, gourmet travellers from around the world flock to Piedmont in search of the seasonal fungus, with the International Alba White Truffle Market and the Annual Auction in November as the highlight events of the season. 

The white truffles of Alba are available everywhere, from the simplest trattorie (family-run cafes) to the most sophisticated Michelin-starred restaurants, for breakfast, lunch and dinner.


The International Alba White Truffle Market takes place over 6 consecutive weekends (Saturday and Sundays only) between October and November each year. In its 84th year, this is a great place to learn about and savour the local delicacy, meet and talk to the hunters and buy their finds directly from them at a better price than you would find in the local shops.

Meeting and talking to truffle hunters at Alba International White Truffle Fair

Prices vary according to the quality grade and size of the truffle - this could be anything from €150 to €250 for 100g. Having said that, I did buy two 50g pieces for €100 after haggling for a discount, so do ask!


There was a large number of stalls selling other regional products as well as truffle-based ingredients including pasta, salt, oils and biscuits, truffle-infused honey, fresh salami and cheeses with truffles.


This part of Piedmont (Langhe and Roero) is famous for its hazelnuts (one of Nutella’s key ingredients) used in the local nougat known as ‘torrone’, and also for cheeses particularly the Toma and Sabauda, all of which were on sale at the fair.


All truffles being sold at the fair were inspected by a team of judges, so whatever you buy is guaranteed to be at the peak of freshness. An added service provided by the fair organisers is the possibility of having your purchases examined by a judge.


I took my two pieces of white truffle to an Italian judge who assessed them for me, and pointed out that although they were both of great quality, they were very different in aroma and flavour – one being much more garlicky and heavily scented than the other. She pointed out was that both were quite firm which is an indication of freshness or ripeness, and explained that softer or crumblier truffles are usually past their best.

Chef John Suley of Celebrity Cruises shaving truffles for our lunch at the Alba International White Truffle Fair

To find out more about the International Alba White Truffle Fair, and the many events and activities and for dates for 2015, please visit their website on www.fieradeltartufo.org.

As with most regional cuisines in Italy, the Piemontese have strong opinions on how their ingredients should be prepared, and rightly so as they have been using them for centuries. In Piedmont, truffles are never cooked (unlike in France). Truffles can be washed but not peeled; they are finely shaved but never grated over cooked food. The lifespan of a truffle is rather short – 7 to 10 days maximum, and it should be stored wrapped in kitchen paper in an airtight jar, with the paper being changed every other day.


In Piedmont, there is a handful of ingredients that are commonly used to partner with truffles - these include eggs, cheese, pasta and raw meat. Most restaurants will serve their own interpretation of dishes using these very same ingredients, with only a few daring to do anything remotely different.

Simplicity is best when it comes to partnering truffles with other ingredients

I enjoyed ‘Fonduta’, the rich Piemontese fondue made from Fontina cheese, egg yolks, milk and butter with shavings of truffles served on top. Fried eggs and plain buttered pasta are also excellent in combination with truffles. We had a few of these dishes at the white truffle fair itself.

Fonduta - the creamy Piemontese fondue with shavings of white truffle

Celebrity Cruises’ executive chef John Suley cooked one of the best truffle dishes I ate on this trip at a truffle cooking demonstration at the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo, a great learning institution, but more of that later.


This was a magnificently creamy risotto with roasted quail, mushrooms and plenty of white truffle shavings, and was quite different to anything we had tried so far in the various restaurants of Piedmont. I enjoyed this immensely and it was one of the dishes I recreated using the truffles I had bought at the international Alba white truffle fair when I got home.


The truffle cooking demonstration by John Suley was followed by a fantastic lunch cooked by the man himself. Of note was his silken cauliflower cream soup with crispy pancetta, mascarpone cheese and croutons, whose recipe I replicate below. The soup was delicious and I thoroughly recommend cooking this at home with some excellent quality Italian truffle oil in lieu of the fresh white truffle shavings.

Fantastic cauliflower soup by John Suley of Celebrity Cruises (recipe at the end of post)

This was followed by a refreshing salad of warm artichoke hearts, fennel, tomatoes and greens with a gorgeous burrata cheese topped with white truffle shavings.


Another noteworthy dish was John’s braised veal cheeks on a bed of soft polenta, served with mushrooms, rapini (turnip greens), Parmesan cheese and white truffle shavings. The meat was wonderfully tender and richly flavoured partnering well with the polenta but sadly overpowering the subtle aroma and flavour of the white truffle.


For dessert we had a light olive oil cake served with ricotta, lemoncello sorbet and caramelized Piemontese hazelnuts, which ended our meal on a high note.


If you haven’t been on a truffle hunt, this is a must-do activity when visiting the region during the white truffle season. Headed by a Trifolau (truffle hunter in Piemontese dialect) and his highly trained dog, this can be incredibly exciting, especially when truffles are located. On our expedition, we (or rather the dog) found two white truffle pieces - a 10g piece and another - a whopper 150g nugget!


The event with the highest bling factor on the Alba’s white truffle season calendar is undoubtedly the World Truffle Auction taking place at the magnificent Castle of Grinzane Cavour (http://www.castellogrinzane.com/ing/).


The Castle sits in one of the most spectacular settings in Langhe, with breathtaking views of the city of Alba. It houses the “Cavour Regional Enoteca” (a wine emporium) where the best Piemontese wines and grappa can be purchased and the one Michelin starred restaurant “Ristorante al Castello” by chef Alessandro Boglioni.

Ristorante al Castello by Chef Alessandro Boglioni - we had one of the best truffle meals there 


Only a very limited number of tickets are available for the annual World Truffle Auction and these are carefully allocated to potential buyers, politicians, artists and local businessmen. As a potential buyer Celebrity Cruises was sold a handful of these coveted tickets, which allowed us access to the auction, followed by a wonderful lunch at Ristorante al Castello.

One of two lots won by Celebrity Cruises in the World Truffle Auction
John Suley bid and won 2 of the 6 lots in the auction for Celebrity Cruises. Each lot included a large truffle of about 500g, plus magnum bottles of vintage Barolo and Barbaresco wines.


The lots were snapped up for €5,000 and €10,000 respectively which appeared absurd amounts of money to pay until the big daddy, the final lot of a 1kg truffle, was purchased for €100,000 by a buyer in Hong Kong, bidding via satellite!

The big daddy 1kg truffle piece being brought in by Miss Smile!

Interestingly, a similar sized white truffle of Alba was auctioned at Sothebys in New York a month later fetching only around half of that amount, about €50,000.

Piedmont: Beyond The Truffle

There is more though to Piedmont than its white truffles, for it is also home to one of the most iconic wines of Italy or indeed the world – Barolo. But the region’s claim to international fame does stop here – Piedmont is also where the chocolate company Ferrero SpA – the makers of Nutella and Ferrero Rocher is based.


Surprisingly, the company is still privately owned and run by the Ferrero family. The company’s current CEO Giovanni Ferrero is Italy’s richest man, or so I am told by Nicoletta, our all-rounder Italian interpreter, organizer, time-keeper, money-lender and friend. Nicoletta’s enthusiasm and knowledge for her home region and its produce made this trip to Piedmont very special.


Hotel Castello di Santa Vittoria occupies the grounds of the eponymous castle dating back to the 14th century in the minute village of Santa Vittoria d’Alba. It is a beautiful hotel offering breathtaking views of the surrounding valleys and vineyards.

View from my room at Hotel Santa Vittoria d'Alba


This was home for the duration of our trip and was a good base to explore the nearby towns of Alba (6 miles) and Bra (5 miles). The hotel has a fantastic selection of regional wines for sale and friendly staff who could not have done more to make our stay as comfortable as possible. If you plan to visit the region, Hotel Castello di Santa Vittoria is worth checking out (http://www.santavittoria.org/).


A few minutes walk from the hotel was Osteria della Pace, where I headed for my first taste of Piemontese cuisine in this trip. This is a simple, family-run restaurant offering home-style cooking at surprisingly reasonable prices.


I thoroughly enjoyed my lunch at Osteria della Pace, particularly their risotto with Dolcetto red wine and Toma cheese (€7) – this is a traditional Piemontese dish, more commonly made with Barolo wine. Toma cheese is another great ingredient of the region; it is a PDO, full flavoured and creamy cheese made from unpasteurized cow’s milk. If you think the combination of red wine and cheese as a base to flavour risotto is an odd one, you ought to try this dish. It was a revelation! (Osteria della Pace, Via Bertero 10, Santa Vittoria d'Alba, Italy).


Next stop was a visit to the winery Fontana Fredda, one of the region’s state-of-the-art wineries, with over 150 years of history. We were given a grand tour of the cellars, wine shop and what seemed like every nook and cranny of the place until we finally sat down for a tasting.
Vineyard Fontana Fredda

Even though Turin is the capital of Piedmont, Alba is the heart of the region when it comes to wine making. A huge generalization, but one that I always remember, is the order in which Piemontese red wines are placed in terms of importance, elegance and price – ascending from Barbera to Dolcetto, then Barbaresco and finally Barolo. Dolcetto and Barbera are both grapes making wines bearing the same name, whilst Barbaresco and Barolo are made from the Nebbiolo grape. Another important Piemontese grape is Cortese, from which Gavi white wine is made. Moscato (muscat) is also used for sparkling Asti Espumante in the region.

Ageing wines in huge oak barrels at Fontana Fredda
Tasting at Fontana Fredda, those spittoons mean business!

Back at Fontana Fredda’s tasting room, I enjoyed their 2010 Barolo Serralunga D’Alba (£30/bottle), a magnificent Barolo aged for 3 years with an intense red colour, notes of red cherry and pronounced but fine tannins. According to DOCG regulations Barolo must be made from 100% Nebbiollo grapes and be aged for at least 2 years in barrel and 1 year in bottle or tank, so a minimum of 3 years of aging (http://www.fontanafredda.it/web/en/home/).


The venue for the white truffle cookery demo and lunch by John Suley of Celebrity Cruises was the University of Gastronomic Sciences in the town of Pollenzo (http://www.unisg.it/en/).


Founded by the Slow Food Movement (http://www.slowfood.org.uk/) this is a stunning international university offering both undergraduate (3-year Gastronomic Science degree) and postgraduate courses. These are taught in English, and include a Masters in Italian Food and Wine Culture, as well as food entrepreneurship and tourism related courses.



Adjacent to the university is La Banca del Vino (The Wine Bank) founded in 1835 originally as the headquarters for viticulture experiments for the royal estates of Savoy. Today, this beautifully restored building is a co-operative and museum where special Italian wines are selected and stored, and tastings and workshops are offered.


English speaking guided tours and tastings are available to the general public from €6 to €18. For more information, visit their website on www.bancadelvino.it.


So to return to the question I first posed, there clearly is an element of bling associated with the consumption of truffles, and whether its price tag is justified or not depends on a personal perspective. Truffles have a unique flavour and aroma, and personally I love them. Having been on this trip, I am even more interested in learning about, cooking and eating more truffles. A visit to Piedmont during the white truffle season is a fantastic opportunity to experience the region and its food and wine, and to snap up some truffles at the International White Truffle Fair, at well below the UK rate.


While I cannot vouch for the level of culinary accomplishment on Celebrity Cruise ships (as I have yet to go on one), I found the initiative of bringing the magical funghi of Alba to the ships’ menu commendable. Judging by the excellent food I ate, cooked by Celebrity Cruises’ executive chef John Suley, passengers on Celebrity Cruises will be in for a treat, if the truffles are to be served up there.  For more information about Celebrity Cruises visit their website at http://www.celebritycruises.co.uk/.

Creamy Cauliflower Soup, Pancetta, Mascarpone Cheese, Croutons
By John Suley of Celebrity Cruises

Ingredients:

3kg cauliflower florets
400g sweet onions, diced
200g shallots, diced
100g garlic, chopped
3ltr chicken stock      
1ltr double cream     
400g unsalted butter
400g mascarpone cheese
10g thyme, chopped
10g parsley, chopped

For the croutons:
100g pancetta ham, diced
1 ciabatta loaf, cut in cubes
200g butter
10g parsley
3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
100g fresh white truffle (optional)
White truffle oil

Method:

Heat butter in a large pot over medium-high heat. Add the diced onions and shallots and reduce heat to medium. Cook and stirring occasionally, until the onions are very soft and then add the garlic. Cook for around 3 to 5 minutes and stir until the liquid has almost completely evaporated. Stir in the cauliflower and chicken stock and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a simmer, cover, and cook for around 20 to 25 minutes until cauliflower is very soft.

Slowly blend the ingredients in a blender for at least 3 minutes until very smooth. Depending on the size of your blender, you may need to do this in a few batches.  Then season to taste with salt and white pepper before finishing with freshly chopped thyme and parsley. Add mascarpone at the end to get the best results.

Serve with some homemade croutons: 

Cook the diced pancetta in a frying pan until crispy. Then take the cubes of ciabatta and rub them in a mixture of olive oil and parsley. Place them on a baking tray, add the cubes of butter and roast in the oven for 10 minutes at 220 degrees to give them a nice colour. Once cooked, drizzle with white truffle oil and add shavings of the white truffle (if using) to garnish.       



Many thanks to Celebrity Cruises for inviting me along to this truffle adventure!

