Showing posts with label Michelin Star. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michelin Star. Show all posts

9 March 2014

Pied a Terre

We recently enjoyed a lunch at Pied a Terre in Charlotte Street, Fitzrovia.  As my wifes birthday fell on a Monday this year, it required a little more research to find somewhere open on Mondays. Luckily Pied a Terre, somewhere we have passed numerous times and have been meaning to visit, was not only open on Monday lunch time, but also had a 6 course tasting menu available for £49 a head.

We started with a selection of canapes, with stand outs being a battered mussel, a salty crunchy delight of a bite, and a wonderful flavour rich celeriac panna cotta for my wife. We tried a few breads including an excellent brioche and ok baguette, but the star of the show was a treacle bread which was simply one of the best breads I've had in a long time, a perfect crisp crust with soft, chewy crumb with a definite hit of treacle.

We both started with a chestnut and juniper gnocchi, a golden fried pillow with a brown caramelised surface and a generous slice of truffle on top. Into the bowl was poured a chestnut and truffle veloute. This was a fine start to the meal, with a deep truffle flavour in the smooth veloute.

The next course was a carrot dish, the carrot coated with blackened spices and with accompanying vegetables, the spices were intense and well flavoured, a fine way to treat a humble carrot. I had a fantastic dish of cod with really lovely mussel sauce and some flavourful little new potatoes, the dish as delicious as it was pretty on the plate.

Our mains were both excellent, for me guinea fowl, morel mushrooms and shallot and liquorice puree. The guinea fowl had good flavour, a superior bird to chicken for me, but the morel mushrooms, my first of the year, were absolutely top class, some of the nicest I've ever had. My wife had a onion squash ravioli, topped with cavelo nero and a pine nut butter. She really liked this dish, especially the textures added by the pine nuts.

Pre-dessert was a glass with some lemon posset and orange mousse, a lovely little palate cleanser topped with some awesome white chocolate and freeze dried blood orange pieces on top, very nice indeed. Dessert proper show cased some very high end patisserie, a Valrhona chocolate creme, with dots of caramel sauce, cubes of chocolate jelly, some lovely peanut brittle pieces. The accompanying salted peanut ice cream was gorgeous, and the salty notes balanced against the sweetness of the chocolate perfectly.

We had some nice wine to match, 2 glasses of rose champagne to start, a couple of excellent whites with the food, the 2 dessert wines recommended were really good. My Spanish red, a Dolc Mataro was unlike anything I've had before, sweet with many fruity notes, and just my type of drink.

Petit four came with coffee, first up 3 on a dish, including a fantastic mandarin filled bowl, followed by some coconut ice cream truffles, and finally a bowl of hot doughnuts, each one as fluffy as a cloud, exceedingly fine examples of their kind.

I was really impressed with Pied a Terre, not only was every aspect of the meal absolutely first rate, a tasting menu with an especially generous selection of goodies to accompany the coffee for £49 felt very good value. The restaurant team, with Marcus Eaves and his crew providing the best London's fine dining has to offer, with a really charming front of house to back them up.

Canapés



Chestnut and Juniper Gnocchi with Chanterelles, Chestnut and Truffle Velouté

Cod with Poached Baby Potatoes, Fennel Puree and Cornish Mussels.

Carrots Cooked in Blackened Spices with Squash Purée, Cracked Wheat, Chilli, Coriander and Mint

Guinea Fowl with Morel Mushrooms, Braised Leek, Shallot and Liquorice Puree, Rosemary Jus.

Onion Squash and Sage Ravioli with Chanterelles, Cavelo Nero and Pine Nut Beurre Noisette

Lemon posset & blood orange

Valrhona Chocolate Crème with Caramel Sauce, Salted Peanut Ice Cream and Chocolate Jelly

Petits Fours



Dessert Wines.



Pied à Terre on Urbanspoon

Square Meal

15 July 2013

Return to Dinner

We revisited Dinner last week, taking my mum and step-dad out for lunch, two weeks of Heston in row!

