Tag Archives: tea

Dinner by Heston Blumenthal

Hype is a funny old thing. You sometimes go to a restaurant so full of expectation almost nothing would match the fantastical standards you’ve built up in your mind. On other occasions, such is the hubbub around a place that you’ve become almost numb to it – in fact you swing the other way and begin to fear the worst. People are idiots; surely if something has been so widely praised it’s a load of rubbish? ‘Look at the pop charts!’, ‘Don’t Panic!’. My visit today was erring toward the latter of these two emotions.

In the company of Andy (signs his emails Andrew) and Lindsey, today I lunched at Dinner. I’ve never eaten at any of Heston’s places, not even the Popham Little Chef, but I’ve been interested in the man for some years – around the time I got serious about food I had a crack at his Spag Bol from ‘Perfection’ (Very good but worth the 12 hour cooking time and fiddly preparations vs the standard Humpage family recipe? Debatable). Since then and my move to London, the appeal has lessened somewhat. Whilst the Fat Duck tasting menu is right up amongst my dream dinners, the chef’s move to Channel 4 and Waitrose-based ubiquity has altered my once reverent opinion of the man.

Fig Martini Aperitif
Fig Martini Aperitif

The dining room was certainly up to the task of dissuading doubts – raised up and overlooking Hyde Park, surprisingly light and spacious. It was classy. My Fig Martini was a lovely drink and the opening salvo of brown bread faultless, with butter almost the colour of egg yolk.

Hype reared it’s two-faced head again at menu time. In the relatively short time this place has been open, several of the dishes have already passed into gasto-folklore. The Meat Fruit. The Tipsy Cake. Your hero at this juncture brace himself, staring right over the precipice of disappointment, and ordered them both.

'Meat Fruit'
‘Meat Fruit’

Haha. Hahahahaha. It’s amazing when a plate of food makes you laugh. Not because it’s clever. Not because it looks EXACTLY like an orange, but it isn’t. But because it’s really bloody tasty. Because you know, in the world right at that moment, you’re in the top 1% – top fractions of a percent – of people who are eating the nicest thing going. And I don’t even really like chicken liver parfait that much. So yeah, by this point, about 1 mouthful into Dinner, all that bollocks waffle about hype above completed smashed to pieces. A plate of food like a good book, as you see you’re nearing the end you’re genuinely sad. 3 of the four of us had this (the other was a veggie) and the sighs of delight, and board scraping for tit-bits was universal.

Pigeon
Pigeon

To my knowledge there isn’t really a signature main in the same way there are starters and desserts, and the dish I was most drawn to (after the obligatory discussion with the restaurant staff) was the spiced pigeon. Served with ‘Ale & artichokes’, it was not a million miles from the divine duck I enjoyed on Tuesday. Big on taste, there was no fault I could pick with it. Fries, obscenely good slow-butter cooked carrots with caraway and green beans with shallots formed sides for the table. In all dishes the standards of my starter were maintained.

Tipsy Cake
Tipsy Cake

You have to order this when you arrive. Quite a big deal for me that, picking dessert before even nibbling on your first course. We agreed a sort of quadruple swapping session, but I was very much ‘Tipsy Cake’ owner. All the same emotions as the meat fruit, repeated (and I feel the same about pineapple as I do chicken liver parfait). The fruit is spit roast, giving it a wonderful caramelized element and what is basically a really fancy iced bun is easily one of the best desserts I’ve eaten. As we roated around variously Brown Bread Ice Cream, Taffety Tart and Bohemian Cake I longed to be back with my iron pot of sponge swimming in boozy syrup goodness. You can see all four desserts – as they are eaten – at the bottom of the blog.

I popped of to go to the toilet (I didn’t want anyone to see my tears of joy/anger at having to share the Tipsy Cake – which was thoroughly my initiative) and upon my return found yet more treats. A mini pot of earl grey chocolate granache, with a caraway shortbread stick alongside. Don’t need no more descriptions. ‘Was really good’ covers it.

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Hang on a moment, what’s this?

Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream
Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream

Oh sure. Why doesn’t some delightfully mannered chap push round a cart and turn vanilla custard into ice cream – using liquid nitrogen – at the table. This was the element one would most associate with the chef who gives his name to the restaurant. A choice of four toppings on your cone – I went apple popping candy and freeze dried raspberry. Yes yes. Ridiculously good. Move along.

