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Showing posts with label kitchen table. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kitchen table. Show all posts

Monday, 27 January 2014

Drake's - Hand and Flowers

List Dad Guest Post – For the third of these very occasional blogs, I am following the example of Giles Coren and taking a look at two of the best restaurants I have visited outside London. As readers may know, Coren’s crime in the eyes of others was to publish a list of his 50 favourite restaurants, 35 of which happened to be in London. Giles not unreasonably pointed out that he was a Londoner and therefore tended to eat in London.

He went on to say that the most recent statistics suggest that more than 80 per cent of all new restaurants that open in the UK open in London, and that it is reported that 92% of the total national restaurant spend is in the capital. So, by rights there should be no more than six or seven restaurants from outside London on his list, whereas there are in fact 15. Twice as many as there ought to be. His list is ludicrously skewed away from London and towards the provinces, giving the non-London restaurant scene fully twice the coverage it merits on the basis of performance, at the expense of a thriving capital that has been woefully underrepresented with only 35 of the 50 places, a meagre 70%.


Another matter for debate was raised recently by the Sunday Times who announced the death of fine dining (pronounced as fayn daynin). According to Joe Warwick, the editor of Where Chefs Eat, Chefs hate the words ‘fine dining’. It sounds like something from the 1950s. When chefs eat out, they want fun and informality. Apart from observing that Joe surely can’t have been around in the 1950s and that I’m definitely not a chef (ask Matt), I’m certainly all for informality. As for fun, the main requirement for me is that the food is packed with interesting flavour combinations, and that the puddings are spectacular!


Cheese and pineapple on a stick anyone? - 1970s dining
Drake's restaurant is in Ripley, Surrey – not far from the Royal Horticultural Society gardens at Wisley. Like Dabbous it has one Michelin star, but the similarities don’t end there. Steve Drake, as with Ollie Dabbous, uses fresh ingredients, cooked to perfection. I have lunched there three times and, apart from some of the amuse-bouches, the menu has been completely different each time.

Steve Drake
The most recent visit started with an ‘extra’ – sweetcorn cream with grated mushroom and charcoal oil. The starter was roast scallop with truffled pearl barley, sorrel and apple. I am a huge fan of scallops and nearly always choose them when they are on a menu. These were probably the best I have tasted.

The main course was equally stunning. Poached and roasted guinea fowl with buckwheat and onion, runner beans and mustard frills.

There followed a huge plate of delicious and interesting British artisan cheeses to share between the five of us. And, yes – the dessert was spectacular. Raspberries and peach, with passion fruit sorbet, lemon verbena and cardamom ice cream. All this, plus more amuse-bouches, some in the form of ice lollies.


The Hand & Flowers at Marlow, Buckinghamshire has had greater national coverage than Drake’s, not least because it was voted No.1 UK restaurant in the 2013 National Restaurant Awards (for the record, Dabbous was number 11, Drake’s was 81 and Kitchen Table didn’t figure, possibly because it is so small). It also boasts a ‘celebrity’ chef in Tom Kerridge, plus one more Michelin star than Dabbous or Drake’s. It is a greater distance from London than Drake’s but is within easy reach for lunch. It doesn’t offer a tasting menu, so my regular dining friend Chris and I opted for the A la Carte rather than the set lunch menu since the latter consists of two or three courses with no alternative dishes.


Tom Kerridge
The ambience is that of a country pub so this would probably not be considered 1950s style fine dining, but the cooking plus the ingenuity of its menu have rightly won it much praise. I didn’t feel it was as outstanding as Drake’s, though Chris (older but not necessarily wiser than me) strongly disagreed. We did agree on the excellence of the pudding, however, which was a sweet malted gateau with malted ice cream, a yeast tuile (certainly a ‘first’) and a brandy snap filled with crème fraîche. We debated having seconds or trying the chocolate and ale cake with salted caramel and muscovado ice cream – we have previous on this, including at the quaintly named Ametsa with Arzak Instruction at the Halkin Hotel in Belgravia where we couldn’t resist a second helping of their amazing piquillo pepper ice cream. On this occasion, we felt we needed to hit the road back to London.