The bread was really good this time, and I thought the brown better than that at the Fat Duck last week, a really well flavoured sourdough with the crispest of crusts. My mum and step-dad had the Meat Fruit to start, whilst I tried Frumenty, a new dish of grilled octopus in a smoked sea broth, possibly the best dish I've had Dinner, a fantastic smoky broth with oats, seaweeds and anemones of lovage puree and two perfectly grilled pieces of grilled octopus. My wife had the vegetarian Salamagundy, a salad with beetroot and horseradish cream and a variation of the nettle porridge as a main. My mums choice of Blackfoot Pork Chop is still a winner, with one of the largest chops I've seen requiring some help from my step-dad to finish off. His turbot was enjoyed, with the cockle ketchup proving the best element of the dish. I chose the Powdered Duck, which whilst not as rare as I like, had an absolutely incredible sticky and rich gravy which ensured the entire plate was devoured in short order. We shared some sides, excellent beans and shallots, and some absolutely incredible caraway roasted carrots. We all chose the Tipsy Cake for dessert. This was first time I've had a full portion and can assure everyone it lives up to the hype, a world class pudding.

Standards are still very high at Dinner, with Heston Blumenthals and Ashley Palmer-Watts excellent takes on old English recipes, a friendly and highly competent front of house, and we had highly memorable family lunch which my mum and step-dad absolutely loved. It must be said though, the St Pellegrino Top 50 list is well out if Dinner rates above The Fat Duck, although Dinner is superb, it's not the one off meal of a lifetime The Fat Duck provides.

Frumenty.

Nettle Porridge.

Black foot pork chop.

30 March 2013

Hedone

Hedone is the restaurant of Michael Jonsson, a former food blogger and ingredients consultant who opened in 2011 and went on to win a Michelin Star in short order, along with a veritable tsunami of praise from critics, bloggers and food lovers worldwide. Michael Jonsson has scoured the UK and Europe to source the absolute best produce available and the ingredients available that day drive the menus.

After a two hour journey across London we arrived and sat at the bar overlooking an open kitchen, which takes up quite a bit of the brick walled room. The kitchen is a full working kitchen rather than a place to plate up in front of guests, with the pastry and amuse bouches being prepared right in front of us. Although I would hate to work under the gaze of my clients, as a punter I enjoyed watching all that went on, from the raw puff pastry for the mille-feuille being prepared at the start of service to the loading of NO2 charger for the mousse during plating up. Behind the central bench was the pass and main cooking area and you get an idea of what was being prepared, and just how many pans are needed for a single plate of food.

The menus gave a choice of a la carte, a tasting menu and 'carte blanche' where you sit back and let chef choose. We went for a vegetarian and non-vegetarian carte blanche menu. The server went over to the chef and he put together something suitable for us, the menu entirely dependent on what was available that day, and can even vary by number of courses if requested. We were then asked if we wanted any hints to what we were having, or if we wanted to leave it a surprise, and opted for the latter.

Canape's arrived first, a tart of smoked haddock and dill, I'd watched the smoked haddock being sliced earlier, the fillet a lovely hue of yellow and white and held a great depth of flavour, foie gras in some razor thin rye, creamy and rich, and a parmesan biscuit, intense with cheese, topped with a tart berry disc. After this the bread was served. I came armed with knowledge of the bread being seriously good here, and as I watched (and more importantly heard) it being sliced right in front of me I knew I was in for a treat. It was indeed as good as you can get, incredible smell, perfect crust, huge depth of flavour and texture, a masterclass in baking. The amuse bouche was small dish of umami flan, a custard flan with a seaweed sauce on top. This was intensely salty,savoury, rich with iodine and the tastes of the sea which I enjoyed, although my wife finished it, wasn't sure if it was her thing.

What can be a better way to celebrate the start of a meal in spring than some of the classic ingredients of the season? Large morels, white asparagus from France and a shaving of green asparagus came with hollandaise, fennel and a sprinkling of cardamon.  With a simple dish like this, the ingredients themselves become the star, the providence of their sourcing is evidenced with each mouthful, excellent examples of how vegetables and fungi should taste.

