Archive for the 'England' Category

Fat Duck – Intriguing and Intelligent

Fat Duck. Where do I start. To be honest I have actually only been familiar with this restaurant for months, not years. Ironically, a colleague of mine, who would never ever imagine to be inside any fancy restaurant, pointed me to the Fat Duck’s website.

Fat Duck

There was something about that website that intrigued me at first glance: The simplicity and the Fat Duck logo. Secondly, I liked the fact that I could find all the information I needed about the food, drinks, prices, how to get there and where to stay. The fact that the team behind FD had not just the physical enjoyment at the restaurant in mind but had considered the virtual experience of it also, provided me with an idea of something very well organised and above all clever. Too many restaurants use flash, which I hate, and think more of their own brand and promotion, than how to make it easy as possible for the user to find the right information he or she is looking for. But not Fat Duck.

After I in August last year read Laurent’s review of his Fat Duck experience, I knew that I had to go there too. Laurent had described a kind of restaurant that was unusual in a completely new and different way, which I found very appealing. Our taste in restaurants is very comparable.

House of FD

Early September I happily realised that I would get a opportunity to visit London and of course I wanted to book a table at Heston Blumenthal’s famous place – even if it would mean that I should eat rye bread sandwiches or pasta with canned tomatoes for a whole week to save up the money.

Fat Duck allows reservations up till two months in advance, but I was in Rome at the time and rang the restaurant when I returned to Copenhagen around the 1st of October. Boy, I was glad that I didn’t wait any longer than that. Although I was reserving a table for lunch, I got only two choices of either noon or at 1.45 p.m. It seems like Fat Duck mostly gets reservations from fine guests who have secretaries to book for them. There was a funny misunderstanding between the woman one the phone and me, she though I was such a secretary, but she finally realised that I was in fact making the reservation just for myself.

The Entrance

I arrived 28 November very early in advance by train from Paddington to Maidenhead Station and then with a taxi to Bray and killed time on strutting around the little village until the clock was 1.45. As you probably imagine, I was excited as ever.

The room is smallish and divided in two by a few joisters in the middle. It was full apart from a single round table almost under the stairs, which would take you to the first floor and the loos. The room was buzzing with people gathered around the round tables, 12-15 in total. Various types of people, the very elegant four past-middle aged women friends, who would much later on play tricks on each other by paying the bill before the other could do it. These ladies were probably the owners of the limos parked just outside the restaurant at the mini parking lot with the waiting drivers.

Jellies

Then there was the four young charming French speaking friends, the young English brother and sister allowing themselves only water and no tea or coffee after the dessert. There was a fine French business man with his chic and slim wife dressed in a Diane von Fürstenberg. There was a companionship of other three French middle aged couples, who were drinking White Burgundy from the same fine glasses I bought not so long ago. A few other tables, and then there was Trine.

Taittinger Comtes de Champagne Brut Rosé 1999

Taittinger Comtes de Champagne Brut Rosé 1999

The sommelier wheeled out the trolley with four different champagnes in front of the table for my selection. I knew from the wine list on the web that one of them was much more expensive than the rest, but naturally I had forgot which one that was. I therefore chose with my heart and selected the Taittinger Comtes de Champagne Brut Rosé 1999 and it’s the best champagne I’ve ever tasted as far as I can remember. I had never dreamed that champagne could be this seducing.

The Tattinger was incredibly nuanced in pleasing my palate, very very full in taste with fruit, so sophisticated with many tones and a gentleness so marvellous.

On a side note about wine lists, every restaurant should publish their wine list on their websites, really. They would save time at the beginning of a dinner because, then people wouldn’t need to study the whole book to find out what the wallet and the palate would be able to agree upon.

The first course was Nitro-Green Tea and Lime Mousse (2001) a little white ball, an egg shell with a soft middle of a sweet taste balanced with lime and that was cool and refreshing. Laurent has a small video of how this is created. Then a hailstorm of dishes followed:
Oyster

Oyster, Passion Fruit Jelly,
Horseradish Cream, & Lavender

Pommery Grain Mustard Ice Cream, Red Cabbage Gazpacho

Pommery grain mustard ice cream,
red cabbage gaspacho

Moss and Nitrogene

Oak Moss

Truffle Toast

and Truffle Toast (Homage)

Parfait of Foie Gras

Jelly Quail, Langoustine Cream,
Parfait of Foie Gras

I thought is was fun to see my table completely covered with smoke but I didn’t fully understand why they did that. The texture of the parfait was smooth in a firm way and taste-wise very intense and amongst the best dishes of that day.
Snail Porridge

Snail Porridge
w/ Joselito Ham & Shaved Fennel

Roast Foie Gras

Roast Foie Gras w/ Almond Fluid Gel,
Cherry, & Chamomile

The Sound

The Sound

The Sea

“Sound of the Sea”

My goodness. This dish could very well be the dish of my life. The whole sensing of it stimulated me beyond belief. It’s adorably and picturesquely beautiful. I have no recollection about the scent, but the taste and the feeling of the food in my mouth was fantastic and very tasty. I felt a slight crunchiness of the tapioca, softness and tickle-ness of the elusive foam. The ‘beach’ was hiding three fish and unfortunately I was only capable of catching that the last one was a superb oyster.