Back at the Hand & Flowers, we both had the starter of crispy pig’s head with rhubarb, pancetta and chickweed. The rhubarb had an intense flavour which blended wonderfully well with the other ingredients. The pig’s head was presented looking rather like a fat fish finger, so it was with some relief that I cut into it and found that the resemblance stopped at that point.

Chris had three starters instead of a main course, and pronounced the blowtorched Scottish scallop with beef and mead bouillon (broth), trompettes, nasturtium and apple as the best he had tasted – I may never know whether it was better than the scallop at Drake’s. His third choice was the ‘interesting’ potato “risotto” with baked potato stock, artichoke, pickled girolles and puntarella (chicory).

My main course was Tom Kerridge’s signature dish (winner of the main course on the BBC’s Great British Menu series of 2010) – slow cooked duck breast with savoury cabbage, duck fat chips and gravy. It was beautifully tender and fully lived up to its billing.


For outstanding cooking, Steve Drake and Tom Kerridge’s establishments are two out of town restaurants worthy of very serious consideration.

Two points in passing. I haven’t quoted prices in these articles as they can change – please check the restaurant websites via the links provided. Second, I’m not qualified to comment on wines as I am virtually teetotal. One criticism I have is that very few top restaurants provide a list of imaginative non-alcoholic drinks. Many times have I watched a waiter filling a wine glass with cranberry juice from a carton!

Square Meal

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More List Dad Guest Posts: Dabbous - Kitchen Table

Sunday, 17 November 2013

Kitchen Table

List Dad Guest Post Matt wrote above my first guest post on 30 September that this would hopefully be the first of many offerings from me. Whilst on the surface this sounds like a compliment or, at the least, a ‘buttering up’, I’m not convinced. Could it be that, having set such a fast pace with his dazzling succession of reports from the front line of London bars, bistros and street food, he wants others to share the burden?


There are several potential elephant traps from my point of view. 


For example, how to describe food without ending up in Pseuds Corner? Does anyone remember Jilly Goolden who stuck her nose into glasses of wine on the original Food and Drink programmes in the 1980s before coming out with phrases such as oodles of freshly turned manure laced with the aroma of a camp fire plus the occasional hint of wellington boots


And how does one define a great meal as opposed to one which is good or adequate?  I believe I know when I have had a really outstanding meal but am unsure of my ability or qualifications to put it into words. Could this be why the legendary A A Gill and Giles Coren spend two thirds of their reviews philosophising about anything other than the food or the restaurant in question? 

And, speaking of Adrian Gill, he once said of a certain food guide:- 

It’s no accident that the legacy of 100 years of Michelin is not just an emaciated, inhospitable French table but the legion of score-settling adjective junkies populating unreadable Internet blogs. Nerds who photograph their lunch as a bedroom metaphor for feelings and a simile for friends. (Vanity Fair - November 2012

Ignoring these words of warning, I will plough on, beginning with a comment on the lists of best UK restaurants which have been appearing on the Internet or falling out of the Sunday papers with great regularity over the past weeks. There will always be the same few restaurants near the top but, lower down, the divergence of opinion is remarkable. How can Dabbous be at number 11 in the 2013 National Restaurant Awards and not in the top 100 of others? In passing, at number 1 in the NRA list is The Hand & Flowers in Marlow, Buckinghamshire which I am visiting for the first time in January. This may have missed out on other lists because it is a pub. 

Kitchen Table, the restaurant I wish to recommend this week, has only featured in one list seen by me, but it stands apart from other eating places not just for the quality of its food but for its theatricality. Chef James Knappett has taken the concept of a chef’s table offered at other top restaurants and has turned his dining room behind Bubbledogs into one big chef’s table where nineteen diners sit round the kitchen on leather high chairs at a horse-shoe bar. 


