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Ready, Steady, Bake! A Review of L' Atelier des Chef's Macaron Baking Class

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Words and Photography by Felicity Spector and Luiz Hara

We were invited to try out the 2 hour ‘Mastering Macarons’ baking class at L’Atelier des Chefs in St Paul's - held on a Friday evening between 6-8pm.


I have to confess I was rather sceptical about the idea of learning how to make macarons in such a short time. I've never tried them before, but watching vicariously as far more experienced Bake Off contestants and the like try and fail to achieve the right consistency and texture made me think it would take far, far longer for me to pick up the technique.


But the class promised macarons in two hours, and I was ready to learn.

Adorned in fetching plastic aprons, we gathered around our tutor for the night, Daniel Stevens, who had already begun the class at a gallop. In order to get a head start, he had managed to measure out some pre-prepared mixture onto trays, so they would dry out in time to put them in the oven.

All the ingredients we needed were already weighed out, and the equipment stood waiting - if only such preparation was so easy at home!

Under Dan's careful direction, we sifted flour and ground almonds, watched as egg whites and sugar ballooned into meringue in the Kitchenaids, and took turns to fold them together. A few dollops of the brightly coloured food colourings in - and we were done. So far, it was all very manageable.


We were then shown how to load up a piping bag and measure out the macaron halves onto the prepared baking trays. This was certainly a technique to remember, as we discovered how to look straight down at the tray, holding the nozzle into the dollop of mixture so it spread evenly and consistently. It was easier than I’d feared, and something I could replicate again.


We were invited to pipe our mixtures onto some trays: some produced lovely neat little macarons, while mine were frankly designed for a greedier person. Or perhaps 'generous' would be a kinder way to describe them.

Next they needed to dry before going in the oven - and the trays were placed next to open oven doors to speed up the process.


Dan carefully advised us how to make sure the mixture was the right consistency, and how to tell when the piped macaron mixture is dry enough to put into the oven: it should be slightly tacky and just firm enough to touch.


Onto the fillings: and there were four. A chocolate ganache was first, flavoured with a mint essence. I got a chance to get over my fear of making caramel - it really wasn't that scary after all. No saucepans were burned in the making of my toffee sauce. A citrus buttercream was surprisingly easy, and a delicious praline creme patissiere completed the lineup. Another useful recipe, which I'll keep for a later day.


Somehow all the fillings managed to set in time for us to fill our piping bags again, and sandwich the finished macarons together - there were certainly plenty to go around and we all filled takeaway boxes with our brightly coloured creations. I confess that we might possibly have eaten the odd one or two as well - but only the ones which weren’t quite perfect looking enough to take home. Honest.


I had arranged to take my batch to friends later in the weekend, and in retrospect I probably shouldn't have tried to keep the ones filled with the creme patissier for so long: they turned rather soggy after two days in the fridge, although they still tasted pretty good. The others held their shape and consistency far more impressively: the salted caramel version went down particularly well.

Dan advised us that macarons are far better eaten the day they're made - a sugar-filled midnight treat, then, or you could take the class right before a dinner party, and take them as a contribution towards dessert.


We were emailed the recipes for the macarons and fillings during the session, the easier to replicate them at home, although it would probably take me rather longer than 2 hours without Dan to provide his expert guidance.

I came away with some excellent tips: those piping techniques, the discovery that old egg whites make better meringues, and that caramel will not instantly burn to a blackened mess and wreck your pans. Our class definitely managed to de-mystify the art of macaron baking. Not such an impossible sweet to attempt, after all.

We were invited to attend the Mastering Macroons class at L’Atelier des Chefs St Pauls, 10 Foster Lane London EC2V 6HR, for more information visit their website here.



Classes cost £72 per person for two hours, and you can take home all the macarons you can eat.

London Restaurant Reviews - Eyre Brothers

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Where:  70 Leonard Street, London, EC2A 4QX, http://www.eyrebrothers.co.uk

Cost: Starters range from £6 to £12. Main courses range from £15 to £24, with a couple of shared main courses at up to £30 per person.  Desserts / cheese platter are from £2 to £7. Entry level wines cost under £20 for both red and white wines, and there is an extensive selection of sherries, ports and Madeiras.

About: Tucked away on Leonard Street in Shoreditch, just metres from Great Eastern Street and Old Street station and less than a mile from my home in Islington, I must have driven past Eyre Brothers thousands of times without realising it was there.  The decor is all dark wood, white walls and chocolate-coloured leather.


Eyre Brothers was opened in 2001 by David and Rob Eyre, who used to be partners in the famous Eagle gastro pub on Farringdon Road. Reflecting their origins in the former Portuguese colony of Mozambique, the menu draws on classic Portuguese and Spanish ingredients and flavour combinations that I've always loved, so I arrived hoping to be impressed.


What We Ate: We kicked off with appetisers of “pimientos de padron fritos” and “pasteis de bacalhao” (salt-cod fritters) both £6.  The fried peppers were good - simply served with flakes of salt that went down really well with the Fino Sherry we had them with.


The “pasteis de bacalhao” were however a revelation – I have been eating these fritters since I was a toddler back in Brazil, but these were some of the finest I have tried for sometime with a generous amount of salted cod to potatoes, and very well seasoned.


Next, Dr G opted for chestnut, chorizo and parsley soup (£6), which was a good hearty winter option. I had the “bacalhao com grao de bico” - warm salt cod with chickpeas, onion and garlic and a soft boiled egg (£10). Salt cod can be rather tricky to get right - it's often tough, dry or too salty from inadequate rehydration, or tasteless if it has been over-soaked. Happily, Eyre Brothers' version was perfectly cooked.


I really wanted to try the Alentejano pork for 2, but couldn't resist ordering also the grilled fillet of acorn-fed Iberico pork, marinated with peppers, thyme and garlic, served with potatoes, green peppers, onions, garlic and white wine (£21). This is considered to be the restaurant’s signature dish and I can see why – served pink, which is quite unusual for pork, the meat was so tender and very flavoursome. Iberico pork is the Rolls Royce of the pork world, free range and fed on acorn only, it is normally served as charcuterie so it was nice to be able to try it fresh and expertly cooked, it really didn’t disappoint.


My favourite Portuguese dish of the night however was the “Cataplana de Porco Alentejano” - or Portuguese pork with clams served in a “cataplana” pot.


The combination of pork and seafood may seem unlikely, but it is typically Portuguese and when it is cooked correctly, a sort of alchemy occurs which is utterly magical.


It is served with a red pepper and paprika sauce and deep-fried cubes of potatoes which soak up all that lovely meat and seafood juices. At £40 for 2, Eyre Brothers did an excellent version of this Portuguese classic, better than many I have had on my trips to Porto.


For dessert, we opted for the Tarta de Santiago, a flourless orange and almond tart with orange marmalade and cream (£5). This was a nice way to end a rich meal, being light and with some refreshing acidity from the citrus fruit.


We also had the very traditional Portuguese dessert of Toucinho de Ceu  (literally "the fat of heaven") a cake based on almonds and egg yolks (£5). It was served with strawberries, and was also good.

What We Drank: With our appetisers, we had a glass of Fino sherry (El Maestro Sierra, £8.25), a bone dry and bready fortified wine, and a glass of Manzanilla Solera Reserva, Emilio Lustau (£5).
With the main meal, we shared a bottle of 5 fincas, Castillo Perelada Reserva 2008 (£45). With a blend of garnacha, syrah, merlot and cabernet sauvignon, this was a complex wine with notes of cherry and blackberry, soft tannins and a long finish. It went very well with our pork dishes.
Busy Bar at Eyre Brothers - Excellent Selection of Portuguese and Spanish Wines and Sherries

Likes: Lovely Iberian cooking, good wine, sherry and port selection sensibly priced, attentive service. The Menu del Dia (Lunch Menu) is excellent value at £18 for 2 courses. Given a day's notice, the restaurant can roast a whole suckling pig Portuguese style.

Dislikes: Perhaps unsurprisingly given its location in the City, it has a somewhat corporate feel, and many of the clientele on our visit appeared to be groups of business people and their business guests in suits unwinding / bonding after a day in the office.

Verdict: An excellent option for dinner in Hoxton, Old Street or Finsbury Circus areas and for some seriously good Iberian cooking. The cooking and service were faultless and as good as some of the top establishments in Portugal. Highly recommended.

London Restaurant Reviews - Paesan

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Words & Photography by Simeen Kadi and Luiz Hara

Name: Paesan

Where: 2 Exmouth Market, London EC1R 4PX, http://paesanlondon.com/

Cost: Antipasti from £4, small plates are around £6 and mains from £8 to £13

About: Paesan aims to extol the virtues of ‘Cucina Povera’; a cuisine styled from the humble meals of Italian peasants. Taking over from the corner site previously housing Dollar Grills and Martinis on Exmouth Market, this is a fairly large, unadorned space which caters to the drinking and dining crowds that line the pavements of this party street.


What we ate: Paesan is one of a few London restaurants that have been spawned from the Polpo template. While I don’t think they actually share any DNA, they have a similar aesthetic and menu – although I would add that Polpo would win any bout of sibling rivalry.

The menu is broken up into manageable chunks with Antipasti, Piccolo (ie small plates) Pasta, Fish and Meat. We started with a plate of charcuterie including Coppa di Testa, Wild Boar Mortadella and Lardo. The Lardo was sweet and deeply flavoured, the coppa was also very good, especially when wrapped around spicy Puglian bread rings. The mortadella, although tasty, did not have a discernable flavour of gamey wild boar. The Caponata was rich and velvety – a great example of inexpensive ingredients given some va va boom.


The Focaccia we ordered to accompany the meats was topped with delicious caramelised onion but was woefully undercooked and doughy.


From the Piccolo section of the menu we ordered the Burrata which came with more of the delicious caponata – the burrata was fresh and bright but could have been creamier.


Calabrian Trippa & Steak Ragu with Chilli and Pecorino tried to appeal to squeamish British diners with a thinly veiled use of the Italian for tripe. The dish was peppery and both the tripe and the steak were tender.


The Crochette Schiacciatina (try saying that after a couple of Negronis) were two crispy patties with a filling flavoured with anchovy and parmesan – dense and well seasoned. It came with a tomato salsa that was one dimensional and tasted vaguely of preservatives.


The pasta dish that I had been waiting to try was Hand Cut Pappardelle with Slow Roasted Suckling Pig Ragu. Sadly it was sold out, so we opted for the Orecchiette with Nduja, Pancetta and Cavolo Nero. Nduja, the fiery hot spreadable sausage made from pork and lots of chilli, was a key ingredient for 2013, featuring in neo-Italian bacare as well as in menu-bending fusion street food stands across the capital. Here, it was tempered by the cabbage and coated the pasta ears to give a rich, pleasing mouthful.


We also tried the Fritto Misto – always a good barometer for the skill of a kitchen. Here, the batter was light, crisp and well seasoned. The fish was mostly Calamari, which was lightly cooked and tender. There was the odd chunk of Red Mullet which was also well cooked in the batter. The accompanying aioli lacked the zing of a squeeze of lemon.


For dessert, we enjoyed a large serving, best shared, of perfectly good toasted Panettone with Grand Marnier and Vanilla ice cream.


What we drank: The Negroni we ordered while perusing the menu was watery, due to the addition of soda – an absolute sacrilege. To make matters worse, the olive in the drink was raw and hard as a bullet.

With our meal we drank a 2012 Montelpuciano d'Abruzzo by Farina which lacked depth or balance, but had plenty of fruit as such a young wine would. A completely forgettable bottle.

Verdict: Paesan has a great location on a vibrant street teeming with great food. A greater focus on using quality ingredients, however humble, and more care in the kitchen and the bar should elevate this restaurant to a neighbourhood favourite.

London Restaurant Reviews - The Mirror Room

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Words & Photography by Felicity Spector and Luiz Hara


Where: Rosewood Hotel, 252 High Holborn, London WC1V 7EN

Cost: Small plates priced from £9 to £16, main courses from £13 to £21, while some dishes to share ranged from £19 to £75 for a rib of beef.

About: The Mirror Room is billed as the highlight of the newly refurbished Rosewood Hotel, the reincarnation of the 5-star Chancery Hotel around the corner from Holborn station. Its American owners have spent an astonishing £85 million on the refit, including a suite in its own wing, so vast that it has its own postcode. Plus, we were told, a cool £500,000 on the dining room silverware alone. Be sure to take care with the glasses in the bar - they cost €150 each!


Designed by New-York based Tony Chi, the Mirror Room itself is a long, astoundingly dramatic space, with a highly intricate mirrored ceiling, a huge fire blazing at the end, and the biggest vase of flowers I’ve ever seen in the centre, from the high-end florists McQueens. Décor is Chinese influenced, with plenty of glossy black lacquer and some very grand sofas and chairs.


The man behind Mirror Room’s kitchen is Bjorn Van Der Horst of the late Eastside Inn who received rave reviews for his Clerkenwell restaurant before it shut.

Prior to dinner, we had a couple of cocktails in the Scarfes Bar, a cosier and more intimate room with beautifully judged lighting, a blazing fire, antique books, and very comfortable chairs.


Illustrations come courtesy of the caricaturist Gerald Scarfe. Here, the comprehensive drinks menus - including more than 200 single malts, come hidden inside antique looking leather book jackets, and there’s live music every night. The staff were fantastic, very knowledgeable and friendly: nothing seemed too much trouble.


The more casual Holborn Dining Rooms is set to open shortly in the hotel, which will be another, perhaps more affordable dining option at the Rosewood Hotel.


From the book lined comfort of the Scarfes Bar, we were led into a stunning corridor, shimmering in a sort of bronze light, then through to the vast expanse of the Mirror Room. “It’s the first place I saw which made me simply say - wow”, said our waitress: and there certainly has been no expense spared on this lavish and luxury space.


What we ate: The menu is divided into a range of ‘small plates’ from which you could easily construct a meal: five between two people, we were told, might be a good selection. Of the large plates, there were a lot of sandwiches, mixed with some more conventional main course dishes and three larger ‘sharing plates’.

The excellent sourdough bread came with a flavoured butter, which changes daily - a clever idea: on the day we went, it was golden raisin, walnut and thyme, which lent a pleasant sweetness and crunch.

I started with a pheasant and chestnut soup (£9), which was exquisitely made, with a rich flavour from the pheasant stock, and plenty of trompette de la mort mushrooms, along with pieces of sliced chestnut to add texture to the creamy veloute style broth.


We also tried the foie gras with almond and coffee (£14): rich, with just a hint of bitterness from the coffee and an almond foam which balanced the unctuous liver very well indeed.


A rose veal tartare (£16) was hand chopped yet remarkably smooth, simply seasoned with just a hint of caper and parmesan - an excellent effort.


For mains we had another of the small plates - gnocchi with morels - wheat rather than potato based dumplings (£11), which came with an intense mushroom sauce and plenty of morels.