Steak Heaven at May Fair Kitchen - a Return Visit

$
0
0

Name: May Fair Kitchen

Where: The May Fair Hotel, Stratton Street, Mayfair, London, W1J 8LT,  http://www.mayfairkitchen.co.uk/

Cost: Starters range from £7 to £16, main dishes from the grill range from £19 to £55, sides from £3 to £11.  There is a small but well considered selection of wines by the glass mostly priced at £11, and by the bottle white wines start at £34 for an Albariño from Rias Baixas, Spain, and reds at £34 for Napa Valley Merlot. 

About: The May Fair Kitchen is based on the ground floor of the swanky May Fair Hotel, on Stratton Street, between Piccadilly and Berkeley Square. The restaurant is simply but stylishly furnished with dark wood floors and panelling, grey fabrics and white linen tablecloths. 

The concept of the May Fair Kitchen is to serve the best quality meat and fish, simply grilled and served with a choice of sauces made to order. All the meat comes from Aldens Butchers, a family butcher with over 200 years of experience in sourcing the best quality produce from across the UK and Europe.  The fish and shellfish comes from James Knight of Mayfair. The vegetables all come from Watts farm, a family-run business with farms across Kent, Essex and Bedfordshire. A few months ago, I spent a couple of days behind the scenes at the May Fair Kitchen, as well as visiting Aldens and Watts farm to see the quality of the produce first hand - more about that here.


Having just heard of a change of menus at May Fair Kitchen, I decided to pay them a return visit to find out more.


What We Ate: We kicked off with half a dozen oysters (£18), served expertly shucked and cleaned (with none of the irritating fragments of shell that are so often left after opening - a minor pet hate of mine!), and with a classic red wine vinegar and shallot dressing. The oysters were terribly fresh, a very good start to our meal.


For starters, we had the steak tartare (£11) - hand chopped and served with a generous grating of Parmesan and a lovely beaten raw quail egg yolk served in the shell. It was very well seasoned, with a great texture from the hand chopping, and knowing it was from Aldens gave me confidence in its quality and safety.


Dr G had a serving of hand-dived scallops with smoked British ham and bean emulsion with fine herbs (£13).  This was well made and tasted great, but at that price tag, we had hoped for more than one and a half scallops.


My main course was grass-fed, 28-day aged, single rib steak, 20oz (£35), with a Bernaise sauce (£3), real chips (£3) and a Niçoise salad (£4.50).


These were magnificent, with superbly tender and well-flavoured beef from Aldens, this was as good as it gets!


The Bernaise was also well made and with just the right acidity. The triple fried chips were also excellent - chunky and crisp.


Dr G opted for the turbot (£38) with a sauce vierge (£3), samphire and ginger (£4.50). The fish was wonderfully textured, and the sauce vierge beautifully flavoured with chervil, but the side serving of watercress was completely undressed, un-seasoned and slightly on the yellow side of green.


For dessert we had a selection of cheeses from the cheese trolley (£12). The choices of cheeses were somewhat limited and a tad uninspiring.


This is such a pity as some restaurants' cheese trolleys in London have legendary status - think Chez Bruce. The cheese course, if offered, should be one of the most exciting courses of the entire meal.

Lovely grapes, but where is the cheese?

We also had the warm flourless clementine and chocolate cake (£8), served with Cornish clotted cream and winter brittle. We wanted to love this, but again, the dish did not quite deliver as a whole.


What We Drank: While we were deciding on our  menu, we enjoyed a glass of very well balanced Moet et Chandon 2006 (£15). We opted for a glass of Albarino (£11), with the fish dishes, with some lovely elderflower notes. For the meat dishes, we shared a bottle of La Serra Negre 2012, a carignan - garnacha blend from Herencia Altes, Spain (£50). A concentrated, purple-tinged wine with plenty of blackberry fruit and cedar notes, this lovely wine was balanced by plenty of tannin, and had great length and complexity.


Likes: The meats were superb - well sourced, richly flavoured and expertly cooked.

Dislikes: Service was friendly and attentive, but on the busy evening we were there, was a little forgetful at times - for example not offering bread or butter when we wanted it, then taking it away prematurely.

Verdict: May Fair Kitchen offers some of the best grilled steaks, fish and seafood in London. A perfect meal here starts with a platter of freshly shucked oysters, followed by the Iberian spiced chorizo and garlic tiger prawn skewers, finishing with their 20oz, grass-fed, 28-day aged, all singing, all dancing, single rib steak, heaven! Recommended.

Kouzu - The New Japanese Restaurant Destination in Belgravia

$
0
0

Name: Kouzu

Where: 21 Grosvenor Gardens, Belgravia, London, SW1 0JW, http://kouzu.co.uk/

Cost: Starters range from £4.50 to £13, sashimi from £11 to £17.50, and sushi is offered individually, and ‘omakaze’ or chef selection platters ranging from £23 to £60. Cocktails are priced from £8.50 to £12. Entry level wines start from £25 for a Picpoul de Pinet or £22 for a Chilean Merlot. There is a good selection of fine wines with even finer prices.    

About: Just a stone's throw from both Buckingham Palace and Victoria station, this restaurant opened in November 2014, with Chef Kyoichi Kai (formerly of Zuma and the Arts Club) heading the kitchen.


The restaurant claims to have all-Japanese kitchen staff, but walking past the basement kitchen I could not help but notice a lot of westerners working alongside the Japanese. Not that I mind, but it seems an odd claim to make if it isn't correct.


Housed in a grand historical grade-II listed building dating from the 1850s, the restaurant has an impressive entrance with a massive chandelier, and a glamorous cocktail bar.


It has a Japanese-style simplicity to the design, with dark slate floors, top quality but unstained and unvarnished tables, and restrained cream and grey fabrics for the blinds, benches and chairs, with a few prominent displays of orchids.
  

What We Ate: From the ‘New Stream Sashimi’ section, we ordered the lime-cured seabass with a green pepper salsa (£13.00) - this was a stunningly presented dish decorated with micro herbs, chervil and pink peppercorns and served with semi-dried cherry tomatoes which worked surprisingly well with the fish. Although I could not taste much lime-curing in the seabass, the dish was very well balanced and one I would definitely order again.


Also from the 'New Stream Sashimi' section, we had the beef fillet tataki (£17.50) - this was a seared fillet cut into fine slices and served with a sauce of soy sauce, mirin and sake, and a generous serving of julienne salad. In fact the serving of salad was so generous that visually it rather obscured the beef. I enjoyed this dish though - the flavours were fresh and the meat was tender and of good quality.


For mains, we had two items from the charcoal grill selection – the lamb chops with spicy miso and the beef fillet. 

The lamb chops with spicy miso (£12.00), was probably the best dish of the evening and at that price, incredibly good value too. There were two perfectly cooked lamb chops, pink and succulent, served alongside a gorgeous selection of char-grilled vegetables including courgettes, tomatoes, peppers and onion. The spicy miso was a great accompanying sauce with a lot of umami flavour and just the right amount of heat, complimenting the meat and the vegetables without overpowering them.


We also had a 200g beef fillet (£31) that came with a choice two of sauces – an European red wine sauce or a citrus Japanese ponzu dressing served with yuzu kosho (a condiment made from yuzu peel, chillies and salt) - we opted for the latter. Like the tataki starter, the beef was of excellent quality, well cooked, and delicious. My only criticism with it was that rather than being served with yuzu kosho as an accompaniment, I was given a spicy oroshi (a mixture of grated daikon radish and chillies).


To accompany our mains, from the small dish and salad menu, we chose the assorted mushroom salad (£11). This was truly impressive and included a selection of four different mushrooms - eringi, shimeji, shiitake and oyster mushrooms - as well as pine nuts, walnuts, radicchio and green salad leaves dressed with ponzu sauce.


We also ordered a selection of tempura, including prawn (£7.50 for 2), along with aubergine, eringi mushroom and asparagus, but sadly it never arrived. 

As is customary in Japanese restaurants, a ‘shime’ (normally rice and miso soup) is served to end a meal. To that effect, we were served a chef’s platter of sushi including a maki roll and some nigiri.


The spicy California roll (£8), made from crab, avocado, cucumber, flying fish roe, and spicy mayonnaise was superbly made with a very fine layer of sushi rice rolled in shichimi pepper for the spicy heat.


The nigiri sushi were unagi eel (£4 each), and chu-toro (tuna belly), priced at £6.50 each. These were exquisite, but sadly quite steeply priced.


With our selection of sushi, we had three slices of yellowtail sashimi, served in a covered glass bowl (£11). Delicious though it was, again we felt this was not great value for money.


For dessert, we opted for the Tart au Mont Blanc with rum and raisin ice cream (£9.50).  It may come as a surprise to those who have not visited Japan, but Tart au Mont Blanc is a very popular dessert there. The version on offer at Kouzu reminded me very much of examples I ate in Tokyo, and was superb.


We also had the dark chocolate mousse and apricot brandy sauce with hazelnut ice cream (£10.50), which again showed real patisserie artistry at Kouzu.


What We Drank: We started with couple of cocktails - the Yuzutini (£9), was a delicious variation on a familiar theme with intense citrus notes from Yuzu-shu (yuzu-infused shochu), Russian vodka and lemon. The Smoky Negroni (£11.50) was strong and well made from 12-year old Bowmore whisky, along with Campari, ume-shu (plum liqueur) and orange peel. I liked this Negroni although I felt that the whisky was too overpowering a spirit and I would have preferred it with gin.


To accompany our dishes, we opted for a bottle of Masi Valpolicella Classico Ripasso (£30). This was a straightforward wine, with vibrant red cherry notes on the nose and palate. A light, fruit-driven wine, it had very little tannin or complexity, but was very drinkable.


Likes: A perfect meal at Kouzu would start with one of the ‘New Stream’ sashimi dishes like the sea bass, followed by the wonderful lamb chops in spicy miso, ending with the delicious Mont Blanc dessert.

Dislikes: There is a night-club style background music, which seems a little out of place in a restaurant of this quality. The food is very good, but while the waiting staff are polite and attentive, they seem to understand rather little about the food they serve, but these were early days for the restaurant. They also, annoyingly, forgot to bring our tempura. Not all the dishes were served as described on the menu (grated radish instead of yuzu-kosho condiment).

Verdict: Great Japanese-European cooking with some inventive ‘New Stream’ sushi and sashimi on offer and fine patisserie. Well-conceived, Kouzu is a new Japanese restaurant in Central London to be reckoned with. Recommended.

Taste of Portugal 2015 – Discovering Bisaro Pork at Portal Restaurant

$
0
0
Words & Photography by Matthew Brown and Luiz Hara

Name: Taste of Portugal 2015 at Portal Restaurant
http://www.tasteportugal-london.com/about.php
http://www.portalrestaurant.com/

Where: 88 St. John Street, London, EC1M 4EH (Portal Restaurant has closed down on the 6th February 2015)

Cost: The Taste of Portugal event ‘Bisaro Pork Tasting Menu’, priced at £65 or £95 with wine-pairing, was specially created by Chef Ricardo Costa and Sommelier Antonio Lopes to highlight this uniquely Portuguese breed of pig for the Taste of Portugal campaign.

But if you missed the event, Portal’s a la carte menu offers plenty of opportunities to try Portuguese pork Bisaro or otherwise - sliced 40-month Pata Negra ham can be ordered by weight (£19/50g), starter of pork belly, black pudding and cabbage (£8), whilst Bisaro pork served with broad beans, chouriço, carrots and turnip (£25) is a popular fixture on the menu can be ordered as a main course. With three days’ notice, determined diners can even order a traditional Bisaro suckling pig, to feed 8-10 people, for £385. The restaurant takes its exclusively Portuguese wine cellar seriously, and though there are few bottles below £20, a large number are priced between £20-30 or available by the glass. 

About:Portal is one of London’s finest Portuguese restaurants, opened nine years ago by Antonio Correia, this is a favourite haunt of mine and the place I head to whenever I crave fine Iberian cuisine, please see reviews here and here.


The evening we visited was organised by Taste of Portugal, a campaign by Turismo de Portugal. Taste of Portugal 2015 is a season of culinary and cultural events - it is a great campaign I support strongly, directed at British foodies, as it highlights the relatively undiscovered cuisine and wines of this amazing country. If you haven’t visited Portugal yet, read on and be tempted. There are still several Taste of Portugal events still to come (check their website here).


On this latest visit to Portal, the menu was created by Ricardo Costa, a young chef who started his professional career in Portal’s kitchen years ago, before returning to Portugal where he is now Executive Chef for the restaurant in Porto’s exclusive Yeatman Hotel, which has the city’s only Michelin star.

Sommelier Antonio Lopes and Chef Ricardo Costa

Bisaro pork, which was at the heart of the menu we sampled, is one of Portugal’s proudest specialities. These pigs are from the Vinhais region in the north of the country, and are actually part-boar, growing to be more than a metre in length. Having been fêted for more than a century, they are fed on a traditional diet including chestnuts and acorns, giving the meat its rich and nutty flavour.


What We Ate: The first course was a game and chicken sausage, made by Costa’s team in the kitchen of the Yeatman Hotel. This is known as alheira sausage, and was invented by Portuguese Jews in order to fool the Inquisition that had forced them to convert to Christianity.