Next up, a wonderfully fresh piece of turbot, this came with crushed smoked potato, a potato skin emulsion and a shavings of the last of the winter truffles. The emulsion had a nice depth of flavour and together with the truffle and potato accompanied the turbot most excellently. My wife had a ducks egg yolk cooked sous vide for 2 hours, a base of the raw/barely blanched green asparagus, more truffle shavings and truffle sauce. The yolk was dense and sticky, coating the fresh bite of asparagus to add a unctuous  richness, with the truffle providing a earthy note to the dish.

Following this a single langoustine in a shallot, celery and herb broth. The langoustine was very nice, sweet and juicy with the onion sweet and broth intense. My wife had a lovely looking plate of carrots. The carrot dish was truly excellent, the carrots of exceptional quality, with an interesting foam, the taste of which was familiar but I couldn't identify it with the single taste I had, and really unusual sweet glaze. Although I loved the turbot, the carrots were so damned good I wish I had this instead.

Next up was possibly one of the dishes of the year, Liquid Parmesan Ravioli. A number of ravioli were covered in a frothy horseradish sauce, lemon rind and yet more shavings of truffle. Like the xiaolongbao I've had recently  these were best eaten whole due to the liquid parmesan centre. A ravioli, truffle slice and generous helping of sauce were piled on a spoon and what a mouthful it was, the liquid parmesan filling the mouth with a buttery flood of superb, really fantastic quality parmesan. intense with umami, perfumed with the truffle and hint of horseradish and lemon. This was dish of the highest order, both my wife and I adored this course.

The first of the main courses arrived next, for me rack of salt marsh lamb served very rare, baby aubergine, endive and smoked aubergine puree. The lamb was incredibly well flavoured, a prime example of its kind, the sauce distilling the essence of roast lamb into a sticky coating on the pink meat for the perfect bite. The smoky aubergine puree was excellent, and partnered the meat perfectly. My wife had some of the same ingredients, but instead of lamb some lovely ramson (wild garlic) and a garlic sauce. The baby aubergine and endive were brushed with miso and roasted but retained a good crunch, and retained their fresh flavours.

I didn't think anything could top the lamb but my final main was possibly my favourite of the lunch. A huge slice of duck breast, again served very pink was accompanied with beetroot served a number of ways, a puree of red beetroot, roasted golden beetroot, smoky white beetroot and some discs of pickled beetroot. The duck, on its own one of the finest Ive had, came with an offal sauce enriched with foie gras. The sauce was quite rich with liver taste, on its own with the duck it was quite strong, but when combined with the sweet beetroot puree it was absolutely heavenly. Each variation of beetroot gave a distinct but differing addition to each piece of duck, sauce and puree. I loved this dish, especially the way it each element combined to such good effect.  My wife did not miss out, with an excellent risotto of watercress, morels and parsley. This was very well cooked risotto, redolent with taste of spring, retaining the peppery kick of watercress and garden fresh parsley throughout, with a welcome return of those superb morels.

We were asked if we wanted cheese and a dessert or two desserts and went for two desserts, although the cheese courses were being prepared in front of us and a number of excellent cheeses were available.

The first dessert was variations of lemon, a lemon sorbet, a meringue square topped with mousse, gel and some lemon thyme leaves. Again sourcing proves itself, with superb lemons being used and all elements providing a wonderful palate cleansing effect. The second dessert was chocolate dish, a bowl with some passion fruit sauce was filled with a warm chocolate mousse from a NO2 charger, this was topped with some discs of chocolate biscuit that had been covered with raspberry powder, on top of this a quenelle of vanilla ice cream. The warm chocolate mousse was incredibly light but rich with chocolate, the raspberry astonishingly well flavoured, intensely tart and holding the raspberry taste even against the superbly rich mousse. The vanilla in the ice cream again was of high quality matching well with the other elements. This was a very special pudding, we both really enjoyed this and one of the best chocolate desserts I've had.  Finally, with some very good filter coffee blend some petit fours, a bergamot marshmallow, a exceedingly good financier and an outstanding vanilla and mango macaron.

