Archives for category: Uncategorized

CarfestIt has been a busy week as the farm prepared for CarFest.

A full moon over the glamping field

A full moon over the glamping field

How wonderful must it be to combine your three favourite things and make up a festival that then raises millions for Children in Need. Well this is what Chris Evans achieved last year combining food, cars & music and year two promised to be bigger and better. It was amazing to see the farm transformed from operating as a farm to becoming the home for tens of thousands of people. I am not quite sure what the poor sheep will be eating this week after the festival-goers have trampled their dinner but I have to say that the event itself was just a wonderful experience. The atmosphere was so lovely and as the lady helping cash up, I can honestly say that I was shocked by how much people will spend on a simple burger, sausage or spit roast.

The tea vintage team get it so right

The tea vintage team get it so right

There were also loads and loads of mobiles with nice offers from people like The Collective yogurt, Belvoir drinks, Ryvita mobiles and Jamie Oliver’s Fabulous Feasts, but the one that grabbed my attention was Tea Vintage. They just captured the mood with fun music, clever table settings and a great offer.

After a full weekend of farm festivities, it was a relief to have the bank holiday and to depend on trusty friends to find the perfect place to relax this Monday. Mr Jones chose Smokehouse in Islington which is the new home of Neil Rankin. He comes with a long list of cool credentials, having worked through Chez Bruce, Pitt Cue Co. and John Salt hype but we were actually relieved that he had lost the whole lick-a-brick thing and just got on with what he does best. We were sad to see that the Bank Holiday delivered a Sunday menu only and I don’t feel that really showcased his best Green Egg/smokey offer, but everything we had made us feel that we would want to go back and try the full menu.

An impressive craft beer with over 20 in tap

An impressive craft beer with over 20 in tap

And the drinks list was impressive with a huge amount of craft beers on tap as well as a whole host of others, and wines by the glass, carafe and bottle.

For a chilled out, laid back, tasty and fairly reasonable plate of food, try Smokehouse.

IMG_1602

I have just had the most wonderful weekend with my friends in their country cottage in the Gloucestershire.

It is at times like this that I really appreciate the country lifestyle, particularly when I share it with two people who are so into their food in the same way I am, except that they are proper professionals. Mr and Mr Melrose and Morgan do such a great job in their shops and I always love to hear about what they are working on and who they are connecting with as it is always spot on. They have such an understated style and yet do food so incredibly, properly and well.

Laverstoke Park Farm organic, biodynamic blackcurrants and gooseberries

Laverstoke Park Farm organic, biodynamic blackcurrants and gooseberries

Saturday breakfast set the tone with the most perfectly cooked boiled farm egg, yummy coffee and a warm raisin, apricot, bran muffin fresh from their shop. Sunday we paced ourselves with buffalo milk yogurt, blackcurrant compote made from Laverstoke Park Farm organic blackcurrants and Melrose and Morgan sour cherry granola which is just the best.

This cottage of theirs is perfect, set in the outskirts of Sapperton in rolling countryside with their own garden and in the catchment of some great pubs and markets. They have kept it simple and homely with mismatched crockery from the local antique shop plus lots of little touches to make it theirs, centred around the most beautiful big wooden kitchen table which is the heart of the whole place.

Some of our market produce

Some of our market produce on the wonderful wooden kitchen table

On Saturday we went to Stroud market which is apparently one of the biggest, most popular farmer’s markets in the country and winner of the best farmer’s market award from FARMA for the second year this year. It is so well supported locally and you can see why when you shop the stalls. We created our weekend menu as we wandered around picking and choosing our way to the best offerings. I brought some bits with me from the farm which added to the market fayre resulted in a larder full of goodies… the perfect thing for a trio who love to cook, cheered on by a glorious sunny day to create yummy things and potter around.

Dappled garden sunlight on our frittata lunch

Dappled garden sunlight on our frittata lunch

Throughout the day, we split our roles really well with Mr. M in the garden in charge of pruning, planting and bringing in all the best the garden had to offer such as fresh herbs, beans and leaves. Other Mr. M was most definitely head chef running a slick kitchen and creating lovely tasty treats. He knocked up this simple lunch frittata and quinoa, broad bean and feta salad plus a banana and chocolate cake baked in time for tea. I took on my favourite role of head chopper and prep chef under Mr. M’s tutelage which is always fun. There was no room for dinner so we popped to the local Butchers Arms pub and put the world to rights as we snacked our way through a couple of their well made starters.

Sunday was a bit of a fresh, rainy day but we pushed on with a proper country stroll to build up an appetite for the buffalo forerib I brought from the farm. The neighbourhood woodlands were like something out of the Lord of the Rings film with huge old trees, pretty moss encrusted stone walls and the odd deer lurching through the shrubbery. An hours stroll was just right and then we were fully ensconced in the kitchen creating the most perfect Sunday lunch.