This was followed by a spectacularly rich belly of Bisaro suckling pig, served with taut slices of cardinal prawn (another ingredient native to Portugal) and a mixed sprout salad. The suckling Bisaro is one of Portal’s specialities, and the gamey, crispy meat lived up to its reputation. I love the Portuguese flair in combining seafood and pork so well (as in pork Alentejano style with clams), and I wonder whether this is something they picked up during the colonial period in China (Macau), or vice versa.


The Bisaro pork returned again in a stew, made with a caramelised pistachio and Madeira wine sauce. Costa placed a succulent loin of pork in the centre of the bowl, with its cooking jus spiked with Madeira poured over it at the table. The loin of Bisaro pork, despite being less fatty than the belly, was still very succulent, and it was interesting to note that this leaner cut was just as flavoursome.


The most surprising dish, however, was dessert: an Abbey of Priscos pudding served with citrus sorbet and cured Bisaro pork. The bacon transformed this traditional pudding of egg, lemon and sugar, with its salt unlocking the creaminess of the rest of the dish. Inventively designed to resemble a fried egg, the pudding was served on a base of pine nuts and with a garnish of red berry jelly. This level of detail is unusual in a dessert, and made it the unexpected star of the meal.


What We Drank: The evening began with a Portonic - a simple but refreshing cocktail of white port and tonic that easily gives the G&T a run for its money. White ports may be sweet or dry, but in this cocktail, a bone-dry version was used, making it a great accompaniment to a bowl of salted almonds, or, as we had it here, with Bisaro pork crackling. The white port we tried is available for purchase at Waitrose.


The wines for the evening were chosen by the recently appointed Official Taste of Portugal Sommelier, Antonio Lopes. Our first, a glass of Principal Rosé "Tête de Cuvée" 2010, was a good choice for the alheira sausage, with gentle berry and floral notes.


It was followed by another rosé, a sparkling Campolargo Pinot Noir Brut 2012 also from the Bairrada region. Much bolder, with strong bubbles and berry notes, this went excellently with the sweet Bisaro crackling.


The Bisaro stew was accompanied by a Meandro 2012, a darkly intense, fruit-driven wine with gentle tannins. With dessert, we had a 10-year old Madeira wine: Barbeito Verdelho Old Reserve. Golden in colour, and with plenty of acidity to balance its sweetness, this was a blissful end to the meal.


Likes: The Bisaro pork was magnificent, and in the capable hands of Ricardo Costa, it was elevated to the sublime. Portal has one of the UK’s finest Portuguese wine cellars, and this meal’s wine pairings showed that some relatively undiscovered national wines can stand shoulder to shoulder with the best of France or Italy. 

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: This Taste of Portugal 2015 event featured Porto’s Michelin-starred chef, together with Portugal’s top sommelier, to highlight the wonderful produce and wines of the country available right here in London’s finest Portuguese restaurant, Portal. This is just one of a number of events by Taste of Portugal 2015, and if you get the chance to attend any of them, I would highly recommend it.

Pachamama - Peruvian Inspired Cuisine, Made in England

$
0
0

Name:Pachamama

Where: 18 Thayer  Street, Lonson, W1U 3JY, http://pachamamalondon.com/

Cost: The menu is small but well thought-out, themed around small eats, and grouped into snacks, land, sea and soil. 'Land' dishes (meat and poultry) cost from £7 to £29, 'Sea' (fish and seafood) from £5 to £10. The 'soil' small eats are vegetable-based, with squash, plaintain, asparagus and quinoa featuring prominently, and priced from £7 to £8. All the fish and seafood is sourced from the British coast, and the meat is all from Yorkshire. Piscos and cocktails are priced at £8.50. Entry-level wines start at £23 for a Spanish Macabeo or an Australian Shiraz.

About:Pachamama, meaning 'Mother Earth' in Quechua language, is one of a cluster of Peruvian restaurants to open in London in the last couple of years, situated in Marylebone, just a stone's throw from The Wallace Collection. With a discrete ground floor door that is very easy to miss, the restaurant opens up in the basement to a surprisingly cavernous space, with a 10 -seater bar for cocktails and small eats, and around 70 covers.


Fairly packed on the midweek evening we attended, the restaurant is all distressed wood-panelling, tiled floors, and plain wooden tables. The menu is Peruvian themed, with some Japanese-influenced Nikkei dishes, a small wine menu, and cocktails on a Peruvian Pisco theme.


The young head-chef Adam Rawson, formerly of White Rabbits in Dalston, has ambitious plans for the restaurant, having hired a Peruvian sous-chef in February 2015. 

What We Ate: From the snack options, we had salt and aji squid (£4.50) and chicharones (deep fried pork belly) with sweet onions (£4.50).  The squid was tender and well flavoured, served with a powerful aji mayonaise.


The chicharones were superb, with tender, flavoursome pork in a crisp shell.


From the 'Sea' menu, we had the Cornish seabass with pumpkin, samphire, red onion, radish, coriander and leche de tigre (tiger's milk) (£9).  The tiger's milk was golden from aji amarillo, with a nice amount of chilli heat and not too much acidity or sweetness, which are often problematic features of leche de tigre outside of Peru.


The yellowfin tuna with soy and pickled potato ceviche (£9), was also excellent. Flavoured with hot rocoto chilli in the soy, wasabe and olive oil dressing, this had some good Peruvian Nikkei flavour combinations.


Next came the Cornish crab served with purple potato and green herbs (£10) in a richly infused saffron-dashi which was creamy and delicious, akin to a crab-bisque.


Scallops conchita (£5), was served in the shell, with beautifully seasoned quinoa and a zingy tomato and red onion salsa, this was a very refreshing dish.


From the 'Land' menu, we had the crispy lamb belly with green miso (£9). Lamb belly can be very fatty, and is great for braising then deep frying. The meat was succulent but crispy with the spicy green miso made from white miso, green jalapeno chillies, garlic and lime helping to cut through the fattiness.


We also had the beef cheek Lomo Saltado (£14). Lomo saltado is a Chinese-Peruvian dish, cooked by the 'Chifa' Chinese migrant labourers when they came to Peru in the early 20th century, and today is one of Peru’s national dishes. Pachamama's version featured some unusual ingredients like beef cheeks and parsnips not commonly seen in this dish. It had little resemblance to the dish we tried in Peru, and lacked the vibrancy of the other dishes we had on our visit.


From the 'Soil' menu, we tried the Peruvian asparagus with saffron yolk and peanut (£8). Although I could not taste much saffron, there was quite a kick of chilli heat, and the asparagus was well cooked with a delicious smoky flavour.


Better still was the fried aubergine with smoked yoghurt and pecan (£8) – with unctuously tender flesh within a crispy deep-fried exterior, the aubergine was delicious accompanied by the smoky, nutty yoghurt.


We shared a couple of desserts -  the suspiro de Limena (£6.50), served in a Champagne goblet, had a sweet lemony meringue, and a creamy base flavoured with tart passion fruit – great contrasting flavours and textures.


The torta de chocolate with toasted quinoa ice cream was also good, with a malted, nutty flavour to the ice cream, although the torta had the texture and flavour more akin to a mousse than a cake (£6.50).


What We Drank: We kicked off with a couple of cocktails - the Shining Path was a refreshing Champagne based drink, spiked with cinnamon and Abbott’s bitters. 

The Rosa del Inca was one of Pachamama’s many Pisco cocktails - infused with pink peppercorns and Volcano coffee beans, vermouth, Campari, orange bitters, this was delicious, with a bracing combination of bitter flavours and subtle coffee notes.


With our fish dishes, we had the house white, Matos Blanco from Spain (£7.50 for 250ml), which was non-descript, and completely outclassed by the food. Similarly, with the meat course, we had the house red, Matos Tinto Tempranillo from Spain (also £7.50 for 250ml) - again fruity but undistinguished, and a very poor partner for the food offered. 

Pachamama has a reputation for its cocktails, so as a digestif, we had a couple more (£8.50 each).  The Dulce de Chasca featured dulce de leche, rum, Pisco, vanilla syrup and chocolate bitters, and was an appropriately fruity yet potent end to the meal.


The Pichu Pichu had Volcano Peruvian coffee, Pisco, Kahlua, chocolate and vanilla bitters - a generous hit of potent coffee and chocolate flavours to complete an excellent dinner.

Likes: Particularly outstanding were the chicharones, the Nikkei yellowtail tuna, the scallops conchita, the fried aubergine and lamb belly. The cocktails were strong and well made.

Dislikes: The music is loud to the point of being almost night-club level, and if you lean against the walls, they shake. Although we really liked almost all the dishes, they were uniformly quite spicy, and this does not reflect our experience of food in Peru, where there was a variety of spicy, citrus and savoury dishes. The lomo saltado was the weakest link of our evening, tasting like an English beef stew - nothing wrong with that but not what we were looking for in a Peruvian restaurant serving one of its great national dishes. 

Verdict: There is some seriously good cooking at Pachamama. With a good Marylebone location and a well-priced menu, this is definitely a place to check out. Highly recommended.


Tredwell's - Casual Dining by Marcus Wareing

$
0
0

Name:Tredwell's

Where: 4a Upper St Martin's Lane, London, WC2H 9NY, http://www.tredwells.com/

Cost: Starters range from £5 to £8, mains from £9 to £26, and sides from £3 to £5. Wines range from £24 to £89.

About: The latest venture from Marcus Wareing, Tredwell’s, over the road from Stringfellows and Dishoom on Upper St Martin’s Lane, has an uncomplicated yet tempting menu with a strong focus on British produce and a few options for snacks, starters, mains and sides.

Over 3 floors, the main dining area is upstairs, where there are long distressed leather banquets, equally distressed mirrors reaching all the way up to the high ceilings, and matt black wooden tables. Possibly the most casual and relaxed of Wareing’s eateries, the music and chatter were quite lively on the evening we were there.


What We Ate: With our aperitifs, we chose a couple of snacks - the chorizo jam with charred bread (£4) was a favourite – reminiscent of Calabrian nduja, this was sweet, spicy and smoky.


The courgette fritters with pine nut butter (£5) were also good, but I was half-expecting them to be courgette fries (despite fritters being clearly displayed on the menu).


For starters, we had the prawns with white polenta, roast garlic and chicken broth (£8.50). I loved the clean yet intense flavours in this dish - the prawns were lightly poached and were very tender and sweet, combining really well with the soft white polenta – a great combination of flavours and textures.


Our second starter, although completely different in concept, was equally delicious - braised lamb belly with aubergine and tomato curry (£6) was soft, unctuous and well flavoured, although the aubergine and tomato tasted more like an Italian caponata than a curry.


For our main course, we opted for the smoked, braised beef short rib to share (£29). This was a truly sensational dish - the beef being meltingly tender, succulent, and richly flavoured with a light smoky finish.



To accompany, we had a portion of chargrilled tenderstem broccoli with almond butter and anchovies (£5) which had a nice crunch.


We also had a portion of polenta fries, with smoked tomato dip (£4) – they were nicely crispy on the outside and creamy inside. I was pleased to see polenta chips on the menu, this is a favourite of mine but hardly found in British restaurants.


For dessert, we had the Pain Perdu (£6) – I have seen Pain Perdu in a few London restaurants recently which is a good thing – literally translated as “lost bread”, the name refers to reclaiming stale bread by soaking them in a mixture of egg custard, sometimes flavoured with cinnamon which are then fried in butter. Once fried, pain perdu is generally served with jam or syrup, but I enjoyed Wareing’s accompaniment of maple cream and crispy bacon – both sweet and savoury, this was a well thought out combination in my opinion. In the Basque country, they have a similar dessert  called Torrijas.


We also had the salted caramel soft serve (£5) – this was also good although I felt it was a tad too salty for my taste. It had crunchy honeycomb in the mix to provide a contrast of textures.


What We Drank: We started with an apertif - the New Fashioned cocktail (£9) combined rye whisky, marmalade and bitters, and a slice of freeze dried orange – this was very well made and strong as I was hoping it would be. We also had a glass of Nyetimber Classic Cuvee 2009, West Sussex (£12). This vintage English sparkly was superb, with an elegant structure, apple flavours and very fine bubbles.


For the meal, we shared a bottle of Pinot Noir from Olivier Wartel, Bourgogne Epineuil 2013 (£61). A young wine, light in colour and weight, this still carried plenty of raspberry fruit flavours, and just a hint of black pepper on the finish.


Likes: The menu is short, well thought-out and sensibly priced. Our waiter (Davide) was friendly, professional and well informed, a real joy to find good service in London.

Dislikes: The venue looks uninviting from the street. Once inside, the loud music is a tad intrusive. The restaurant feels somehow cold to me and more like a bar that serves food than a proper restaurant.

Verdict: Our food at Tredwell’s was beautifully executed and very reasonably priced. The slow-braised beef short ribs and the polenta fries were sensational and warrant a visit on their own right. Recommended.

Gigi's - A Preview from The London Foodie Tipster!

$
0
0

Name:Gigi's

Where: 22 Woodstock Street, Mayfair, London W1C 2AR
www.gigismayfair.com

Cost: Starters are priced from £8.50 to £15.00, with pasta dishes from £14.00 to £27.00, mains from £19.50 to £36, and side dishes at £4.50. Two or three course set lunch menus are £22 or £25 (Mon to Fri, 12 - 3pm). These change weekly, and include vegetarian options.  Cocktails range from £8.50 to £11.50.