The ‘crispy Dover sole, chips and truffle mayonnaise’ (£19) was also a success: two substantial fillets of perfectly cooked fish in a tempura batter, crisp, fluffy chips in a small Jenga type tower alongside a pot of very good truffle mayonnaise. I also ordered an off-menu selection of steamed vegetables, a prettily arranged selection served al dente.


Desserts were a particular highlight: the menu offered a few options including the tempting sounding “patisserie from the counter” (£8).


We were invited to view the selection with our obliging waiter, who talked us through the various options, including a cheesecake, various biscuits and madeleines, and a selection of French pastries.


I chose a blackberry frangipane tart, a pleasingly generous slice cut from a whole tart, with some raspberry coulis on the side. It was excellently made: crisp, thin pastry, moist frangipane with the tartness of the berries cutting through the almond sweetness.


We also tried a dessert from the main menu - ‘chocolate, candied chestnut, Lagavulin cream and vanilla meringue’, which came in a glass, an indulgent twist on a Mont Blanc and very alcoholic.


What we drank: There was a good range of cocktails created by the in-house barmen in the Scarfes Bar - served with special daily changing ice-cube shape (which I’ve never heard of before) in those expensively heavy and gorgeous Ralph Lauren glasses.

We had a glass of Hats Off, a delicious concoction of tequila, Aperol, lemon and grapefruit juices that was refreshing and with the right amount of bitterness from the Aperol (£12). We also tried The Humidor made from Chivas 18-year old whisky, dry white Port and Absynthe among other ingredients (£12). This was a strong and very well-made cocktail and my favourite of the evening.


In the restaurant, the vast wine list was expertly navigated by our sommelier who suggested a glass of Pinot Noir to go with the foie gras and veal tartare starters. He had specially opened a bottle of Domaine Pierre Danoy, normally not available by the glass, but priced at £60 a bottle.

With the Dover sole main came a glass of 2009 Lucien Le Moin white Burgundy at £18, fresh and citrusy with hints of butter and spice, chosen to match the beer batter on the fish.

Water came served in stainless steel cups lined with copper, a very grand touch.

Likes: The service was wonderful, with extremely friendly and expert staff, from the Polish waitress in Scarfes Bar who exuded enthusiasm - to our sommelier and waiter, they all went out of their way to make us feel comfortable. The desserts were the highlight for me, while my companion had high praise for the tartare and foie gras, where the quality of the ingredients, and the care taken with their preparation, were evident.

Dislikes: We were there on a quiet midweek night, and although there were a few occupied tables around us, with the restaurant being so spacious, it felt a little lacking in atmosphere.

Verdict: If it’s a grand experience you’re after - this is definitely the place. It has that ‘wow’ interior the like of which you’ll rarely find in London as well as excellent cocktails, food and desserts. The Scarfes Bar was very relaxing and would make an excellent place to meet - especially with the live music. Recommended.

Dieci Restaurant - Italian Fine-Dining in the Heart of Marylebone

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Words & Photography by Florentyna Leow and Luiz Hara


Where: 10 Manchester Street, Marylebone, London, W1U 4DG. T: +44 (0) 207 3175 928 - http://www.diecilondon.com

Cost:£9 - £12 for starters; £7.50 - £26 for pastas; £15 - £28 for mains; £6 – 11 for desserts

About: Dieci is an Italian restaurant at No. Ten Manchester Street, a stylish boutique hotel on a quiet street in Marylebone, a stone’s throw from Baker Street or Marylebone stations. Headed by Executive Chef Cristian Gaimarri, Dieci serves up classic Italian dishes featuring seasonal local ingredients and meats and cheeses from small Italian producers.


The restaurant itself is an intimate affair: the dining area seats around 24, and the plush sofas and jazz make it a lovely place for a romantic night out. Yet this is also a popular spot for corporate meetings particularly at the cigar lounge, or more often in the cosy sampling room where you can linger over a cigar and whisky until 1 in the morning.

The Cigar Lounge
Dieci'shumidor deserves a special mention – you'll be spoilt for choice with their range of fine, fragrant Havana cigars (from £14 per cigar) which even includes a few UK market exclusives. Their staff, who clearly know their stuff, will be happy to assist you in choosing a suitable cigar from the extensive cigar menu.

The impressive Cigar Humidor


What We Ate: I love it when restaurants pay attention to their bread baskets, and Dieci's surpassed my expectations. We had a decent selection of breads, including a shockingly tasty house-made foccacia with rosemary and crunchy sea salt, and slices of tomato bread which left a savoury, spicy burn at the back of the throat. We were particularly enamoured of the pane carasau, a crispy Sardinian flatbread sprinkled with rosemary and baked with olive oil. It was quite difficult to resist over-indulging with bread of this calibre.


For starters we had the Piemont fassone beef tartare served with mushroom sauté & Umbrian black truffle (£12.50) and Andrian burrata, smoked aubergine, and Bloody Mary salsa (£9.50). The beef tartare is one of their best-selling starters, and I wanted to love this but didn't quite. While the beef was well-seasoned, and showered with thick shavings of fresh and lovely Umbrian truffles, the hot sautéed mushrooms left the tartare on the warm side. I also felt that it could have been chopped less finely for improved texture, and a little more sharpness or acidity would have also helped.


The burrata, though, was divine – an unabashedly, gloriously creamy hunk of fresh cheese paired with an intensely smoky aubergine puree. You pour over a Bloody Mary salsa-sauce, which cuts through the creaminess of the burrata with a lovely hit of spiciness and acidity. A well-thought out and beautifully executed starter I'd happily eat again.


One cannot eat at an Italian restaurant and forego pasta, so we gamely ordered two – the Canadian lobster pasta (£26) and Tuscan Pici pasta with lamb ragout (£14.50). The lobster pasta was an impressive looking dish – with spaghetti drenched in a deep tomato and lobster sauce, lightly spiced with Calabrese chilli.


No matter how impressive that lobster was, it paled in comparison to the Pici pasta. The simplest dish of the night was also our unanimous favourite – a completely unassuming mound of pasta topped with a perfunctory sprig of rosemary. This was the ultimate in Italian home cooking. Each mouthful of soul-warming pasta was lightly bathed in a slow-cooked lamb ragout and Castelmagno cheese, and we were sorry when we'd finished scraping the plate clean.


Our second main courses, the oven-baked veal shank with parmigiana risotto (£30) and red-wine braised baby lamb shank (£25), were equally impressive - well-executed versions of the Italian classics, they are sure to please any red-blooded carnivore at the dinner table.


Noteworthy, however, was the meltingly rich bone marrow in the veal – so bad for your heart, but so good for your soul. Also particularly intriguing was the pasta accompanying the lamb shank.  Sardinian fregola – and not strawberries (fragole) as we originally thought – is a kind of hand-rolled pasta. In its uncooked form it looks similar to Israeli couscous, but cooks up into little sago-like cubes but much firmer and chewy in texture – very disconcerting if you're expecting a more traditional pasta, but we quickly grew to enjoy it as it soaked up the lamb shank sauce very nicely.


By this time we had room left for just one dessert, shared between us – the Sicilian Bronte pistachio semifreddo (£8.50). It was deliciously nutty and lighter than an ice cream, but a pool of melted dark chocolate gave it a dash of va-va-voom. A lovely end to what had been a rich and hearty meal.


What We Drank: Dieci sources many of their wines from small Italian producers, and we drank a superb Merlot recommended by restaurant manager Paola Gaimarri – the Just Me 2010 (£52/bottle) from di Lenardo Vineyards in the Friuli region of North Italy. It was luscious and velvety, juicy with lots of cherry notes and dangerously drinkable – possibly one of the best Italian wines we'd had in a long time.


With dessert we had the Glenmorangie Signet – a very fine whisky that went down a treat with the dark chocolate.

Likes: The restaurant’s attention to seasonal produce, which is reflected in the construction of the menu, the unusual and regional breads, pasta and cheeses, some of which were unknown to us was intriguing and educational. It was a rather cold night when we went, and comfort dishes like the Pici pasta and ossobuco were all we needed. Portions are also quite generous, and the bread basket was exceptional.

Dislikes:While the beef tartare tasted lovely we felt it a bit of a shame to have those beautiful truffles with a warm, raw beef which also lacked in texture. While the lobster was quite delicious, I found it a tad overcooked.

Verdict: Dieci is a fine addition to a group of excellent restaurants in the surrounding area (which include Pied Nus and the Royal China Club). A perfect meal here consists of burrata, the Pici pasta with lamb ragout and the pistachio semifreddo, all wash down with a bottle of "Just Me" Merlot. Highly recommended.

Portuguese Fine-Dining at Portal Restaurant - Revisited

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Where: 88 St John Street, London, EC1M 4EH, http://www.portalrestaurant.com

Cost: Starters range from £6 to £12, main courses from £14 to £24, and desserts from £6 to £14 for the cheese board. Special, traditionally Portuguese options such as a whole suckling pig are also available for £385 to share between 8-10 people, given 3 days' notice.

About: This is my second visit to Portal, you can see my first review here. I was keen to pay a return visit as Portal recently appointed a new head chef, Vitor Veloso replacing Jeronimo Abreu who was head chef on my last visit.

The restaurant has an elegantly timeless façade of jade-green tiles on a black background. On stepping through the front door, a spacious tapas bar area greets the eye - the perfect spot for a dry white port and a savoury platter or two.

The restaurant itself comes as a surprise, being invisible from the street. Set in a large conservatory made almost entirely of glass and steel, it is surprisingly warm and inviting, and the lush greenery surrounding makes for a beautiful setting. The staff are mainly Portuguese, and very knowledgeable about the food and wine.


The restaurant is situated in the creative heart of Clerkenwell, sandwiched between the City and Islington.

What We Ate: We kicked off with a starter of tender, meaty scallops with ‘Farinheira’ Crumble (pork sausage crumble), chicken broth and vegetables (£8.50) which was very beautifully presented.

Our second starter was an open pigeon tart with caramelised onion, dried figs and Port wine reduction (£12). This had probably the most delicious, ripe and fragrant fig I've eaten in years, and sweetly tender caramelised onion, but was let down by the pigeon which was somewhat tough and dry, as well as being served cold.

Being addicted to salt cod (bacalhau) since I was a child, the main course was an easy choice for me - I went for the roasted Bacalhau with broccoli purée, confit potato and garlic (£17). This was well presented and tender, but was to my palate rather lacking in flavour concentration and seasoning. It is a cliché in Portugal that Brazilians (with whom they share a passionate devotion to salt cod) like their fish over-salty, but to my palate this was nevertheless a little on the bland side.


Dr G opted for the slow cooked Bisaro (neck of pork) with mushroom purée, bok choy, apple and raspberries (£20). The pork had been cooked sous vide for 12 hours, at 68 degrees, while marinating in white port, orange juice, rosemary and garlic.


As an accompaniment, we had Batata a Murro (£3.50), a wholesome dish of new potatoes roughly crushed in butter and garlic.

For dessert, we ordered one of the restaurant’s signature dishes – the legendary Pasteis de Nata (the quintessential Portuguese snack of burn custard in a flaky pastry case) which were excellent, with cinnamon ice cream (£8).


We also had the Passion Fruit Parfait with coffee, poached pear and pistachio ice cream (£7), which was delectable and very refreshing.


What We Drank: The wine list is put together by Antonio Correia, an acclaimed expert on Portuguese wines in London. The restaurant is said to have the largest collection of Portuguese wine in the UK, many made from indigenous grapes found nowhere else in the world. It is a treasure-trove.


As we arrived, for a stunning aperitif, we opted not for our usual Manzanilla sherry, but rather for a glass of Quinta do Portal Extra Dry White Port (£6), which was perfect with a little dish of plain popcorn.

The wine list is very extensive, and almost exclusively Portuguese, including a huge range of aged and vintage ports, and Madeira wines. There are some very rare, fine wines, but also a good range of more affordable options including whites from £24, and reds from £22.

We were very impressed by the quality of the entry level house wines, and enjoyed with our starters a couple of glasses of white wine from the Duoro and Dao regions.  The Quinta do Portal, Frontaria Branco, Douro, 2011 was made from the Malvasia grape (£5 per glass), had crisp acidity, and went very nicely with the scallops.


With the pigeon tart, we had a glass of Quinta de Saes, from the Dao region just south of Porto. A blend of Touriga Nacional, Tinta Pinheira, Jaen and Alfrocheiro, this was a steal at just £5.50 per glass.

With our main courses, we had a glass of Condado das Vinhas 2012, from the Alentejo region (£5), which was straightforward but had a good concentration of red berry fruit.
 

With the cod, we had a glass of Quinta do Portal DOC 2010, from the Douro region (£4.50). I was surprised to be offered red wine with the cod, but it worked well, being delicate enough not to overpower the meaty fish.



Likes: There are few restaurants in London that offer serious Portuguese cuisine, and this place offers an extensive, authentic menu. The settings of the bar and restaurant are stylish without being flashy. The wine list is outstandingly good, lists some excellent regional Portuguese rarities, and starts at a very reasonable price. Service is discrete and expert.

Dislikes: At best, the cooking is excellent, but sadly it was not entirely consistent on this second visit.

Verdict:  Portal remains a well-established fine dining Portuguese restaurant in Clerkenwell.  The list of Portuguese wines, Ports and Madeiras is unrivalled, and the setting is stunning. Recommended.


The Walmesley: The Future Is Bright and You Can Visit It Now

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Words & Photography by Simeen Kadi

Name: The Walmesley

Where: Audley Retirement Village, Templeton Road, Kintbury, RG17 9AA http://www.walmesleyrestaurant.co.uk/

Cost: Starters from £7 and mains from £15 from the a la carte menu, or go for the lavish tasting menu of 5 courses plus amuses bouches for £55.

About: It’s not every day that I get to say this, but the other day I had an excellent dinner at one of the country’s most luxurious retirement homes.

The Walmesley is the restaurant at one of the finest retirement homes I have visited – admittedly it is the only one I have ever visited, so I am no expert. But, when my time comes I totally want to be rocking up to this gaff every evening. As well as a spa, pool and even a very classy bar, it also boasts one of the best restaurants for miles.


Retirement homes are changing; and why not? In the same way we are no longer turning into frumps in our thirties and forties, why would we expect to be past our peak in our 70s and 80s?


So, why am I telling you all this? Because, we can all get into the pensioner vibe; The Walmesley is open to all, as is the members’ club. Surrounded by some gorgeous Berkshire countryside and a stone’s throw from Newbury, it is a good option for a relaxing, gastronomic country weekend.


What’s more, they have two beautifully appointed ensuite rooms which can be snapped up for as little as £50, including a sumptuous breakfast and use of the pool and spa.