Sunday lunch in style

Sunday lunch in style

Mr. M’s beets were boiled, roasted in balsamic vinegar and complemented with garden fresh fennel fronds, pan fried greens and a dash of great quality oil. We had a radish and bean salad plus a salmoriglio or Summer thyme sauce made fresh with garden herbs. Central to the table was that wonderful forerib cooked perfectly to 55 degrees by Mr. M and rested whilst his baby Yorkshire puddings puffed up to bursting in the hot oven. Accompanied by a bottle of English red wine from Kenton vineyard in Devon we had the most perfect celebration of everything we did over the weekend.

I feel like I have had the best holiday and guess I now need to get back to the real world. I can only hope that my impending move to the country will facilitate a similar lifestyle and then all will be good with the world.

We are definitely spoilt for choice in London for new restaurants. A new opening is a weekly occurrence. Sadly there are many more failures than successes and my list of potential places to visit gets edited down somewhat frequently. It used to be that I would bound along with fresh enthusiasm but years of disappointment makes me far more cynical these days.

Last year it was Dabbous that caught my eye but I got bored trying to get a table so it is still on the list, but could be there for some time. The reviews can’t all be wrong, so I will get there at some point. Mind you, I also fancied Dach & Sons – a hotdog and cocktails place that opened less than a year ago near me. When I finally found a suitably young & hip companion to take there, it had shut! They put it down to failure to generate the right volume of trade…a sad reality of starting up in this highly competitive city.

This year, I had two front runners on my ever expanding list: Ametsa and Restaurant Story.

Ametsa restaurant

Ametsa appealed because I also have San Sebastian, and of course Arzak, well up on my travel list (I know – all these lists!). So when the mountain and chef mohammed were coming to London it seemed too good to be true. I researched and chased and hung on in the phone queue as is normally required in these circumstances, and secured a table soon after opening. Experience tells me never to go week one as it is generally being bedded in and you can also catch up on the restaurant critics and reviewers before you go. In Ametsa’s case, it kind of dived: pretentious name (Ametsa with Arzak Instruction); the room was over designed with no sense of warmth or reality and the set menu at £105 or £145 with wine just seemed extortionate when you consider what wonderfulness you can get in these frugal days for a quarter of that. My friends and I declined. So it’s on the list, but I would, as Marina O’Loughlin says, rather spend the money on going to San Sebastian.

Restaurant Story

Restaurant Story is at the other Dabbous-end of the new restaurant scale. Tom Sellers is one of those new chefs, like Ollie Dabbous, who has risen through the teachings of great chefs and restaurants. In Tom’s case, he worked with Tom Aikens and Adam Byatt here in the UK as well as at Noma and Per Se abroad. Not a bad resume for a boy from Nottingham who started out aged 16 as a pot wash in a pub. Now aged 26 he has opened his first stand alone restaurant in an old Bermondsey toilet block, near Tower Bridge. I followed chef Tom on Twitter and subscribed to his website to try and get in on the table bookings, knowing how these things go. Even though subscribers were allowed to ring a day in advance of the official opening for bookings, it still took me 4 hours to get through. Still, a table was booked and this weekend we embarked on the tale.

restaurant story

I fear that when a place has the kind of hype that this one does, it can only fail to deliver and the concept was already feeling a little over-worked culminating in their request for you to bring a book to the place. Thankfully all remnants of the toilet block are well and truly gone and the designers have taken the whole Story idea into all elements with leather bound banisters, a bespoke bookcase for said books and an old copy of a Dickens classic centre table when you arrive.  My fear of pretension was only accentuated when our rather over-keen waiter announced as we sat down: “welcome …I hope you are ready to have the best meal of your life”. Hmm. These guys needed a chill pill.

Thankfully the skill of a good chef can’t be put down and the meal was interesting and enjoyable. There have been reviews on a poor and overpriced wine list, but my Spanish friend Pilar found a lovely Galician white which was reasonable and the perfect accompaniment to the first six of our ten course taster. And the food was really well made. There were ingredients and flavours which I have never had which seemed to nod to the Noma influence and there were dishes that I really loved.