About: Opened in September 2014, this Italian restaurant headed by the Neapolitan chef Ivan Simeoli, previously of Club Gascon and The Wallace, is tucked away at the end of a tiny enclave off Oxford Street that could easily be missed.


Gigi's is an elegant spot, on which it seems no money has been spared, with classic parquet floors, plush green velvet seating, chandeliers and a magnificent cocktail bar.


I could not fail to notice that on the evening we were there, all the waiting staff were Russian. On further investigation, it turns out that the restaurant is Russian owned, which might explain the staffing, and the huge sums that appear to have been spent on the decor. It also claims to have  served the world's most expensive cocktail at £9000 a pop.


What We Ate: It is rare in a restaurant for me to find that I want to order many items from the menu, but this was an issue at Gigi's, and choosing was difficult. After much deliberation, we decided to start our meal with the roasted octopus with borlotti beans and flamed onion broth (£11.50). I love the combination of seafood and beans, and here the octopus was excellent, with a deliciously char-grilled flavour and sweetness from the onions, and surprisingly was even more tender than the accompanying beans.


The vitello carpaccio tonnato (£13.50) is one of Italy's most popular regional specialties  from Turin. Gigi's take on this Italian classic, dotted with leaves of radicchio and sorrel, was superb, with finely cut rare veal, and a light and creamy fresh tuna mayonnaise. Having enjoyed this dish on a number of occasions in Italy, I can safely state that Gigi's was the best I have eaten to date.


The ravioli with Amalfi lemon and buffalo ricotta (£14.00), from the pasta section, had a heady citrus aroma, and a rich buttery sauce. A refined, beautifully presented dish, it transported me straight back to my last visit to Sorrento (reviewed here).


The pappardelle Zafferano with ossobuco and sage butter (£19.50), had freshly made, paper thin pasta, nearly as wide as lasagne. Served with veal and bone-marrow, this was rich, sweet and full of flavour. The chef had substituted the more traditional risotto with freshly made pasta, which worked a treat.


The salt marsh English lamb, with heritage carrots, sheep's milk and crunchy shallots (£24) was in my opinion the star of the meal. Tender and full of flavour, and with a magnificent, highly concentrated jus, it was exquisite both to the eye and the palate.
  

The White Park rib eye beef was served medium rare, with turnip tops and mustard (£36). Richly flavoured and well presented, this was also very good, although compared with the lamb, it did not fare so well in flavour or value for money.


For dessert, we opted for the Ivan Simeoli's interpretation of tiramisu (£7.50). A delectable deconstruction of an overfamiliar classic, this featured chocolate tuile, coffee meringue and a coffee parfait.


The liquorice sandwich with apple bubbles (£7.50) was very fine, with an intensely flavoured and aromatic apple foam, and a well made hazelnut parfait.


What We Drank: We kicked off with a Silver-tini cocktail - a refreshing concoction of lychees, gin, elderflower cordial, lime and pink champagne (£11.50). Equally good was the Rose Petal Martini, gin-based (Hendricks), but flavoured with rose and voilet liqueurs and lychee puree (£10.50).


With the main course, we had a glass of Montepulciano d'Abruzzo (£7.50 per glass), which was not a great match for the quality of the cooking.

Likes: The salt marsh English lamb was excellent, as was the vitello carpaccio tonnato, and both pasta dishes. Desserts were innovative and skillfully presented. Cocktails were strong and well made. The food menu is in the main well priced for the location.  

Dislikes: None

Verdict: There is some first rate cooking at Gigi's - Ivan Simeoli is a creative and talented chef using fantastic Italian produce to reinvent some of his country's classics. It's early days for Gigi's, and while it tries to find its feet on the London culinary scene, there is some serious cooking at surprisingly reasonable prices to be had. Highly recommended.

Moro - A Taste of Al-Andalus in Clerkenwell

$
0
0

Name:Moro

Where: 34/36 Exmouth Market, London, EC1R 4QE, http://www.moro.co.uk/

Cost: Starters range from £8.50 to £9.50, main courses from £16.50 to £22.00, and desserts from £6.50 to £9.00. Wines are largely from the Iberian peninsula, with whites from £19.50 for a Venas del Vero, Somontano, Spain, and reds from £22.00 for a Bobal - Tempranillo blend from Utiel-Requena, Spain. There is an extensive and well-priced sherry menu.

About: Moro is a Clerkenwell institution, opened by Sam and Sam Clark in 1997. With its little sister Morito next door (reviewed here), with a more casual tapas-style menu and no reservations taken, they have been the top choices in Clerkenwell for Iberian and North African food for years.


Moro has a laid-back feel about it, with wooden floors and bare tables, and an open kitchen with an old fashioned wood oven contrasting with gleaming stainless steel. The food is uncomplicated, relying on good ingredients prepared with minimal fuss.



I have been using Moro's cookbooks for years, they are among the few I have returned to over and over again - lately even more so since getting hold of their latest Morito cookbook, which has some wonderful recipes. I highly recommend their cookbooks -   you can find out more about them here.


What We Ate: With their comprehensive list of sherries, we could think of no better start than with some aperitifs and a glass of chilled sherry. We kicked off with some salted Marcona almonds, olives, some crusty bread and a couple of glasses of bone-dry  amontillado and an oloroso.


For starters, we shared the roasted quail ajillo (i.e. cooked in garlic), served in a fragrant jus of white wine and garlic, with shavings of black truffle (£9.50). The sweet quail meat had soaked up the garlic, butter and white wine, and made a great start to the dinner.


The other starter was a platter of chopped calves liver (£9.50), over fresh greens and herbs including chervil, and a smattering of toasted, lightly crushed hazelnuts. The dish had a wonderful combination of flavours and texture which I really enjoyed - creamy liver, crunchy nuts and refreshing green herbs.


The mains were quite substantial and wholesome. The wood-roasted Herefordshire pork (£19.50), was served with slow-cooked cabbage flavoured with chorizo pieces, and whole roasted chestnuts. The pork crackling was crisp, and the meat soft and flavoursome with hints of paprika, and a deliciously rich red wine jus.


Better still was the charcoal grilled lamb with Moroccan salads and chermoula (a sauce of coriander, garlic, lemon juice and olive oil) (£21.50). Served rare as ordered, the lamb was tender and the flavour lifted by the accompanying chermoula and salads. I loved the salads, and there were three - wafer-thin turnip with orange blossom and mint; celery with olives, tomatoes, cumin and ground ginger; and finally soft carrots, roasted with cinnamon and paprika. The flavours were fresh and aromatic, and were a great accompaniment to the lamb. I would love to have this dish again.


To finish, we had a delectable yoghurt cake with pistachios and pomegranate (£7.00). One of Moro's classic desserts for many years, this was light and creamy with refreshing acidity from the yoghurt.


But perhaps Moro's most famous dessert is the Malaga raisin ice cream (£6.50). Served with a luscious Pedro Ximenez sherry, the ice cream infused with plummy raisin fruit and a prominent hit of alcohol, this was vanilla ice cream like no other.


What We Drank: After a couple of excellent sherries, we shared a bottle of Sino da Romaneira 2010 (£42), from Douro, Portugal. A blend of Touriga Nacional, Tinta Roriz, Touriga Franca and Tinto Cão, this had a surprisingly restrained nose, but on the palate, plenty of red fruit, structured tannins and a long finish. It was weighty and complex enough to be a good partner to the richness of the meats. 


Likes: A small but well thought out menu which changes daily, top-notch ingredients, serving some of my favourite flavours from the Iberian peninsula and North Africa. The place has a casual vibe, and was heaving on the Wednesday evening of our dinner. 

Dislikes: None

Verdict: Top ingredients, expert cooking with little fuss, reasonable prices - no wonder Moro has been a favourite for Iberian and North African food in London for years. And judging by my latest visit, it would not suprised me if it continued to be for years to come. I can't wait to return. Highly recommended. 

Nipa Thai - A Taste of Siam in London's Hyde Park

$
0
0
Words & Photography by Matthew Brown and Luiz Hara

Name:Nipa Thai

Where: Nipa Thai, Lancaster Hotel, Lancaster Terrace, London, W2 2TY,
http://www.niparestaurant.co.uk/

Cost: From the a la carte menu, starters and soups are around £11-12, with salads and curries at £16-19. There are a number of special fish dishes - from scallops in a red chilli and coconut broth to crisp fried sea bass - though none costs more than £24. All desserts are £9. Nipa Thai also offers a number of set menus, from £35 per person for six shared dishes to £40 for eight, with a choice of Thai wine pairings at £20 per person.

About:Nipa Thai is one of a small number of Thai restaurants to have received the prestigious Thai Select award from the Thai government for the quality of its cooking. It also has 2 AA Rosettes, and is situated within the Thai-owned Lancaster Hotel with views over Hyde Park, making it popular with visiting Thai dignitaries. Head-chef Sanguan Parr brought her experience from the partner restaurant, Nipa, in Bangkok’s Landmark Hotel. 

What We Ate: To begin, we ordered the Ruam Mitr - a sharing selection comprising several starters, the highlight of which was the chicken satay in a sweet and velvety homemade sauce, complemented by Thai fish cakes which were fresh and zingy with lime and coriander.


The Kao Krieb Pak Moh was also good - steamed rice parcels containing chicken, shallot and plenty of peanut, glistening like multi-coloured oysters on the plate, and eaten inside a crunchy lettuce leaf.


Next came a soup course, of Tom Kha Kai and Kaeng Jued Tao Hoo, both well made. I particularly enjoyed the Tom Khai Kai, containing tender chicken in a succulent coconut broth, made refreshing by lime and lemongrass. It is easy to miss out a soup course when ordering Thai food, but these dishes are a reminder that this is a mistake.


They were followed by an array of main course dishes. Pla Rad Prig featured fried seabass with crispy skin and succulent white flesh, with coriander, onion and chilli.


The Yua Ma Muang Poo Nim, a salad of soft-shell crab and mango, was also hot, but not as successful. The crab had crunch, but was over-battered and lacked flavour, and the mango salad wasn’t substantial enough to sooth the heat.


The curry - Phad Kiew Warn Ta Law - was better. Mixed seafood (including some large fat scallops) was served in a green curry with Thai aubergine and basil.


These dishes were served with Sanguan’s Phad Thai, named after new head chef Sanguan Parr. Sweeter than usual and with plenty of lime, this was as good as anything I have eaten in Bangkok. I also enjoyed the aromatic Kao Kati - steamed rice with coconut milk and pandan leaves.


Desserts are rarely the most interesting aspect of Southeast Asian menus, and true to form, the desserts at Nipa Thai were in my opinion a bit of a let down. The banana pudding was bland, and served with the tiniest dash of caramel sauce.


The Piña Colada panacotta, whilst innovative, had the consistency of a mousse and lacked the richness of the “cooked cream” that gives panacotta its name.


What We Drank: The drinks menu features classic cocktails (£9), champagne cocktails (£12) and a range of European and Asian beers (all around £5.50 a pint). Most of the wines are below £40 a bottle, with a good number under £30. There’s also a selection of Thai wines - most of which are World Wine Award winners - for £29 a bottle, and available in 175ml or 250ml glasses. 

We opted for a bottle of the Thai Monsoon Valley Colombard, a World Wine Bronze Award-winning white. Although this grape originated in Southwest France, the wine shares the medium body and acidity of Sauvignon Blanc. It had notes of apple and grapefruit, making it a good partner to the spicy aromatic food. 

For dessert, we had a glass of another Thai Monsoon Valley wine, this time a Late Harvest Chenin Blanc, which was well made.

Likes: The restaurant’s setting is impressive, and there can be few better London dining rooms in which to eat Thai food. The Kao Krieb Pak Moh (chicken-filled rice dumplings) and Phad Kiew Warn Ta Law (seafood green curry) were exceptional. 

Dislikes: The desserts were unexciting, although the course was rescued by a very enjoyable Thai Chenin Blanc.

Verdict: Thai Cuisine is more diverse and complex than many restaurants do justice to. Nipa Thai’s soups and seafood dishes are well made, and the interior is eye-catching. With a number of good-value set menus, anyone looking to experience authentic Thai food should head to Nipa Thai. Recommended.

Quattro Passi - For the Finest of Italian Produce and Cooking in London's Mayfair

$
0
0

Name: Quattro Passi 

Where: 34 Dover Street, London, W1S 4NG, www.quattropassi.co.uk

Cost: Antipasti cost from £12 to £40, starters range from £12 to £30, main courses from £29 to £40 with side dishes at £4-5. There is a tasting menu priced at £80 for 7 courses. There is also a 2-course business lunch menu, Monday to Friday, for £25 per person, and 3 courses for £35. The restaurant is also offering a New Year’s Eve 7-course tasting menu for £222 including a glass of champagne on arrival.

About: Quattro Passi is a new restaurant in Dover Street, opposite The Ritz, which aim to bring the fresh flavours of Campania in Southern Italy, to London.