Marvellous Scotch - at £34 a dram
Marvellous Scotch – at £34 a dram

Then to finish we took a digestif. I must say that even though I was being treated to lunch, the prices on this after dinner drinks menu made me flinch. My hosts gave the OK and I finished one of the finest meals of my life – almost certainly the best dinner I’ve had this year – with a simply sublime single malt. Seriously smooth but with loads of depth and the good type of craziness on the palate. Mega. I’ve been saying mega quite a lot recently.

I’ve also not mentioned the wine – two French bottles, a floral white to start and a spicy red with mains. Both were exquisite but my memory is too full of weird meaty oranges and five spongey segments to recall the regions, let alone the labels.

So Dinner. Like everyone else has said, do yourself a favour and go. I’m still deliriously happy just typing up all this nonsense now, five days later.

HungryHungryHumpo

Dinner by Heston Blumenthal on Urbanspoon

Square Meal

Vanilla Black

Another one (there’s many) in the list of places I’ve long wanted to eat at. Such is the perpetual pain of the London restaurant scene; not dissimilar to the property section of ‘The Week’ or the types of holidays I get sent links to from Destinology. Well anyway today I get to cross one off.

The place is fine dining vegetarian eatery ‘Vanilla Black’. A place that started in York around a decade ago and moved to the city, selected as both my exec and on of my hosts are vegetarian (and, errrr, I’ve wanted to go for ages).

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After lovely little loaves with smoked butter (which was served in jars, opened – with smoke – at the table. Nice bit of theatre), the waitress took us through every dish (there were some odd sounding numbers on the menu, brie ice cream starter, anyone?) and I began with the whipped jacket potato with crispy shallots and tomato syrup atop slices of Wednesleydale.

It was rich and buttery, though the cheese got lost a bit. The tomato syrup was a rich gravy and the shallots were excellent – the sort of dish component of which you wish volumes were double.

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My main was one of the signature dishes – a ribblesdale chese pudding with slow cooked hen egg and hickory smoked potato croquette. Again this was lovely – although flavourwise had many elements that were very close to my starter.

The element worked together well though, and the poached – cooked for an hour, apparently – was perfect.

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The whole place really came alive with dessert – I ummed and ahhed over the menu before setting on smoked paprika fudge, malt loaf and builders tea ice cream. This was adorned with an unusal smoked pear foam and slices of crispy pear. My first bite was most bizarre and not altogether pleasant, but each successive mouthful improved to the point where I was devastated to finsh, despite being completely stuffed. The paprika fudge especially was really something.

A bottle of Picpoul and some sparkling water were the drink accompaniments, and despite the slightly austere dining room and the reliance on cheese and potato (with some part of every dish getting the smoking treatment) I would heartily reccomend this to veggies and carnivores alike. There’s nowhere I know like it in London. 

HungryHungryHumpo

Square Meal

Marmite on Toast

Hot tea and Marmite on extremely buttery toast. The bread is not important in this basic lunch – which is actually more of a Sunday afternoon snack this time. But good bread elevates the whole thing to make it so good that this had to be a rare weekend lunch update for The Lunch Club. Oat and barley from….Percy Ingle’s was the stuff. Toasts particularly well. I know they used to get a slating on here but recently I’ve started getting loaves from them and whilst their sandwiches continue to look dire but the bread is really good. Huge cup of steaming hot tea too. Delicious.

Doug the Devourer

Dean St Townhouse

This update has taken an age to get written up, which makes it very much in keeping with the lunch it reports on. A Christmas present whoch finally came into being 10 months late! A Saturday lunch this time but worth writing up as it’s one of the rare occasions I go somewhere that is a sandwich chain, if I go anywhere at all.

Inspired by LunchClubAl’s previous visit to the Dean Street Townhouse I had opted to try it all out for afternoon tea. The context being a long, long overdue Christmas present from me to another. In fact I’m pretty sure the first Dean Street Townhouse visit of my blogging companion was very early on the frenzy of eating out in London he’s experienced and described in these here pages. My follow up, so to speak, was a long time coming.

