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chrisp

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Everything posted by chrisp

  1. Same - regret just received Not a happy bunny. Oh well, there's always next year.
  2. Does this mean you sent an email and got a "regret" automated response already?
  3. Here here - a nice steak should resist a bit I think. Very suspicious if it just falls apart like it's been stewed. In some steakhouses in Australia they treat the meat so it's over-tender, I think out of some mistaken belief that people will forgive a lack of flavour as long as it's tender enough. Big mistake.
  4. Sent on Friday morning! I thought I might be too early but didn't get the standard automated response so fingers crossed. Any idea how long one might have to wait for a reply? I tried the trick of specifying a preferred date but then made it clear I would be pathetically grateful for any date, any time and any amount of people. Let's hope that does the trick.
  5. Isn't Royal Hospital Road's prestige menu £110 or something? And they seem to be doing pretty well for themselves.
  6. Pizza Metro isn't that good. Never been to Donna Margarita but as it's just at the top of my road I should probably pay it a visit.
  7. Had a brilliant meal here last night. Just in case anyone was thinking their standards may have slipped! The caramel dessert is one of the best I've ever had. Chris
  8. Cerisaie is brilliant - I second that recommendation.
  9. Had a lovely meal here on Friday. Here's my report: The decor inside the restaurant is very odd. Think alpine ski-lodge crossed with Dadaesque surrealism. A pair of huge metal scales swung ominously above our table, whilst in the next room various stuffed animals stared down at diners with a dozen beady eyes. Pictures of everything from French peasant women to Picasso-styled portraits covered every available wall space, and the drinks trolley appeared to be an old wooden wheelbarrow. I think the word is "eclectic". Also, when I tell you the service was excellent you have to bear in mind that for most of the evening this consisted of one woman (the chef's wife I believe), who never seemed harried or hurried but nevertheless replaced cutlery, served a myriad of complex courses and topped up wineglasses with practiced ease for about twenty covers. It was most impressive. The food, then. Being the adventurous types we are, we elected for the "Menu sorpresa", a selection of five mystery dishes, cheese and desert, although in reality this turned out to be very similar to the listed "Menu La Llar" with an extra meat course. Cheese puff straws and salted almonds were a nice change from the usual olives and bread but nothing special. However, the pre-starter "tapas" were extraordinarily good. Lolipops of "Botifarra" (local sausage) made sweet with what I think was maple syrup were crunchy on the outside and soft within. A miniscule portion of goats cheese with a tomato jam was bursting with farmy, fresh flavours and was a sensation. But best of all a martini glass of Vichyssoise had just the right balance of creaminess and potato - I think I also detected a cauliflower flavour in there somewhere but with the ingredients not being on the menu I can't swear to it. It was comforting and heady, and made me want to lick the glass dry. Overall, a brilliant start. The next course was "Tartar de llobarro i salmo fresc" which we decided through a rosetta-stone style reading of the multilingual menu was seabass and salmon pate. A reasonably straightforward dish in terms of presentation and tastes, but again thanks to good fresh ingredients was full of life. A garlic paste served with it was also good fun. A tomato soup with lobster meat with olive oil was perhaps slightly on the rich side but was bold in flavour and the tomato soup itself was pleasantly velvety. Also I don't think you can go far wrong in my book with great big chunks of lobster. The next course was the one real dud unfortunately - scallops which were bland and plasticky in flavour and rather unsatisfyingly uniform in texture. The sauces didn't taste of much either. Best forgotten, this one. Luckily the next course was the great redeemer - a meaty, gorgeously seasoned end of John Dory with a fantastic onion sauce that delighted the senses. Also served with this were a few tiny wild mushrooms whose incredibly strong flavour belied their size. Everyone enjoyed this one. The last of the main courses was a lovely chunk of beef fillet steak in a red wine sauce, served with a kind of pear sauce with a crisp sugar coating, and more of those delicious wild mushrooms. You can't really go far wrong with beef fillet and red wine sauce, so of course this was a very tasty course indeed, if