Chef/Patron Antonio Mellino has earned two Michelin stars at his landmark restaurant in Massa Loubrense in Campania, a region which many chefs say grows the finest lemons in Italy. He has moved his family to London with the stated aim of introducing real Italian fine dining.


Mellino, his sons Raffaele and Fabrizio and a top front of house and kitchen team, bring the skills perfected at his Amalfi coast restaurant, along with the light and simple pasta and seafood dishes and fabulous grills on which his reputation has been built.


The menu is impressive (with prices to match) featuring some of the finest produce Campania and other Italian regions have to offer. On our visit, mains included fish dishes like Amalfi lemon and basil infused monkfish, caramelised pears and chestnuts, homemade pasta with white truffles of Alba, or duck glazed in carob honey with Earl Grey creme caramel. 

What We Ate: We opted for the 7-course tasting menu priced at £80 per head. We started with an excellent platter of burrata cheese served with sweet pomodorino tomatoes and rocket leaves (representing the three colours of the national flag) doused in a treacly balsamic vinegar. The burrata was stunningly creamy and as good as the ones I enjoyed on my last trip to Campania.


Of note was also Quattro Passi’s generous bread “basket” – freshly baked in the restaurant, it featured a number of Italian classics including grissini, focaccia and friselle.


To follow, we had a magnificent linguine pasta course with courgettes and Parmesan cheese sauce.


Having just returned from a visit to the white truffle international fair and auction in Alba, I have come to appreciate these lovely little funghi. At Quattro Passi, we were served tagliolini pasta with generous shavings of white truffles – I loved the ingenious simplicity of this dish, the best way to appreciate the wonderful aroma and flavour of this Piemontese delicacy.


The fish course was mint-crusted turbot with a millefeuille of courgette and red turnips. Although the turbot was well made, the whole assembly lacked punch and focus in my opinion, with a rather bland courgette dish.


The main course was Fassone beef tagliata (fassone is a Piemontese breed of cattle highly regarded for the flavour of its meat), served with spicy broccoli, potato millefeuille and blackcurrant sauce. The beef was served medium rare, deliciously tender and indeed with a great depth of flavour. I was a little disappointed by the broccoli though, which despite being well flavoured, was a tad too soft for my taste.


For dessert we had the quintessential Italian dessert - Tiramisu with coffee ice cream and chocolate. With a milimetre-thin layer of cake, then microns-thin bitter chocolate, interspersed with dots of airily light mascarpone, this was a deliciously light and refined version of an often stodgy classic. I loved it.


What We Drank: Sommelier Diego served us a matched flight of wines. We kicked off with a glass of Quattro Passi's own label Champagne, from Epernay.


With our first course of burrata, we had a glass of Greco di Tufo, Vinosia 2013 from Campania, with fresh acidity, minerality and stone fruit flavours. 

Next came a glass of Ca' del Bosco 2010 from Curtefranca. With exhilarating minerality and steely fruit, this was a great example of one of Italy's best wines - a blend of Pinot Bianco and Chardonnay, from a top producer.



With the fish, we had a Sauvignon Blanc from Vigna Maso Tratta, La Vis 2013, from Trentino. With gooseberry and  nettle notes quite prominent, this nevertheless had a depth of flavour to make it a good match for the turbot. 

With the main course came a Chianti Classico 2011, from Peppoli, Antinori. Again from one of Italy's top producers, this was oak aged, with a heady nose of great complexity - sweet red cherries, raisins, vanilla and cedar among others, and tremendous length.   

For dessert, we had a passito wine, Roce Roce from Vinosia, 2010 made from Fiano d'Avalino grape. Named in Neapolitan dialect, it means 'sweet sweet'. Golden in colour, it is light in style with apricot aromas, and a long satisfying finish.


Likes: There is some superb quality Italian produce here, both on the table and in respect of wines. Such produce never comes cheap, and having spent time with some of Italy's finest food regions over the last few years, I think this restaurant really does serve some of the best produce of Italy. A perfect meal here would start with the burrata, followed by the pasta with white truffles, the fassone beef and ending with the wonderful tiramisu. The 7-course tasting menu at £80 is good value as is the £35 set business lunch which I am still to try.

Dislikes: Some have criticised the noise level at this restaurant, personally I could not see the issue. A few more affordable/accessible options on the a la carte menu would be welcome.

Verdict: Superb Italian produce very expertly cooked, for Italian fine-dining Quattro Passi is as good as it gets. Highly recommended.

A Return Visit to L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon

$
0
0
Words & Photography by Matthew Brown and Luiz Hara

Name:L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon

Where: 13-15 West Street, London WC2H 9NE, United Kingdom,
http://www.joelrobuchon.co.uk/

Cost: We sampled dishes from several of the restaurant’s menus. A La Carte starters range from £17 to £49. Main courses are more consistent, and vary from £34-49, while desserts are all £11. The restaurant also offers 5- and 8-course tasting menus, priced at £95 and £129, and each can be extended to include either a “Sommelier’s Choice” or a “French” wine pairing. As well as set lunch and pre-theatre menus (2 courses for £31, 4 for £41) there’s an additional menu of small tasting dishes (from £16-29) that features some of the restaurant’s most innovative items.

The wine list is extensive, and though the top bottles are stratospheric, there is a good choice of bottles under £40. There is an extensive spirits selection, and a strong cocktail list (£11-15) that is also available in the restaurant’s biggest secret, its cosy penthouse bar.

About: L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon is the London outpost of a superstar chef with restaurants all over the world, from Bangkok to Bordeaux and Las Vegas to Tokyo. Robuchon was named ‘Chef of the Century’ in 1989 and his ingredient-led cuisine shows great attention to detail. The London restaurant is led by Head Chef Xavier Boyer who has worked with Robuchon for 13 years, and shares his determination to reinvent classic French cooking.

Open plan kitchen by Chef's Table at L'Atelier Joel Robuchon

This restaurant opened in 2006, in a striking black townhouse on Covent Garden’s West Street. Inside, the emphasis is on glamour. The downstairs dining room offers bar seating around a sleek open kitchen.  As if this didn’t provide enough drama, there’s also a vertical garden on the back wall and irresistibly good lighting throughout. The second floor dining room is larger and has a more conventional arrangement of tables, but the drama returns in the third floor bar which features a roof terrace, a modernist fireplace and deep red leather armchairs.


L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon is one of my favourite ‘splurge’ restaurants in London, I wrote about it in The London Foodie previously, see earlier review here.

What We Ate: We began with an amuse bouche of foie gras, port wine and parmesan foam that was rich and well-executed and set the tone for the dishes that followed, all of which used indulgent ingredients with impressive finesse.


For our first course, we had a well-presented dish of fresh crabmeat, served in crisp ravioli of pressed turnip with a sweet and sour sauce.


It was followed by poached egg with Comte cheese cream, from the tasting ‘Découverte’ menu. Served on a rich black truffle coulis, the egg was poached to creamy perfection.


Next, we had poached turbot in a Champagne sauce, from the Gout de France menu, served with cockles, clams and shiitake mushrooms and a superb spiced Champagne foam.


For the main course, we had wagyu beef. The quality of the marbled wagyu was excellent - crispy on the outside and rare but firm inside.


We enjoyed it with soy spinach and Robuchon's famously buttery pomme purée (see earlier review here).


Dessert was a cylinder of crystalised sugar that contained layers of milk chocolate mousse, lemon cream and ginger ice cream. The sugar cylinder offered much more than presentation - along with the caramelized hazelnuts it gave a contrasting crunch to the soft layers inside.


What We Drank: Veuve Clicquot is the restaurant’s house champagne, always a good sign, and our meal began with those familiar, fizzy brioche notes.

Our first pairing was a 2013 Godeval Godello Valdeorras from Spain. High in acidity, its crisp lemon notes were a great accompaniment to the crabmeat and pressed radish.

The next glass, like the truffle dish it accompanied, was more powerful. A 2012 Riesling from the famous Schloss Johannisberg,  was light in body but with high enough minerality to stand up to the unctuous truffle.



Our third white was a 2011 Terlan Pinot Bianco ‘Vorberg’. Aged in oak casks, it had a delicious weight of apricot fruit flavours and great length.

The red wine was a 2009 Bodegas Resalte from Ribera del Duero. With  blackberry and spice notes, it was an excellent partner for the wagyu beef. 

With dessert we had a 2011 Luigi Bosca ‘Granos Nobles’ Gewürztraminer, a rich, sweet wine from Argentina, with a plenty of acidity to keep it from being cloying.

We ended the evening with two cocktails in the third floor bar and lounge. The first, a Smoked Brooklyn, a variation on a Manhattan, was a more aromatic version of that classic drink. The second, featuring my favourite Japanese citrus fruit, was the Yuzu Pisco - fresh, pretty and delicious.


Likes: the crabmeat ravioli were excellent but Robuchon's buttery pomme purée is what got me to return!

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon offers a truly unique experience – their Japanese inspired French cooking is light yet elegant and full of flavour. Their wine selection is second to none, and the ambience is glamorous, dark and soothing. Highly recommended.

The New Tasting Menu at Tamarind of Mayfair

$
0
0
Words and Photography by Matthew Brown and Luiz Hara

Name: Tamarind of Mayfair

Where: 20 Queen Street, London, W1J 5PR, http://www.tamarindrestaurant.com/

Cost: We visited Tamarind of Mayfair to try their new ‘Taste of Tamarind’ menu, available every day until 9:30pm. It’s a six-course set menu, priced at £65 per person, or £115 with a pairing that includes some exceptional wines. 

The restaurant has several other menus. The lunch set-menu is £21.50 for two courses, and £24.50 for three. Sunday Lunch is £32 per person, and a pre- or post- theatre 3-course menu is £35. The à la carte menu is pricier but not excessively so, though there are decadent options, such as a Lobster Masala (£39.50) and Tiger Prawn Kebabs (£34.50) available. 

About: This year marks the twentieth anniversary of Tamarind of Mayfair’s opening on Queen Street. It was the first fine-dining Indian restaurant anywhere in the world to win a Michelin star, and it’s now the flagship for an international group with venues from Kensington to California.


Situated on a quiet Mayfair street, there’s no doubt that this restaurant is still the jewel in the group’s crown. The gold-pillared underground dining room feels as though it’s in a great ocean liner.  It is an elegant restaurant overlooking a busy open plan kitchen offering impeccable service and great food.


What We Ate: Our meal began with a delicious Channa Chaat - spiced potato and chickpeas - served in a patty that had the shape and depth of colour of steak tartare, and just as indulgent. This was delicious - the chickpeas were soft, served with crispy fried gram flour for bite and a thick tamarind and sweetened yoghurt sauce for acidity and freshness. 


To follow we had the grilled scallop served with smoked peppers and spiced tomato chutney, which was not as successful (although any dish following that marvellous Channa Chaat would be at a disadvantage). The scallop flesh was soft, and the chutney well-spiced, but the tomato flavour was overwhelming in our opinion - the dish lacked the complexity and freshness of the Channa Chaat.


Tandoor-grilled baby chicken breast was better, with charcoal-smoked crispy skin and butter-soft flesh, served with fenugreek leaves wrapped in vermicelli and a spiced tomato purêe.


Up to this point the portions had been small, and a rich but tiny tamarind and date sorbet did little to assuage our hunger. The fourth course was however more substantial, and very well made - lamb chops served with spiced spinach, a creamy makhni daal, pulao rice and naan bread. The daal was dark and creamy, the spinach rich but light and the lamb chop was an excellent choice of meat.


For dessert, we had carrot fudge served with white raisins and melon seeds. This was soft and buttery, and served with a rich, nutty pistachio kulfi.


Tamarind clearly pays as much attention to its desserts as it does its savouries, and even the petit fours - salted caramel truffles and mint leaves coated in white chocolate, could have been a dessert in their own right. They were delicious.


What We Drank: With the sublime Channa Chaat was paired with an equally vibrant wine - a Riesling Trimbach 2007, from Cuvée Frederic Emile in Alsace, with apricot flavours and plenty of minerality, this was more than a match for the rich tamarind sauce.

With the scallop came a delicious Chablis Premier Cru Les Lys 2013, with fine citrus fruit and melon notes.

With the tandoori chicken came a chardonnay from Italy, the Cevaro della Sala 2012, with exotic tropical fruit flavours to match the weight of the dish.



To accompany the lamb, we had a glass of Dom Chante Cigale 2011 from Chateauneuf-du-Pape. Another respected vineyard on a flight of strong European wines, this complex wine made of several varietals had soft tannins, berry fruit flavours and great length.

Our dessert wine was an Andrew Quady Orange Blossom Muscat from California – sweet enough not to be overwhelmed by the dessert but with enough acidity to give it some grip. 

Likes: The tasting menu is well balanced and varied in character. The Channa Chaat warrants a visit to Tamarind of Mayfair on its own right. It can be hard to partner Indian food with wine, but Tamarind’s sommelier has chosen some excellent wines that are also a reason to visit in themselves.

Dislikes: The scallop dish was the weakest link in our opinion, and besides I could have done with a little more carb in the first three smaller starters.

Verdict:  With vibrant and well-balanced flavours, Tamarind’s tasting menu is an excellent option for those wanting to experience Michelin-starred Indian cooking in the heart of London's Mayfair. Highly recommended.


