Thursday, 10 October 2013
From breakfast with love
Thursday, 3 October 2013
Guo Yue's restaurant club
I never really eat ‘Chinese’ food. If we ever went to a Chinese restaurant as children, my sisters and I would just sit at the end of the table munching away on prawn crackers and seaweed, leaving little crispy bits of green straw scattered over the table all around our plates, whilst the adults drank Tsingtao and ate weird, translucent, floppy things and talked about crumbling marriages.
Later on, it was a university takeaway staple. The night after we’d drunk 800 alcopops, snogged people we hated and posted every single moment of the evening onto facebook in a epically detailed album of 60+ photos, all with their own captions (and I was so STRESSED all the time! I had so much to do! I was going to have a breakdown with the amount of work I did!), three of us would decant plastic containers of sweet and sour or chicken in black bean sauce and sit on the floor of one of our rooms, watching a gentle film. I’d never had sweet and sour chicken before university. I’d also never seen curry house rice with all the different coloured bits, or been called stupid so many times during one supervision that I’d snapped a pen in half and thrown it into a fireplace, threateningly (Golden Age of French Theatre my ass), but those are different stories.
Of course, this is because what I was eating (not the pen bit, the Chinese food bit) was a blanket English bastardisation of a thousand different culinary traditions. But I didn’t know that. The upshot is, it doesn’t really excite me, and whenever I read about a new place specialising in Sichaun spiced oiled pork belly, or Cantonese steamed buns, or duck gizzard skewers from somewhere else, all of which are delicious and different and interesting, I just think ‘sweet orange gloop’ and then ‘meh’. This happened most recently at Flesh & Buns, but I’m blaming that on the fact it was so loud I couldn’t hear myself think so forgot I wasn’t going to be interested. And then I went somewhere that changed my mind.
My godmother hovers in the background of these pages, always good for a cocktail or a fun evening out, but also a very good cook in her own right, and someone who is really interested in food to boot. She makes spanakopita from scratch on weeknights, and she went on a course to learn how to make dim sum dumplings. That’s the kind of person she is.
The man who ran her dumpling course is called Guo Yue, and he plays the Chinese flute well enough to have a Wikipedia entry on the same (I promise I didn’t write it). He does occasional restaurant nights with set menus that he emails his contact list about in advance, and they are always fully booked. I can’t improve on the descriptions in the actual menu he emailed everyone ahead of the dinner we went to, in a small restaurant on Cleveland Street a few weeks ago. It is beautiful. If this isn’t evocative of a time, place and culture ‘other’, I don’t know what is. Everyone sat with strangers and shared everything out from plates in the middle of the table, Guo Yue played a flute made of jade and passed round rice wine. It was out of this world.
Wednesday, 11 September 2013
Honky Tonk- review
I was lying by the pool in the middle of a vineyard in France (which is pretty much like throwing a duck into the middle of a lake and giving it lots of bread) when I was seized with a pang of emotion for most of my immediate family and texted them to suggest having lunch on the Sunday I got back. They were clearly not feeling the love, or just hadn’t started on the rosé at midday, and the only one who was interested was Sister Number 4.
Famed for her inability to organise anything, arrive anywhere on time, or respond to texts unless in her direct and immediate interest (a genuine feat given that her phone is superglued to her face), I wasn’t too concerned when she hadn’t replied to a single message on Sunday morning. I finally got hold of her at about 11am. She grumbled down the phone like the kraken for about five minutes before she grudgingly agreed to let me buy her lunch at Honky Tonk on Hollywood Road.
It started to rain as I left my flat so I was forced to break into the casual ‘I’ve been caught in a downpour!’ jog that you see in films, complete with waving a newspaper ineffectually in the air above my head. I got pretty into it and was therefore surprised to notice, from a fleeting glimpse in a shop window, that I didn’t look like an artfully tousled film star so much as a loping Neanderthal with mad hair. I put my jacket over my head and walked the rest of the way staring at the pavement, lamenting my own hubris. Just another one of those things that isn’t true in the movies, like running through airport barriers to stop the love of your life getting on a plane. Don’t. You’ll get shot.
I loped into Honky Tonk, feeling as proto-human as I apparently looked, and waited for the sister at the bar. The restaurant bit at the back was empty but for a lot of balloons, which looked sort of sad in the clear, grey light of a rainy afternoon. On reflection, given the hard liquor and rock music, this is probably more of a Thursday night kind of place than a Sunday lunch one, but they’ve tried to allay that with a good looking brunch and good looking staff. We asked for marmalade margaritas. Tequila is a struggle at 1pm, which is probably a good thing, but they were great.