Hedone really does live up to its reputation, proving that if you source the best ingredients and produce available you can serve these precisely cooked and in clever recipes, achieve world class dishes and create a destination for anyone who loves their food. Both vegetarian and non-vegetarian menus were packed with excellent dishes, and very generous portions too, no finger sized morsels of meat for my mains!  My praise for each course came with best kind of proof, the plates wiped almost shiny clean with some of the wonderful bread to be had. It's only a pity I live so far away, or I'd be joining the regulars sitting each side of us at the bar in visiting as often as I could.  Service was great too, with knowledgeable, attentive and friendly staff. The bill came to £277.

Canapes.

Bread.

Umami flan.

Asparagus, morels, hollandaise.

Turbot, smoked potato, potato skin emulsion, truffle.


Duck egg yolk, asparagus, truffle.


Langoustine.


Carrots.


Liquid Parmesan Ravioli.

Salt marsh lamb, baby aubergine, endive, miso, smoked aubergine puree.

Ramson, baby aubergine, endive, miso, smoked aubergine puree.

Duck, beetroot, offal sauce.

Watercress, parsley and morel risotto.

Lemon dessert.

Warm chocolate mousse, raspberry and chocolate ring, vanilla ice cream.

Petit Four.


Hedone on Urbanspoon

Square Meal

17 February 2013

Viajante

Viajante is now closed.

Viajante is the restaurant of Nuno Mendes, a Portuguese chef with an impressive CV, having worked at some of the best restaurants around the world and previously providing Hoxton with Bacchus and a supper club based out his apartment. The dining room is quite small, seating I guess about 30 or so diners. The front of the room is the kitchen and plating area, with Nuno Mendes and a host of chefs quietly preparing the food. Lunch is a choice of 3 or 6 courses, or like us, you can arrange 9 courses when booking in advance. The menu involved choosing the number of courses and from then on it would be a surprise  Dietary requirements are catered for without fuss, and a vegetarian meal was prepared for my wife and an 'anything goes' selection for myself. Whilst briefly waiting in the bar for the staff briefing to finish, we ordered some non-alcoholic cocktails, and these arrived at the table shortly after we sat down. I had a rather delicious marmalade, apple and honey concoction, my wife something pink involving hibiscus, including a beautiful hibiscus flower held in place with the straw. We decided on a few glasses of wine and left it to the sommelier to bring out something for us during the amuse bouches.

The first of many amuse bouches was Thai Explosion III, for me a crispy base, chicken mousse and quails egg topped with chicken skin. Redolent with Thai flavours, this was a fantastic start, especially the use of chicken skin, for they had captured the taste of the perfect moment of chicken skin; stolen whilst carving the roast and no one is watching.  My wife's was very similar, except chicken mousse replaced with cauliflower and the crispy bit doubled up. Following this was an unusual dish, Amaranth, a grain from South America, topped with sweet popcorn and on a base of sorrel puree. This was a sweet crunchy bite, and much like a posh crispy bar, well matched with the earthy sorrel. Next up, an incredible smelling and tasting, almost raw  Palamos prawn in oil for me, and smoky enoki mushrooms for my wife. After this Gordal Olive Soup, an intense olive puree matched with a pile of garlic with something I couldn't identify providing a sweet note and crunchy texture. This was a delicious few spoonfuls we both enjoyed, the taste of olives being perfectly captured. Next up was an unusual combination of potato and yeast. On a soft black bread, a puree of yeast was topped with potato and a potato crisp, and for me an additional sliver of lardo. This was a great combination of potato, paprika, melting fat and the hint of marmite from the yeast. Finally, the crowning glory of a winning combination of amuse bouches, the bread was presented.  We both had a baguette, and I had a bread with Iberico ham, and my wife a sourdough. A brown whipped butter was generously topped with Iberico ham and crispy chicken skin for me, and crushed sunflower seeds and for my wife, we also both had a butter topped with ash and nuts. The warm bread was of very high quality, some of the finest I've had, and the baguette with the whipped butter, chicken skin and ham was simply divine, a plate of sublime genius.