I ate it while I was listening to huge breaking waves splashing lappingly onto the sand coming from the iPod’s head phones. I was in my own private world, shutting out the ambience – just focused on enjoying the sound of the sea.

Salmon and Liquorice

Salmon Poached in Licorice, Artichokes,
vanilla mayonnaise, & “Manni” Olive Oil

This dish was the only one that didn’t reach perfection. The salmon inside was wonderful, moist, very pure and clear in taste, a lovely quality, but the liquorice package didn’t work for me. The artichokes were exquisite and the vanilla mayo too much and too rich.

Anjou Pigeon

Ballotine of Anjou Pigeon
Black pudding “made to order”, pickling brine and spiced juices

Hot and Iced Tea

Mrs Marshall’s Margaret Cornet

Mrs Marshall’s Margaret Cornet

Before the server brought me the ice-cream, I had got a small booklet introducing the cook Agnes Bertha Marshall, who was the first ever to write about the ice cream cone. Tasting this crisp cornet ginger ice cream afterwards, I couldn’t deny the affect and the sentiments that the read and the tasting had on me. I was really moved to tears and for the first time of my life.

Vanilla Stick w/ Citric Powder

Pine Sherbet Fountain (pre-hit)

Mango and Douglas Fir Puree

Mango and Douglas Fir Puree
Bavarois of lychee and mango, blackcurrant sorbet

Cerials

Parsnip Cereal

Icing th Egg

The Toast

itro-Scrambled Egg and Bacon Ice Cream

Nitro-Scrambled Egg and Bacon Ice Cream (2006)
Pain perdu

The woman waiter Good Morning Madame’d me and explained that I would have scrambled eggs for dessert. With liquid nitrogene she turned the egg into ice-cream. The bacon was made of sugar and didn’t taste like bacon but added sweetness to the ice cream and to the toast. An entertaining and tasty dish, but a bit too rich for my appetite after that many dishes.

Tea

and tea jelly

Whisky Wine Gums

Whisk(e)y Wine Gums

I know this looks kind of strange, but it was actually a whisky tasting. It was clear and easy to distinguish them from each other, and each had different flavours and degrees of smoke to it. I know just about zero about whisky but with this map I learned where each type of whisky originates. I was amazed at how much taste the staff had been able to encapsulate in those tiny gums.

Petit Fours
Carrot and orange lolly, mandarin aerated chocolate, violet tartlet
Apple pie caramel “edible wrapper”

What was absolutely striking about this meal was the way that each dish was distinctly designed in taste. What I mean and love about this is that each dish was composed to stimulate the ability to identify flavours, a bit like when I’m tasting wine. A good wine makes me taste different aromas when the liquid passes through the tunnel of my mouth, the tip of my tongue, the middle, my palate, my gums and finally the back of my tongue. I experience sweetness, sour, bitterness and spices. Each bite at Fat Duck was like this. A designed tasting perfection.

Chuck wrote about FD that you can sense the chef’s enthusiasm for food *and* experience; instead of his cash register. This is true. There is a lot of gaming around with the extensive use of the nitrogene wizard at your table, the use of the iPod, but I found it sincere curiosity and the desire to share that. To me it wasn’t show-off.

A little word about the service which was fine and perfect (of course). In the beginning the staff was very formal, but after a while they mellowed. When ordering the champagne I also asked for a glass of white Burgundy to be served when I would have finished the rosé. At the instant of my thinking OK now please pour me more wine as my glass was empty, the sommelier came and suggested me a red one instead to accompany the more heavy courses. He also suggested to drink only water with the Sound of the Sea dish. I appreciated this guidance and got a 2002 Gaja La Maranca di Magari (in a Riedel glass btw.) offering a fat fruit scent, a fruity taste balanced with heavy tannins with hints of wood. The finish was restrained and long, and I really like it. The Magari matched the salmon/liquorice dish very well, because the pepper from the black shield made the wine’s flavours evolve in my mouth.