The menu is full on Americana. Not completely Southern grits, not wholly the dirty burger thing, not just Tex-Mex, but a roll call of the greatest hits from the good old US of A that complemented the stars and stripes playlist perfectly. Sister number 4 didn’t know what a quesadilla was (she also doesn’t know what a bison is, incidentally) so we ordered those and some pork ribs to share for our starters. They were eaten with glee. The quesadillas were bite size and especially delicious. The ribs were not an overwhelmingly Desperate Dan style rack so were manageable, but this is still filling food. I only just forced down my mac ‘n’ cheese (and I was so good last time at not ordering macaroni cheese!) and my sister’s little face crumpled when she realised that there was absolutely no way she could fit bourbon and dark chocolate s’mores into her jeans.
There was a lot more to explore here in terms of cool American drinks (juleps, sazeracs, picklebacks, craft beers) but it felt a bit wrong to bomb through those at lunchtime, so I will be back one evening to do their menu justice: this is more a watering hole than a gastronomic temple, but none the worse for it.
Thursday, 22 August 2013
The Fish and Chip Shop - review
In an effort to be cool (when in
Anyway, I arrived to find one of my friends inside, downing a whisky. "Hullo", he said, and then, "let's go", which I thought was a little forward before we'd even eaten. It turned out that our other friend was not there, having been refused entry. For a brilliant moment, I thought he'd been turned away simply for being lame, which would have pretty much sorted our group out for conversation for the next ten years, but alas it was because he was wearing a suit. I'm not sure a dress code is a particularly rock and roll thing to enforce, really. Wearing a suit doesn't automatically make you a jerk, nor does it reveal anything about what music you like. It's a uniform as much as a policeman's clothes, or wearing a Metallica hoodie and having a ponytail when you're forty five years old.My friend, however, is a jerk, so they got it bang on with that one.
So there we were, a rebel without a cause, a rebel without a clue and yours truly, all dressed up (too smartly in some cases) with nowhere to go. We killed some time in a pub and arrived early at the restaurant. Despite our table not being ready, they kindly found us a perch (not on the menu, being a muddy river fish) and we ordered some cocktails. These took quite a while to arrive but it was insanely busy and they'd given us a place (also not on the menu) to sit, so no complaints there. We waited with baited breath. Once moved to the comfier booth we were furnished with gimlets and an 'Old Man and the Sea' - "it tastes of watermelon", said my companion, sounding startled. He was at once demonstrating a sensitive palate and the memory of a goldfish (again, not on the... I'll stop), as watermelon featured prominently in the drink's description on the menu.
The room looks 'traditional', but not like a traditional chippy at all. Well, at least not like any of the ones near me. If you're imagining strip lighting, peeling linoleum, formica and an obese man tossing scrag ends of fish into a stinking fryer whilst a desultory saveloy oversees an incidence of youth knife crime in the corner, you could not have got it more wrong. It looks like a seaside pub, or maybe a ship.
The menu is short and sweet, and all fish. You could do the whole thing without touching fish and chips themselves - there were good looking plates of grilled fish and vegetables and a shrimp mac 'n' cheese, which I forced myself not to order because all I want to eat is macaroni cheese all the bloody time, like some demented overgrown five year old. AA Gill said it was good though.
We shared London particulars, three scallops with chilli and parsley butter, and crab on toast with avocados. The scallops were delicious; butter slurped from the shells by two thirds of the company (the third was trying to keep his suit clean). The London particulars are the 'famous' new thing - pea and ham croquettes with a mustard sauce. Ham and pea soup is called a London particular after the fog of the same name (also pea souper...). The croquettes were hot and crunchy and way better than soup. Last was the crab - great quality meat, but a little dull compared to the other two. I'm sure people said the same of our table. One of my friends commented on the toast, but I can't remember what he said.
We had a bottle of their own blend wine, which was decent, and ordered cod and chips (me - classic, traditional), haddock and chips (friend 1, apparently northern), scampi and chips (friend 2, apparently from the 1970s) and two wallys (aside from my companions). They're big gherkins, and you'll only need one. Which I said eight times. No matter, I'm about to lurch into the present tense and eat the best fish and chips of my life. That good. The cod - flaky, pearlescent, perfectly cooked. The batter - crisp, light, crunchy. Absolutely excellent. The boys said the same about theirs. 'Best chips in London' was bandied around. The tartare sauce was zingy.
The only thing I would say is that I was extremely full. I couldn't finish my food, which happens but rarely, and I was forced to call it a night before I was beached.
