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Niall

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Posts posted by Niall

  1. We're just back from a trip to NY, and had great meals at a few places;

    - Eleven Madison lunch; really innovative food and nice concept. Service was excellent.

    - Momofuku Noodle bar lunch; had the fried chicken (very tasty; I preferred the Southern, my wife preferred Korean), the pork Ramen and and pork buns. All excellent.

    - Per Se; excellent as always

    - Matsugen dinner; very good Japanese food. Excellent Soba. great value prix fixe option.

    - Aldea dinner; great food, good service, relaxed atmosphere. We went to the Flatiron loung cocktail bar beforehand; very old school.

    - Spice Market (lunch) and SHO Shaun Hergatt (dinner); Both good, but nothing stellar. Although a bit unfair to judge as we ate there on Thanksgiving

    - Gramercy Tavern for Sunday lunch; very good traditional food.

    We also had lunch at Jean George and were really disappointed.The pasta was too thick, the prawns were over cooked to the point of being chewy, the ginger sauce on the Tuna was really overpowering, the crab too much mustardy, the sauce on the veal scallopine too salty (had to be sent back) and chicken too salty (eaten only after taking off the crust). They gave us free dessert to make up but that was terrible too; the chambord macerated fennel overpowered the rest of the dessert. The service was excellent throughout though, particularly the Sommelier.

  2. Was there last week for a big group dinner. We had the Smoked Pollack salad, the Bone marrow and a suckling pig. Food was very good (a couple of the bone marrows were overdone, but not too badly) but service wasn't. Wine list is ok; nothing that is standout good quality. We had the Croze hermitage which was good. The waitress then recommended a bottle of les Sorcieres 2008 from Rousillon; that was terrible.

    I will go back, but find that the service for big groups is generally bad, particularly if you're in the main dining room.

  3. Since I had never even thought of using a barcode scanner before this thread, I had to buy one. After driving around Seattle until I was dizzy and sick of being told I had to buy a Point of Sale system if I wanted one; I went to Google and found about a million. I learned that not all scanners will read ISBN but found one at Buy .com for $63 that would.

    It is a ADESSO Nusscan 1000 series. Plugged into a USB port and started scanning.

    I'm running about 20% misses. I have a fair number of pre 10 and 13 diget older books so I will have to figure it out. I'd like to see this program at least catalog ALL my books whether they will ever be indexed or not.

    This system has me excited.

    I'm using a free app called ZBar on an iPhone 3GS to get the barcodes; it's working quite well. Although we've had a few books where the bookshop has put their barcode sticker over the ISBN barcode.. a bit irritating.

  4. Have you considered getting the TGV from Paris to Strasbourg, then picking up a car there? The TGV only takes a couple of hours (rather than 6) and you'll save on car hire/ petrol etc.

    As for eating, I haven't been to Strasbourg, but I loved Auberge D'Ill at Illhaeusern and La Table Gourmet at Riquewihr; less than an hour away, and in a nice part of Alsace. Riquewihr in particular is a very pretty town worth visiting.

  5. I used to live in Cammeray before moving to London, and love the Japanese pleaces on the north shore; the highlights for me were;

    - As mentioned before, Ju Ge Mu & Shimbashi on Military Rd in Neutral bay; they make their own Soba noodles.

    - Toriciya in Cammeray; a bit off the beaten track, but a great Izakaya with Yakitori and a fantastic Sake list

    - Sushi Counter in Crows Nest; get the Omakase menu; basically the sushi chef chooses the best he has that day to give you

    - Rengaya on the cnr of Miller and Blue St in North Sydney; $60 all you can eat Yakiniku Mon-Thurs

    - Kyushu in Neutral bay; down a side street near the Oaks. Really good Pork Maki

    Other places I love;

    - watching Rugby on a Saturday afternoon in the beer garden at the Oaks pub

    - Delicado food and Wine on Blues Point Rd. Good Tapas style food. great wines. Great sherry collection

    - Paradoxe on Falcon St in Neutral bay

    - Il Perugino in Mosman

    - Phuong Vietnamese in Crows Nest

    - The Burlington in Crows Nest; Matthew Kemp's (Balzac) second restaurant

    - Epoque belgian beer bar in Cammeray

    - Papaya Thai in Cremorne and Cammeray

    - 2060 in Waverton does a great breakfast, and Dinner is pretty good too.

    Good foodie shops;

    - Hudsons Meats in Cammeray Square; cammeray Sq also has a Harris farm veg shop

    - Essential Ingredient

    - Kitchen Kapers in Crows Nest for kitchen equipment

    - St Honore bakery in North Sydney

    The lower north shore doesn't really have any great high end dining places, but is full of some great casual dining places.

  6. I have always found Ireland to be very homogenized. County Cork is probably the one large exception to that, or at least the fastest to change. There's very little regionalisation; for example Westmeath beef (from around Athlone) is fantastic because of the huge shannon flood plains around there, but try asking a butcher in Dublin for some of it. They'll look at you like you have 2 heads. Things are getting a lot better though; one example is irish cheeses and cheese shops have improved hugely in the 9 years since I left Ireland.