I’d wanted somewhere with class, but not overly ‘fancy’. Hotels doing tea in Mayfair, whilst no doubt excellent in quality did not seem quite right (in my head at least). I wanted somewhere with style as well as a great ambience but also very relaxed. Dean Street Townhouse delivered. Hotel guests in jeans trundled about whilst Soho fashion types sat at tables nearby those who looked like they probably lived in the nicest parts of West London. Despite my lingering ’man flu’ I was very much enjoying Saturday afternoon feeling I foind in Soho

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. A sort of mixture between relaxation and casual goings on with a feeling of something more ex citing being on the cards for later…whatever that may in this part of town (probably queuing to get into a ‘no bookings’ restaurant)

Afternoon tea it was then. I ordered that smokiest and most luxurious of teas, Lapsang Souchon with Earl Grey being the other one at our table. It was excellent although after my 6th or so cup the flavour was beginning to dominate. In fact I could taste it, subtley, in and around my nose and mouth for a day or so after. I was glad of the repise of cup of Early Grey towards the end of our visit.

Finger sandwiches came, and went. I particularly liked the fact that they were very, very classic. No bulging fillings, no ‘new fangled bread (brioche) and no keeerazy flavour combinations. Ham and mustard, egg mayonnaise, smoked salmon and cream cheese. Crusts cut off, soft bread and modestly filled. Very nice. Then came the highlight. Two monstrous scones with two types of jam (blackcurrant and raspberry if I remember correctly) and a generous pot of clotted cream. What an ingredient. It really is spectacular stuff. I’ve never had bad clotted cream I don’t think. And it’s a good job I don’t have it more than three or four times a year. Proper gateway to obesity stuff.

Cakes and pastries followed as did the exceptional serivce. The best of the bunch was slice of what was a sort of caramel and banana loaf. Pecan possibly featuring heavily. It was dense, incredibly moist and utterly delicious. Macaroons were great and there was a little chocolate tart thing. In fact everything on the top layer of the cake stand was first class. It was all rather epic though and we couldn’t quite finish it. Which is a shame as some of the high tea options looked very tempting too. I was eager to try the mac and cheese – a dish very popular right now it seems and one being transported from the processed and lower echelons of dinner to something reinvented and made great by using top quality ingredients. I just didn’t have room.

Doug the Devourer

 

Michelin Starred Dim Sum – Tim Ho Wan

This Monday lunch was taken in Hong Kong. My host, Jack, had already furnished me with the michelin guide, and coupled with a perusal of the internet I discovered a celebrated Dim Sum restaurant that happened to be in the vicinity of ‘Sneaker Street’ – an area of Mong Kok where there are hundreds of shops selling trainers. 

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We rocked up not much after mid-day and were told there was a two hour wait, so dutifully popped our names down before some shopping. We then came back and were seated about 90 minutes later.

The HK michelin guide doesn’t bear much relation to it’s European parents – this restaurant was a curious place, all elbows, noise and no dishes above a couple of quid. It’s comfortably the cheapest michelin-starred lunch in the world. 

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As is the way, we checked off a selection of dishes from the menu and were given copious amounts of pu-er tea while we waited.

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First up were steamed shrimp dumplings. Light, tasty, slightly glutinous coating – a staple in this part of the world and well done.

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A portion of glutionous rice mixed with pork meat – this big, wrapped dumpling was Jack’s choice, and whilst I was initially wary it was delicious.

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Perhaps ther best dim sum dish I’ve had, these quails egg and pork steamed dumplings were superb. The quails egg was a fancy touch that made the whole dish go a little bit wow. Popped in the mouth in one bite to avoid the risk of chop stick juggling, an amazing mouthful.

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The ubiqitous BBQ pork buns. Lightly glazed on the base, these were sweet, sticky and superb. 

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Deep fried ‘meat’ dumplings – at this stage, given the extra dishes not featured above, including rice with beef and egg – we were bloody stuffed. And the whole bill was a fiver each. Somewhat ridiculous.

The dim sum was very good. However as I was to find whilst visiting several other restaurants – there was little to differentiate it from the numerous dim sum joints all over town – a slight bit of finesse here and there but the staple dishes were almost indistinguishable from similar restaurants in the area. 

That, however, says more about the quality of all of them rather than any slight on this place. If you’re in HK, go to Tim Ho Wan, you won’t be disappointed.

HungryHungryHumpo

The World’s Heaviest Sarnie?