James (late of Marcus Wareing at the Berkeley and Noma) is a most engaging host and is happy to chat to his guests as he and his team prepare twelve to fourteen courses, describing why he has chosen the combinations of flavours and where he has bought, found or foraged the ingredients. On our night, for example, there was foraged wild garlic and a dish of sand eels (not cooked there before) with nettles.

James Knappett (credit: Paul Winch-Furness)

The menu varies daily, and follows the current fashion of describing each course (on a blackboard) with one or two key words. When we visited, one of the most intriguing courses was beetroot and liquorice. This turned out to be a fabulous pudding comprising a warm beetroot cake, sorbet and meringue matched with liquorice ice cream. James explained that this came about because he snacks on liquorice as he cooks and can’t resist trying it out with other ingredients he has to hand. 


This is an experience like a great night out at the theatre, with the best seat in the house.

Monday, 1 April 2013

Attendant - Rev JW Simpson - Bubbledogs - London Cocktail Club - Artesian Bar

Tuesday 26th March - Last week I went to a Monkey Shoulder whiskey event called Malt Jockey (read about it here) with Sam.  A few days later they announced on Twitter that they would be holding a follow up after party at London Cocktail Club near Goodge Street with their ambassador bartender, Dean Callan. Sam wasn't around to attend but luckily whiskey enthusiast Will was ready to step up in his place, eager to get off the mark on The List.  After a quick check of the area, we found some other List-worthy places nearby to add to Will's score for the day.

Dean Callan - pic from http://misswhisky.com
We started off at 4pm at Attendant on Foley Street, a fantastic new café located in a restored Victorian toilet.  We were lucky to get a urinal seat (didn't think I'd ever say that) as it is a popular place.  It is currently open Mon-Fri 8.00-18.00 and Sat 10.00-17.00.  


They have daily hot food specials which seem to sell out around lunch time so get there early. There is a "banquette" table that can be hired from 8.00am for an unorthodox office meeting! We had some excellent tea served in individual teapots and I went for a blueberry crumble cake (provided by Bittersweet Bakers) that was delicious.  It is definitely worth heading over there just for the novelty value but then you will probably find yourself coming back due to the high quality produce on offer (at reasonable prices). Satisfied, we had a check on the Bubbledogs queue, which thankfully hadn't started to form, and went for a quick pint in the excellent Draft House (one left to complete the set) followed by an even quicker cocktail in Rev. JW Simpson.


Look for a little black door on Goodge Street with Rev. JW Simpson written at the top and head down the stairs into a cold basement bar with peeling wallpaper that has a slightly creepy feel to it. This is probably down to the fact that this space was lived in by Reverend JW Simpson until the late 1980s before it turned into the seedier Capricorn Club that was apparently raided by the police in 2009. We went for two £8 cocktails - Mead Feast (mead, basil, honey & quince liqueur, lemon juice, bitters) was the winner - with an enjoyable free bowl of nuts on the side.  It's nice enough, with high quality cocktails from the Bourne and Hollingsworth team (it's a shame I didn't realise that they were round the corner too), but it really doesn't stand out from the crowd with its limited menu and dodgy décor.  We quickly made our way back on to the street to beat the Bubbledogs queue.



Bubbledogs is insanely popular for what it is - hot dogs and champagne.  Have a quick look through their guestbook to see baffling messages left by people who queued for two hours and were still delighted! Luckily we walked straight in at 17.30 when it opened as it quickly started to fill up.  The restaurant looks great (although there is very little room for the many waiters to squeeze by) with amusing hot dog themed artwork all around.



The hot dogs were tasty but on the small side considering this is a restaurant not street food.  The main problem is that the hot dogs take about a minute to eat and then you are just left drinking champagne for as long as you like, while the crowd builds up outside. For a bigger, better and quicker hot dog & champagne experience, order from the Big Apple Hot Dogs van whilst swigging from your own bottle of bubbly.  More interesting is the hidden room in the back which is the home of Kitchen Table - an intimate restaurant set around one table with room for 19 guests run by the same people as Bubbledogs.

