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gingerbeer

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Posts posted by gingerbeer

  1. Is this the right section of the forum to ask this…?

     

    Anyway, hope I can draw on the experience of the experts here. A friend and I very much want to go to this next year, but the consumer passes are SO costly ($1,350). Does anyone know if:

     

    a) the consumer pass means once you're in, you don't pay extra for food & drinks

     

    b) is it worth just buying tickets to individual parties and events…? I suppose that way, though, you would miss out on all the demonstrations which are the most interesting bit...

     

    c) generally, what is the atmosphere like? particularly towards non-industry professionals

     

    Generally, does anyone have any helpful tips for this? I've never been before, as you can tell. Any advice would be welcome for a total novice.

  2. I don't know what country you are in, but here the gastropub Sunday roast is very popular. Roast beef or chicken, roast potatoes, yorkshire pudding, gravy, peas, carrots, etc. If you can update it, the comfort factor is huge and people love it.

    I agree with the mezze plate idea.

    What about individual pies of some kind (savoury ones) - maybe meat or veggie?

    Big bowls of shoestring or skinny fries? With different dipping sauces, or sprinkled with dried rosemary and feta?

    And what about moules mariniere with some amazing bread?

  3. While this article upset me, thinking about it, I realised that my own behaviour is not that different. I'm a full-time PhD student who is also working, and often I am really, really tired. I came from a cooking background, in that my mother put a home-cooked meal on the table every night, and after school I would help her prepare the food (chopping things, blending things, mixing things, etc), and I was even 'babysat' by a restaurant kitchen at one point when my mother went back to work (it was Lebanese, my main job was to arrange the baclava on a tray)... but... nowadays, I mostly end up doing the following things:

    1. Making a sandwich

    2. Eating cereal or scrambled eggs

    3. Eating plain pasta, maybe if I'm really pushing it - making a really quick tomato sauce, or just grating parmesan over it with garlic and butter

    4. Ordering food in

    5. Very rarely, cooking properly from scratch (a stew or something similar)

    So how often do I cook? Rarely ever. And if I were inclined to be eating ready-meals, I probably would. There is not much to differentiate me from the people in the article.

  4. I vote for:

    - A sandwich famous in the Muslim community in South Africa, from one Ekelwayer's (sp?) shop - challah bread roll, South African bologna sausage (fried), fat hot chips, and red chilli powder.

    - Foodstuffs in Glencoe, IL makes a great sandwich - black bread, boursin, dijon mustard, spinach, sun-dried tomato paste and grilled chicken

  5. I really didn't like Michael Isabella - sexist and sneering.

    Then again, watching Top Chef masters, I wasn't exactly a fan of Michael Chiarello ('What's my name???')

    I think the right person went home - if not for the food, then for her attitude - it's always a mistake on these kinds of shows to insist you're right, no matter what.

    Wolfgang Puck was the best part of this episode. I think Jen and Kevin look like the best chefs, so far. I'm also interested to see what happens in terms of the sibling rivalry - the producers must've been delighted when they realised they had that plot line going!

  6. After seeing the video of rats in KFC (youtube it if you have not done so yet, and don't mind feeling horribly ill), I told a friend that I would never, ever eat fast food again (yes, it is sometimes a guilty pleasure). I always suspected fast food places weren't the cleanest, but irrational or not, that video has put me off for life.

    Anyway, my friend commented that they were no likely to be dirtier than 'gourmet' restaurants, where the chefs might touch the food with their hands, and there may be rodent problems and any other array of unhygienic practices also. I know that it's naive to expect every restaurant to be clean and spotless, and eating out means you know that people have touched your food, but I disagree. To me, it seems that a single restaurant has far more to lose in terms of a diner getting ill, failing a health inspection, etc, than the average fast food place, and not only that, but good restaurants have people who know food and therefore know better what is a safe practise in handling and preparing it.

    So who is right? Is your average McDonalds as clean as your average good restaurant? I am pretty sure I am right, but my friend is full of restaurant horror stories and is convinced. I'd like to point him to all of your opinions to prove myself!

  7. Tayyabs for Pakistani food

    Mangal in Arcola Street in Dalston for Turkish food

    Alounak near Kensington Olympia or in Westbourne Grove for Iranian food

    North Sea Fish Restaurant near Russell Square for fish and chips

    Amoul in Maida Vale for home-cooked Lebanese food (truly amazing) and a very 'local' experience (everyone within a few streets radiates there on the weekend)

    Moti Mahal in Covent Garden for Indian food

    Bob Bob Ricard in Soho for middle of the night snacks/afternoon tea/milkshakes (you have to try the raspberry ripple one) (and the decor)

    The Wolseley for afternoon tea

    Peyton and Byrne on Tottenham Court Road (inside Heals/Habitat main entrance) for a sandwich/British cakes etc

    Princi on Wardour Street in Soho for dessert

    Mrs Kibbles sweet shop on Old Compton Street in Soho for a bag of British retro sweets

  8. The picnic lunch was very successful, thanks to those who suggested it! I had a great trip - in the end I managed to coax everyone away from eating Paul sandwiches for every single meal and we ate some great food. Especially Les Elysees (see other post) and various North African places.