FD Menu

The look and feel of this envelope with the black stamp with the Fat Duck logo was so perfect, delicate and luxurious that I didn’t dare to open it during the lunch. I know this sounds silly, but I wanted to wait until I would start writing this post and providing me with the last sensing enjoyment of it. The paper has a soft outer skin like the feeling of velour whereas the inner side is sensed more rough. It’s a fine souvenir.

Fat Duck knocked me sideways and I have to go back. Some day.

Bravo Mr Heston Blumenthal!

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Texture – Upcoming Gourmet Place

During my latest visit to London I had the pleasure of lunching with to new friends, Yin and her niece Ming, on the 1st of December 2007. I felt lucky to meet up with them in London, as I for some time had thought it would be good fun to eventually meet face to face. Our mutual interest and love for very good food was the agenda and the newly established restaurant Texture in a beautiful Georgian building at the corner of Portman Square and Portman Street was the venue for our first encounter.

I must confess that this review hasn’t been easy for me to write for a couple of reasons. First of all time was short, our lunch was scheduled for the day of my afternoon flight back to Copenhagen, which by the way was the last one that day, so I couldn’t afford to miss it. Second, meeting my new friends had my top priority, so experiencing the food wasn’t in my focus the way it usually is. This doesn’t mean that I didn’t enjoy and think of the food, certainly not. What I mean is that this review will be slightly different from what I usually write and a bit shorter and not as detailed, which I’d like to apologize for in advance.

So then, why Texture? I had heard that the place has certain similarities with my favourite Copenhagen restaurant and that intrigued me of course. The fact of head chef Aggi Sverrisson being of Icelandic origin was also interesting to me and I kind of hoped for a Nordic touch in his food. Restaurant Texture is run by Sverrisson himself together with sommelier Xavier Rousset. Their philosophy is that light and healthy food and exquisite wines have equal importance. Ultimately, and not least, getting an opportunity to try something not many people had already tried also attracted me.

The Snack

Various Snacks

Bubbles

… and champagne

The restaurant is one large rectangular and beautiful room, split in two by the bar, with very high ceilings and walls decorated with pretty wainscots. We started out in the lounge area, which is at the end close to the entrance and got colourful variations of crispy and very thin snacks, which were fantastic. There is nothing worse than leathery chips from poultry and fish skins; these ones were certainly not that. The delicate snack made a good point to the naming of the restaurant. The crisps were just right, salty and delicious.

The Pumpkin Appetizer

The Amuse Bouche

The appetizer’s main ingredient was pumpkin in juicy and firm textures. The little glass bowl also contained chest nuts and Stilton cheese, which was only slightly pronounced and most in the after-taste. Pumpkin may be very common in Britain during winter times, and thus not as surprising to the British guests as as it was to me. But I really liked this little greeting from the chef, the sweetness from the fruit and the salt and strong flavoured English cheese.

Olive Oil, Olives and Butter

Tapenade of black olives, olive oil from Liguria and French butter

We were offered various kinds of rolls to be dipped in tapenade, delicious olive oil from the Ligurian coast and butter from France.

Texture follows a concept at lunch time I have not found elsewhere. They offer a lunch menu listing 10-11 different dishes all at the price of £ 8,50 each, and you can choose as few or as many as you’d like. I picked three that all filled my hungry tummy and covetous eyes perfectly – not too much and not too less.

2004 Chassagne Montrachet

2004 Bernard Morey Et Fils, Les Embrazées 1 er Cru, Chassagne Montrachet, Burgundy

To accompany the dishes I asked for a glass of white wine and the kind waiter suggested a glass of white Chassagne Montrachet, which is a wine that I have never tried before. I hesitated a bit when I noticed it was vintage 2004, which is a very acidic vintage as far as my palate has experienced so far. I went for it, however, and contrary to other white Burgundy appellations of 2004 I actually found that this wine was nicely balanced. It was a very full bodied wine, flavours of fruit and oak, and in this picture the acidity was just right and made the wine very enjoyable. Without the huge amount of acidity the wine would have been fulsome.

Burgundy 1er Cru wines is not often served by the glass. But I see this as a proof of Texture’s concept of giving good food and exquisite wine the same kind of attention, and I liked that.

Egg and Parmasan Cheese

Hoads Farm Hen Egg
Slow poached, parmesan broth, barley, parmesan bread

My first course consisted of a poached hen egg, which itself wasn’t that interesting. Over it was poured 3 years old parmesan cheese, which was heavenly because of its delicate yet full taste. On the side I got some parmesan toasts that had the same nice flavour, but didn’t add much to the completeness of the dish. All in all a new thing for me, but not the most impressive one.

