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Kikujiro

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Posts posted by Kikujiro

  1. I had breakfast there (Cafeteria) a couple of weeks ago. Excited to see huevos rancheros on the menu, disappointed to receive a kind of spicy version of a canteen ratatouille with eggs that were raw underneath but somehow cooked to develop a rubber-firm skin on top that was astonishingly difficult to penetrate. Oh, and I ordered a grapefruit juice, which on the menu was listed as fresh squeezed pink, and got something out of a carton, for which, it later turned out, I was charged the fresh pink price. Overpriced, too. Staff were friendly.

    Website here.

    Unlike Simon, I am happy with ground-floor Smiths for breakfast or a sandwich.

  2. For the historically-minded, I came across a review of a couple of gay restaurants in London circa 1987, including the above-mentioned Roy's. There seem to have been at least three centred around Earl's Court. Here's a sample of what the late-80s gay diner might have enjoyed.

    At Roy's:

    Deep-fried Lymeswold cheese with cranberry sauce

    Fresh orange, lychee and melon melange flavoured with Cointreau

    Pasta shells, sweetcorn, bacon and prawns, baked in a cream sauce, topped with cheese

    Sauteed mussels and leeks with creamy orange sauce

    --

    Beef & vegetable casserole

    Sirloin steak (supp.)

    Aylesbury duck in honey and lemon sauce

    Rack of English lamb

    Billingsgate Pie

    Vegetarian Pie

    --

    Choctop Sticky Whopper Show Stopper

    Banana Bavarian Vanilla Bavarois

    Scarlet's a Strawberry Tart

    2 courses £10, puds £2.85

    Meanwhile, down the road at the more aspirational Van B's -- table lamps, louvred wooden panelling, French chefs; waiters probably not in drag:

    Avocado on a crepe with vegetables and cream sauce

    Sea terrine served with basil sauce

    Snails on puff pastry with hazlenut butter

    --

    Palate cleanser: lemon sorbet, peppermint oil

    --

    Poached salmon with Hollandaise

    Confit of duck with walnuts and Calvados

    Stuffed chicken breast in a cream and green pepper sauce.

    Puds unspecified. £13.75 for three courses. A Chablies 1er cru would have put you back £17.75; Beaujolais Villages, £9.75.

  3. Soba: yes, and in some states in the US, for example, the 'unnatural' acts are illegal between het as well as gay couples, whereas in others it's the same-sex context that makes them transgressive.

    Also, the relative specificity or lack thereof in various legal codes (check out Texas on the link above for fascinatingly graphic specifics about what they don't want to see happening) is another interesting gap to explore.

  4. There are definitely states where certain acts are illegal, but not just BEING.

    Repression of homosexuality almost always concerns specific actions rather than some kind of 'being' gay, which is after all fairly difficult to establish in the absence of action (unlike, say, being black). Even conservative Christianity says: hate the sin, love the sinner.

    Of course, for those who missed out on Foucault, the idea that there such a thing as 'sexuality' (that a sentence differentiating acts from 'just BEING' is even intelligible) is only a bit over a hundred years old.

    In terms of restaurants, I'm assuming the 'acts' would involve holding hands across the table, or having certain kinds of conversation.

  5. And then...there's always Big Cup.  :blink:

    I have fond memories of Big Cup from when I stayed in a dive hotel round the corner (next to a police station, I think I remember). I remember it had good muffins (note that this may or may not be, or ever have been, the case in actuality).

    The odd thing about the hotel was that the view from the window changed overnight.

  6. I mean, the Italians would laugh for days if they saw that in a restaurant!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Polenta is only served in rustic restaurants in the mountains. Come on!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! That's for Brit poseurs only - you know who you are! :biggrin:

    Rubbish. I had it in two of the best restaurants in Venice last week.

    I am only able to type this reply because I'm checking the board less often these days so I know won't get dragged into another 'debate' on 'real' 'Italian' 'food'.

  7. Miss J's right about the olives. I kept eating them in the hope that one of them might eventually taste of olive. Oh, and she's right about everything else too (except I don't think the tortilla chips were freshly fried). What was utterly bizarre was that this was a daily menu, dated 9 April, which clearly told us the 'bistro' food was available from 6 to 10 (we were trying to eat from about 8.30). No explanation was forthcoming as to why this menu, specially printed for the day, was simply unavailable.

    But I think I may have worked it out. I just dug out some blurb I got sent by them a month or so back:

    Post refurbishment [the canteen was refurbished? somebody needs to tell them about lighting], you can now eat in new ways at the ICA.

    The lunchtime canteen (mon to fri 12-2.30) is a sharp, daily changing menu: soup, salad or a sandwich as well as more substantial dishes. Brunch is served to your table until 4pm sat & sun.

    There are now two eays to eat in the evening -- bar or bistro. The bar menu, from 5pm each evening, ranges from nibbles to full meals with a wide selection in between. Our table service bistro (tue to sat, 6-10pm, except on club nights [my emphasis -- there was some event going on in the bar involving laptops] launches in Spring 2003 and is all about good food, fair pricing and relaxed, friendly service.

    Food at the ICA is now frill-free cooking in its finest hour [Henderson watch out], as conceived by the new chef-in-residence, Allegra McEvedy previously of Tribeca Grill (N.Y.) and The River Café and author of The Good Cook. Her philosophy is [wait for it] fresh, seasonal, well-sourced ingredients, simply prepared and presented.

    So whether it's for eats and drinks in the bar before a movie, business over lunch or a stress-free supper in the bistro, it's all there!

    That anything at all came out of the kitchen was fairly amazing, seeing as it looked pitch black in there.

  8. Now, just to confuse things, supposing it was celeriac mash. Could I make that in advance and just heat it in a pan when needed without it all going nasty?

  9. Well, I returned from my expedition to New Covent Garden this morning loaded with Boiron frozen peach purée. Despite my arriving shortly before ten, which I think is five to midnight NCG time, I was lucky that one of the Boiron suppliers, French Garden, was still trading. I bought a box of six kilo packs of white peach purée at £2.70 a pack (would have been a little bit more for individual packs) and two kilo packs of blood peach purée at £2.90 each. Total therefore £22 for eight kilos, or £25 including the three quid charge for entry by car. Seems pretty reasonable to me. At 1:3 puree: Prosecco, I make that enough for 32 bottles :blink: Luckily it lasts (and I'd undertaken to give some to other people). I hope that despite my not having a Macro-esque refrigerated boot, the stuff survived its tour of London (Vauxhall-Battersea-Clerkenwell). Will report back on the bellinis, but happy with progress so far. (On the latter topic I spent some time trying to find bellini glasses, but failed.)

    edit: I really wish I had a deep freeze

  10. Can't mashed potatoes be held for a while over a water bath? Wouldn?t that be easier?

    Yes, it might well be. But he's got me all antsy now about starch.

  11. I'd need to get a new one. My only mandoline is the ultrathin Japanese type :sad:

    Plus a digital probe thermometer of course.

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