After belatedly reading your top bit of topical twitter linking Douglas (http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2012/jun/22/store-wars-pret-a-manger-eat – but you should be following us, links directly above under the chaps on the skyscraper) I was tempted by a Pret.

Strolling in (Euston Road option, despite having to cross the damn thing) I noticed a selection of packaging seemingly new since my last visit – and crucially, some new sandwiches. The validity of this claim is doubted as nowhere on their highly styled packaging did it proclaim ‘New’. 

However I’d not seen the chicken, stuffing and mango sandiwch beofre, and there were two big ones left (it was 3pm). I picked one up and was quite flabberghasted by the weight of the thing. A true monster! The heaviest sandwich I’d ever held? Possibly. Incredible.

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The other was just as weighty but I went with my first ‘pick’. £3.50, not cheap but pound-for-pound this had the potential to be a knockout. 

And it was very, very good. Basically a summer version of the Christmas special. The stuffing was the same porky, sausage meat strips, the leaves were just right bar one piece of lettuce, whose crunchiness was somewhat incongruous. The mango roughly spread making for pleasant bite variety, the chicken almost dressed in mayo. Good job, Eat-beater. 

The reason I was able to hold off on lunch (despite a conference call) was the presence of some superb cupcakes in my working day. Lola’s Kitchen, from Primrose Hill – two boxes – bloody marvelous. At a little before midday, I had almost first pick of a delightful mini-oreo style affair with my cup of Earl Grey, and finished the day with the last, a purple number (the decorations weren’t all that). This relegated the already postponed pre-bought sweet treat of yesterday to tomorrow. I’m starting to worry about it in my drawer.

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 HungryHungryHumpo

Supreme Foodstuffs – N’Duja Sausage

Today a Lunch Club staple, the 321st tagged sandwich, was enlivened with the bounties of a Saturday shop at Borough market.

Aside from a very light spreading of squeezy Hellmann’s light mayo, the first of the three ingredients was the titular south Italian spicy, spreadable spiced pork salami. A truly divine meat, this N’Duja had a medium level of chilli cut through with farmed pork belly. I think it is my most favourite form of meat at the present time.

Sitting on top of the spicy red spread were thinly sliced triangles of Berkswell cheese. Lauded by the founder of La Fromagerie for its prominence amongst world cheese, this slight grittily textured, very nutty cheese was enhanced by a very slight drizzling of honey, and then sandwiched between two slices of Morrison’s pumpkin and sunflower seed loaf.

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The sandwich was great. I regretted the absence of some leaves when I constructed it in the morning, but upon eating delighted in the simplicity of cheese, bread and meat.

A packet of mature cheese Kettle Chips concluded a exquisite epicurean intro to the week, juxtaposed by several cups of Earl Grey.

HungryHungryHumpo

Lamb Lamb Lamb Lamb

Today was a day I’d arranged to have a bite, long overdue, with Claire Scott, friend of the Lunch Club and occasionally titularly referenced. It was grim outside and we both have quite a bit of the old work to do. So it was proposed we dine in the office cafe.

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Now I’m not the office cafe’s biggest fan. Even when it’s doling out free nosh. However I’d already spotted today they were doing some kind of kebab special. Not quite sure what a Pita is – did they hire you to write the menu? But I was wary to say the least. 

My fears were part allayed by the fact they did not take card, and Claire subbed me the £4.20 to cover my food. I joined the queue, and interest was initially piqued by the presence of the kebab-shop staple (of which I am a hearty recent convert) the bright green, pickled chillis. 

I asked, as usual, for loads of meat – and after my pitta (an unusual, almost bread roll styled device) was laden with a very good slaw, the server, shaky of hand though he was, duly dished up lots and lots of rich brown lamb meat into the mix.

Both sauces – chilli and garlic mayo, went on the top, before a side salad was constructed from bags of florette, tomato slices and the aforementioned green chillis (x3).

I further pimped my salad with a few spoonfuls of sunflower seeds and some chilli oil from the bountiful condiment arena. 

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Yum. This lamb was amazing. Not sure how they done it, but they managed to pack donner flavours into tender, fibrous and melty lamb. Both sauces were top notch, with an epic zing off the chilli, and the salad did the business. Pickled chillis rise higher in my estimation – what was I doing ignoring these little spicers for so long?

Back at the desk and a cup of tea with a couple of biscuits completed a most surprisingly enjoyable lunch.

HungryHungryHumpo