A Very Special Night Supper Club with Martell Cognac VS

$
0
0
Words & Photography by Greg Klerk and Joe Plimmer

L’art de vivre– the art of living – is a wonderfully French concept: the notion that a life well lived should be a thing of beauty and elegance. For 300 years Martell Cognac has placed l’art de vivre at the heart of its eponymous spirit, adhering as closely as possible to the craftsmanship and attention to detail that its founder, Jean Martell, established in 1715.


Throughout 2015, Martell is celebrating three centuries of l’art de vivre through its Very Special Nights – festive happenings that combine fabulous food, great company and Martell Cognac. The London Foodie was thrilled to host a Martell Very Special Night Supper Club, which demonstrated just how beautifully the elegance, balance and complexity of Martell Cognac goes hand in hand with the art of gastronomy.


Cognac is made from white wine; to earn the title of ‘cognac’ it must be made from at least 90% Ugni Blanc, Folle Blanche or Colombard grapes that are grown in one of the six crus surrounding the town of Cognac. The wine used to make cognac is twice distilled in copper stills to create eaux de vie, then aged for at least two years and finally blended to make cognac.


Beautiful served on its own, cognac is also tailor-made for cocktails and a Martell expert gave us a literal taste of the possibilities throughout our evening. We began with a Classic Champagne Cocktail: a perfect home for Martell VS Cognac. With dashes of Angostura bitters, a sugar cube and a top-up of G.H. Mumm Cordon Rouge Champagne, it was an irresistible start to the evening.  Dating back to the mid-1800’s, the Classic Champagne Cocktail is one of the oldest cocktails, with its first written mention found in 1855 in New York. The cocktail even pre-dates the first cocktail book published in 1862.

Pissaladiere

Appropriate to the celebration of an iconic French brand like Martell Cognac, The London Foodie prepared a six-course French menu. The Classic Champagne Cocktail was served with a pissaladiere, and this was followed by Curried Mussel Veloute, Wakame Seaweed and Croutons, with which we enjoyed a Vin de Savoie Chignin-Bergeron, Domaine Jean Vullien et Fils. This lovely, dryish wine with strong pear and peach notes also worked nicely with our Premiere Entrée of Baked Camembert with Honey, Garlic and Rosemary, Brown-Sugar Roasted Ham, New Potatoes and Cornichons. All wines on the evening were expertly paired by wine merchant Laurent Faure of Le Vieux Comptoir.


A Second Entrée – Tartare of Sea Bream, Apples, Fresh Herbs and Sake – was followed by an opportunity for Martell VS Cognac to show off solo. Pale gold in colour, top notes of apple and pear layered over subtler notes of spice and almonds, with a rich, almost creamy mouth-feel. A lovely glass.


Our Plat principal & Accompaniment was Parmentierde Confit de Canard aux Cepes Duxelles et Foie Gras With Green Leaf and Herb Salad in Vinaigrette Dressing. With this we enjoyed another wine  selection, Guillaume de Pratavone Ajaccio, a spicy, medium-bodied Corsican red made from a Grenache-Sangiovese blend not uncommon in Corsica’s Ajaccio region, which is otherwise famed as the birthplace of Napoleon Bonaparte.


A cheeseboard selection by Androuet Maitre Fromager of Spitafields was the perfect match for a glass of Martell Cordon Bleu, created in 1912 by Edourd Martell and long since renowned as a classic cognac. Dark and coppery, Martell Cordon Bleu has a complex nose of orchard fruits – plum, apricot, apple – interwoven with coffee and spices, most particularly cinnamon. Mellow and rich, it has a gloriously long finish.


We ended the evening with Tarte Tatin with Rosemary, Flaked Almonds and Crème Fraiche, which was served with an unusual Martell Cognac cocktail twist: a Martell & Coffee Martini, made with espresso, Martell VS Cognac and Irish cream liqueur and served in a martini glass and topped with two coffee beans.



It was a Very Special Night indeed, and one we’re sure that Jean Martell would have loved.


For recipes, cocktail ideas and further information on Martell Cognac’s 300th year anniversary, please visit www.martell.com or find them on twitter @MartellCognacUK


A Taste of Scottish Hospitality at Gleneagles

$
0
0

Regarded by many as the top luxury resort in Scotland, if not in the whole of the UK, Gleneagles is 232-room, 5-star hotel in Perthshire, also famous for hosting the international golf tournament Ryder Cup. Owned by Diageo, the world’s largest drinks conglomerate, it is also a member of the exclusive Leading Hotels of the World, a personal favourite hotel collection I always look out for when I go travelling.


Built in 1924 in French-inspired architecture, Gleneagles is set in 850 acres of tranquil Scottish countryside. It is hard to believe that London is just a 5-hour direct train journey away, or that Edinburgh or Glasgow is only an hour’s drive.


Guests at Gleneagles come for relaxation and pampering, and there are plenty of opportunities for both. The facilities including the spa, fitness centre and golf courses are truly impressive, but it was the dining options including a 2-Michelin starred restaurant, and the anticipation of sampling some of Scotland’s finest produce that really piqued my curiosity. Followers on Twitter told me – “the Gleneagles’ breakfast is probably the best you will ever have”! I seriously doubted that at the time, but nothing really prepared me for what I experienced waking up at Gleneagles.


I was invited to Gleneagles for three days and two nights to experience Scottish hospitality and learn more about the hotel’s offerings. I met some of their local suppliers of seafood, game and ice cream, dined with a couple of the chefs and even got to blend my own-label Scotch whisky. Oh yes, and I did a bit of falconry too. There are plenty of activities guests can take up at Gleneagles so if golfing is not your thing (and it certainly isn’t mine), there is still much to discover and enjoy at the hotel.


Day One

Arriving at Edinburgh after a 1 hour 20 minute flight from London Heathrow, the drive to the hotel took just an hour. The chateau architecture and formal gardens make for a stunning entrance to the hotel. It felt as grand and elegant as I could have wished for.

View from my hotel room at Gleneagles

My room was spacious, in tones of browns and tartans, with a lit fire making it warm and elegant without being ostentatious. There were great views of the hotel grounds, and the bed was huge and comfortable.


Despite being a hotel room, it was so spacious and well appointed that I could happily have spent a few hours relaxing, writing or reading there without feeling cooped up. There was a huge bathroom, beautifully decorated.


Visit to Stewart Tower Dairy

After an hour of down-time to freshen up, we went to visit Gleneagles ice-cream supplier, Stewart Tower Dairy, home to a small herd of beautiful Holstein cows. Husband and wife team Neil and Lindsay Butler, frustrated with the wild fluctuations of the milk market, decided in 2006 to move into ice cream as a way to get a more reliable profit from milk.  It was a good move, and today they produce around 40,000 litres of ice cream per year in 200 different flavours.


These can be enjoyed at their ice cream parlour at the farm, which is open to the public, or at one of their clients scattered around the UK, including Gleneagles.


This was a fun visit, and we had the chance to meet Neil and Lindsay, see the cows being milked, and we even made our own ice cream mixture. The ice cream was light and creamy with wonderful natural flavours.


Dinner at Gleneagles The Strathearn Restaurant

With two AA Rosettes, this restaurant serves classic French and Scottish dishes in an atmosphere that recalls the glamour of the hotel’s art deco origins. The feel and service reflect this, with a grand piano being played in the corner, silver service and many items prepared or cut in front of diners before being served.


Whole sides of smoked salmon are sliced, Beef Wellingtons are carved and Crêpe Suzettes flambéed, all at the table and with great panache. The menu features the abundance of Scotland’s cold waters, including oysters from Argyll, Hebridean crab, Scottish lobster and langoustines and the of course wild Scottish smoked salmon.


Set priced menus cost £60 for three courses and £70 for four. I had a starter of seared scallop with sweet corn purée, chicory and shavings of summer truffle, that was delicious.


On our visit, the meat dish of the day was Beef Wellington, and I had this for my main. It was perfectly cooked with crisp pastry, and the beef was pink throughout – this is as good as Beef Wellington gets.


The dinner menu offers three courses including dessert for £60.00, or four courses including dessert and cheese for £70.00.

The legendary cheese trolley at Gleneagles

Day Two

The Gleneagles Breakfast

I have been lucky enough to visit many five star hotels during my travels, but nothing compared to the breakfast at Gleneagles, and this is no overstatement.

Breakfast #1 - just warming up...

Served in the splendour of the Strathearn restaurant, breakfast at Gleneagles is a sumptuous affair. There is station after station of specialties including Scottish smoked salmon, traditional hot dishes including kedgeree, scrambled eggs, the full Scottish breakfast, waffles in maple syrup, French pastries, a cheese station, whole legs of ham carved on silver platters, juices and the list goes on.

Breakfast #2 - how could I resist a Full Scottish Breakkie?!....

I discovered that in addition to my dessert stomach, I have a secret breakfast stomach that saw me through two or even three helpings, so irresistible was the spread at Gleneagles.  As if all this were not enough, Gleneagles also offers breakfast cooked to order, which I felt I had to sample. My favourite was the grilled fillet steak, with a fried egg and chips, served with a glass of Champagne. Heaven!

Breakfast #3 - Beef fillet, chips and Champagne, my kind of breakfast heaven!

Make sure to put aside time for this spectacular, and get up early enough to spend one or two hours on your breakfast – you will not regret it. After breakfast, we headed out to visit Gleneagles suppliers of fish and seafood.

My favourite breakfast station at Gleneagles - Bloody Mary & Bucks Fizz Station!


Visit to George Campbell & Sons Fishmongers

George Campbell & Sons have been trading since 1872, and have supplied seafood to Gleneagles since the hotel opened in 1924. The current owner, Iain Campbell, has worked at the business since 1977.


Staff work through the night to prepare the day’s catch, ready for delivery in the morning. All the preparation, skinning, filleting and pin-boning is done by hand, with their vans leaving at dawn to deliver all over the country.


On the morning we were there, Colin Bussey, former Executive Chef at Gleneagles, joined us at the fishmongers along with Alan Gibb (Executive Chef at Gleneagles), as well as Iain and Rachel Campbell, to prepare a wonderful lunch and show the fantastic quality of the local Scottish seafood. We ate in the experimental kitchen at the fishmongers, open for presentations, food clubs and restaurant demonstrations.


First, we watched one of the fishmongers, Gus McKenzie, skillfully prepare an array of the freshest fish and scallops ready for the chef. We had the most delicious potted brown shrimps, hot smoked salmon paté on oatmeal biscuits, and a salmon and leek tart.


The star of the lunch for me though was a stupendous dish of seared scallops served on Stornoway black pudding from Macleod & Macleod with a beurre blanc sauce.  This was spectacularly delicious – the scallops were huge and meaty, and among the best I have eaten anywhere, and the combination with black pudding was classic surf and turf.


Falconry and Gun Dog Lessons

Back at the hotel, with a full stomach and very happy, we were keen to learn more about the activities available at Gleneagles.


The hotel provides a range of activities for their guests beyond golfing. We spent an hour at the British School of Falconry at Gleneagles, learning some of the skills involved in this sport, and also learning that a number of common expressions in English are derived from this ancient sport – “under the thumb” and “tight-fisted” being just two. We had the opportunity to work with Victor the falcon.


The gun dogs, Sweep, Wexie, Tar and Debbie were three lovely black Labradors and a black Spaniel at Gleneagles Gun Dog School, and we spent some time learning how to handle them, including obedience and agility training.


As a dog owner, I was pleased to learn that guests’ dogs up to the size of a Labrador are welcome in the hotel for an additional fee, either staying in their owners bedroom, or in a special guests’ kennels on site where owners can visit them freely. 

Andrew Fairlie Kitchen

Sadly we didn’t get to eat at this 2 Michelin starred restaurant in Gleneagles, but we did get to have a look around the kitchen with Head Chef Stevie McLaughlin. Andrew Fairlie is independent from the hotel, and serves 6 and 8 course menus at £95 and £125 respectively, or 3 courses à la carte from £125, with wine flights available. It’s quite an intimate venue, with just 17 tables.


Andrew Fairlie is only open for dinner, and serves produce from a nearby kitchen garden tended by three full-time gardeners. One of the signature dishes is lobster smoked over whisky barrels, which I would love to have sampled – a treat for next time I guess.


I can’t vouch for the food as we didn’t eat there, but I think the accolades speak for themselves – the restaurant has been awarded 2 Michelin stars since 2006, and in 2011 Andrew Fairlie was named a Relais & Chateaux Grand Chef. In 2012, Andrew Fairlie at Gleneagles was named Best Restaurant in the UK in the Sunday Times Food List. 

Deseo Restaurant

Deseo is an informal restaurant intended to represent a Mediterranean food market, allowing guests to enjoy a wide variety of appetizing dishes. The restaurant has a ‘breed book’ aimed at giving diners the chance to choose beef in the same way they might select fine wines or whiskies, and was created in conjunction with local butcher Simon Howie. Every week sees a different guest breed on offer.


One option at Deseo is to reserve the chef’s table for 8 people, and this was what we did on our second evening. We were joined by Gleneagles Director of Food and Drink, Alan Hill, and the hotel’s game supplier, Neil Dixon from Ochil Foods.


A keen shot for decades, Neil explained a great deal about game, the leanness of venison (only 4% fat) and the difficulty of persuading supermarkets to overcome their worries and stock more game.