Our first glass of wine came during the amuse bouches, a Josmeyer Riesling "Le Kottabe" 2010, and a Domaine Weinbach "Close des Capucins" Sylvaner 2010, both from Alsace. We tried both, and I took the Domaine Weinbach, a fruity, fresh white.

Thai Explosion III.


Thai Explosion vegetarian.


Amaranth with Sorrel.


Palamos Prawn.


Enoki Mushrooms.


Gordal Olive Soup.


Potato with Yeast.


Bread and butter.



After an hour of amuse bouches and bread the first of our nine courses were bought to the table by Chef Mendes himself, he described the dishes; for my wife a gorgeous selection of daikon, radishes, herbs and flavoured with liquorice on to which a parsley sauce was poured. For me 2 scallops, sat in their own cooking juices, on to which he added frozen beach herbs from a pan. This was an interesting dish, providing a new sensation as the herbs were incredibly cold, I suspect they might have been frozen using nitrogen. These, in particular the samphire added a salty note to the scallop, with the juices providing a taste of the sea. 

Our next course was Brussels sprouts and rye, with a plump langoustine for me. Brussels sprouts are a much maligned vegetable, as they can be the stuff of nightmares when overcooked, but here, barely blanched and almost raw they were fantastic dish, especially paired with two fantastic creamy puree's. My wife in particular loved hers, being a huge fan of sprouts. For me, the langoustine was the star of the dish, perfectly cooked, its flavour matched the slight bitterness of the sprouts and creaminess of the puree's perfectly but by no means did my wife's dish lose out by not having the langoustine, the sprouts certainly shone in their own right and made her dish one of her favourites of the day.

Scallop with frozen beach herbs.


Daikon with liquorice and parsley.


Langoustine with Brussels sprouts and rye.


Brussels sprouts and rye.



I had a really fantastic dish next, a gorgeous plate of pike on a base of egg yolk, topped with pike caviar and sea bass roe. I haven't had pike since my childhood holidays in Brittany, and the meaty fish went beautifully with the sweet, somewhat salty caviar and roe. The flavours were quite subtle, pike isn't really like other freshwater fish normally found on menus, and its caviar were noticeably sweet and salty, the taste of the roe was there without overpowering, and these all went really well with the custardy egg yolk base. My wife's course was also equally delicious, a milk skin topped charred leeks in an leek ash emulsion. Milk skin is quite unusual, almost like a pasta, it has a bit of a bite to it, held the flavour of the leek emulsion very well. The leeks were particularly fine examples of their kind and this was a very well crafted dish. 

Next up was a bowl with a barely cooked almost raw belly of sea bass, crispy skinned yet with flesh soft as can be, flavoured with a light sauce with a subtle vanilla it was presented with a really exceptional piece of spring onion and strip of daikon. My wife had a very interesting dish of carrot, this was cooked with molasses, slightly charred yet still crunchy on the inside, it came with a carrot crisp. Whilst still savoury, this featured some sweet flavours highlighting the natural sweetness of carrot. It looked pretty as a picture too. 

We both then had a really good salsify dish. Poached in milk and butter, the salsify lay on a thick potato broth and came with a chanterelle mushroom, sesame seeds. spruce bark and a generous shaving of black truffle. All matched well to to make a really well tasting vegetable dish, the aromas of truffle, the sweetness of salsify, the nutty tang from the sesame all underlined by an intense, thick potato broth. Definitely an example of how very high quality dishes don't need meat or fish.
We also had another glass of wine, I had a particular aromatic Portuguese white, a blend of two grapes which alas I did not record the name of. 

Pike with roe and egg yolk.


Charred leek with milk skin and leek ash emulsion.


Sea bass with vanilla and daikon.