    Why is Ireland so homogenized and why is there so little regional variation? I'd say it's because of 8 centuries of being under foreign rule followed by decades of relative poverty followed by EU agricultural policy handouts. Now that disposal incomes have risen and EU handouts are decreasing the pace of change should keep speeding up.

  7. I was there on the 25th aswell and had a great time. We had the £50 tasting menu; not necessarily good value, but certainly great food.

    We had:

    Pork and scallop dumplings

    Kimchi

    Tuna tataki

    3 Sashimi - Tuna, Salmon, Sea Bream

    tempura Tuna rolls

    Eggplant in Mirin and Ginger

    Grilled asparagus with soy and sesame

    Sea bream with Miso sauce

    Chicken Yakitori

    Mushroom rice hotpot

    All of the food was excelent; especially both Sea Breams. The room itself was great; the designer seems to have had a great sense of light and texture. There was a great mix of wood, metal, stone and other textures on the walls; we were sitting beside a wall of light covered in a tan substance that felt almost like paper mache. (but not in a bad way). We didn't look at the winelist, but there was a good range of Shochu and Sake. I'm bad enough remembering what wines I've had.. I'm afraid I have no chance with Sake!!

    The service was pretty good too. At the table next to us the waiter spilt warm sake in a diner's lap. The apologies were profuse, an extra desert was presented to the couple and the manager gave them his business card so that they could arrange to be reimbursed for any necessary dry cleaning.

    All in all, it was a really good meal, and I would recommend it.

  8. and if you want to be degustazione'd: Tentazioni

    I like Tentazioni. The food is good. If you book at their website you can get a complimentary glass of wine, and if you join their club you can get 10% off the cost of food at dinner. http://www.tentazioni.co.uk

    I used to go to Giardinettos when it was at Charlotte St, but I've heard that the prices have doubled and quantities halved since it moved to Mayfair.

    Refettorio is good for the price; especially when theres a 25 or 33% off deal on toptable. I think the current deal is 25% off all food.

  9. Season/ marinate the pork. Then cover it in olive oil and cook on about 100 C for 8 hours. when this is done let it cool slightly and then put it between two chopping boards with weights on top to compress it for an hour or so. Then cut it up flash fry it to crisp it up and warm it through.

    Thats how I do it anyway.... I usually serve this with a blood orange and ginger sauce; although I got the original idea from Aria's bangalow pork belly with cumquats.

  10. We were down at borough last weekend and managed to get a largish (28gm) white truffle from the Italian man for £60 - it was 2200 a kilo. We toyed with the idea of just getting a couple of the smaller ones but couldn't resist the smell of the bigger one.

    The quality of it was excellent.. be careful at booths to make sure there isn't a load of dirt crusted on, but this one was generally very clean.

    We stuck it into some rice with half a dozen eggs. We used it for three meals;

    for the first we scrambled three eggs and had that on some bread from the Pont de la tour bakery. A great Sunday breakfast.

    For our second meal we made some fresh egg pasta with one of the remaining eggs. We mixed it in a sauce of white wine, oil and chives. We fried the remaining two eggs and shaved 60% of the truffle and some parmesan over the top.

    For the third meal my other half decided to do a recipe from elizabeth david involving veal escalopes; she made a sandwich between the escalopes with parmesan, tuscan prosciutto and the remaining truffle. This was fried in some oil with some port and white wine added to make a sauce. This was served with some fennel and cauliflower that had been roasted in truffle oil.

    All up it was delicious; although more truffle would always be good.

  11. We'll probably try to get the train there and get a taxi back.

    Thank you all for your comments; We were not expecting a huge level of creativeness; just some of the best classic french cuisine. We had considered Troisgros, but decided against it this trip. I'm sure we will be back in the future for that one.

    This one will be our third 3 star experience, so we are looking forward to it. So far we ahve been to lameloise and Ducasse at the Plaza Athene, both of which have been completely different, and Bocuse looks like it will be different too.

  12. Hi,

    I have a reservation for Bocuse in November and was hoping for some advice on where to stay. We are in Lyon for two nights and would rather stay in the one place.

    How easy is it to get to and from Bocuse from the City centre? How much would a taxi cost? Or is there somewhere reasonably priced close by that would be better?

    Thanks

    Niall

  13. Eric Frechon at Bristol is very interesting too.  Esp. if you do not order the relatively tame menu degustation and try his more rustic dishes which stem from his cuisine bourgeoise/bistro origins.  I like him.

    I had a great meal at the Bristol about a year ago; I did have the degustation; the Crab soup and Turbot were delicious and very memorable. The service was fantastic, and the Winter room is great.

    Last time I was in Paris I ate at a 1 star called Braisière in the 17th. There wasn't one on the menu, so we asked if one was possible. The chef came out and spoke to us and asked about our likes and dislikes and put a dego together for us; it was very good. After the meal the chef came out and spoke to us about our meal. The place itself was small and quite nice. The english amongst the staff was minimal though. The menu was 70 euros each for 7 courses. The food is country french; the chef is from the Gascogne.

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