Kitchen Table
Fairly unimpressed, we moved on to London Cocktail Club for some whiskey cocktails from the Monkey Shoulder team. Don't be fooled by the ordinary name, LCC Goodge Street (there is another on Shaftesbury Avenue) is a fantastic underground bar decked out like an old gin palace. I can't comment on the drinks from the menu but everyone I talked to at the bar raved about the cocktails and the bartenders. The food menu also looks enticing, especially the pudding cocktails!

London Cocktail Club - Goodge Street Gin Palace
We were treated excellently by the Monkey Shoulder team (Olivier splashing the cash, Dean making the cocktails) who were giving out free drinks based on their whiskey and talking about their upcoming events and experiences so far.  It was great fun getting the inside scoop on Monkey Shoulder events (look out for Popcorn Flip on 21st November!) and the lifestyle of an ambassador bartender - Dean had coincidentally been to Paris at the weekend like me but had spent considerably more than I had done overall in just one place! We even found ourselves listening to Dean's grandfather's old jazz band on his brother's iPod - check out Theis Nyegaard Jazzband if you are interested.  We had an Old Fashioned (one barrel aged and one freshly made to compare - barrel wins) and a Morning Glory each. We could have stayed there a lot longer as we were enjoying chatting away but more hopeful malt jockeys were turning up so we disappeared into the nice Young's pub over the road (The One Tun) to watch England vs Montenegro.

LCC creations
Two hours and two goals later we emerged back on to Goodge Street (all these places are extremely close to one another!) and decided to go to one last place that Dean had recommended earlier on.  He told us to go to The Artesian Bar at The Langham Hotel, and to order a Pina Colada with an umbrella, so that's what we did!  It's an expensive place to drink but if you can afford it, this is the place to be.  The drinks are excellent - seriously, try the Pina Colada - and the bar staff are top class.  The drinks cabinet is a sight to behold - sit at the bar so that you can ask about their weirder bottles.  We had a cheeky taster of hisbiscus, rosebud and white tea syrup.

Ask about the mysterious Black Top rum
The drinks menu is well put together with an interesting cocktail flavour map complete with axes included at the back (I love a good graph), but you may well also want to ask them to make up something completely new on the spot.  Whilst we were enjoying our Pina Coladas, Dean unexpectedly walked in with friends and introduced us to the barman serving us that he happens to live with (they must have some crazy parties). I thought I already had the exciting umbrella on the side of my glass but it turned out he was talking about something much bigger and sillier - a pretty manly picture I'm sure you will all agree.  We decided to stay for one more as his flatmate offered to make us something a bit different to finish. Mine was Japanese themed, served in a small box on top of some anime artwork - see the picture below.  Just as we were on our way out, Dean said "Don't leave without holding Johnny Depp's gun". I wasn't expecting that but a few moments later I was holding a pistol from Pirates of the Carribean 2 and a hat that the cast must have left behind!


Thanks to Will for an impressive début List appearance (5 points in one evening) and to everyone involved in the Monkey Shoulder event at London Cocktail Club for their generosity, and finally to Dean and his flatmate at Artesian Bar for helping us to end the evening in style!

Also, please check out some of my talented/crazy friends:

Photographer Seb - http://www.searproductions.co.uk/

Comedian Andy - also part of the Austentatious gang - http://austentatiousimpro.com/ - @andrewhunterm

3000 Mile Athlete Fundraiser Ali - http://iwouldrun3000miles.wordpress.com/

Freelance writer and scientist Cassie - http://cassandracoburn.com/

Art journalist Maggie - http://maggiegraywriting.wordpress.com/

Travel Blogger/ Future Lithuanian Ambassador Max I - http://maxchilaquiles.blogspot.co.uk/

Writer Max K - recently won HJI-Reed Youth Unemployment Essay Prize - http://mbk1.tumblr.com/

Paris Blog Quiz Prize - It's still open! I have received a couple of incorrect entries, and two correct entries from Tim and Shan on Wire who can't win because they were involved.  Don't all rush at once!

Square Meal

Square Meal


Square Meal

Square Meal

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