Carrot with molasses and buttermilk.


Salsify with spruce bark and black truffle.



My first meat course was somewhat unusual, a presa, the cut between the top of the shoulder and the beginning of the loin of iberico pork came with a pork jus, and some really unusually flavoured strips of fermented chesnut squash. On their own the fermented squash pieces were a really odd flavour, hard to describe and I wasn't even sure if I liked them at first, but when a few slivers were paired with pork it worked really well. The iberico presa was marvelous, intense in pork flavour, cooked almost rare it still showed the marbling iberico pork is famous for and it left me with a lasting impression of how good pork can be, and just how well it could taste. My wifes dish was similar, except the fermented squash were paired with some gorgeous hunks of roasted pumpkin. Again the fermented squash went with the pumpkin really well, and like me she found it too intense on it on its own. The bold and different ingredient made both dishes an unusual yet enjoyable experience.

The last main course was for me, one of the best of them all. Chef Mendes and another of the chefs brought the dish to table and explain and to spoon the sauce onto the plate. For my wife, jerusalem artichoke with picada and moss, the artichoke being cooked several ways, accompanied with an unusual earthy moss, the picada being a Catalan sauce made with nuts and garlic similar to a pesto.  For me, 2 pieces of iberico tail, cooked la plancha, Jerusalem artichoke, picada, and
if i remember rightly, a pork and chicken jus. The tail was basically, the finest, most flavourful, crispy and simply awesome pieces of pork crackling ever to grace a plate, an absolute delight and worked incredibly well with the jus, a gorgeous sweet piece of artichoke and the nutty picada. 

Iberico presa with fermented squash.


Pumpkin with fermented squash.


Iberico tail with Jerusalem artichoke.


Jerusalem artichoke with picada and moss.


Dessert was started with a highly unusual dish, Cucumber with reduced milk and lemon. This refreshing palate cleanser was a combination of sweet with some savoury elements, the granita and ice cream slightly sweet, the cucumber incredibly flavourful, some pieces plain and others smoked and intense, with an aromatic jelly adding another element. The next dessert was one of the most unusual I've had, a piece of black carrot, prepared so it was sweet and fruity yet barely a hint of carrot flavour provided a crunchy texture, this was accompanied with a vibrant purple toasted caraway ice cream. The flavours and textures worked really well, not too sweet, yet definitely not savoury, this was a work of genius and highly memorable dessert. Following this was Milk, a milk ice cream, some sort of dry frozen milk, a crispy milk wafer and powdered milk. This again worked really well, a light refreshing end to the meal, the flavours of milk well defined, with a hint of curd, yet nothing too sweet. The wafer and dry frozen almost meringue like pieces providing some unusual textures. 

Finally coffee came with petit fours, the first an incredible nitrogen frozen olive oil and lemon morsel, with a texture somewhat like toffee yet a really light olive oil and lemon flavour. The second was a white chocolate centred truffle flavoured with the highly unusual addition of porcini mushroom. The mushroom flavour was quite intense yet worked with white chocolate and the fact it worked was a really pleasant surprise. We were also presented with a menu showing what we had enjoyed over the previous four hours.

Cucumber, reduced milk and lemon.


Black carrot with toasted caraway ice cream.


Milk.


White chocolate and porcini mushroom truffle.


Over the four hours we spent in Viajante we enjoyed an epic cornucopia of dishes providing a host of new experiences and flavours. I love the format of a surprise tasting menu, each course an unknown factor but arrive to your delight and eagerness to indulge in the gorgeous food presented. Nuno Mendes and his kitchen deliver each time without disappointment, each dish was innovative, unusual, technically perfect and fantastic in execution, you can see and taste the passion which drives the chef and his staff. It must be mentioned that my vegetarian wife was catered for just as well as myself, with all dishes having a vegetarian alternative or replacement that were equally innovative and exciting.

Service and surroundings were equally pleasing, my wife in particular enjoyed the music being played, someone obviously had similar tastes!



Viajante on Urbanspoon

Square Meal