Paul Devonshire, Gleneagles Executive Sous Chef, prepared our game dinner that evening. We started with a lovely partridge carpaccio with a herb-encrusted and deep fried quail’s egg and three types of beetroot – candy, red and yellow. The partridge had been cooked sous vide at 40 degrees for 50 minutes, and was served with a glass of delicious Bonarda 2011 from Mendoza, Argentina.


Next came pheasant in a rich and gently spiced broth, served with a glass of Marchesi di Gresy 2009, made from Chardonnay grapes in Langhe, Piemonte, Italy.


Before the main course, we had marinated grouse breast with double cream and thyme, topped with fried julienned leeks, served with a glass of Cepas Viejas 2009, from Dominio de Tares, Bierzo, Spain.


The main event was a sumptuous and hearty dish of Sutherland venison with a hare joint, purple Heritage potato rosti, and Stornoway black pudding.  This was a magnificent dish, full of flavour and complexity, well balanced with a glass of 2009 Rioja from Cecias, Paisajes, Spain.


For pre-dessert, we had a little ice cream with frozen Gold Reserve whisky. Dessert proper was a lovely apple bavarois with cinnamon meringue, expertly partnered with a glass of Moscato Passito 2007 from L’Altro, Marchesi di Gresy, Piemonte, Italy.


The Chef's Table Experience costs £720 for a table of eight and includes your own chef, waiter and menu offering.

Whisky Tasting in the Blue Bar

The Blue Bar is located in a courtyard accessed through the hotel’s Dormy Clubhouse, and is a heated outdoor bar for the appreciation of fine Cuban cigars and Johnnie Walker Blue Label whisky, as well as a range of “molecular” whisky cocktails.


Here we were treated to a fantastic tasting, and also had the opportunity with one of the whisky sommeliers to learn how to  blend our own whiskies.  I also learned about the popular misconception that all the best whiskies are single malt. In fact, there are some wonderful blends, which we sampled at the bar, and this is an area about which I now want to learn much more.


Day 3

Sadly our last day at Gleneagles. After another monumental breakfast at the Strathearn Restaurant, and a long walk through the golf courses and grounds, what else to do but head back to Deseo Restaurant for a truffle lunch before our departure?

Cooked by Gleneagles Executive Chef Alan Gibb, we were treated to a medley of wonderful truffle dishes. We started with black truffle pizza with parmesan and basil, moving on through scrambled eggs with white truffle, to a truffled mac’n’cheese.


The piece de resistance was a magnificent dish of roast chicken with winter truffles, chicken liver, creamy mashed potatoes, carrot and cauliflower.  This was a great lunch that really brought to life some top quality produce from Scotland and beyond, prepared with the unique touch of Gleneagles, Scotland’s finest resort.


I would like to thank Gleneagles Hotel for hosting me and showing me some of the fantastic hospitality and produce of Scotland. These were unforgettable days, and I cannot wait to return one day.


The Gleneagles Hotel, Auchterarder, Perthshire, Scotland PH3 1NF
T: 0800 704 705 (UK Freephone) or 1 866 881 9525 (US Freephone)
www.gleneagles.com
@Gleneagleshotel

The YTL – Malaysia’s Top Hotel Collection

$
0
0

A few years ago, Dr G and I visited Malaysia, and stayed at two properties of the YTL group, reputedly the country’s number one hotel collection. High up in the mountains among tea plantations, we spent a couple of nights at the colonial-style Cameron Highlands Resort, having one of our most interesting stays whilst in Malaysia (reviewed here). On the same trip, we also visited Pangkor Laut, Malaysia’s top resort, also owned by YTL (reviewed here).
Pangkor Laut Resort - Malaysia's Top Luxury Resort

These experiences were breathtaking, and the YTL has since that time become one of my favourite Asian hotel collections. Whenever I travel to the region, I look out for their properties.  More recently we stayed at The Surin, a luxury resort in Phuket, Thailand (also reviewed here). Currently the collection extends beyond Malaysia and Thailand to a number of other countries including Indonesia and Japan, and they also own The Gainsborough Spa Hotel in Bath, England.  

We had such a wonderful time at Pangkor Laut that, when I was invited by the YTL group to Malaysia for a return visit to the resort, I didn’t think twice. I was also given the opportunity to spend an evening at The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur, which certainly lives up to its name, being one of the most elegant hotels I have stayed at and the only one in KL to be included in the prestigious Leading Hotels of the World luxury collection. 

The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur

The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur includes the original Hotel Majestic, which is a national heritage site. This colonial building dates back to 1932 and became an iconic hotel of its time.


A symbol of Malaya’s boom years before World War II, the hotel was the destination for glamorous social events, government receptions and the hotel of choice for prominent international visitors. Today the hotel is part of the YTL’s Classic Hotel group, having been restored to its former glory and extended, and renamed The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur.

Live Jazz band at the Colonial Cafe


The hotel is spread over two wings – the Majestic and the Tower. The Majestic Wing is the original historic hotel building, and I stayed in one of the suites in this lovely part of the hotel.

Living area of my suite at the Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur

All the Majestic Wing suites are provided with 24-hour butler service, WiFi, and a complimentary, fully stocked minibar, in-room continental breakfast and a pick-up and drop-off service in Kuala Lumpur city centre, which I found very handy when sightseeing. My room was a magnificent Art Deco suite, so large and so elegantly furnished, it was truly palatial.

The gorgeous suite at the Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur

Annexed to the Majestic Wing, The Tower Wing is a modern addition, housing the majority of the hotel’s guestrooms and suites, and this is also where the hotel’s largest restaurant Contango is found, as well as the conference centre, the gym and fitness centre, and the largest of the hotel’s swimming pools.


The hotel has six different locations where guests can dine. On our first night we headed to Contango. I enjoyed our dinner here for various reasons – the food offering was excellent, particularly the Malay and curry spreads, but it was the variety of cuisine choices and the buzz of the place that really sold it to me.


Contango is among the finest food courts you will come across in KL with open plan kitchen stations offering everything from Brazilian churrasco to pizza and Japanese sushi, as well as Malay and Nyonya cooking. The place was heaving on the evening we were there, with a predominantly Malaysian clientele; it sits up to 250 diners.


I must admit that I had never used a hotel gym before my stay at the Majestic Hotel. Having just paid a small fortune to join a local gym back in London, I decided to get up early (making the most of my jetlag), and work the treadmill. The gym facilities are excellent at the hotel with all the amenities one might want, including a gorgeous swimming pool with spectacular views over the city.


Breakfast is also taken at Contango, and just like at dinner, the offering was a true feast. There were stations of Malay breakfast serving Nasi Lemak (coconut rice with egg, sambal sauce, dried anchovies, cucumber and peanuts wrapped in banana leaf), roti canai (flaked pastry served with chicken curry or sweetened with condensed milk) and other local delicacies. 


I love congee - a savoury rice porridge that is a traditional Chinese breakfast, whenever I am in Asia, and the Chinese congee station at Contango was again superb.



The breakfast at the Majestic Hotel is a real foodie experience, so if you are staying at this hotel make sure to get up in time for it, take your time and enjoy it in a leisurely fashion.

The magnificent bars at The Smoking House at The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur

In a hectic city like KL, The Majestic Hotel’s spa is an oasis of calm and relaxation and I was lucky enough to enjoy a 90-minute Malay massage there, after which I was walking on clouds. There are several treatments that guests can book and I highly recommend one during your stay. Malaysia and other Asian countries have a long tradition of massage - not only for relaxation but also as part of a holistic treatment for many ailments. Whatever your reason, I cannot think of a better way to start (or end) your holiday in Asia.


Residents of the Majestic Wing are afforded the luxury of a pick up and drop off service to the city centre of KL. Keen to hit the town, I was taken by limousine to an agreed spot and given a mobile phone to call the hotel whenever I wanted to be picked up.

The Majestic Wing


I had a quick but enjoyable whizz around the Central Market, Jalan Petaling and the busy neighbouring streets of KL. I have been to the city a few times but I still find it impossibly difficult to navigate – this is partially down to my own lack of spatial awareness and my reliance on Dr G doing all the navigating whenever we are travelling together, but as I was on my own I found the chauffeur service a great comfort.


I don’t need much to work up an appetite but all that walking certainly helped. I was intrigued by the Colonial Café, and particularly by the food being served there. Colonial cuisine, I learnt referred to the cooking of Chinese chefs created during the time when the British ruled Malaysia and Singapore (known as British Malaya) between the 18th and 20th centuries. The British officers and merchants positioned there at the time, and who were wealthy enough to afford cooks, longed for some of their native dishes. Colonial cuisine was hence born from the attempts of these Chinese chefs to recreate such dishes using British staples, Asian cooking styles and some exotic local flavours.


I thoroughly enjoyed our lunch at Colonial Café - it was refreshing to see a creative approach to some classic British dishes but the quality of ingredients and the level of cooking skills were also top notch. One of my favourite dishes was the baked seafood crab shell – this was a mixture of crabmeat, fish and other seafood mixed with seasoned breadcrumbs and served with a gorgeously cheesy mushroom sauce.


Another delicious dish was the old-style Hainanese chicken rice balls – this is poached chicken served with rice balls cooked in the chicken’s own broth. I love this dish and have seen a few variations on it in Malaysia and Singapore.


The fried chicken wings, another Hainanese classic, was also a popular dish – crispy and very meaty, I just wished we had ordered a few more servings of these bad boys.


After a short but pleasurable stay at The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur, it was time to say goodbye and leave for our next destination: Pangkor Laut Resort.





The Majestic Hotel Kuala Lumpur
5 Jalan Sultan Hishamuddin
50000 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
T: (603) 2785 8000    
Email: tmklresv@ytlhotels.com.my    
www.majestickl.com

Pangkor Laut Resort

Pangkor Laut Resort and I are no strangers – I was lucky enough to visit this resort a couple of years ago (reviewed here), and fall in love with it. Returning to Pangkor Laut was a tad scary – would it live up to the wonderful experience I’d had?

Arriving at Pangkor Laut Resort

Located on a small private island three miles off the West Coast of Malaysia along the Straits of Malacca, Pangkor Laut Resort is reached from the much larger Pangkor Island, where guests check in at the jetty before being whisked away by speedboat for a 15-minute ride. Stepping off the launch onto the impressive pier, an army of staff welcomes guests with ice-cold drinks and towels, taking care of the luggage and helping with the check-in and orientation.


Over the years, Pangkor Laut Resort has been awarded many accolades including the "Number One in the World" by Condé Nast, as well as being voted the world's best spa resort by the readers of Travel & Leisure World. There is only one resort on the island, no other hotels, restaurants or businesses. Of the island's 300 acres, only a small part has been developed to house the resort, leaving plenty of beaches and natural rainforest (which still makes up 80% of the island) to explore.


The resort offers various types of accommodation including the Spa Villas where we stayed, next to the spa, built on stilts over the sea. Spacious, elegant and stylish, they offer great privacy, and are fully equipped with a king-size bed, a massive stone bath, air conditioning and a stunning veranda over the sea. These rooms are mainly used by couples, and no children are allowed in the Spa Villas or Village. I loved my room -  beautifully decorated, and very spacious.

My lovely Spa Villa room at Pangkor Laut Resort

The private veranda in my room at Pangkor Laut Resort
Alternative accommodation is available further inland at the nearby Sea Villas (also on stilts but closer to the resort's main reception and restaurants), and also the Beach, Garden and Hill Villas respectively, which are built on solid ground. These are aimed more at families than couples, and include television and Wifi.  Also, these rooms are closer to the forest, and to the main reception, restaurants, bars and tennis courts.


There are six dining locations in the resort; they vary in cuisine and formality, including Chinese, Malay, Indian, French fine dining and Japanese options. 

In my opinion, the best meal of the day was breakfast at Feast Village, which was outstandingly good. There was a variety of stations serving individually prepared Malay, Chinese and Western dishes, including Dim Sum, Teppanyaki Noodles, Nasi Lemak, freshly baked waffles, fresh tropical fruits of every shape and size, as well as juices, cereals and French pastries. 

The sheer variety of dishes and styles makes for a very long breakfast if you want to try a bit of everything, which I highly recommend, so make enough time for it.

Wonderful Roti Canai and Chicken Curry Station (also pictured below)

Next to Feast Village, The Straits Restaurant is set against the rocks by the beach, and is lined with dining booths that overlook the sea, a really stunning setting. This is where we had our first dinner soon after arriving at Pangkor Laut. The restaurant serves a selection of fine South-East Asian dishes.


Uncle Lim's Kitchen was built on top of a rock surrounded by fig trees, and is named after the chef who has been with the resort since it first opened. It specialises in Nyonya and Hockchew Chinese-style home cooking, and it was here that we had one of the best meals on this trip.


The amazing Uncle Lim
Uncle Lim himself was there to greet us and cook a number of outstanding dishes including stir-fried scallops and fine green beans in a spicy sauce, sautéed lobster and deep-fried tofu and abalone, to name just a few. Uncle Lim’s Kitchen was my preferred restaurant during my first visit to the resort and it continues to be in my opinion, the best dining option at Pangkor Laut.