The signature beef dripping candle

The signature beef dripping candle

Right up there was the rye bread served with the now well documented beef dripping candle but more importantly with a beautiful sharp/sweet side of perfectly cut veal tongue chunks, with celery, spring onion and jellied cubes of chicken consomme which we demolished. We also loved the pre dinner snack of polenta coated rabbit croquettes with the most wonderful depth of tarragon.

crispy cod skin appetiser

crispy cod skin pre dinner amuse bouche

More pre dinner tasters: radish with seaweed butter and stuffed nasturtium flower

more pre dinner tasters: radish with seaweed butter and stuffed nasturtium flower

the lovely rabbit croquettes

the lovely rabbit croquettes

Burnt onions in gin, apple and thyme jus

burnt onions in gin, apple and thyme jus

Scallop ceviche with cucumber balls, some covered in dill ash

scallop ‘ceviche’ with cucumber balls, some covered in dill ash, horseradish cream and nasturtium leaves

Mackerel with mermaid's hair (seaweed) and slices of almost raw strawberry

mackerel with mermaid’s hair (seaweed) and slices of almost raw strawberry

Buttery buttery mash with asparagus, grass and coal emulsion

buttery buttery mash with asparagus, grass and coal emulsion

sweet rich beetroot and raspberry with a subtle horseradish snow

sweet rich beetroot and raspberry with a subtle horseradish snow

My least favourite lamb with wild garlic, salad leaves and sheep yogurt

my least favourite lamb with wild garlic, salad leaves and sheep yogurt

Finally the desserts. ‘Lemon’ really was a celebration of this wonderful citrus and an overwhelming favourite of the table. Tea infused prunes with lovage ice cream was interesting and the signature three bear’s porridge … well we loved the serving dishes, got confused because the too salty, too sweet and just right on the card didn’t match the order served but generally would have preferred something more classically desserty. I always feel cheated if there isn’t something with chocolate or caramel in my desserts.

our favourite 'lemon'

our favourite ‘lemon’

Earl Grey infused prunes with lovage ice cream and milk skin

Earl Grey infused prunes with lovage ice cream and milk skin

three bear's porridge: too salty, too sweet and just right (actually I preferred the too sweet, but hey ho)

three bear’s porridge: too salty, too sweet and just right (actually I preferred the too sweet, but hey ho)

Overall we enjoyed, savoured and at times kind of wondered about some things but we were all glad we went. There is no doubt that each plate, carefully chosen in its own right, was truly beautiful and really well made.

Was it memorable? It wasn’t in the league of Blue Hill at Stone Barns, Koffmann’s, Pot Luck Club or Bazaar at the SLS, but it was a lovely evening and a restaurant that I am sure will grow and grow as it matures.

When I have children, I can only hope that they have the same vitality, charm and drive that I experienced at the home of my friend tonight. Her wonderful daughters keep her on her toes, I am sure, but they really do her proud as well. It’s fascinating to see how two girls brought up in the same home by the same Mum can shine in such different ways. Gabi excels academically but can’t even make a piece of toast whereas Amber may not be as successful in her school exams, but is a hugely talented cook. Clearly, I relate to Amber in the kitchen and am always amazed at her creations.

Amber's pecan pie with a meringue twist

Amber’s pecan pie with a meringue twist

Tonight, she cooked us dinner from scratch: a stunning Coq au Vin followed by a pecan pie topped with meringue. Baking is her real passion. You can see why she was a Junior Masterchef finalist when you see all her cake creations. I have no doubt that she will have her very own successful bakery some day very soon. She has already registered an online name for her place and has a very clear view about how it will look & feel. All this at 15 years old. Here are some of the temptations she may take into that bakery:

A chocolate brownie indulgence

A chocolate brownie indulgence

A 6 tier salted caramel gateaux

A 6 tier salted caramel gateaux

Chocolate cheesecake

Chocolate cheesecake

This week, I also indulged in a dinner made by the teenage daughter of my friend Luci. We went to the college she trains at in Basingstoke and ate our way through her fabulous meal which was part of her assessment. It was so impressive to see a slightly self conscious girl find her voice through cooking. The menu was varied, the food beautifully presented, and each dish was well thought through. What impressed me the most was the elegance with which she balanced the flavours. I am sure young Jess will be an asset in someone’s kitchen very, very soon.

All of this made me think about how young talent gets trained and developed in the industry. Clearly there are good colleges out there doing general cookery courses giving the background and training needed. But for Amber, it is more specific because she is really only interested in baking. London stalwart, Leiths don’t have a pastisserie specific qualification and the Cordon Bleu cookery school won’t accept under 18’s. How does someone with the talent and drive that Amber has achieve her ambition? Thankfully she has found the right course at Westminster college and so all being well her progression into the world of food will be a smooth one. I only wish there was a better network of specialists who could mentor girls like Amber. I think it would be great if some of the successful chefs would be online to support the up and coming talent in some sort of chat room or network. It is clear to me that this young lady has a skill and passion that we will all know about in the future….it’s just a question of how quickly she can get on her chosen path. I for one will do whatever I can to help.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started