Jump to content

grahamR

participating member
  • Posts

    150
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by grahamR

  1. The Sunday Times were giving away a DVD of that Bloomin Hestenthal’s new series. What’s on the DVD is a bit of an oddity: the Sunday Times deglazing the cutting room floor. HB doesn’t seem to be one of life’s natural communicators, and yet he comes across as very down-to-earth and a generally nice sort. You certainly can’t imagine him effing and blinding at his staff for messing up the liquid nitrogen ice cream.

    What’s interesting is that he’s very soft-line on “molecular gastronomy”. It’s a term he doesn’t like, as he explains in a conversation with Harold McGee. Should be an interesting series – if you don’t get too caught up in how clunky HB’s presentation skills are.

  2. My problem with risotto is that no matter how good the first mouthful, the experience goes downhill from there. Flavour/texture fatigue always gets me well before the end of the dish.

    Ooze seems like a missed opportunity: a tappas element would get around one of The Big Problems With Risotto.

  3. I’ve read through Essence a couple of times and it has plenty to offer at all levels. What at first seems unobtainable (I’m not likely to go foraging for wild ingredients) is at least supplemented by alternatives and suggestions. As I’ve reread the book I’m coming to the conclusion that there is a lot of interest in just those ideas alone.

    It’s a very good book. It’s a very interesting book. It’s not by Jamie Oliver :wink:

    For gardeners at least, there’s a certain thrill for having a recipe that uses ground elder.

  4. Poor old Maison Berteaux! Perhaps I’m just being sentimental as I’ve been going there for so many years, but I think it’s unfair to put them in the same league as the perfectly horrible Patisserie Valerie (or Amato’s, for that matter). Sketch they are not, but on the simple basis of what I enjoy, I’ll have to tip my hat to Maison Berteaux.

  5. I've just had a quick look through the book (ISBN: 1904573525). It landed on the doorstep the same day as the Tom Aikens. Seems like all those weeds I've been pulling up and putting on the compost heap will be coming in to the kitchen next year: Meadowsweet for rice pudding, and as for the bitter hairy cress... These are recipes you really have to do some world class shopping to source the ingredients. You may even have to buy a greenhouse to grow some of them.

    In contrast the Aikens book is very down to earth. Possibly too much so?

  6. This year's list.

    http://www.timeout.com/london/restaurants/features/1823.html

    Winners in bold, the runner's up below. Odd categories, some odd choices. Hope Yakitoria get a bit of business out of their mention. It deserves to to better.

    Best Bar: Lost Society, 697 Wandsworth Rd, SW8 3JF

    Annex 3, 6 Little Portland Street

    Donovan Bar, Brown's Hotel, Albemarle Street

    Gilgamesh, Camden Stables Market

    Hawksmoor, 157 Commercial Street

    Best Cheap Eat: The Table (Café), 83 Southwark St, SE1 0HX

    fish! kitchen (Fish & chips), 58 Coombe Road,

    Hummus Bros (Budget), 88 Wardour Street

    Imli (Indian), 167-168 Wardour Street

    Masa (Afghani), 24-26 Headstone Drive

    Best Design: Yakitoria, 25 Sheldon Square, W2 6EY

    Canteen (British), 2 Crispin Place

    China Tang (Chinese), The Dorchester, Park Lane

    Ladurée, Harrods, entrance on Hans Road,

    The Table (Café), 83 Southwark Street

    Best Gastropub: Marquess Tavern, 32 Canonbury St, N1 2TB

    Charles Lamb, 16 Elia Street

    Inn at Kew Gardens, 292 Sandycombe Road

    Phoenix, 14 Palace Street

    The Queen’s Pub and Dining Room, 26 Broadway Parade

    Best Family Restaurant: Benihana , 100 Avenue Rd, NW3 3HF

    Frankie’s Italian Bar & Grill, 224 Piccadilly

    Inn the Park (British), St James's Park

    Jo Shmo’s (North American), 33 High Street

    Marco Polo (Italian), 6-7 Riverside Quarter

    Best Local Restaurant: Sam’s Brasserie, 11 Barley Mow Passage, W4 4PH

    Dylan’s (Mod Euro), 21 Station Parade, Cockfosters Road

    Inside (Mod Euro), 19 Greenwich South Street

    The Island (Mod Euro)123 College Road

    Upstairs 89B Acre Lane

    Best New Restaurant: Arbutus, 63-64 Frith St, W1D 3JW

    Ambassador (Mod Euro) - 55 Exmouth Market

    Bar Shu (Chinese) - 28 Frith Street

    La Collina (Italian) - 17 Princess Road

    Papillon (French) - 96 Draycott Avenue

    Best Pâtisserie: Macaron, 22 The Pavement, SW4 0HY

    Hummingbird, 133 Portobello Road

    Ladurée, Harrods

    The Wolseley, 160 Piccadilly

    Yauatcha, 15 Broadwick Street

    Best Steak Restaurant: Gaucho Piccadilly, 25 Swallow St, W1B 4QR

    Hawksmoor (North American), 157 Commercial Street

    Notting Grill (British), Clarendon Road

    Santa Maria del Buen Ayre (Argentinian), 50 Broadway Market, Hackney

    Top Floor at Smiths (British), Smiths of Smithfield, 67-77 Charterhouse Street

    Best Wine Bar: Vinoteca, 7 St John St, EC1M 4AA

    Cellar Gascon, 59 West Smithfield

    Green & Blue, 38 Lordship Lane

    Vivat Bacchus, 47 Farringdon Street

    Wine Wharf, Stoney Street, Borough Market

  7. What a strange show the F word is.

    It has a curiously bi-polar opinion of its host Mr Ramsey. He is one of this country’s greatest chefs, whose food seems, more often than not, to lose when put in competition against the home cooked efforts of (celebrity) amateurs.