Friday, 9 August 2013
Flesh and Buns - review
Notes from a broad
In celebration of Sister Number 2’s recent marriage, we all went to France without her. It was infernally hot and my tan is minimal because I was forced to become the family’s unpaid chef for ten days, a role slightly more interesting that my normal position in the pack as unpaid lone voice of reason (self appointed). One day, I made a courgette salad and Dad liked it so much there were some ‘hilarious’ jokes about another wedding. In amongst the slavery, we had some pretty spectacular lunches.
Bruno, Lorgues
You know that joke about someone’s face proving that God has a sense of humour? Well I feel the same way about the existence of a restaurant serving six course lunches entirely consisting of truffles in the South of France. Bruno gets through a metric tonne of truffles a year, and the five menus only vary in the grade of truffles used on each course, and are priced accordingly. As an amuse bouche, there were grainy, light brown summer truffles (aestivum) on toast. In the middle of the table, in case we were seized by a sudden craving, shavings of coal black melanosporum truffles interlaced on a plate, glossy with olive oil and crunchy with salt, like a tuber carpaccio. The palate cleanser was a truffle ice cream.
The experience is so overwhelmingly truffled that Sister Number 4 broke down and wept as she was presented with, and I’m actually going to quote directly from the menu here, “A potato, simply cooked in the oven, served with a cream of white Alba truffles and topped with grated brumale truffles”. So simple. It truly was the best of times and worst of times. No quarter is given to the fact it’s 30 degrees outside, which you just have to admire. As lunch progressed, Sister Number 3 remarked that it seemed to be the hottest day of the holiday so far. It actually wasn’t, and we were still sitting on a cool, mosaic-ed terrace shaded by mulberry trees, but the amount of energy we were putting into our bodies in the form of truffles and their accompaniments (apparently sweetbreads, foie gras, pastry, toast, beef and potatoes go best with truffles) had played havoc with our internal temperature controls.
I have no idea why Bruno decided to open his homage aux truffes in the South of France, but I’m pretty glad he did. You can also stay there, which I would suggest might be a sensible option since I didn’t regain full mobility for some hours afterwards.
Mirazur, Menton
What follows now is of course not compromised by the fact that the maitre’d gave me his card and asked me to look him up, but Mirazur is probably the best lunch I’ve ever had. The chef, Mauro Colagreco, is an Argentinean cooking French food in the minimal, Scandinavian style, in the South of France a mile or so from the Italian border. And you thought Bruno was confused.
The first thing that made me love this place was that it looks like a film set for a 60s Bond film. The view is spectacular, and Sean wasn’t even there. The second thing that made me love this place was the fact that the bread came with Pablo Neruda’s Ode to Bread, in French. A gimmick, you may cry, but you weren’t there and it worked. The third thing that made me love it was that, despite the fact that it is very, very smart, the whole team were friendly and relaxed and didn’t follow you to the bathroom and then turn your napkin into a swan.
The menu Carte Blanche is an eleven course event, and everything we ate was tiny, clever and perfect. The flavours were clean and meticulous; fish caught that morning, clear tomato consommé, lemon verbena with onions, pigeon with coffee semolina, eggs filled with caviar, sage foam, wild mint, cherry and green bean salad, prawn crackers… it looks silly written down; a bit like Lewis Carroll has been at the opium again, but it was conceptual in the best possible way. Afterwards, we drove into the hills following Biggles and butterflies.
La Bastide de Saint Antoine, Grasse
This was probably the most traditional of the lunches, both in the Provencal style of cooking and also the clientele, who were Riviera to the max. Botoxed (but with wrinkly arms- why?! Why would you iron your forehead and ignore your arms? It looks like your head is wax melting onto the parchment of your body), tanned to a walnut hue, golden watches glinting in the sunshine from underneath bright Pucci silk prints….and that was just our table. Fabulous. The food was old French, which I always think of as the amount of attention paid to the sauces. I had a ‘foie gras three ways’ starter (‘when in Rome’ I thought, as I wondered where to inject botulism into my body next) and then pollack, which had been cooked to translucent rather than cotton wool, and was delicious with girolles and courgettes in a light sauce. It was also described on the menu as ‘le merveilleux colin’, which made me laugh. There was a sea bream with a thick, lemony sauce, something I’m going to pretend was a sea bass because I don’t know what it actually was in French, with a ratatouille, and scallops with tonka bean and truffles, which was probably the most inventive. All the fish was cooked perfectly, and the lunch was light, pretty and classic. Unlike our dining companions.