  9. Rasoi used to be one of my favourite restaurants, and the other day a friend and I were passing by when we decided to look at the menu. It mentioned the 'Indian tapas' place in Westbourne Grove, and the other day I noticed a new VB restaurant opening up across the Intercontinental in Park Lane (next to Nobu, almost). Has anyone been to any of these? How are they? What are your impressions of Rasoi?

  10. Hi all,

    Thank you for your suggestions last week about where to eat in Paris. I had a great time. The best meal I had though, was at Les Elysees at the Hotel Vernet. We ate early - 7.30 - because we had a train to catch. It has, I believe, 2 Michelin stars. The dining room was empty, predictably. But the service was fantastic and the meal, even more so.

    My first course were white and green asparagus tips with a soft-poached egg (chef's suggestion) - classic, but gorgeous. The flavour of the white asparagus especially was beautiful. I then had lamb chops and beans in a tomato sauce, again very simple, and while my lamb was a little over-cooked, it was so good that I ended up unconsciously soaking up every bit of the sauce with bread. Finally, a peach melba, which was endearingly child-like, whoever had made it had obviously delighted in cream swirls and chocolate sauce all over the place, but the peaches again were allowed to shine through, in a very uncomplicated way. Everything about this restaurant was at once typically 'fancy' but the staff and chef all seemed to be serving their food with a simple, uncomplicated kind of enthuasiam, betraying themselves through homely or childish touches here and there. It was a fantastically lovely meal and I can't wait to go back.

  11. These are great recommendations, thank you. I actually only have a few hours before I leave so I'm going to take my laptop and save this page. John, I know I asked quite an open question, but I am traveling with other people so didn't want to ask for anything too specific as in the end it will be up to popular vote as to where we go. Thanks all!

  12. i'm going to paris tonight for the first time since i was a teenager (admittedly not THAT long ago), when good eating wasn't exactly high on my list of priorities. i need your absolute must not miss places, any price, any location, although anywhere near the champes elysees would be nice as that's where i'm staying.

    thank you! xx

    Well, last minute is not usually the way to get into these types of places. You could pray for an opening at Astrance. L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon might be a good bet if you don't mind waiting, as their reservation book is limited to first seatings, I believe.

    It was a kind of last minute decision to go, but I don't mind going to places that are more local/less renowned, etc. I've put those down on the list though and I'll see if I can get myself in somehow. Thank you :)

  13. i'm going to paris tonight for the first time since i was a teenager (admittedly not THAT long ago), when good eating wasn't exactly high on my list of priorities. i need your absolute must not miss places, any price, any location, although anywhere near the champes elysees would be nice as that's where i'm staying.

    thank you! xx

  14. That's good advice, although it wouldn't even have restrooms. It would really just be a little hole in the wall stall type thing.

    In many areas here in the US, you would be required to have an employee restroom. Plus handwashing facilities in the food prep area.

    That's a good point. There would definitely be handwashing facilities, but I can see that there'd also be a need for an employee bathroom.

  15. I am pondering starting a very small scale food business in London. Really, what I'm thinking of is just basically a small hole in the wall, selling coffee, tea, and 3 or 4 'street food' items from my home country. It would be very cheap (I am thinking 1-2 pounds per item) and everything would be made fresh and able to be eaten as you walk around. There'd be no seating.

    I know this is very general, but, any advice? Anything you wish youd known?

  16. I grew up in Australia in the 80s/90s and went to a posh private school (though my family were far from wealthy, we were just immigrants who saved a lot) and this is how the day ran there:

    meal one: breakfast (cereal, toast, etc), before 9am

    meal two: morning tea (small snack, usually cordial + biscuits, or fruit), around 11am

    meal three: lunch, around 1pm

    meal four: afternoon tea (small snack), around 3pm

    meal five: dinner (meat, veg, etc) around 7pm

    meal six: supper (hot chocolate, some other small comforting snack), before bed.

    Some people used to call dinner 'tea', but they were weird or went to state schools. We thought that only English people called lunch 'dinner'. Supper could never be anything substantial, or even savoury, really, it was more likely just to be a hot drink, something to put you to sleep.

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