Tea of Jerusalem Articholes

Tea of Jerusalem artichokes

Jerusalem Artichokes and Cepes

French Jerusalem artichokes and cepes

The following dish was a beauty of French Jerusalem artichokes and cepes. Those two really become each other well. I love, love them both and so the dish was a big hit for me. To prepare my palate for the perfectly cooked, firm Jerusalem artichokes still with a bite to them, I first got a test type glass with Jerusalem artichoke tea. It had a fine taste with a bit of sweetness to it but seemed to me missing finesse. Perhaps the muddy look of it also stressed that.

Skate Wing

Cornish Skate Wing, artichokes, fennel salad, citrus sauce

The third course was indeed nice too and very satisfying. The skate wing was fresh, firm and delicate in taste. The fennels were sliced very thin and had been blanched or similar, because the liquorice flavour was not drowning the fine flavours of the artichoke cream and the fish. Very good.

I don’t know whether the fact of our constant photographing dishes or our scribbling in our note books had an effect, or whether the Texture staff is like that at all times. But the fact is that we got a fine attention. As an example, I didn’t know what a chest nut was and my friend asked a waiter if they perhaps had one in the kitchen, which they could show us, and he did. Ironically it didn’t help me much as he presented a chopped nut, which was too granulated for me to identify. I was looking for the Danish equivalent which is “kastagne”. So now everybody knows and I’ll never forget that again.

Overall I enjoyed the food, the wine and the place of Texture and if I were often in London I would adore to come back again. I love the concept of many equally expensive deliciously sounding dishes and the Saturday lunch availability is perfect. Many good fine dining places are always closed on Saturday mid day. What I missed a bit that day was sharpness and confidence. Texture had been open for 10 weeks when I was visiting, and although the waiters and cooks were very competent and clearly talented, I would have liked a bit more character both in terms of food and service. I feel confident, though, that it will come with time, and this is why I call Texture upcoming gourmet, I think they can do even better. So watch out, and keep and eye on that place!

But what I most enjoyed at this lunch was the company! Imagine travelling six hours just for lunching with me…, Yin I am grateful you did that – it was a great pleasure meeting you and Ming. I look forward to seeing you in CPH sometime hopefully soon!!

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London Eats

Just back from London, and I had a great time there, I was really lucky that all my eats turned out to be lovely in their own way.

I stayed at the nice and old stylish Thistle Hotel in Bloomsbury which offered wifi in the rooms, so I could connect to cyberspace as often as I wanted. It’s funny how I quickly adapt to my new environment and start getting some sort of home feeling about a pretty standard hotel room.

My Tube Stop

Tottenham Court Road was my stop, and after a couple of days I was habituated with the area and knew my way around the tube, the directions of the Central Line and the quickest way to my hotel. That is nice when it rains, as it’s seems quite impossible to get a taxi in London, when it rains.

White House

One of the things I love about visiting cities, apart from the dining I mean, is to walk around and watch the architecture and buildings of it. London is beautiful. Most of all I adore the scrolled Victorian houses and the white and majestic neoclassical style buildings with the stairs in front of the house, which is very different from what the Danish blocks look like.

I could spent all day long walking around London, looking at buildings and people, cars, telephone boxes, policemen and suck in the whole atmosphere of this multi cultural and vivid city. And take photographs.

A Beautiful Balchony

But I also spent some time checking out a few of the British eateries. My hard investigation had paid off. Every planned meal was very good.

I spontaneously found The Cow in the Zagat guide, when I was looking for a place to have sea food, preferably in the Notting Hill area. In the end it wasn’t a fish but a huge Aberdeen Angus steak that made my main course. It was so delicious and very tasty with a very rich meat flavour. I went there with a friend of mine from Argentina. You know how they produce gorgeous steaks in that country (if not then take a look at Luxeat’s boeuf here). She got a taster and she too found the steak great and this must be a quality stamp for The Cow. I did eat some sea food there, by the way, we shared a plate with two of three different kinds of oysters from Ireland, England and France. We both agreed that the French ones were the most delicious ones, not too jelly-like and with a delicate taste.

My Sweet Tooth

I also managed to pop into a Baker and Spice café as well for a cup of tea and a cheesecake and satisfy my craving for sweets. Cheesecake is amongst my favourites. It’s the sourness and fruit combined with the creamy taste that I find beguiling.

Anyway, back to the very good food. Like I had announced on my Wish List page I had booked tables at St. John, Texture and Fat Duck. My last evening I went too St. John Bread and Wine. I was so thrilled about St. John’s the first night and desired to go back, but it was fully booked on the Friday. Instead the kind waiter set me up at Wine & Bread, which I’ll tell more about when I’m posting St. John.

I the next coming weeks I’ll write up my experiences of Texture, the two St. John places and, of course, Fat Duck.

But before that, I have a little noma lunch to write up as well. ;-) My luck the Christmas holidays are coming up real soon.

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