What we ate: Heading up the kitchen at The Walmesley is chef Gert Pienaar who has worked in some illustrious kitchens including that of nearby Vineyard at Stockcross (see our review here). We were treated to a four-course tasting menu but there are also a la carte options as well as a more casual bistro.


We started off with a little appetite tickler (OK, amuse bouche) of trout rillettes drowned in a silky cauliflower velouté.


Next came a Jerusalem Artichoke velouté (you can never have too much velouté) with truffle ragout and new potatoes, which was a tower of potato with a mushroom duxelles atop. To accompany, we had the Bianco di Custoza Monte del Fra 2012 from the Veneto which stood up well to this rich dish.


The fish course featured a bright and fresh fillet of Brill perched on a fricassee of tiny brown shrimp and brussels sprout leaves with a deep and toasty cognac-laced bisque. A real delight with fresh clean flavours.


The crisp Picpoul that accompanied – Pinet Domaine Felines Jourdan 2012 – had a refreshing acidity and minerality.


Local Venison Loin came in generous slabs, cooked long and low and beautifully tender, accompanied by red chard and a juniper jus which was well judged and not overpowering, often a concern with juniper. The Elderton E Series Shiraz Cabernet 2010 from Mendoza was silky smooth and had sufficient weight to accompany the game.


The pudding of Coffee and Vanilla parfait came with flecks of chocolate brownie and some bitter cubes of coffee jelly to balance the sweetness. This was accompanied by a fine glass of 2010 Beaumes de Venise (Domaine de Durban).


Everyone around our table was at least a couple of decades from claiming their free bus pass. And so the conversation revolved around current perceptions of old age and whether The Walmesley should make a virtue of its pedigree as a pioneer in retirement living in the UK. Certainly, sitting in our gorgeous dining room, I felt like a privileged member of an exclusive country club. And this feeling continued as we wandered around the place from the very inviting pool to the spa.


The staff have all been hand-picked from top hotels and restaurants and were clearly passionate about their work.

Likes: A great dinner in a glamorous setting and a chance to spend the night in a fabulous room without breaking the bank.

Dislikes: Yes, it is quiet and probably not the place for a raucous evening. But perfect for a romantic weekend.

Verdict: The Walmesley is a restaurant with the wow factor and great food in the elegant surroundings of a stately home. And, I am going to let you into a little known secret. There are two beautifully appointed en-suite guestrooms available for hire for a song; and this means you can enjoy a night of fine dining and wake up the next morning for a dip in their very inviting looking pool. A country weekend in an old people’s home? Perish the thought.

Kaiseki by Chef Yoshinori Ishii – Japanese Haute Cuisine with the Best of British Produce at UMU London

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Name:UMU

Where: 14-16 Bruton Place, Mayfair, London, W1J 6LX, http://www.umurestaurant.com/umu.htm

Cost: The 8 course kaiseki menu costs £115 per person, with the option of matching wines or sakes for £65 per person.

About: The word kaiseki derives from the Japanese words kai (bosom) and seki(stone), and comes from the habit of trainee monks carrying a heated stone in their robes, whose warmth helped to stave off hunger. Served as part of the tea ceremony since the 16th century, light kaiseki meals were introduced as the high caffeine content of powdered green tea was almost too intense to drink on an empty stomach. Today, kaiseki generally refers to multi-course Haute Cuisine meals at some of the best restaurants in Japan, and particularly Kyoto.

UMU, London’s first Kyoto kaiseki restaurant was opened in 2004, and was awarded its Michelin only 5 months later in January 2005. My first visit to UMU was in that same year, when I attended a day-long cookery demonstration by its head chef. It was an amazing experience, and one that truly impressed me. Nearly 10 years later at my Japanese supperclub, I am often asked for Japanese restaurant recommendations, and UMU still springs to mind.


As I cook Japanese food often at home or for my supperclubs, whenever I go out for a Japanese meal, it has to be a real treat. The food has to be outstanding, and beyond anything I can cook myself. And so I was thrilled to return to UMU recently to try head chef Yoshinori Ishii’s latest kaiseki menu.


Bringing over 20 years of cooking experience, 9 years of which were at the 3 Michelin starred Kyoto Kitchen in Japan, Yoshinori Ishii has also studied pottery, flower arrangement, farming, calligraphy and fishery. He worked as head chef for the Japanese embassy at the United Nations in Geneva before joining UMU as executive chef in 2010.


Since then, Chef Yoshinori Ishii has undertaken a drastic overhaul of the restaurant’s menu. Rather than using frozen native fish air-freighted from Japan, Chef Ishii has focused on familiarizing himself with local, British producers and suppliers, particularly organic farmers and day boats. Today most of its ingredients come from British soil or sea, to create UMU’s Kyoto-inspired kaiseki menu. And this is no lip service – on my latest visit, it was a joy to be served caviar from Exmoor, lobster and langoustine from Scotland, and wild eels from Wales.

Very few Japanese chefs have the confidence and the know-how to steer away from centuries of Japanese tradition, and make use of foreign but locally sourced ingredients in their native cooking, and for that I respect chef Ishii. This is resonant with the increasingly recognized concept of Nikkei cuisine – the cooking of the Japanese diaspora (sometimes even second or third generation in Brazil, Peru and other countries with substantial numbers of Japanese expats) using locally available ingredients.

Chef Yoshinori Ishii is also a firm believer and practitioner of ikejime, a method of causing immediate brain-death in fish, before draining them of blood. This method helps to prevent unnecessary stress to the fish, which reduces the eating quality and shortens its storage life. It also prevents blood clotting in the flesh, the growth of bacteria and unpleasant odours, and slows the onset of rigor mortis and decay.

Chef Ishii is on a mission to popularize this preservation technique, which originated in Japan during the Edo period, among fishermen in the UK. UMU will pay 1.5 times the market price for ikejime-treated fish delivered to its kitchen, creating an incentive for participation.

For more information about chef Yoshinori Ishii’s culinary adventures and ikejimefishing initiative, visit his blog http://kaiseki-master.blogspot.co.uk/

To learn more about the fascinating technique known as Ikejime or Ikijime (the humane killing of fish), visit the Ikejimi website http://www.ikijime.com

What We Ate: We started with 2 pieces of nigiri sushi, topped with British farmed sturgeon caviar from Exmoor National Park 10g tin which was sublime. Little pearls of sea saltiness and fresh flavours were a joy to the tongue and palate.


This was followed by a sake-cured, meaty Scottish langoustine, served in a very refreshing tomato jelly with fresh ripe figs.


Next came a delectable “treasure bag” made from yuba –fine sheets of tofu skin obtained from the boiling of soya milk during tofu making, and a great delicacy in Japanese cooking.  This was wrapping around seafood served in a very fine clear dashi broth (Japanese stock made from bonito flakes and konbu seaweed).


We were then served a platter of chef Ishii’s Special Selection of Sashimi – paper thin slices of brill served with yuzu-pon (Japanese citrus dressing), engawa(the fatty fin of the brill – my favourite sushi topping, and the first time I have been served it in England), red mullet, yellow tail, scallops, the freshest and most succulent belly of tuna, and delicious sea urchin from Iceland. The platter was for me the highlight of the meal, with outstanding freshness of ingredients and stunning presentation.


Next was Welsh wild eel, smoked a la minute, it was succulent and tender and served with a tangy plum-shiso sauce. Sour plum (known in Japanese as umeboshi) and shiso (aka perilla and widely used in Japanese and Vietnamese cooking – it tastes like a cross between mint and basil) are a great combination of flavours, usually served with barbecued chicken maki rolls, one of my favourite izakaya dishes.


The wild Scottish lobster served with a wonderfully intense miso bisque and shichimi pepper (Japanese seven spices), was another winner, made even more spectacular by the addition of generous shavings of white truffle over the dish.


The pièce-de-résitance was however the grade 7 wagyu beef served over hot Himalayan rock salt our table. Paper thin shavings of marbled beef cooked on rock salt, served with yuzu kosho. Yuzu kosho is a delicious and very strongly flavoured Japanese condiment for grilled beef and fish from Kyushu Island made from yuzu rind, chillies and salt.


For dessert, we had Frozen Lake and Kinako Kinoko. Both desserts were nothing short of sublime, but Frozen Lake was my favourite for presentation, refreshing flavours and contrasting textures – Shochu baba, clementine ice cream and kumquat puree.


Kinako Kinoko was also excellent – kinako flavoured poached meringue served with cream. Kinako is roasted soybean flour which is widely used as a coating for Japanese sweets, it has a delicious toasty flavour and worked really well with the sweet meringues.


What We Drank: The wine and sake lists are comprehensive with more than 600 wine bins and 160 types of sake, reputedly the largest sake list in Europe. A wine flight is available to accompany the kaiseki menu for £65 per person. The most affordable bottle is £40, prices escalate rapidly then on.

On my visit I had a couple of glasses of 2011 Sainte-Agathe by Domaine Georges Vernay from the Cotes du Rhone (£15 - 175ml), and also of 2010 Chablis 1er Cru Montee de Tonnerre by Domaine Jean Collet (£12 – 175ml). These were both excellent choices by the sommelier, but prohibitively expensive in my opinion, specially if purchased by the bottle (around £70).


Likes: The food was sublime, the service attentive and very friendly. The engawawas a lovely surprise on the sashimi platter, the Frozen Lake dessert was another highlight.

Dislikes: More affordable wine choices on the menu. I think it is a pity that a restaurant that boasts more than 600 wine bins on their list, cannot offer a few more affordable choices.

Verdict: Chef Yoshinori Ishii’s vision and passion for his native cuisine, his determination for freshness and use of top quality British produce are commendable. UMU is probably my favourite Japanese restaurant in London and I very highly recommend it.


Discovering SKREI® - a Unique Norwegian Delicacy

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SKREI Season 2014

Myre, a picturesque town located in northwestern Norway is as remote as can be, and is also one of the largest fishing villages in the country.


I was invited to Myre, aka the capital of SKREI®, to report on the seasonal fishing of this iconic migrating Norwegian cod, only available from January to April each year.

#SKREIPassion2014 was an initiative by the Norwegian Seafood Council, bringing 7 international chefs and 7 journalists to Myre, Norway to learn more about SKREI®, fish for it, cook it and eat it. How could I refuse!


What is SKREI®?

From the world’s largest cod stock that lives in the Barents Sea, cod reaching maturity at the age of 5 years will spend the winter months migrating thousands of miles to their birthplace to spawn along the northern coast of Norway. This cod, in the prime of its life, is known in Norway as SKREI®.  

Migrating over vast distances, the flesh of these powerful fish becomes exceptionally firm, white and supple, which makes the fish lean and tasty, and guaranteed to be of the highest quality.

Not every Norwegian cod fished during the seasonal migration can be labeled SKREI®. In fact, only 10% of Norwegian cod is graded as SKREI®. Strict quality standards are applied to guarantee that only the very best are so labeled.

SKREI® must come from the Barents Sea, be fully grown (about 5 years old), and fished between January and April along the traditional spawning grounds of northern Norway. In addition, it must be line caught by small Norwegian fishing boats, and be in pristine condition with no scratches, bruises or other injuries.


SKREI® differs from coastal cod not only in appearance (it is longer, more pointed, and lighter in colour), but also in its feeding habits. During spawning, SKREI® hardly eat, whereas coastal cod eat all year round.  As a result, SKREI® has a leaner, firmer consistency and the meat is very white.



Two flights from Oslo and a coach journey later, we arrived in the town of Myre to take part in a SKREI® workshop at the local chef school. Each one of the seven international chefs was to create his own recipe using the Norwegian fish, combined with his country’s native ingredients.

I was lucky enough to be invited to report on the UK chef Simon Hulstone, the man behind The Elephant in Torquay Restaurant, which has held a Michelin star since 2006.

Chef Simon Husltone from The Elephant in Torquay

This was also a great opportunity for me to meet some of the other chefs who came from as far as the USA (Ben Pollinger of NYC’s Oceana Restaurant), Portugal (Jose Cordeiro of Chefe Cordeiro Praca do Comercio), and Spain (Hung Fai of Lgeretxe Hotel in the Basque country) among other countries and chefs.





Talking of too many cooks spoiling the broth, being in a busy kitchen with 7 chefs, their assistants and journalists was an interesting if not challenging experience for most. The chefs did a brilliant job though, cooking for a full house of hungry local residents at a sit-down dinner at the cooking school hall.


This was a fascinating dinner, and a wonderful chance to try all these dishes made from the same SKREI® fish, given very different interpretations, flavours and textures by the chefs. At our table of seven journalists, it was unanimously agreed that although the competition was fierce, chef Simon Hulstone’s dish was the most successful, and this is not British bias I swear!


The 7 Chefs

Simon served us a fillet of Norwegian SKREI® wrapped in Iberian lardo, with a creamy parsnip puree and a rich reduction of verjuice and chicken stock finished off with plenty of butter, sultanas, spring onions and cucumber. This had many layers of flavour and texture, but what brought it all together was his sauce – buttery and rich, yet refreshing, sour and sweet at the same time, a real winner! If you would like to try Simon Hulstone’s recipe for Norwegian SKREI®, I have reproduced his recipe at the end of this post.

Chef Simon Hulstone's dish

Next morning was a very early start as we went onboard a local boat to fish for SKREI®. The scenery was breathtaking, and the temperature -14°C!




As tradition dictated, we all went line fishing, and Simon landed a healthy catch of SKREI® to cook back on dry land.


Returning to dry land never felt so good!
Fishing is the town’s major industry, and everyone is associated with it in one way or another. The youngsters and students will have their first contact with fishing through the activity of tongue cutting, for which they get pocket money through their school years and sometimes even through university.





The tongues of SKREI®, and indeed almost every part of the fishcan be eaten, not just the white flesh. I thoroughly enjoyed the tongue fritters on our first day, as well as trying poached liver and roe in the traditional Norwegian mølje dish that evening.  

Mentored by some of these students and tongue cutters, our international chefs had a competition to see who could cut the most tongues. It was striking to note that the local teenagers were faster than the Michelin starred chefs – clearly practice makes perfect in tongue cutting too.


For me, the highlight of this trip was dining in a local family home for a traditional SKREI®mølje dinner. Our hosts cooked an authentic regional dish of poached fillets of SKREI® liver and roe, accompanied by boiled potatoes, flat crispy bread, butter and cranberry conserve.




Our Norwegian hosts from Myre
This was simple, delicious and wholesome, being made from the best local ingredients. The best part though was meeting and talking to local Myre residents and experiencing their generous hospitality.


The local TV channels as well as the ever so helpful team from the Norwegian Seafood Council were present to support and film us throughout our stay.  One of the nicest things they did was to put together this short video outlining some of the activities we participated in, which give a flavour of our time in Myre.