not the most complex. But it went down very well again with all concerned. Next up, a nice little selection of three cheeses which weren't written down anywhere so I'm afraid I have no idea what they were. The best by common consensus was the little medallion of goats cheese, which was satisfyingly strong. However all 3 were slightly on the cold side so probably weren't at their best. Saving their most theatrical flourish for last, after the cheese course Mrs. Chef arrived pushing a huge dessert trolley loaded with a mouthwatering display of cakes, mousses and fresh fruit. Once our selections were made, the bitesize portions were arranged artistically on a plate and the correct sauces poured on top. Again I should mention that despite the labour involved in this task it was performed expertly and confidently and each plate was given the attention it deserved. The desserts themselves ranged from OK to very good, but the sheer choice left nobody feeling short changed. Best of all in my opinion was a passion fruit and peach soup - georgously silky and moreish. A couple of chocolate truffles and a brandy snap to finish, and we were done. Spain's high-end restaurants are pretty much without exception very good value, and for a little over £70 each for all that food, a glass of cava each and a bottle of white, so was La Llar. If you're lucky enough to be holidaying in this part of the world, I can recommend a visit - just go easy on the alcohol for the journey home. 8/10 P.S. Pics and preamble on the website.
  10. Oh yes so it does. Thanks for that Si - for some reason when I searched for the La Llar postcode it didn't show up!
  11. Hi We have a reservation for La Llar, near Roses, for this Friday. However I can't seem to find it on the Michelin website any more. Does anyone know if it still has a star? It certainly did last year when my family visited (and had a great meal). Chris
  12. that is extremely cheeky - I was saying to an American friend just the other day that you can always get tap water in London restaurants. ← It's actually a condition of a lot of premises' licences, so if you feel strongly enough about it (and I think one should) then it would be worth contacting Camden Council and checking. ← I remember once threatening to flush the toilet twelve times if they refused to serve me a glass of tap water. They eventually gave in.
  13. Yes I suppose, although I was with 5 other friends and nobody else liked it! It was quite funny because when Mr. Bosi came out at the end of service to have a chat nobody was brave enough to tell him....
  14. Try the weekend of October 12th. ← Brilliant, I will, thanks for the info. Out of interest do you know whether I would be more or less likely to get a reservation if I just ask for any time on any date for any amount of people? Do they prefer you to be more specific? I'm pretty sure I could get enough of my foodie friends together for any size table at any time in 2008.
  15. Just my 2 pence worth but: Benares is pretty dull, despite the Michelin Star, and you pay through the nose for anywhere in Mayfair anyway. Brick Lane is 99% rubbish, but Cliftons on the Whitechapel end is pretty good I believe. However, there are two places you really have to try: Lahore Kebab House, just off Commercial Road, and New Tayyabs in Whitechapel. Tayyabs is probably better in my opinion. Both are Pakistani however, not strictly Indian. Edit: Oh, almost forgot - for a reasonably unique experience you can try Kastoori in Tooting. It's family-run, entirely vegetarian and entirely delicious!
  16. Make sure if you're in L'Escala you go to El Roser 2 and not El Roser, which is a different thing entirely. El Roser 2 is probably the best restaurant in L'Escala and remember to ask if they have Percebes if you're there at the right time of year!
  17. I ate at Can Roca in April and was slightly disappointed. Started well but the main wasn't nice at all. Here's the link to my review: Can Roca Not sure if this against eGullet etiquette - if I'm not supposed to do this then somebody put me right and I won't do it again Chris
  18. What does "mid-October" mean? I need a date and a time!!
  19. What is Claude Bosi up to these days anyway? I enjoyed my visit to Hibiscus a couple of years ago - all except an absolutely hideous palette cleanser of watermelon and olive oil foam!? Truly disgusting.
  20. I'm going here for the Toptable offer (3 courses for £30 from a set menu) on 2nd October. Anyone else tried this and can tell me how limited the limited menu is? I suppose I could always go A La Carte on the night if the set menu looks very basic - I get the feeling this is what they would prefer you to do a lot of the time.
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