Following a fascinating Jungle Walk guided by the resort’s resident naturalist, ending at Emerald Bay, we headed to Chapman’s Bar for a "Banana Leaf" lunch.


The Chapman's Bar is named after a famous British Colonel who, after more than three years evading Japanese soldiers in the jungles of mainland Malaya, sought refuge at Emerald Bay before escaping to a British submarine just outside the bay in 1945. By sheer coincidence, one of my good friends in London is William Chapman of 7 BR Chambers is his great nephew, and he explained that after the war his Uncle Freddie had a distinguished career in education, but sadly died in 1971 by his own hand.


The food at Chapman’s Bar was South-Asian, and quite varied including a selection of curried vegetables (ladies fingers, fine green beans, cabbage and rice), beautifully seasoned meats and fresh fish and seafood served on banana leaves. The food was delicious and some of the best we had on the island. It is open for light lunches and more formal dinners on the beach.

The breathtaking Emerald Bay at Pangkor Laut Resort

The Royal Bay Beach Club is another great spot for lunch. Situated by the resort’s largest swimming pool and fitness centre, this is an open air restaurant and a favourite option for families. I had a delicious Chicken Kapitan there, a classic Nyonya dish, that was bursting with flavour.



But what to do between meals at Pangkor Laut? Fear not, there are many activities to get stuck into - from putting your feat up on the beach or relaxing at the resort’s award winning spa to jungle walking and excursions to Pangkor Island, sunset cruises, cookery and yoga classes, there isn’t a dull moment to be had at the resort.

Early morning yoga class at Pangkor Laut Resort

Tennis courts at Pangkor Laut Resort
At the top of my list of things to do is a signature spa experience at the resort’s award winning Spa Village, that takes a full 3 hours. This involved a pre-treatment bath-house ritual of washing and scrubbing, including a Japanese onsen-type experience and herbal steam inhalation. Once clean and very shiny, I had a 2-hour massage known as Campur-Campur, which blended Malay and Thai techniques, pressure points and aromatherapy. I've been to a few hotel spas in my time, but the one at Pangkor Laut was quite something. Covering about an acre of land, it has a very peaceful quality, being mostly in the open air, surrounded by running water and with the sound of the sea audible throughout.

The award winning Spa Village at Pangkor Laut Resort

I remember falling asleep and waking a number of times during the massage, and when it was over I was so relaxed that I could not get up from the table! I highly recommend a visit to the Pangkor Laut Resort’s spa.

The resort also provides excursions to the nearby Pangkor Island. We visited the island’s fishery as well as one of its major fishmongers, and it was amazing to see the volume of fish being handled and boxed away for shipping to all corners of the world.


We also visited a dried seafood market and watched local women preparing the dried fish to be sold, as well as visiting the resort’s noodle maker on Pangkor Island. These visits gave us a fascinating glimpse into the islanders everyday lives.


Back at the hotel, we headed to Feast Village for the Chef's Kitchen Experience. As a chef, this was one of the most interesting activities at the resort. Chef Ken (our Malay chef) taught us how to cook some fantastic local dishes including Ikan Bilis - a snack of dried baby anchovies and peanuts, fried in a sweet, sour and spicy onion dressing that was truly delicious. Another great dish was Chef Ken’s deep fried prawns served on a bed of julienne apples that was both refreshing and moreish. Having prepared these dishes, the experience then included an hour's massage at the Spa Village. A wonderful way to spend a day of cooking at the island!



My return visit to Pangkor Laut only reinforced my feelings towards this fascinating resort, I felt that the top luxury resort of Malaysia has only improved with time and better acquaintance! And I am already contemplating a 3rd visit….



Pangkor Laut Resort
Jetty Complex
Marina Island Pangkor
KM1, Teluk Muruh
32200 Lumut, Perak
www.pangkorlautresort.com

Shackfuyu - Creative Japanese Inspired Cooking in Soho

$
0
0

Name:Shackfuyu

Where: 14a Old Compton Street, London, W1D 4TJ, http://www.bonedaddies.com/shackfuyu/

Cost: The small dishes cost around £4 to £8, the larger options vary from £13.50 to £15, while dessert is priced at £6. The average food cost is around £30 to £35 per person.

About: A temporary restaurant, with a planned life span of twelve months, this latest outpost of Bone Daddies is at the Charing Cross Road end of Old Compton Street opened in February 2015, and due to close in February 2016.


With bare wood floors, walls of distressed brick or lime green, and a soundtrack of American hard rock, the restaurant serves up a range of Japanese cuisine inspired small eats, together with Japanese beers, sakes and a smattering of wines.  The aim is to change the menu every 6 weeks or so. There is a lively basement bar. The restaurant does not take reservations, but on the Saturday night we had dinner, there was fortunately no queue.


What We Ate: We started with the yellowtail sashimi tostada with avocado shiso (£2.50 each) was made up of a crispy tortilla with crushed avocado and shiso herb (a Japanese herb which tastes like a cross between mint and basil and is also known as perilla), topped with a slice of yellowtail, a dot of Siriracha and a slice of jalapeño chilli. We found this underwhelming – the flavours did not quite come together and we both thought it was a tad expensive for what was being offered.


The other starter was the mackerel nanban-style (£7.80) is a dish I often serve at my Japanese and Nikkei Supper Club and while I enjoyed the tangy flavours of the nanban dressing, I would have liked a bit more chilli heat. And again we felt that at this price level we expected a bit more mackerel.


For main we had the whole sole roasted with shiso chimichurri (£15) which was the special of the night. This was excellent – perfectly cooked in the wood oven (a great inheritance by the former pizza venue Shackfuyu has taken over the premises from), with zingy and refreshing flavours from the shiso chimichurri, it was probably the best dish of the evening.


The other main was also great - USDA beef picanha, with kimchee butter (£14.50). Served with raw pickled onions, the beef was tender, well cooked and served medium rare just as ordered. I love a good Picanha (Brazil’s national cut of beef, synonymous to Churrasco or BBQ in the country where it is served simply encrusted in rock salt and grilled) and Shackfuyu was very well flavoured.


To accompany our main dishes, we shared a Mentaiko mac 'n cheese with bacon and 'cock scratchings' made of crushed deep fried chicken skin (£6.90).  Mentaiko is Japanese Pollack or cod roe, which is marinated in chillies so it becomes spicy and pinkish in colour. It is one of the main ingredients of Kyushu Island in Japan where my family comes from. Mentaiko is one of my favourite Japanese ingredients and I love it simply over white Japanese rice or in Mentaiko Spaghetti, it tastes amazing!

So of course that Shackfuyu’s Mentaiko mac ‘n chesse had to be ordered - but I found it slightly odd – I could hardly taste any Mentaiko in it, and the cock scratchings had such an overpowering flavour I could not taste anything else. This is definitely a combination of flavours that should be revisited by the restaurant.


A much better accompaniment was the beef hot stone rice (£8.30), served Korean bibimbap-style - in a hot stone bowl, with a raw egg yolk on top, and mixed at the table by our waiter. With sweetcorn, shiitake mushrooms, julienne carrots and kizami nori (shredded nori seaweed), this had a good amount of chilli and great flavours.


For dessert, we shared a portion of Kinako French toast with soft matcha ice cream (£6). A thick slice of bread soaked in custard then pan fried, this had a crisp coating of caramelised sugar with a dusting of Kinako (toasted soya bean powder) and a lovely, slightly astringent green tea ice cream.


What We Drank: Shackfuyu offers a range of beers, cocktails and wines. We started with a can of Niigata unfiltered pale ale (£4.80), and a bottle of Asahi Black (£4). After that, we moved on to Asahi beer at £4.80 per pint on draft.


Wines are available by the glass, carafe and bottle, with an exclusively New World choice of just three red and three white wines, starting at £18.50 per bottle for a white South African  Chenin Blanc and a red South African Cab Sauv. 

Likes: the special of the day, roasted whole sole with a shiso dressing was delicious, as was the USDA picanha beef, the bibimbap rice and the Kinako French toast with green tea ice cream. The staff were very friendly and seemed to understand the food and ingredients they were serving.

Dislikes: the tostadas were tiny and overpriced as was the nanban-style mackerel. I really wanted to like the Mentaiko Mac ‘n Cheese but the combination of flavours did not work for me.

Verdict: I enjoyed Shackfuyu’s creative use of Japanese ingredients for some of its dishes. Their food offerings go beyond the ubiquitous Japanese sushi and sashimi to show a number of Japanese ingredients not much known in the UK. Recommended.

Franciacorta - Italy's Answer to Champagne? We Find Out.

$
0
0
Words & Photography by Greg Klerkx

Think of the world’s venerable winemaking nations, and Italy will surely be near the top of the list, with rich Barolo, peppery Chianti, and dozens of other venerable varietals, regions, styles and makers happily crowding the mind. Think Italian fizz, however, and that expansive, multi-hued picture often reduces to a single frame crowded with one word: Prosecco.


This ubiquitous sparkler can, of course, be lovely; it can also be, and too often is, unbalanced and one dimensional – the stuff of a thousand cheap Bellinis. Italian winemakers have long howled that there’s much more to their country’s sparkling wine scene, and so it was with great anticipation that we sat down recently for a master class featuring six Italian sparklers looking to knock Prosecco off its perch.

The fizz in question hailed from six winemakers in one of Italy’s prominent sparkling regions, Franciacorta, located in Lombardy a couple of hours’ drive from Milan. Though wine has been made here for centuries, Franciacorta sparkling wines received DOCG status – the top quality marker in the Italian wine industry – only in 1995. The rise of Franciacorta as a producer of sparkling wine since then has been precipitous: from 3,000 bottles a year half a century ago to over 15 million bottles sold last year.


There are now 113 sparkling wine producers in Franciacorta, six of which were on show at a pop-up tasting held at Andaz Liverpool Street curated by Christopher Cooper, former head sommelier of Soho House and Gordon Ramsay Group. “Everyone should know about Franciacorta,” Christopher said. “It easily rivals Champagne for quality and often beats it for value.”

We put Christopher’s words to the test with a range of sparkling styles, beginning with a Franciacorta Brut made by Antica Fratta (£28.50, Amazon.) This non-vintage style fizz was medium dry with top notes of hay and wood-smoke and a honeyed finish that was slightly sweeter than expected, though not off-puttingly so. Very low acidity made it also very drinkable, and a fine choice to start any dinner party.


Next up was a wine made in a style called Saten (‘satin’), which is unique to Franciacorta. Made only from white grapes and with slightly lower pressure, Franciacorta Saten is typically more delicate and somewhat less bubbly than other sparklers. We had a Franciacorta Saten from Castello Bonomi that seemed an appropriately silky representative of the style, with an aromatic caramel corn nose leading to a crisp feel and very blanc de blanc notes of pear and gooseberry, an excellent match for creamy dishes (and indeed we drank it with a tasty morsel of Andaz wild mushroom stuff tortellini and lobster puree to underscore the point.)


A highlight of the event was the Ca’Del Vent Blanc de Blancs Vintage 2011, a so-called ‘zero dosage’ Extra Brut with no sugar added. Non dossato sparklers have long been a favourite aperitif in northern Italy and it’s easy to see why: absolutely bone-dry, the absence of extra sugar amplifies the pure sweet-tangy flavour of the grapes, offering a lean, fresh feel and taste. Zero-dosage wines can often been astringent, but this Franciacorta Extra Brut was a revelation that I’d happily buy by the crateful.


The Bellavista Alma Cuvee, a non-vintage Franciacorta sparkling wine, was not quite as wow as the Extra Brut but has the distinct advantage of being easily purchased in the UK (£13.21, uvinum.com.) Alas, while Franciacorta sparkling wines are broadly available in the UK, many of the labels sampled here would require a trip to Italy (or paying the appropriately steep shipping cost from a UK importer.) Bellavista is good value at the price and would match well with hearty, meaty dishes – we tasted it with a portion of aged beef roast with spring onions – and would be a fine, if not outstanding, aperitif.

Gatti Enrico Vintage 2008 is a Franciacorta Brut made in what’s known as Millesimo, or ‘year-defined’, style (Millésime is the Champagne equivalent.) Most sparkling wines are made from grapes harvested in different years, but occasionally a wine-maker produces a Millesimo to highlight the quality of a particular vintage. If the Gatti Enrico is anything to go by, 2008 was very kind to Franciacorta: this was the most classically Champagne-like of the Franciacortas, in the best possible way – earthy, bready, firm and delicious.


We finished with Franciacorta La Valle Rose (£30.49, Italyabroad.com), described by Christopher as an “up and comer” in the region. Made only from Pinot Noir grapes – and with the wine left on the skins to produce its gorgeous rosy hue – this was a soft, lightly bubbling glass filled with strawberries, pear and sunshine…just the sort of thing to nudge a bit of la dolce vita into our blossoming English summer, and an excellent match with a variety of foods, including the crumbed taleggio with red pepper emulsion we were served.


As mentioned above, some of the labels represented in this tasting aren’t yet readily available in the UK. That said, many Franciacorta sparkling wines are very easily found via Ocado, Majestic, Fortnum & Mason and any number of specialty wine shops. Based on the consistency of our tasting, you’ll be well rewarded for trying any of them…and for leaving all but the finest Prosecco behind.

Viewing all 444 articles
Browse latest View live