    He is family man Gordon, with his lovely children, and his suberb-garden-slaughterhouse, who comes into the studio to flirt with anything in a skirt.

    He is caring Gordon, who wants to get the country cooking, and will pop round to your house to show you how to make a Sunday roast. Then it’s back to the kitchen to bluster about like a pirate with tourettes.

    It’s that last persona that really annoys me: Gordon “the acceptable face of bullying” Ramsey. That thinly veiled threat of violence, as he draws himself to his full height, steps into the personal space of his target and screams invective at them. It’s the sort of behaviour that would have you sacked from almost any other job.

    Must the price of a nicely cooked meal be a culture of victimisation, humiliation, violence and bullying?

  8. Apropos of what she will be having for her 80th birthday, I was interested to note what Her Majesty was served for her coronation.

    <p style='border: 1px dotted green; text-align: center'>

    Chicken Consommé garnished with cubes of egg custard.

    Fillet of Beef garnished with quarters of artichoke bottoms, tossed in butter with cocotte potatoes and slices of truffle.

    Salad

    Mango Ice Cream.

    </p>

    From The Old Foodie

  9. Scotland has special places to eat. I’m not sure that the high drama of the four already selected can be matched on quite the same terms, but for what it’s worth:

    The Three Chimneys is a terrific restaurant. I have eaten there three or four times in the last five years, but (as already indicated) not really in the league of the other restaurants you are considering. It is, however, a pretty special sort of place and if you are in the area, it’s a lovely place to stay and eat.

    Even more outstanding in terms of location and I’ll admit a complete surprise for the high quality of food was a recent stay at Ardanaiseig. The view from the dining room is the sunset across Loch Awe.

    I’ll add, although it’s actually the opposite of what you’re probably looking for :biggrin: , my favourite place to eat in Scotland: The Old Pines. It’s home style cooking, impeccably sourced, always seasonal and prepared with a completely natural flair. If I called it a Scottish bistro I think you’d have the right idea.

    I wish your celebration well. It sounds astonishing.

  10. London Chocolate Week used to be a fantastic opportunity to explore, try and buy what is on offer. I’d be very happy to be proved wrong but I don’t think it has run in the last couple of years.

    My own conclusion was that L'Artisan Du Chocolat, tucked away off Sloane Square, are the best of the best. I’m sure you’d find something impressively satisfying amongst their plantation bars.

    Personally I don’t think any of the other chocolatiers in London get close to the quality of their couture collection. Unlike most other producers they do not recycle mis-shapes (they sell them at Borough market, and very nice they are too) which allows them to be much more bold in their flavouring.

    (Must stop thinking about salted caramels and get back to work...)

  11. I liked the old well-honed recipes for a dinner party format. At least that way the book at the end of the series had something interesting you could use in there.

    All this “ready-steady-cook”, “working in a real restaurant” stuff is just padding. Those two muppets that front the show have about as much charisma as a toilet in a French caravan site. Last years “I don’t like salmon” routine was pure x-factor cobblers.

    I was much more hopeful for “food uncut” on uk tv food. Sadly they have production values that make Masterchef look like Ghandi. A great shame to see good ideas butchered. One of the early shows did a taste off between a Heston slow cooked beef joint and a Nigella recipe for the same cut. Potentially interesting, but rushed through far too quickly.

  12. For those that missed the honours list, Gordon and Heston were both awarded an OBE. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4569630.stm

    Jamie Oliver already has an MBE, and if the eGullet rumour of Mr Harriot’s royal connections are correct, can it be long before we see Sir Ainsley?

    I always have mixed feelings about Ramsay: while he’s a very successful businessman, I have a real problem with him as “the acceptable face of bullying”. He is, of course, very able in recognising good dishes and setting up high-quality production lines.

  13. Interesting topic, particularly for my own New Year resolution to stop buying fruit, vegetables, meat and fish from supermarkets and move to independent (more seasonally inclined) suppliers. My problem has been finding the suppliers as I live in Central London, but that’s probably a thread of its own.

    Two books to add to your list.

    The Four Seasons Cookery Book by Margaret Costa : first published in 1970, this is a bit of a lost classic which took years before a reprint became available. Full of good stuff and plundered by many a cookery writer.

    The Independant Cook by Jeremy Round : some interesting recipes, and very handy charts. First published in 1988. His writing style can be a bit snooty, but I think it's worth persevering with. Useful, though short, early sections on shopping and eating seasonally.

×
×
  • Create New...