Having never visited Norway, let alone Myre, nor having set foot on a fishing boat, and knowing little if anything at all about SKREI® until then, this trip was a fascinating experience for me and I think everyone else involved. It showed me not only what a beautiful and unspoilt stretch of Norway this is, but also all the care and attention that go into bringing SKREI® from those wild shores to our shops, restaurants and homes in the UK.


If you fancy trying SKREI® for yourself, you can find it closer to home, in Harrods Food Hall, or if you live in the north of England, Booths the Fishmongers, or ask your local fishmonger. But hurry – the season finishes at the end of April.

Fillet of Norwegian SKREI® with Parsnip Purée and a Verjus and Spring Onion Butter Sauce
(Recipe by Simon Hulstone of The Elephant, Torquay as part of the 2014 SKREI® Season)

Serves 4

For the parsnip purée:
100g/4oz butter
300g/10oz parsnips, finely chopped
180ml/7fl oz double cream

For the verjus butter:
100/8fl oz verjus du perigord
100ml/8fl oz light chicken stock
220g/8oz butter, chilled, cubed
salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 tbsp golden sultanas, chopped and soaked in 16 tbsp verjus
1 cucumber, peeled, finely chopped
6 spring onions, finely sliced

For the SKREI®:
4 x 110g/8oz SKREI® fillet
1 tbsp olive oil
2 slices iberico lardo
2 tsp fennel pollen
2 tbsp kibbled onions (dried onion flakes)
2 tbsp fresh chives, chopped finely
2 tbsp fresh borage leaves

Preparation method:

1. For the parsnip purée, heat the butter in a saucepan and cook the parsnips for one minute on a high heat.

2. Add the cream, bring the mixture to the boil then reduce the heat and simmer for five minutes or until the parsnips are tender. Blend the parsnip mixture in a blender until smooth.

3. Pass the mixture through a fine sieve and into a clean pan, then season to taste with salt and freshly ground black pepper.

4. For the verjus butter, pour the verjus and chicken stock into a saucepan and bring to a boil, continue to cook until the volume of the liquid is reduced by three-quarters.

5. Remove the pan from the heat and whisk in the cubed butter until smooth and glossy. Season to taste with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Add the sultanas, cucumber and spring onion. Keep warm.

6. Meanwhile for the SKREI®, season the fillets with salt and freshly ground black pepper.

7. Pour 1 tbsp olive oil in a hot frying pan, add the seasoned SKREI® skin-side down and cook for 2-3 minutes, or until golden-brown. Turn the fish over and remove the pan from the heat.

8. Place the fish onto a board or a plate and place a lardo slice on each fillet and carefully sprinkle the fennel pollen, kibbled onions, chives and borage on top.

9. To serve, spoon the parsnip purée in the centre of serving plates and place the dressed SKREI® on top. Finish by pouring the sauce around the SKREI® and serve immediately.


Many thanks to the Norwegian Seafood Council for inviting me along for this fascinating trip to Norway, for their hospitality and the opportunity to learn
and experience Norwegian SKREI®.

SixtyOne - Reinventing the Classics with One of the Best Value Tasting Menus in London

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Words & Photography by Greg Klerkx and Luiz Hara


Where: 61 Upper Berkeley Street, London, W1H 7PP, http://sixtyonerestaurant.co.uk

Cost: The six-course Tasting Menu costs £45, or £75 with five glasses of wine. A three-course meal from the à la carte menu would cost about £30 to £45 per person, excluding wine.

About: On a cold winter’s evening – beset by wind, rain and a Tube strike – we fairly stumbled into Sixtyone Restaurantand Bar. It felt like a triumph just arriving, as Sixtyone isn’t the easiest restaurant to find: it is set along a quiet, largely residential street just behind the Marble Arch end of Oxford Street. But the trek was well worth it: Sixtyone offered one of the finest meals of the new year, and it was wonderful value to boot.


Sixtyone is part of the Searcys fine dining universe, which includes restaurants at Royal Opera House and the much-lauded private dining room at The Gherkin. Sixtyone’s Chef Patron, Arnaud Stevens, has led both of these operations and Killian Lynch, Sixtyone’s Head Chef, was most recently Head Chef at The Gherkin. This pedigree shows proudly at Sixtyone through modern European cooking that is inventive yet precise, with invariably beautiful presentation.


What We Ate: Though Sixtyone offers a carefully curated à la carte menu, we chose the six-course tasting menu. A surprising amuse bouche was home-made dashi decanted through a paper filter filled with herbs, cinnamon sticks, orange peel and star anise, and served in teacups along with a pot of tempura rice noodles and soya mayonnaise.


Unlike  the whisperingly delicate and almost floral dashi we know of, this was deliciously savoury, and a fine preview for delights to come.


A basket of French bread, including some from Boulangerie de Paris a fantastic supplier I use for my own French Supper Clubs, was similarly full of surprises, most particularly a generous wedge of chewy, almost chocolaty Marmite loaf, which might win many a convert from the ‘hate it’ side of the Marmite argument.


The minimalist descriptions on Sixtyone’s menu hardly do justice to the joyfully creative work at hand. The dashi and bread, for instance, were followed with something called simply Snacks, conjuring visions of a bowlful of pistachios or a packet of crisps. Happily, the reality was far more subtle: we were presented with what looked like a large, antiquarian book that opened to reveal gorgeously presented pan-fried Dorset oysters and chicken caillettes, the latter being lightly breaded croquettes of chicken, red pepper, chard and almond. Both the oysters and cailletes were appropriately crisp yet succulent.


The Octopus carpaccio, red pepper confit and sesame starter was gorgeous to look at, but the octopus was sliced so thinly as to be overwhelmed by the pepper and pine nuts. A rare misjudgement in our opinion.


Arguably the highlight of the meal was not on the tasting menu, nor indeed on the à la carte menu. It should be: the Rabbit Bolognese, salsify and almond starter was perfectly judged, the small portion of Bolognese exploding with savoury meatiness. The salsify was cooked and presented to mimic a nest of pasta, yet it was a far lighter companion to the relatively mild rabbit. I’m not sure where the almond came in, but it hardly mattered. This was a fabulous dish that alone was worth the visit.


There was another rabbit starter – Rabbit, juniper, prune & Armagnac – which we had as well, being as it was the starter on the actual tasting menu. It was a decent example of this classic dish, though slightly anticlimactic after the undeniable wow of the Bolognese.


Fortunately, the two mains recovered the pace. An artful square of roasted cod, served skin-on, was tender and delicate and married well with a rich dashi broth, Alsace bacon lardons and a hint of truffle.


The final main was, on paper, the scariest: duck a l’orange, so classic and yet so easy to get wrong in the balance of its signature ingredients. No worries here: a very pink (perhaps too pink for some) duck breast with a rich reduction, cauliflower puree and a crispy filo packet filled with succulent confit duck leg. As with so much else on the menu, this was both beautifully presented and very delicious.


We rounded out the meal with lemon meringue pie, but in keeping with Sixtyone’s inventive flair this was far from the wobbly wedge of cloying sweetness one might envision. The lemon was zingy but light, the meringue light yet substantial, and the whole was dished into a half-pipe of flaky pastry and accompanied by blackberry purée and a refreshing lemon sorbet.


What We Drank: The wine selections for our meal were enjoyable and quirky, beginning with a Petaluma Riesling (2011, Coonawara, Australia; 175ml @ £10.50, 250ml @ £14.75) that served as a light, fresh and not-too-sweet accompaniment to our Snack. A Chianti Classico from Villa la Pagliaia (2010, Tuscany; 175ml @ £7.25, 250ml @ £10) was a smoky, peppery match for both rabbit dishes.



A bottle of Camden Gentleman’s Wit – a Belgian-style wheat beer infused with lemon zest and bergamot – went surprisingly well with the lemon meringue pie.


Likes: Inventive, beautifully executed renditions of French classics, a focus on local and regional sources, well-priced menu (particularly the Tasting Menu), warm and knowledgeable service in a relaxed yet elegant atmosphere.

Dislikes: the octopus carpaccio was our least favourite dish on the tasting menu.

Verdict: Excellent restaurant just off the beating heart of Oxford Street serving elegant food with modern flair. Creative and delicious, very reasonably priced cooking of a very high standard. Very highly recommended.

Duvel & Le Gavroche – Beer and Food Pairing Made in Heaven!

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Much as I love wine at meal times (or anytime, come to think of it), sometimes I crave for a long drink with my food. We all know that there are some foods that will go better with beer - pizza, burgers and spicy curries or deep-fried treats are some that spring to mind. I really love good quality beer, but admit to never really considering it as a serious alternative to wine for a gourmet meal.

So it was with great curiosity that I recently accepted an invitation to a Duvel Beer Dinner at Le Gavroche. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the food was outstandingly good, but it was the pairing of the four excellent dishes we enjoyed with a selection of Duvel beers that has given me pause for thought.


Interestingly, the principles of beer and food pairing are somewhat similar to those that apply to wine. For example, in wine and food pairing, it is a common misconception that fish and white meat will always go with white wines and red meats with red wines. In fact, the trick is not to focus on colour but rather consider the weight or body of the dishes and wines.

Similarly, in beer matching, one of the basic principles is “matching strength with strength”. This means that milder dishes will normally go best with delicate beers whilst strongly flavoured foods require more weighty beers. The weight of the beer relates not only to its alcoholic strength, but also to the degree of malt character, bitterness from hops, sweetness and richness.

Take our first pairing at Le Gavroche for example – a lovely seared pepper tuna with ginger, chilli and a zingy soy dressing, served with a glass of Liefmans Cuvee Brut 6%. The Liefmans is a deep red fruit beer matured with cherries, which has a rich and refreshing flavour. With sweet and sour undertones, it interacted really well with the pepper and ginger in the tuna. I found it a perfect match that complemented without overpowering the meaty tuna, one of the best pairings of the evening.


Another important consideration is the “interaction” of certain qualities between the food and beer being paired, for example, characteristics like sweetness, bitterness and spice, and how these interact with each other. Taking account of these relationships will help to ensure a balanced pairing, with neither partner throwing the match out of sync.


Our next pairing was a good illustration of this. A perfectly roasted cod with a rich mustard butter sauce was served with a glass of Vedett Extra White 4.7%. A wheat beer, this had a delicious, refreshing and surprisingly crisp taste perfect for a fish dish.


An orange and lemon zing cut through the richness of the butter while the gentle bitterness from the unfiltered yeast balanced the mustard heat of the sauce. This beer could also make an excellent partner to fish terrines, mussels, prawns and even roast chicken.


Finding harmonies” between food and beer pairings is also key. Combinations often work best when they share some common flavour or aroma elements as we discovered in our next pairing. Racks of pork and cheeks were braised in Duvel beer, making the meat yieldingly tender, sweet and flavoursome. Perhaps logically, the pork was served with the beer in which it had been cooked, a classic Belgian golden ale – Duvel 8.5%.


Smooth, lively and almost creamy on the palate, with grapefruit and vanilla notes, Duvel has plenty of body and flavour and can happily fill the shoes of a fuller bodied red wine. Its high alcohol content gives a weight and mild bitterness that was the perfect match for the sweetness of the slow braised pork.


For dessert, a Guinness cake with coffee cream and chocolate and malt ice cream was served with a glass or two of LiefmansFruitesse 4.2%. Served over ice, this fresh tasting beer is generously sweet with flavours of red fruits like cherries, raspberries and strawberries which complemented well the chocolate and Guinness elements in this dessert.



The most unusual of the beers, and probably my favourite of the evening, was Chateau d’Ychouffe 9% (Anno 2013) which was served with our petits fours. The beer is macerated on the skin of sultana grapes which impart a sweetness and wine-like quality I have never come across in a beer. This had enough weight and concentration to go with the delectable selection of nougat, chocolate truffles and macarons and rounded off the evening splendidly.



If you would like to take your Belgian beer and food pairing appreciation to yet another level, one last thing to consider is choosing the correct glass for the type of beer. George Riedel, the Austrian manufacturer famous for his range of wine glasses by grape varietal, has now turned his attention to beer glasses introducing three different designs – a flavour-concentrating Pilsner glass, a wheat beer glass and a wide-necked lager glass. For more information about these, visit the Spiegelau website here (http://www.spiegelau.com).

A fascinating experience that has opened up a whole new world of food and beer matching possibilities, I look forward to developing this further and bringing it to my day to day and supper club dining experiences.

Most of these beers can be found at Waitrose (http://www.waitrose.co.uk)

For more information on the range of Belgian beers featured, visit:


Meeting Hélène Darroze and Some of Her Top Suppliers at The Connaught

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Hélène Darroze, the two Michelin-starred chef from Landes, resident at The Connaught, and one of the best known figures on the London fine dining scene, needs little if any introduction from me.

I visited the eponymous restaurant at The Connaught to try her magnificent weekend brunch (reviewed here), and was pleased to return recently to see Hélène for a very special lunch where she paid homage to, and brought some of her top suppliers to a wider audience. 

As Hélène explained in her introduction to the lunch, she owed much of her success to her suppliers. Without their support and the close relationships that have been nurtured over the years, she would not have been able to bring her cooking to the tables at The Connaught with such consistent quality.


Despite her celebrity chef status, Hélène is a down to earth and easy person to talk to, and I looked forward to seeing her again. On this recent visit, I learned of Hélène’s two adopted Vietnamese children, of her growing interest in the cuisines of Asia, and how she is bringing these flavours into her French cooking.


One such example was a lovely canapé of hand-chopped steak tartare, simply seasoned with a refreshing Japanese Ponzu dressing and thinly sliced coriander, topped with black caviar selected by Kaviari, one of Hélène’s suppliers.


I am a steak tartare obsessive, but having it with ponzu and caviar was a first for me - what a revelation!


Canapés and bubbly were followed by a sit down lunch, at which the guests were split over various tables, each having one of Hélène’s suppliers. At our table, I got to meet Alex McMullan, the lobster supplier from Northern Island. Interestingly, he told me that Hélène is his only customer in London, and that all his lobsters and crustacea that do not sell locally are shipped to France.

To introduce Bernadette Cassagnau of Béarn and her white cocoa beans, we kicked off with a martini glass filled with chopped Fine de Claire oysters in jelly, topped with an ultra-light and creamy white cocoa bean mousse.


A dollop of Kristal caviar by Kaviari and a leaf of gold finished off this stunning creation.  The combination of white chocolate and oyster was both daring and wonderful. It showed great sophistication, and was a fitting start to the meal.


Our next dish was Alex McMullan’s much anticipated Northern Irish lobster. Served in a highly concentrated, crystal clear lobster consommé, it was partnered with champignons de Paris, fine shavings of foie gras, coriander and baby shiso leaves.  The combination of lobster and foie gras was again unusual but exceptionally good, as was the addition of coriander and highly aromatic shiso leaves in this dish, evoking some of the best known flavours of Asia for me.


To partner both these dishes, we had a glass of 2009 Bourgogne Aligote by Pierre Morey, which had enough fruit, body and weight to perfectly match our first two starters.

