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Gavin Jones

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Posts posted by Gavin Jones

  1. As I understand it there will be quite a bit of tasty grilled meat and dhals with a bitter/sour emphasis. With this in mind I was thinking of some less jammy reds. Mourvedre say.

    I am foreswearing bottle blondes from Belgium temporarily. But might consider a Brunette from a monastery...

  2. Treat it like any grain - so oats for porridge - cooked for 20 mins in hot milk for cous cous. It is a fantastic breakfast cereal - the full ras-el-hanout is probably not what yr palate wants first thing but I'd think cinnamon wd be a great addition to the day's start. Apple is probably good with this (either as compote or poached in milk...)

  3. Well the mine of 50's & 60's nostalgia which has partially fuelled Thomas Keller's cooking has been documented elsewhere.

    And you could certainly take a more high-minded template to hot-wire the brain back to formative tastes - without unnecessary bandying around of Proust.

    It does strike me that the tone is a little more low-concept - 'Step back in time to the awful tastes of yesteryear that you secretly love.'

    I can still remember vividly the dissolving chocolate buttons (in my mouth & on my hands) and rowntree's fruit pastilles both of which my granny used to buy for me (& no not recently).

    How pleased I would be to fork out £40 a head for the pleasure of a waiter smearing me with Cadbury's chocolate is another matter.

  4. There is a small french restaurant called Le Petit Robert opposite Neal's Yard dairy off Borough Market (& next to the Borough cafe).

    If you're flat hunting fill up at the latter before the trek round awful locations and then go & drink well priced wine & armagnac at the former (& get some ok french cooking). Take the cheese home.

    Tas down the road towards Elephant & Castle is worth a look (Eastern Med cooking). Have a drink in the George & the Market Porter.

  5. Stick a single layer of sausages in a baking tin (lightly greased).

    Pour over the Yorkshire pudding mix (just a thin batter - with maybe some mustard powder used) so you can still see the tops of the sausages.

    Whack in the oven at 200C for 3/4 of an hour.

    Serve - possibly enlivened by an onion gravy.

    The browned sausages should be poking out of the voluptuous tanned waves of the Yorkshire pudding batter, yum.

    If you feel humiliated by the english name serve as sausage clafoutis.

  6. Though I recently pointed out Chapter II & an upcoming Mar I terra in Blackheath where I really like to go is a converted Pub with the dreadful name Gastro!Gastro! which functions as a Brasserie on 78 Blackheath Road (Between Greenwich, Lewisham & Deptford).

    Good quality meat, a range of dishes from T-Bone & Bearnaise, Jerk Chicken Brochette, Calves Liver Bacon & exemplary mash to Sea bass with rocket & almond salad.

    This is my favourite local place to go either for a drink in a grown-up environment or for a relaxed meal. Service is great & the wine list is good too. If you find yrself in SE10 give it a go.

  7. I had to think for about that for 30 seconds.

    I am going to tact school, now.

    My suggestion is to produce food that is surprising in some way.

    You know, strawberries with black pepper, fish & meat cooked together.

    This will avoid the implicit criticism of producing a meal in the same genre as they did, but much better.

    Do not however eat at their place ever again after this as you will be served 'creative fusion food'.

  8. When were recent good vintages for sweeties from the Loire?

    Good Coteaux du Layon et al are a pleasure - and sufficiently unfashionable (rather like German Riesling) that decent examples are affordable. I'm not an expert on them but outside Rhone wines (1998-2000) and some Italian this is what I would hang onto.

  9. Steven - on the selection front the number of different apple varieties grown at the scale of an orchard in the uk has been hugely reduced from the early part of this century. So the diversity has been strongly reduced.

    Brogdale carries the flame.

    Likewise many other species till recently. e.g. cattle, pigs, potatoes...

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