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circeplum

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Posts posted by circeplum

  1. the food at the wolseley, though not at all bad, isn't the point. it's all about the buzz and the people watching. call me shallow, but i loved it too.

    and the celebrity count is satisfyingly high, though if you're a mere likes-of-us punter you'll probably be sat on the outer fringes and not in the holy-of-holies central corral.

  2. Yeah, but what does she know? :raz:

    bapi: :wub:

    incidentally - had lunch at a strange caff in world's end called the mona lisa, menu veering between seabass and bacon butties. total cost for 3 adults and 4 children, including seafood pasta, chicken kiev :wub:, buffalo mozzarella etc - £36. and portions were absolutely humungous...

    m

  3. busaba eathai is good if you're on your own because it has bar-type seating (esp the one off tottenham court road) and is really reasonably priced. thai food pretty good too. gorgeous design. (don't know if it's open, though.)

    wagamama works for the same reasons.

    if i were in town, i'd offer to join you! can't be on your own on boxing day in a strange city! (though i did it in new york once. went to the empire diner. good choice for lone eating.)

    m

  4. This sounds like it could be promising - however, I'm slow to get excited about things like this as in the past they've always failed to impress :sad:

    Have they replaced Down Mexico Way which was/is also on Swallow Street?

    I worry slightly about the term 'South American'.

    yes, it was 'down mexico way'. never was in there, had a rep for booze-up hen/stag parties. but destino just might be a different story.

    apart from anything else, it looks absolutely stunning; apparently was london's first ever spanish restaurant in the 20s and retains the original, glorious tiling.

    we just had lunch downstairs in the 'deli', open just for snacks and a 'taco' counter??? don't pretend to be anything of an expert on mexican food, but what we had tasted great. chunky guacamole with tostaditos (home made); a soft corn taco filled with fabulous bbq pork and 'latino coleslaw' (seemed to be mostly marinated red onion), a flour burrito filled with seared beef and peppers. best of all were a black bean dip and a divine habanero dip. i could have drunk the latter from its pot.

    def. going back to try the full menu.

    m

  5. there's quite a strange little place just opened round the corner from the t.o.l., on a road with nothing else on it other than the railway, called rosemary lanes.

    odd collision between incredibly ambitious, organic food and old boozer surroundings. the dartboard was still in situ. they've put in plush banquettes and the silverware and glassware is all comme il faut, but looks like they may just have run out of money.

    the chef (a woman) is, i think, californian and it shows. we had things like soft shell 'club' - good crab, 'heirloom' tomatoes, yellow pepper foam and 'caviar' (flying fish roe, i think). and seared foie gras with banyuls on brioche. and john dory with shallots, preserved lemons, cape gooseberries and celeriac. see what i mean about ambition?

    you even get amuse bouches and inter-course sorbets (excellent blackcurrant and star anise) - totally anomalous in these surroundings. but definitely worth a visit, if only to admire the pioneering spirit.

    m

  6. And - have you tried the restaurant which was mentioned - 24 Rhodes I think it is. And is their mutton as good as yours :)? I will try anything at least once if someone thinks it's delicious. Robyn

    the mutton suet pudding at rhodes 24 is a serious contender for my dish of the year award. moist, fluffy, squidgey, suetey crust stuffed with meltingly tender slow-cooked mutton (3 years old, rhodes couldn't find his desired 5 year old) and onions. it comes with three little jugs of sauce - an onion soubise, a caper sauce and really intense mutton gravy - so if you chemistry-set it about with these you can have a different tasting mouthful each time.

    i want it again. NOW.

    m

  7. i'd avoid the seafresh in wilton road - the fish'n'chips ain't bad, but it's a gloomy old dump of a place. geales in notting hill is more fun and a real institution.

    also, i'd swap your categories for locanda locatelli and andrew edmunds: edmunds is an informal, smokey media soho hangout; locatelli is drop-dead glam and just about as hard to get into as the ivy - but i reckon the first-class italian cooking repays the effort.

    m

  8. i'll still be using the cheeseshop and the italian deli on upper tachbrook, and the mad patisserie and the spanish shop on lower tachbrook, the portuguese on warwick way (though not, absolutely not the diabolical bella sicilia deli.)

    Bella Sicilia - ug. I went there once in a warm support-my-local-retailers type of mood, had a nice chat with the owner, and for my pains got sold what turned out to be possibly the oldest piece of parmesan known to man. It was positively geological. Never went back.

    he is a complete prick. he's given me the arse end of parma ham before; when i remonstrated he threw it on the scales and said it was worth £11. eh?

    then, when i asked him to take the skin off some salami, he told me i wanted too much service, replaced the salami in the cabinet and refused to serve me.

    i hope sainsbury's kills his business stone dead. :angry:

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