The XXL scallop by David Price from Scotland followed - this was one of my favourite dishes of the lunch. A large meaty scallop was perfectly cooked, and served with a warm Parmigiano Reggiano foam and generous shavings of heady black truffle.  Cleverly put together, these simple, familiar flavours combined to create a form of culinary alchemy.


The hake by Anne-Marie Vergés of Saint-Jean de Luz was our next dish. A chunky fillet of hake was simply pan-fried and served with crumbled hazelnut, truffled mash, wild garlic foam and crunchy, paper-thin slices of cauliflower. I loved the many layers of flavour and texture in this dish, so ingeniously combined.


We enjoyed the scallop and hake dishes with a glass of 2012 Cuvée des Conti, Tour des Gendres, which was again a magnificent choice for both the scallop and hake dishes.


The pièce de resistance was, however, yet to come. Arnaud Tauzin’s magnificent chicken from the Landes is the Rolls Royce of the poultry world. I had a brief chat with Arnaud, who told me that he only sells the smaller and more flavoursome female chickens for consumption. Hélène Darroze is his only UK client, with the rest of his production being sold either locally in the Landes or to selected butchers in Paris, where each chicken retails for a whopping €45.


Chicken is a dish I hardly ever order in a restaurant, since it can be such non-descript meat in the UK. Arnaud’s chicken was among the best I have ever tasted, roasted and served with a highly concentrated glossy jus. The chicken had been stuffed with black truffle between the skin and the flesh, “cogollos”, potato and served with a creamy sauce made with “Vin jaune d’Arbois”, a French “yellow wine” akin to Fino Sherry but not fortified.


To accompany the chicken, we had a glass of 2010 Barbaresco Vigneto Valeriano from La Spineta.

The rhubarb supplied by Janet Oldroyd of Yorkshire was put to good use to create Hélène’s Forced Rhubarb dessert. A light and creamy rhubarb ice cream was placed over a freshly baked rhubarb financier, and served with crumbled almonds and a feather light rhubarb caramel tuille. The dessert was exceptionally light and refreshing, wrapping up proceedings with a real flourish.


I enjoyed a glass of 2012 Gaillac, Grain de Follie Douce from Domain Causse Marine with the dessert. For me, it was good to see this lesser known wine region represented in the dessert wine list. It is a wine I remember fondly from my trip to the Tarn and Gaillac  a few years ago.

In addition to the suppliers mentioned so far, noteworthy also were the all the vegetables for this meal, which were supplied by Joēl Thiebault, as well as the Espelette pepper by Mattin and Xabi Catanchoa, used in many of the dishes.

I thoroughly enjoy Hélène Darroze’s cooking - her creativity and sophistication of palate knows no bounds. But it was her generosity of spirit, humility and her publicly expressed gratitude to those who have supported her in her work that really struck a chord with me on this latest visit.

Helene and Her Team at The Connaught

If you have not tried Hélène Darroze’s cooking at The Connaught yet, I highly recommend it. If you have, it’s well worth a revisit. Her brunch is also one of the most fabulous ways to spend a weekend in London.

For more information about Hélène Darroze at The Connaught, visit their website here.

Tirage – Bubbles in the City

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Where: 64 Bishopsgate, London, EC2N 4AW, http://www.tirage.co.uk

Cost: A 5 course tasting menu is offered for £39 pp (or £69 with five matched sparkling wines/Champagnes).  On the à la carte menu, small plates are from £8.50 to £9.50 (although there is a blow-out dish of 30g Finnish Baerii caviar for £95). Salads are £6.50, sides including Mac & Cheese or hand cut chips are from £2.50 to £4.50. Desserts are all £6.50.

About: Tirage is a new restaurant and Champagne bar that opened in early 2014. Just a stone's throw from Liverpool Street Station and the Heron Tower with its Sushi Samba and Duck & Waffle restaurants, it joins a number of local eateries that are bringing a real foodie vibe to this otherwise rather corporate area of the City. 

Venezuelan Elio Machillanda, a former City worker, has put his life and soul into this new venture in collaboration with Michelin-starred restaurateur David Moore (of Pied à Terre, L'Autre Pied and pop-up Pied Nus reviewed here), the concept of the restaurant being to partner good quality small eats with Champagnes and sparkling wines by the glass.

Sommelier Roberto Della Pietra, formerly of Gaultier Soho, spent 6 months prior to the launch of the restaurant researching and planning a Champagne list that would complement a range of aperitif, fish and meat dishes by Head Chef Alasdair Fraser, and developing set menus partnering small eats and Champagne. And his work has paid off – the list includes a range of Champagnes and sparkling wines, twenty of which are available by the glass   including some gems I have never encountered before such as a rare Russian sparkly. But more of that later.


I had the pleasure of spending a few days with Roberto on a wine press trip to Somontano in Spain last year (reviewed here), and was impressed by his knowledge of the wines of that region, and by his acute but uncomplicated approach to wine.


The house champagne is supplied by Perrier Jouët, which also has an eponymous dining room for up to 12 guests suitable for business or private functions. The first floor has a private bar and dedicated kitchen catering for up to 100 guests.


The head chef is Alasdair Fraser (formerly of Kensington's The Abingdon), who has created a French menu with Peruvian touches for Tirage.


What We Ate/Drank:We went for the 5 course tasting menu with a matching flight of Champagnes and sparkling wines. We started with a glass of house Champagne from Perrier Jouët, which was elegantly refreshing. The menu kicked off with 3 of the freshest rock oysters from Colchester, simply served with a thick wedge of lemon and a red wine vinegar and shallot dressing.


With the oysters came a glass of Drappier "Sans Ajout de Soufre" zero dosage Champagne.  Having no added sugar, this had a bracing minerality, well balancing the ocean flavours of the shellfish.


Next was a Cornish scallop ceviche, with caramelised Jerusalem artichoke purée, prosciutto powder, kaffir lime, pomegranate and sorrel flower reduction. This was a gorgeous dish both in the presentation and the palate, with freshness and a thrilling combination of flavours and textures.


To accompany the ceviche, the sommelier's choice was a Duetz Champagne Brut Classic. Owned by Louis Roederer, it had a fine toasty nose and elegant structure, which has prompted the likes of Serena Sutcliffe, Master of Wine, to call it "the Champagne for people in the know".


To follow, there was a pan-fried seabass, with an Asian-scented seed crust, white crab emulsion, broccoli and curry oil.  I loved this dish, and the seabass, having been cured, roasted and then pan fried was tender, well flavoured and perfectly cooked. The Devon crab had been emulsified with spices, and was richly flavoured.


Roberto has chosen a rare Russian sparkling wine for this dish, and it had plenty of richness and spice to stand up to the fish. The most unusual (but also one of the most delicious) sparkling wines of the evening, and the only one that was not a Champagne, this was the Abrau-Durso "Cuvée Alexander II" NV from the Krasnodar region of Russia. Made from a blend of riesling, pinot noir, pinot blanc and chardonnay grapes, this had a magnificent spicy, clove nose and had green apple, lime and mint on the palate, easily withstanding the Asian spice in the fish dish. A revelation!


Our fourth dish was pan-fried, “ethically produced” foie gras. Served with caramelised pear, chilli popcorn and blinis, it was delicious. Whereas geese have to be force-fed to produce foie gras, the ducks used to produce “ethical” foie gras are naturally greedy and will eat more than their fair share particularly just prior to (planned) migration. This fattens their livers naturally, and the resulting dish was as creamy as any I have tried, with the crunchy chilli popcorn giving a contrasting texture.


With it, we had the Champagne Michel Furdyna NV Rose, from Celles sur Ource.  Made from 100% pinot noir, this was a well-structured, muscular wine with enough weight of fruit to hold its own against the unctuous liver.


The final dish on the tasting menu was a venison haunch confit.  Served with an acorn squash purée, chimichurri sauce and barbecued cauliflower, this was excellent with perfectly tender venison.  I did not see how a Champagne could stand up to this richest of gamey meats, but once again the sommelier confounded expectations and came up with a magnificent example, with a depth of structure that only became apparent after eating the meat.


This was a truly splendid glass of Coulon Premier Cru NV.  Roger Coulon is unusual in planting pinot meunier on as much as 40% of his vineyards, but this Champagne demonstrates the advantage of the grape in giving a tremendous depth of structure. With a fine nose of brioche, at the first brush with the palate it concealed its power beneath a surface elegance. However, when tasted with the venison, it revealed remarkably complex layers of luscious green fruit flavour, lemony acidity and minerality.


Note that desserts are not part of the set menu, and we ordered them separately. We had a flourless chocolate and blueberry gateau and chocolate sauce, and also a pink Champagne and mango cheesecake with peach and Champagne sauce.


Both were delectable, and well complemented by a glass of fruity, moderately sweet Italian Moscato.


Likes: The small-eats style of restaurant, which allows sampling of a wide range of textures and flavours, and an extensive and really interesting Champagne menu, at a surprisingly reasonable price for its easily accessible location. A tasting menu of this quality in the City with five Champagnes or sparkling wines at £69 per person is, I think, amazingly good value.

Dislikes: None

Verdict: A truly innovative partnering of modern French-Peruvian cuisine with an outstanding list of Champagnes and sparkling wines. Tirage's tasting menu partnering food with Champagnes is magnificent, and one of the best value in the City. Highly recommended.

Getting Hot Under the Collar at Er Mei!

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Words & Photography by Florentyna Leow and Luiz Hara

Name: Er Mei (Former Empress of Sichuan)

Where: 6-7 Lisle Street London WC2H 7BG Tel: 0207-734-8128 http://www.ermei.co.uk/

Cost: £2 - £31.50 for starters; approximately £8 - £30 for mains (seafood mains are priced around £20 to £30 but these are sharing platters).

About: Er Mei is a Sichuanese restaurant on Lisle Street, a stone's throw away from the Prince of Charles Cinema behind Chinatown. We previously reviewed it when it used to be known as the Empress of Sichuan (see review here), but a change of ownership brought about their new name as well as a new head chef, Yi Ge, and a few additions to the menu. We had a splendid meal at the Empress of Sichuan in 2010, but does Er Mei live up to the standard set by its predecessor?


With an extensive list of enticing dishes to choose from, we spent a long while debating over our choices but eventually decided to order a completely different meal from the one we enjoyed on our last visit. In fact, there we so many dishes we wanted to try that we ended up requesting smaller-sized portions of the main dishes for the purposes of this review. The starters looked the most intriguing, and our consensus afterwards was that you could certainly have a very fine meal consisting of their many appetisers alone.


What We Ate: We began with one of the hot starters, the Sichuan-style Grilled Lamb Skewer. At £2.00 per skewer, it was a real bargain – incredibly flavourful and tender and well seasoned with cumin, garlic, chilli, spring onions and whole Sichuan peppercorns. I would have happily had a dinner consisting of several skewers and a bowl of rice.


The Marinated Chicken Slices in Spicy Sauce @£7.50 is a dish I have fond memories of – when I used to live near King's Cross, I would often stop by Chilli Cool for this starter alone. Er Mei's rendition is one of the most memorable versions I have tasted yet – cool, refreshing slices of thigh meat drenched in a subtly spicy soy sauce-based dressing with a numbing kick from Sichuan peppercorns, showered with crushed peanuts and garlic pieces both fried and raw.


The Pork Belly Slices with Garlic and Chilli Sauce (£7.50) was also quite delicious, albeit a little salty for my taste. We both agreed that given a choice we would choose the chicken over the pork belly; however, either would make a good starter.


The only starter that we didn't enjoy was the Marinated Cucumber with Fragrant Sesame Paste, which was poor value at £6.00 a plate. While the cucumber alone was a good palate cleanser, it hadn't been marinated, but simply sliced and presented on a platter, with a sub-par sesame dressing poured over it. It was disappointing.


Our main dishes were generally well-executed and almost any of them would have been perfect for sharing between two for a meal. The Ma Po Tofu (£9.50) was an enjoyable version of a Sichuanese classic, with a slow, tingling burn from the Sichuan pepper. In retrospect, I would have to agree with my dining companion who pointed out that it could have used more flavour than spiciness – perhaps a little more chilli bean paste could solve this problem.


Our next dish was a slight mistake on our part – we ordered the Sea-Spiced Three Vegetables (£10.00), thinking it referred to a variation on the famous fish-fragrant aubergine dish. Instead, the fish-fragrant aubergine dish was listed in English as 'Spicy Aubergine With Minced Meat' in case you would like to order it on your visit.


'Sea-spiced,' according to our waitress referred to the oyster sauce used in the dish we ordered. What arrived on our table was actually a more Northern Chinese-style dish of juicy, deep-fried aubergines, potatoes and red peppers tossed in a sweet, thick, glossy sauce. While it was well done, both of us thought it could have used a little balancing acidity (vinegar) to freshen up the dish and reduce the sauce’s gloopiness.

Er Mei's Kung Pao Chicken (£12.80) was an excellent version of this popular dish, with the addition of peanuts and Sichuan peppercorns that lent it a more traditional touch.


Our waitress enthusiastically recommended that we order the ‘Chilli Cod with Coriander and Onions’ (£25), and we were very glad to have taken her at her word – this was one of the best dishes of the night. Thin slices of deep-fried cod, rich and buttery within and crunchy without; sweet, crisp cubes of onions and red pepper; the flavour of the umami-rich fermented black beans permeating each bite. Just thinking about it makes my mouth water. The seafood mains were generally on the expensive side, and this was no different, but I would gladly order it again.


We decided to order a dish from their special New Year's Menu – the Red & Green Chilli Pig's Joint (£15.80) – this was utterly delicious. What would normally be such a rich and heavy cut of meat when braised turned out to be surprisingly refreshing when bathed in a tangy, flavourful sauce. Do not miss the skin and other parts surrounding the meat – it was not fatty, but tender and gelatinous, and a real joy to eat.


What We Drank: We had a pot of hot Chinese tea (£1.50 per person), which went down well with our meal. Be warned that their menu does not list all the varieties of tea available, even in Chinese. Instead of the usual jasmine tea, try asking for Tie Guan Yin (Iron Goddess) or Pu-er tea – both are oolong teas, great for washing down a rich meal!

Er Mei also has a respectable selection of wines to choose from – 10 reds, 13 whites and 2 roses. Their house red and white wines are a mere £15.90 per bottle, and there are 4 other wines on the list which are priced below £20. Tiger or Tsing Tsao beers priced at £3.60, while Sunlik draft beer cost £2.50 for a half and £4.50 for a pint.

Likes: The cooking is good and occasionally stunning – the chilli cod, lamb skewer and marinated chicken point to some magic happening in the kitchen.

Dislikes: Skip the cucumber.

Verdict: Not your average cheap-and-cheerful Chinese joint, Er Mei is probably one of the best Sichuanese restaurants in London. Highly recommended.

Little Venice Gangnam Style at Gogi Korean Bar & Grill

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Name: Gogi Korean Bar & Grill       

Where: 451 Edgware Road, Little Venice, London, W2 1TH, 

Cost: Starters range from £4.90 to £15.50, main courses from £8.90 to £28.50, desserts are £6.90.

About: Opened in 2013, Gogi (Korean for 'meat') is on the busy Edgware Road, next to the Regent's Canal, and more or less opposite London's only Burmese restaurant Mandalay (reviewed here).


It is open 7 days a week for lunch and dinner, and it aims to serve authentic Korean meats and seafood, barbecued at your table, as well as a range of Korean staple dishes. It has a modern setting of bare brick walls, decorated in part by antique wood panels, as well as stainless steel extractor hoods over each table in an authentic Korean style I recognised from dining in Seoul.


Lighting is low, soothing, and much of it comes from cleverly concealed red strip lights. Large glass windows help to soak up the atmosphere from leafy Little Venice, making it also a great place for people watching.


What We Ate: As regular readers of this site will know, I am always on the lookout for good steak tartare, so I could not resist the Yuk Hwe (Korean steak tartare, £12.00). Gogi's version combined thinly shredded raw beef seasoned with sesame oil, served with julienned pear and an egg yolk.  This was a great start to our meal – it was fresh, well seasoned and with a refreshing crunch from the pear.


We had side dishes of Modum Kimchi (assorted cabbage, radish and cucumber kimchi, £5.90) and Modum Namul (spinach, radish, courgette and mushroom seasoned with garlic and sesame oil, £5.90), both of which were refreshing and palate cleansing.


To follow, we had Yang Yeum Chicken (£8.50); this was battered and deep fried, and served with a sweet chilli sauce.  This was disappointing - the sauce was gloopy and sweet and not spicy enough for my taste, while the batter was excessively thick, making up about 50% of each bite, and not very crispy. This is one of my favourite Korean dishes, and one I always order.


Next we had a Korean grilled barbeque, choosing the 'L.A. Galbi' (£9.90). This consisted of two slivers of beef ribs on the bone, which was barbecued on the grill set into our table.


In my opinion the quantity of beef was meagre given the price tag and considering that more than half of it was bone. We ate the ribs with a dipping sauce, wrapped up in fresh lettuce leaves with carrots and cucumber for an extra £3.50.


More successful was the Chicken Dolsot Bibimbap (£12.50). This Korean classic, served in an eartheware pot, comes with rice, sautéed seasoned vegetables, raw egg yolk and red chilli paste, the whole lot being mixed together at the table. It is one of my favourite Korean dishes, and Gogi's was excellent.


To finish our meal, we shared a portion of Tteok and Soojeaonggwa. This is a Korean rice cake, with a chilled cinnamon drink (£6.90). The rice cake was very much like a Japanese mochi, and had a delicious, intensely chocolate-flavoured mousse inside. I loved it. Even better was the Soojeaonggwa. This is a traditional Korean fruit punch, made from dried persimmons, cinnamon and ginger, garnished with pine nuts. It was my first time tasting this drink, but I'm a sucker for anything with cinnamon, and I savoured every drop.


What We Drank: We shared a bottle of Chianti Riserva 2009, Teuzzo, from Cecchi (£25.50). This was eminently quaffable and fruit-driven, without showing much complexity. The restaurant also serves a full range of cocktails, many given a Korean twist.


Likes: The setting is atmospheric, and the staff friendly and helpful with advice on ordering, grilling and even eating some of the more complex dishes. Some of the dishes were excellent, including the Korean steak tartare, the Bibimbap and the Korean rice cake (Tteok). 

Dislikes: While we loved the dessert, cinnamon drink and bibimbap, we felt that the Koren BBQ offered was a tad disappointing as was the not so crispy Yang Yeum chicken.

Verdict: A good local Korean restaurant for Little Venice and Maida Vale with some excellent dishes and great service. Recommended.


The London Foodie Goes to Italy - A Long & Very Wet Weekend in Rome

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What can I say about Rome? It's a big place, the capital and largest city of Italy and of the Lazio region, host to the Vatican, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and famed capital of the Roman Empire. It has exerted a huge influence over the world in its roughly 3,000 years of existence, and its history and culture is evident wherever you walk in the city.


I've visited Rome once or twice before, but Dr G and I made a decision this year to visit some of Europe's great cities for a series of long-weekends, and this was one such trip. In many ways, a long weekend is not enough for such a fascinating city, but we reckoned better a weekend than not visiting it at all, after working out that it had been nearly 20 years since either of us had set foot in the place. Just two hours on a budget airline from London, it seemed too good an opportunity to miss.


It rained for most of the two days we were in Rome, so we spent most of the weekend indoors, eating. What a chore!


Where to Stay 


The Palazzo Manfredi is a magnificent building dating back to the 17th century, and completely rebuilt as the hunting lodge of a noble family in the 18th century. It overlooks the Coliseum only 50 metres or so away.


Intimate and Elegant Reception Area at Palazzo Manfredi
Converted into a luxury hotel in 2002 by Count Goffredo Manfredi, it is today accredited by Relais & Chateaux. It is an intimate 5 star hotel with 15 spacious rooms, which tastefully integrated luxurious contemporary design with the ancient and venerable Palazzo.

The View of Our Suite at Palazzo Manfredi

We had a large ground floor suite, with shuttered windows overlooking the Coliseum. Generously proportioned with a large double bedroom and a king size bed, a reception room and two bathrooms decked out in Philippe Starck appliances, it was supremely elegant.

Our Suite at Palazzo Manfredi

Adjoining Room of Our Suite at Palazzo Manfredi
It had the usual conveniences including WiFi, air conditioning, a minibar and safe, and it was very nice to have a complimentary bottle of Prosecco on ice when we arrived. I'm a sucker for Nespresso machines, and it was really great to be able to have a smooth, rich caffeine fix whenever I needed it in our room.

Welcome Prosecco on Arrival at Palazzo Manfredi

Breakfast is taken in the rooftop Aroma restaurant, with spectacular views over the Coliseum and city.  With a generous buffet, and a variety of a la carte options, this was a wonderful spot to plan the days sight-seeing.


Palazzo Manfredi is great for visiting the Coliseum and other sites of the ancient city of Rome nearby, and for its wonderful Aroma restaurant (see Where to Eat section below) but the modern side of the city is a little way north, and we decided to spend our second night near the Villa Borghese on Via Veneto.


Regina Baglioni Hotel

Regina Baglioni is a 19th century, 5-star hotel part of the Leading Hotels of the World Group. Situated on the Via Veneto, it is just a short walk to the magnificent Villa Borghese with its fabulous art works, the Spanish Steps, and the fashion street Via Condotti.  With 126 rooms, it is on a substantially larger scale than the Palazzo Manfredi, and has a spa and gym befitting its size.


We stayed in one of the junior suites. Decorated in Art Deco style, it was luxuriously appointed, with a stunning marble bathroom, a king-sized bed, as well as cable TV and WiFi.


The public rooms of the hotel are huge and opulent, including the beautiful oval Caffè Baglioni with its marble and granite floors, chandeliers, paintings and plush upholstered chairs for taking afternoon tea.


It looked like the kind of place in which Woody Allen might set one of his movies.


We had breakfast in the dining room next to the Caffe Baglioni. This was a very good continental breakfast with a fine buffet, including some lovely local produce such as mozzarella di bufalo and a range of prosciutto, salami and cheeses.


The Regina Baglioni Hotel is a very comfortable and convenient place to stay in Rome, and a good option within strolling distance of the main sites of the Via del Corso.

Where to Eat

Massimo Riccioli Restaurant & Bistrot at the Hotel Majestic Roma

Just a hundred metres or so from the Regina Baglioni Hotel is the Hotel Majestic Roma, built in 1889 in neoclassical style. Its restaurant, an utterly opulent, mirrored and chandeliered first-floor room, was taken over by celebrity Sicilian chef Massimo Riccioli in October 2013.


Riccioli (who used to be in charge of Massimo Restaurant & Oyster Bar in London's Corinthia Hotel) is celebrated for his seafood dishes, but in this restaurant he has extended his range to include Roman meat dishes with aplomb. However, we were very tempted by his fish dishes, which made up the majority of our spread for meal.


We had a fantastic lunch at Massimo Riccioli’s, starting with a platter of lightly battered and crispy baccala (salted cod) accompanied by courgette flowers, almonds and a variety of crustacea.


The salad of grilled octopus with “Salmoriglio” sauce and tabbouleh (£15) was delicious – salmoriglio sauce is a Sicilian sauce made from lemon juice, olive oil, garlic, parsley and oregano which goes really well with roasted meats and fish as in this dish.


We also had a gorgeous selection of raw fish and prawns (£23), served with different sauces, caviar and berries. Akin to a sashimi or Peruvian “tiradito”, the fish was ultra-fresh, and delicately seasoned.


The tuna tartare was also excellent served with an agretto of strawberries and capers (£13), an unusual but refreshing combination of flavours.


I love to cook trofie pasta in the Ligurian style with green beans, potatoes and pesto, but Massimo's trofie pasta carbonara of courgettes (£13) was an interesting perspective on an established classic.


Our final pasta dish was a simple but delicious tagliolini with mussels, prawns and clams, tomatoes and fresh herbs (£15). This was a stunning dish both in presentation and flavour.


For main course, we had the amberjack fillet baked with grape and caponatina of aubergine, pepper and courgette (£16.50), and a meat course of oxtail and cheek beef meatballs with broccoli (£14), the only non-fish and also the least interesting dish of our meal.


We had little room for dessert, but with coffee had a very generous selection of excellent petit fours.


Lunch at Massimo Riccioli Bistrot can cost as little as €30 (£25) for 2 courses on the set menu. This was one of the finest lunches I have enjoyed in recent months particularly for the fish antipasti & primi piatti, and I would strongly recommend it to anyone for its freshest fish and seafood and stunningly glamorous setting.


Aroma Restaurant

Aroma Restaurant is a Palazzo Manfredi's rooftop restaurant, with spectacular views over the Coliseum. Chef Guiseppe Di Iorio and sommelier Alessio Dominici have put together a tasting menu (€125/£105 per person or €195/£163 with matching wines) reputedly featuring some of the best, seasonal produce of the Lazio region, and we could not wait to try it.


The evening started well with a delectable dish of raw sea bass, salmon and ricciola fish served on a crunchy wafer and a chilled margarita mousse – this was a sensational dish with many layers of flavour and texture, and well paired with a very refreshing glass of Prosecco.

Next was a veal terrine with artichoke and black olive powder - well made and subtly flavoured, it was served with a glass of Livia Felluga 2012. An Italian pinot grigio unlike any I have tasted before in the UK, this was rich, concentrated and with ripe greengage fruit on the palate akin to a good Alsatian Pinot Gris.


To follow, we had the homemade fettuccelli pasta "a modo mio" (my way), with calamari and courgette. Al dente, and well seasoned, the pasta was delicious. To accompany it, the Sommelier served a glass of chilled Renata Pizzulin Friuli Malvasia Istriana Melaris. Made from the malvasia grape, this had fresh melon and grapefruit notes that worked very well with the calamari.


Equally good was the panzerotti pasta filled with fresh herbs, French butter and Parmesan cheese, accompanied by a fine Pistillo wine, made from 100% pecorino grapes. This was quite an austere wine on its own, but with pasta, layers of complexity, minerality and a rich sweetness emerged.

We then had red mullet and shrimps with crunchy artichokes, fresh spinach oil and lemon. This seemed to me to show Italian cooking at its best - fantastic ingredients cooked simply and we loved it. This was paired with a glass of Nussbaumer, 100% Gewürztraminer from Alto Adige  (South Tyrol), which had a good weight of tropical fruit and sweetness to match the rich fish and seafood.


The meat course was lamb cutlets with pistachio, goose liver and lavender sauce, tempura carrot and asparagus. The lamb was tender and flavoursome, and served with a richly concentrated jus. I really enjoyed this, with a glass of Chianti Rampolla 2011. Made from 70% Sangiovese, blended with merlot and cabernet sauvignon, it had a lovely rich red cherry fruit on the palate, but good tannins and length to balance the fruit.


Dessert was a scrumptious milk chocolate and coconut surprise with pineapple ice cream, accompanied by a glass of Passito Martingano. Made from late harvest, partially dried moscato grapes, this was a wonderful dessert wine with flavours of raisins, damsons and dried fig.


It was good to see that Aroma Restaurant offers much more than outstanding views of the Coliseum. The cooking is on a par with the stunning setting.  The restaurant is popular with both tourists and locals on romantic dates. I recommend it highly for a special occasion - it is a treat.


Pizzarium

One place any foodie in Rome must visit is Bonci's.  Celebrity pizza chef Gabriele Bonci (described in Vogue as "the Michelangelo of pizza") has a tiny shop close to the Vatican, which sells rectangular pizza slices by weight.


Bonci is famous because of the special sourdough and the finest ingredients he uses for his pizze. For the dough, he collects yeasts from all over Italy using the various ancient and unique yeast cultures. The signature dish is pizza con le patate - hand-crushed Abruzzo potatoes with a dash of vanilla, but other scrumptious pizze include spicy coppa with blood orange, and tripe with tomato.


The shop is minute, accommodating no more than about 10 people standing, but you can choose a variety of slices, which are then warmed in the oven to eat there and then with a selection of beers (we opted for a delicious local Italian "My Antonia") and wines by the glass, or on the bench outside. I don't think I've ever eaten a better pizza, and the quality of the ingredients is unrivalled. The arancini were also superb.


Bonci is quoted as saying "pizza is traditionally seen as food for poor people and so pizza makers would use cheaper industrial dough, and cut corners on quality. I refuse to do that". Despite high quality ingredients, slices are sold at around £2 a slice. It’s a bit of a trek outside the centre of Rome, but definitely worth a visit. Very highly recommended.


Grom

I love Grom ice cream, having first sampled it in their Venice branch (read review here) and also while living in Tokyo. We couldn't resist popping into the Grom at Piazza Navona. Their range of ice cream is excellent. With seasonal flavours that change throughout the year like ricotta and fig, marrons glacé and zabaione and raisin on our last visit, it's hard to go wrong.


Grom only uses 100% natural ingredients from Italy (pistachios from Bronte in Sicily, nougat from Asti, fruit from their own farm Mura Mura) – the ice cream flavours were intense but fresh with a wonderful creamy texture that below my mind away. I cannot recommend Gromhighly enough. For a full list of branches, see here.  But please, when is the London branch opening?


Brunello Restaurant

The Brunello Restaurant is situated within the Regina Baglioni Hotel where we spent one of our nights.  It’s a popular spot for dinner, and we had a very good meal there.


For antipasti, we had a delectable dish of squid filled with brandade (whipped salt cod, potatoes and Genzano bread) on a light chicken and porcini mushroom velouté (£21) and the “bocconcini” of lobster bites sautéed with wild rice, onions, peppers and roasted tomatoes (£21).


Next came tonnarelli pasta with rabbit ragout, Pienza Pecorino cheese flakes and flavoured with truffle oil (£18) and “Garofalo” spaghetti with garlic, oil and chilli pepper with clams and mussels (£18) – both excellently made and delicious.


The main courses were veal and suckling pig. The veal cheek was cooked at low temperature with vanilla oil and frosted pears, served on daikon cream (£23). I often cook daikon for my Japanese supper clubs, and it was a pleasure to come across this novel but very refined Italian take.


The suckling pig was flavoured with herbs and Sarawak pepper with spring onion jam and crispy celery (£20). To accompany our meat courses, we had a glass of very fine Rosso de Montalcino 2011, by Castello Banfi.


The Regina Tiramisu (£10) was a surprisingly light take on a classic Italian dessert, most of us grew up with in the 90s and I was glad to revisit it.


What to Do

There are so many things to do in Rome, it's hard to know where to start. This is by no means a comprehensive list and  moreover as it rained nearly non-stop while we were there, we spent most of the weekend indoors, eating.


A good place to get your bearings is the Via del Corso - Rome's main thoroughfare.


From there, you can meander down towards the Pizza Venezi, visiting on the way the Trevi Fountain, the Galleria Doria Pamphili with its wonderful paintings by Bernini, Caravaggio and Titian (in one of Rome's finest Rococo palaces) the incomparable Pantheon, the Campo de Fiori (flower market) and the Piazza Navona.


Other sites not to miss are the Roman ruins around and including the Coliseum near Palazzo Manfredi, St Peter's Basilica in the Vatican, and the Galleria Borghese near the Regina Hotel Baglinio.


If you are in Rome on a Sunday, the flea market at Piazza Augusto Imperatore is worth a look.


The Campo de Fiori Market is a great place to sample and purchase some of the region’s finest fresh ingredients in a stunning ancient market square.


Travel Essentials

Palazzo Manfredi
Via Labicana, 125-00184
Rome
info@hotelpalazzomanfredi.it

Rooms are available from around £300 per night. The junior suite featured costs around £760 per night. 

Regina Hotel Baglinio
Via Veneto, 72-00187
Rome
reservations.reginaroma@baglionihotels.com

Room are available from £215. The junior suite featured costs around £500 per night.

Aroma Restaurant
Palazzo Manfredi
Bookings are made via the hotel's website or by phone.
The tasting dinner costs £100 per person, or £160 with matching wines.

Massimo Riccioli Restaurant/Bistrot
Hotel Majestic Roma
Via Veneto, 50-00187
Rome
hotelmajestic@hotelmajestic.com

Bonci's Pizzarium
43 Via della Meloria
Rome, 00136, Italy

Gelateria Grom
Via agonale 3
Angolo Piazza Navona - 00186
Rome

Baiwei: Affordable and Tasty Sichuanese Food in Chinatown

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Name: Baiwei

Where: 8 Little Newport Street, London, WC2H 7JJ

Cost: Starters/appetizers from £4.90, mains from £6.50, average spend per person £20 or less excl. drinks

About: Baiwei (100 Flavours in Mandarin), is the latest venture by successful restaurateur Shao Wei, who introduced us to Barshu, Bashan (reviewed here) and Baozi Inn in Soho, with food consultancy by writer and Chinese food specialist Fuschia Dunlop.


Baiwei is the most casual and also the most affordable addition to the group. Situated in a tiny townhouse on Little Newport Street between Leicester Square and Charing Cross Road, the restaurant stretches across a number of tiny rooms and floors. Most of the rooms fit no more than two tables, and the walls are dotted with hand-painted images from the Mao era. It specialises in comfort food from Sichuan and northern China.


Service is efficient, fast and helpful – our waitress was very enthusiastic to explanation all our queries (there were many!) on the various dishes on the menu. I rarely come across a menu which intrigues me as much as to make me want to try most of its dishes – Baiwei’s was certainly one.


What We Ate: One of Baiwei’s signature dishes, the catfish with sizzling chilli oil (£8.90), actually made from fresh cod on our visit, was served in a huge earthenware pot in chillied oil and beans sprouts, the cod was succulent and delectably flavoured with cooling, lip numbing Sichuanese pink peppercorns. A delicious and umami-laden dish.


Smacked cucumbers with garlic and fresh coriander (£4.90) is a favourite of mine and a must for any Sichuanese meals – Baiwei’s did not disappoint, it was a refreshing, cooling accompaniment to the other hotter, spicier dishes.


The twice-cooked belly pork with black bean and chilli (8.90) stir-fried with peppers and leek was also flavoursome and tender.


Another Sichuanese favourite is the fish fragrant pork slivers (£8.90) with picked chilli, ginger, garlic and spring onion. This was very good, with mildly hot and refreshing sourness and acidity from the fish fragrant sauce.


The spicy stewed beef with tofu knots was both intriguing and well flavoured (£12.90) – the stewing broth had an intense richness with flavours of star anis, cinnamon and Sichuanese peppers, while the brisket beef was meltingly tender and gelatinous, a real joy.


However the tofu knots had a chewy and unfortunate stale flavour about them – this is something I sometimes encounter in Chinese dishes with deep-fried tofu as factories will sometimes re-use oil which should have been discarded for deep-frying. This stale flavour can be partially avoided by rinsing the tofu in running boiling water before cooking, something I always do when cooking deep-fried tofu.


The Northern Chinese dish of spicy sizzling lamb with cumin (£14.90) is such as staple and one I nearly always order. Baiwei's take was good despite being served with green peppers rather than green chillies as described on their menu (none the worse for that though in my opinion).


To accompany this protein-chilli laden feast, we had our token vegetable dish - dry fried green beans with minced pork and preserved mustard greens (£8.90), which was a perfect example of its kind and I thoroughly enjoyed it.


What We Drank: We enjoyed brown rice tea at £2 per person. The restaurant has a limited drinks menu with soft drinks and juices at £2.50 per glass, bottled water at £2.50, and one beer Tsing Tao for £3.50 a bottle.

Likes: The menu is large and well-illustrated, with a good range of Sichuanese, Hunanese and Northern Chinese dishes, with abundant dried and fresh chillies, Sichuan pepper, garlic and gelatinous cuts of meat.  Service is friendly and informative. 

Dislikes: Drinks menu is a tad limited – a glass of Coke for £2.50 is a little steep too. Tap water should be offered free of charge.

Verdict: A good & very affordable addition to the growing number of Sichuanese restaurants in Chinatown, introducing Londoners to regional Chinese dishes beyond the more familiar Cantonese staples. Recommended.

Babbo – The Italian Daddy of London's Mayfair

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Words & Photography by Greg Klerkx and Luiz Hara

Name: Babbo

Where: 39 Albemarle Street W1S 4JQ, http://www.babborestaurant.co.uk

Cost: Antipasti range from £10 to £17, pasta and risotto from £15 to £30, main courses are priced between £26 and £86 for a 950g grilled T-bone steak for two. A less elaborate lunch menu is available at £22 or £26 for 2 or 3 courses respectively.

About: Babbo means ‘daddy’ in Italian. Any Italian restaurant that leads so proudly with such a strong statement of familial embrace may invite, among the more cynical diner, suspicions of kitsch. Thankfully, Babbo restaurant in Mayfair is an elegant proposition that manages to retain a homespun feel that is warming yet not grating. Likewise the restaurant’s food: anchored in tradition, yet executed with flare and precision.


What We Ate: We came for dinner, which features a small but creative menu structured in the classic antipasti, pasta, main fashion (there is also a more limited but reasonable prix fixe lunch menu). A number of Babbo dishes are made from ingredients shipped in once or twice each week from Italy, including Chianina beef for bresaola and the restaurant’s signature lasagne, and Burrata cheese for several dishes. We enjoyed the latter in the form of a starter, Burrata con pomodoro e basilica (£13.50); a generous blossom of purest-white Burrata cheese lightly dressed with tomato and basil. The cheese was delicate and feather-light, creamy and delicious.


Our second antipasti dish was inarguably the highlight of the meal. Fonduta di riso al zafferano con nocciole tostate e formaggio di capra (£13.50) is a mouthful to say, but worth every syllable. The rough English translation is ‘blended saffron risotto’, but this does not do justice to the dreamy, intensely flavourful delicacy that is served dusted with goats cheese snow and pistachio powder and dressed with pea shoots and amaretto. It tasted like a golden summer’s afternoon at a Tuscan villa: light and rich, comforting yet entirely new, and worth the trip to Babbo all by itself.


Perhaps because it followed the startlingly good risotto, the restaurant’s self-proclaimed signature dish, Lasagna al ragu di Chianina (£19.50), suffered slightly in comparison. There was nothing wrong with it – smoky and toasty on the outside, savoury, meaty and moist on the inside. But it was, merely, a fine example of the form, not wildly transcendent…admittedly a high bar, but one the saffron risotto had quite clearly set.


The other pasta course we tried, Tortelloni ripieni di gorgonzola, noci, pera serviti con salsa burro e vino rosso(£16.50), came without the lasagna’s ‘signature’ fanfare and perhaps as a result fared much better, with its intense, sweet-ish sauce (pear zest with butter and red wine) balancing nicely with the salty, pungent gorgonzola. The pasta for both the lasagna and tortellini were house-made, and delicious, al dente and light.


The mains kept up the high standard. Our only quibble with the Rana pescatrice in crosta di porcini, vegetali autunnali e polenta (£26.50) was that the porcini mushroom crust which enveloped the very generous serving of succulent monkfish could have been crispier, particularly as the accompanying polenta was suitably creamy and needed more of a counter-balancing crunch.


We had a variation on the Guanciale di manzo con cime di rapa e purea di patate al tartufo nero that substituted a succulent and perfectly cooked beef filet for the advertised beef cheeks, which still matched beautifully with braised turnip tops and black truffle mash.



To accompany our main courses, we had a side of zucchine fritte (£4.50), these were deliciously crispy courgette fritters, coated in breadcrumbs and deep-fried.



After such copious delights, we did briefly debate the wisdom of pudding. But we forged ahead and were glad of it. The Intenso Sapore di Limone con Gelatina di Fiori, Granita di Lime e Alveare dolci(£8.50) was a sweet-‘n-tangy blast of lime granite and lemon, shot through with chewy honeycomb and accented with hibiscus flower jelly…fresh and inventive.


Our second pudding was a neat plate of two small cannoli filled with sweet ricotta complemented with orange jam and pistachio ice cream (£8.50), which was beautifully made and very tasty though one could wish for one more cannolo to make a proper portion.


What We Drank: Not surprisingly, Babbo takes pride in its range of Italian wines (though its list is global) and we enjoyed several during our meal. The antipasti dishes were accompanied by a lovely Sereole Soave, softly floral and crisp with hints of pear. The pasta dishes were well served by glasses of Corvina Veronese with its peppery notes and slight astringency. With the monkfish, a glass of citrusy, vaguely metallic Malvasia was very good, while Nebbiolo – deep crimson, with brambly fruit and licorice – worked its dark magic beautifully with the beef. Another Soave, Tre Colli Recioto, somewhat sweeter than the Sereole yet still rather floral, was delightful with the puddings.


(Note: Babbo’s wine list was revamped for spring shortly after our meal, so expect a different set of offerings from the restaurant’s enthusiastic and knowledgeable sommelier. Generally, prices by the 175ml glass range from £7-£13, with bottles available at a wide variety of prices).


Likes: The blended saffron risotto should not be missed. The service is convivial and well informed.

Dislikes: None, though do calibrate your expectations accordingly for whatever follows the saffron risotto (it’s that wow).

Verdict: Inventive, delicious traditional Italian food with modern flair, served in a cosy environment. Highly recommended.

The London Foodie Goes to Peru - Paracas and Nazca

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A little over 3 hours south of Lima by coach, Paracas is for many the first stop on the southern circuit of internationally famous tourist destinations that includes the Ballestas Islands, Nazca and its mysterious lines, Arequipa, Lake Titicaca, Cuzco and of course Machu Picchu. It was in Paracas that  we started our epic journey through  southern and central Peru.

Ballestas Islands

The Paracas peninsula, a large area of coast to the south and the Ballestas Islands together make up the National Reserve of Paracas in the province of Pisco, with reportedly the highest concentration of marine birds in the world. Aside from this stupendous natural beauty and the stunning rock beaches, there is little of interest to the visitor in the town of Paracas, but the climate is warmer and less cloudy than Lima, the ocean cleaner, and it makes a good spot to relax for a couple of days by the hotel pool.  It is to Paracas that for decades affluent Limeño families have come for a weekend fix of sun and sea.

Spot The Astronaut - One of the Nazca Lines

Where to Stay

The Hotel Paracas, part of The Luxury Collection of 80 boutique hotels and resorts scattered around the world, is situated just a few metres away from the Pacific Ocean, and 300m from the town square.


Famous since it first opened as the only luxury hotel on Peru's south coast in 1944, this hotel has always been a favourite weekend destination for the well heeled residents of Lima. They remain the majority guests in the new hotel, which was completely rebuilt at a cost of $50m after the massive 2007 earthquake severely damaged the original building.


Re-opened in 2009, today the hotel is a 5 star affair with 120 villas, two swimming pools, a spa and a choice of restaurants and bars. It also has its own private launch for visiting the nearby Ballestas Islands, famous for their sea lions, dolphins puffins and penguins.



The hotel's rooms are in villas scattered over the site, some with an ocean view, others facing the gardens. Our room was spacious, with wooden floorboards throughout and a restful colour scheme of white linens, distressed white louvered woodwork, and natural bamboo. It was well equipped with air-conditioning, satellite TV, iPlayer docking system and minibar.  The bathroom had a power shower and separate bath, and double sink. Outside was a private balcony overlooking tropical gardens. The hotel’s magnificent grounds were immaculately maintained with myriad local plants and flowers.

Our gorgeous villa at the Paracas Hotel

Breakfast is served in the main dining room overlooking the larger of the two pools, a stunning setting. There is a good range of perfectly ripe and sweet exotic fruit salads and juices, which I always make a point of enjoying when I am in a tropical country.

The buffet has a generous spread of hams, cheeses, yoghurt, bread, pastries, and cooked items kept in heated dishes - bacon, scrambled eggs, sausages and the like.


There is also a menu of made to order items, from which we tried a delicious French toast (a thick wedge of toast fried in custard, scattered with cinnamon all smothered in maple syrup and topped with strawberries which was scrumptious), eggs Benedict over brioche and ham and cheese panino, all very good. But best of all, the coffee was strong and well flavoured.


Where to Eat

Chalana Restaurant

It has to be admitted that the restaurants of Paracas are few and not particularly enticing. Most are cheap and cheerful, and are in a strip overlooking the jetty from which boats leave towards the Ballestas Islands. Although I always try to find good restaurants outside the hotels I stay in and we did eat in the town, the experience was not positive, so having heard about the million dollar kitchens installed in the Hotel Paracas in 2009, we decided to stick to the hotel's restaurants.

Seaside Restaurants at Paracas - to be avoided

For lunch, the Chalana Restaurant is the obvious choice. Situated at the end of the hotel's private pier, and standing about 100 metres into the Pacific, it is the place for ceviche and tiraditos. Surprisingly given its precarious location, it is equipped with a state of the art chef's station, all gleaming stainless steel and spotless refrigeration cabinets.


The tables are of bare, white-painted wood befitting the maritime location. Executive Chef Franco Rivadeneyra explained that all the fish served there comes daily from a local fisherman who has been supplying the hotel for years.


Chalana Restaurant - not a bad place to work!
The stunning freshness of the fish became clear with the dishes that followed. We watched the Chef José Luis make a traditional ceviche from a fillet of raw seabass, chopped and marinated for about 3 minutes with the tiny but very zingy local limes, along with chilli, garlic, coriander and seasoning. He then added some 'leche de tigre' - a milky fish stock, and finished the dish with wafer thin shredded red onion and a red chilli.

Chef Jose Luis at Work

Adding Leche de Tigre - Tiger's Milk to the Fish
Served with the traditional accompaniments of boiled sweet potato, fresh and toasted corn, this was a magnificent dish the like of which I have never tasted outside Peru. It had the perfect combination of chilli heat, fresh acidity and vibrancy from the freshest fish, herbs and raw onion.

Ceviche with a View

Next was a tiradito - a Peruvian raw fish dish invented by Japanese chef Toshiro Konishi (whom I got to interview in Lima, but more of that later). Akin to sashimi, Tiradito differs from ceviche in the way that the fish is cut (into 4mm slices rather than chunks), and in the absence of onions. Again this was a dish of raw seabass, sprinkled with lime juice and seasoning, and served with a side of sweet potato, fresh and toasted corn. But the finish was very different, this time the fish being bathed in an aji amarillo (yellow pepper) sauce on one side, a aji rocoto (red pepper) sauce on the other. The tiradito was also deliciously zingy with the delicate chilli heat balanced by the sweet potato and corn.

Tiradito of Seabass with Ajs Amarillo & Rocoto Cream and Leche de Tigre

We had a fantastic Causa – a typical Peruvian dish of mashed potatoes of various colours, topped or stuffed with meat or seafood, less well known than ceviche, but very good all the same. At the Chalana’s version, we had a selection of octopus, prawns and fish.  Wonderfully colourful and a treat to look at, it was delicious to eat too.

Causa with Seafood

To finish, we had a simple but wonderful dish of sliced raw scallop with shavings of parmesan, crushed toasted corn, a leaf or two of rocket and olive oil. I have not eaten scallop with Parmesan before but it was a great combination, and the addition of the crushed corn was brilliantly effective, adding both a crunchy texture and a delicate savour to the dish.

Raw Sliced Scallops and Shavings of Parmesan

This was simple but really accomplished cooking with the freshest of raw fish, and I loved it. It was so good that we went there twice, and in retrospect having eaten during three weeks of travel all over the country including Lima, I think this was one of the very best tiraditos and ceviches we had in our entire trip. Chef José Luis was very welcoming, and allowed me to join him in the kitchen to rustle up my own tiradito. None of the dishes cost over £10, the restaurant is open to non-residents, and I would recommend it as the top gastronomic destination for anyone visiting Paracas.

Gracias Chef Jose Luis!
For dinner, we had a tasting menu of classic Peruvian dishes cooked by the Executive Chef himself, Franco Rivadeneyra. Our meal started with 4 types of Pisco sour - the classic version with lime juice, and the others with mandarin, passion fruit or chicha morada (Peruvian purple corn). These drinks were very refreshing, but each very different, illustrating the surprising versatility of the Pisco grape spirit that underpinned them all.

The amuse bouche of green asparagus gazpacho with onion bread was bursting with concentrated asparagus flavour and was almost chlorophyll green.

Next came a Tiradito of seabass with avocado and lime sauce, gratinated scallops and Champagne foam.  This was a great dish with some very cheffy touches including tiny spherified pearls of Champagne.


To follow we had octopus, slow cooked then grilled with purple corn, plantain mash and octopus reduction. This was a superb dish, the octopus wonderfully tender yet with a deliciously smokey flavour from the grilling. The chef explained that he slow-cooked the octopus sous-vide to tenderise it before blasting it under the grill.


Our final fish dish was grilled seabass with a purple potato crust, served with steamed Peruvian purple potatoes, and the Andean herb huacatay (aka black mint). This was a very flavoursome dish using authentic local ingredients, and the fresh huacatay gave it a wonderfully aromatic lift.


The meat course was two dishes served simultaneously - a bowl of Orzo pasta flavoured with an intense beef reduction, and a rich, tender lamb stew with quail egg and yucca purée. The quail egg was perfectly cooked- the white set firm but the yolk oozing seductively across the lamb.

Dessert was a delectable trio of baked custard apple, layered chocolate cake and rice pudding ice cream. Starters at the restaurant cost around £10, with mains at £15. Some of the dishes we had were not on the official menu, but Chef Franco is happy to create a similar tasting menu given 24 hours notice.


We were keen to try the local Peruvian wine from the Ica region of which Paracas is a part. We opted for the Intipalka Santiago Queirolo range, choosing a bottle of their 2012 Sauvignon Blanc, and the 2011 Malbec (both at £33). With its warm winters and hot summers, Peru struggles to make good wines but these were decent efforts well worth trying if you are in the area. They do not yet rival the wines of Chile or Argentina, who benefit from a much more favourable climate.

The restaurant at Hotel Paracas is very good, and it is easy to understand why the residents of Lima visit so often and have done so for generations. The Executive Chef Franco Rivadeneyra is still just under 30 but has had wide-ranging training and experience in Peru and Spain, and has an impressive range of cooking skills. The hotel's French General Manager Bruno Giordano is also a chef by training, and indeed was the head chef at Hotel Paracas before Franco. These two factors, I think, explain a lot about why the food at the hotel is one of its strongest points.


What to Do

The Ballestas Islands

It is easy enough to fix up a visit to the Ballestas Islands independently by visiting one of the many agencies in the town. A two hour boat trip to the islands costs around £10 per person, and is the thing to do while in Paracas.

The Candelabro Formation

The islands are astounding, being packed with wildlife including millions of birds as well as large packs of sea lions, penguins and sometimes even dolphins. The birds include boobies, guano birds, oyster catchers, cormorants and pelicans among many others.


Although it is neither possible nor permitted to set foot on the islands, the boats get to within a few metres of the wildlife, which makes for an exhilarating experience.


The Hotel Paracas also arranges tours to the Ballestas Islands, and since they leave from the hotel's private jetty, they are more convenient and involve less queuing than the public boats from the main town. They are a little more expensive at £18 per person, and are available via the hotel's own agent, Tikariy.


Visit Nazca to Fly Over the Mysterious Nazca Lines

We travelled, as many people do, overland by Cruz del Sur bus to Nazca to take a local flight over the lines. While there is little to do in Nasca apart from flying over the lines or visiting ancient cemeteries and the few remaining mummies, it is a good place to break up the long journey between Paracas and Arequipa, which was to be our next destination.

Cruz del Sur Buses - most popular transport method (when flying isn't an option!)

The town of Nazca is small and quite sleepy, and there are no hotels to speak of. We had a homestay at the modest Nazca House, the home of Senora Nancy. Nancy was very kind and attentive, and allowed us to keep our room for a very late checkout of 9pm as we had an overnight bus to catch that evening.  On Calle Bolognesi off the main square is where all the restaurants and bars are. We had a couple of decent meals there at La Encantada.


Jallea - Deep Fried Seafood and Chips with a very Cold Beer at La Encantada
The flight over the mysterious Nazca lines is short (30 minutes), but spectacular, and it is really the only way to begin to comprehend these extraordinary pre-historic and wonderfully artistic desert sculptures. They are still poorly understood complex zoomorphic designs that include massive abstract geometric forms, and more than 30 animals including the monkey, spider and humming bird. It is thought that they were religious offerings by the Nazca people to bring rain to the once fertile Nazca plains as they were turning into the desert seen today.


There were several fatal plane crashes over the lines in 2011-12, and since then a number of safety improvements have been made and some companies closed. Aero Paracas has a good safety record, modern planes and two pilots per plane, and we had a very good flight with them.



Flights are best taken in the early morning around 8am while the sun is still low and the shadows accentuate the lines. One simple way to arrange the flight is to arrive at the airport at 07.30, go to the Aero Paracas desk, and pay directly.  The planes seat only 6 passengers and the flight can be choppy, so it is recommended to delay breakfast until after the flight.


For those who do not have time to travel to Nazca, it is also possible to charter a plane from Pisco airport near the Hotel Paracas for the one hour forty minute return flight to Nazca to see the lines from the air. Hotel Paracas' agency Tikariy can arrange this for a minimum of 7 people, at a cost of £160 per person.

Visit to Nazca's Local Fruit & Veg Market

Paracas National Reserve

A full day trip can also be arranged which includes exploration of the Ballestas Islands followed by the Paracas National Park by boat. Here, along with great natural beauty of the marine landscapes, it is possible to see the Andean condor, turtles, dolphins and flamingos.

Visit the Spa or Gym

The hotel's extensive spa building also hosts the gym and dry sauna, which are free for guests.


For an extra charge, guests can also access a large heated hydrotherapy pool with hydromassage, and a range of spa treatments. These include Thai and Shiatsu massages and the "Total Paracas" fusion treatment for £80.


Travel Essentials

Hotel Paracas
Avenida Paracas
Paracas
Peru

Rooms at Hotel Paracas cost around £190 per double room per night.

Nazca House
Maria Reiche 308
11501 Nazca
Peru
info@nazcahouse.com

Rooms cost around £20 per night via Booking.com.

Travel

There are several bus and coach operators offering the route from Lima to Paracas. We opted for Cruz del Sur, a company that runs quite luxurious air-conditioned double-decked coaches all over Peru. The advantages are that it has a website in English from which it is possible to purchase tickets on-line from overseas, and that the coach stations are clean, well-organised and secure from the luggage thieves who can otherwise be quite a problem in the country. They also serve better meals than we had on our flight to Peru, with a well-known company that shall remain nameless!

A Cruz del Sur ticket from Lima to Paracas costs £7.80 per person including lunch.


Flights over the Nazca Lines

AeroParacas

Spanish Tapas & Cava Pairing at Copa de Cava

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Words & Photography by Marina Benjamin

Name: Copa de Cava

Where: 33 Blackfriars Lane, London, EC4V 6EP,  http://cava.co.uk


Cost: Cava – by the ‘copa’ – from £5. Tapas style plates £4-14. Nibbling menu £15.00 per person. Tasting menu with cava flight is £60.00 per person.

About: Copa de Cava is the new offshoot of the Camino and Bar Pepito group. But it’s very much its own thing – a project that focuses lovingly on small boutique cava makers, regional flavours, the chemistry of oak-barreling and grape blending, and the finer details of the methode champenoise, which involves double fermenting the cava in the bottle in deep underground caves and tunnels for anything up to two years. You might say Copa de Cava is to Cava what the craft ale movement is to beer: it celebrates the local, the particular, and the fiercely proud end of the drinks industry.

Situated in a vaulted basement under the Blackfriars Lane branch of Camino, Copa de Cava is cozy and clubbable, with a comfy armchair and dark wood vibe. On a Thursday night, it was buzzing with a young crowd but also a not-so-young crowd, roughly divided between people who were there merely to sip the golden-hued nectar, and those gamely ordering small plates from the modern menu of ‘deconstructed’ tapas.


What We Ate/Drank:Copa de Cava’s tasting menu is structured around an appealing idea: a flight of cava, with each glass matched to one or two small plates. So tempting was the notion of progressing through 6 glasses of distinctively fermented fizz – from a Rosado to a Semi-seco, and with every kind of Reserva in between – that other options barely registered. 

The Rosada, ripe with floral and strawberry scents, and tasting a bit like a Kir Royale but without the cloyingness, was paired with salty cured and smoked hams and a dish of "pan amb tomaquet"– crusty slivers of toast rubbed in fresh garlic, tomatoes and olive oil. The salt and sweet worked nicely together, even if the cava itself registered a little too high on sugar to qualify as an aperitif in my book.


The next cava in the flight was called Mont Marçal. This was my favourite of the evening. Dry and lemony on the nose and creamy, almost almondy in the mouth, this smooth-tasting beauty had been fermented for 15 months.


It was both delicious and more-ish, and it came with a Spanish omelette in a glass, a tasty mix of crushed potatoes and fried onions topped with a sabayon of egg yolk and onion oil.


The Brut Vilernau that came next couldn’t compete. A blend of traditional cava grapes, Macabeu and Parellada, with just a dash of Chardonnay, it was crisp and appley. Though it was well paired with tangy mussels cooked in tomato and onion, and a sharpish ceviche of stone bass, I’d have happily stuck with the Mont Marçal.


By time our fourth glass of cava arrived, a fine Aria, Segura Viudas Reserva, I was hungry for more than nibbles. And so I really appreciated the lovely aubergine tart that was a bit like a pissaladière, and a delicious dish of tender seared Iberico pork shoulder, bracingly rare in the middle, that came with a rich side of pearl barley risotto, flecked with tiny cubes of smoky chorizo and sprinkled with Manchego snow.


The cheese course was unexceptional – though it was boosted by a Gran Reserva from a small family-owned winery (Reserva de la Familia Juves y Camps). Full bodied and citrusy, with a toasty aftertaste, this cava really sang.


Five glasses of cava was about as much as I could handle, but the sixth glass of Semi-Seco was appealingly sweet and bubbly, and I managed to drink most of it. The dessert was billed as a Crema Catalana, but the restaurant had either run out of them or not made any that evening, and instead served up a glass thimble, containing a single raspberry smothered with sweetened whipped cream.

Likes: The warm atmosphere and friendly service were a real boon, and the staff is genuinely knowledgeable about the different cavas. The food was hit and miss, but the hits were truly delicious. The deconstructed tortilla at £4, and the pork shoulder with pearl barley risotto at £12 were especially good. And at £25 a bottle the Mont Marçal is a must have.

Dislikes:Copa de Cava is more bar than restaurant and with noise levels to match. I’d have preferred a mellower setting in which to savour the tasting menu.

Verdict. I look forward to another visit, when I’ll sit down with a bottle of Mont Marçal and sample some of the other tapas. I hear the steak tartare (£14) is excellent. Recommended.

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