Ran Restaurant

Earlier this week I finally managed to eat at Ran, a Korean restaurant I always walk past on the way to work but I had never had a chance to eat their yet. I’ve been intrigued in this place for a while namely because I haven’t had much Korean food in London yet and this restaurant has a large LCD facing the street cycling through all the delicious looking platters of food they serve. I made a booking for six of us and although two of the six were half an hour late I thankfully never felt hurried or rushed to order by the staff, even though tables seemed limited in number.

Ran Restaurant

I like Korean food the most for the delicious charred food you get from the gas grill that sits in the middle of the table. All of the Korean restaurants I ate at back home had a very homey feel, with most of the grilled done by yourself. At Ran though, they go to the supreme effort of cooking all of it for you (with the gas grill still in the middle of the table) and then distributing it out amongst the diners. It is extremely demanding on the waiters and waitresses and they certainly deserve the 12.5% service for all the preparation they did for us.

We tried a great selection of many dishes including Korean pancakes, assorted tempura, assorted kim chi, gyoza, a variety of grilled meats and the Dolsot Bibimbap. It was a supreme feast and I think we were all surprised that even though collectively we’d all had some shoju, warm sake and some Korean beers, and service included it only ended up at £25 a head for such a fine meal.

Details: Ran
Found on: 58-59 Great Marlborough Street, London, W1F 7JY
Contactable on: 020 7434 1650
Highlights: Fantastic atmosphere, great service and great quality Korean food at decent prices. Booking over the Internet was extremely easy and a great all round experience.
Room for improvement: The chair and table arrangements make it hard for the waiters and waitresses to cook and serve food. They don’t open for lunch on weekends.
The Kua Rating: 8.5 out of 10

Embracing Change

Wu WeiI had my room packed up, my bills redirected, my flight booked, had someone almost moving into my flat and was already trying to get through the round of (short term) farewells, but contrary to my recent post, it looks like I’m staying in London for a bit longer. Earlier today I got the ominous phone call telling me that my current opportunity to be a trainer in India will not be available as planned for the start of next year.

To say I’m disappointed is quite understated but at least I will no longer be as anxious as I have been this last week building up to Christmas and I know an opportunity will open up sometime in the future. Better yet I’m glad that it’s been easy enough to cancel the cancellation request on my ISP (they rock!) and I still get to go on my skiing trip already booked and paid for next year. I apologise to all the people who I sincerely told that I was leaving London, and I thank all of you who contacted me to wish me the best.

The picture above are the characters for the Toaist principle, Wu-Wei, and I find relevant in dealing with the recent news

Moving Out and Moving On!

The biggest news I have this week is that I’m going to be living in India for about 6 months starting from January. I’ll be taking on a new role with other instructors running training and induction classes for people that join Thoughtworks. I’m really looking forward to the experience and I have a lot of support from my work colleagues and sponsor. I hope the people I will be working with will be able to capitalise on all my experiences I’ve had working on the many projects I’ve been on, and I think I will be able to refine a lot of the techniques and approaches I use when coaching teams and pair programming with people. I will also get a huge kick of working with people that are genuinely interested in learning and sharing and like most projects I’ve been on they’ll no doubt be plenty of fun along the way.

It’s a big change for me once again after moving to the UK, but I do plan on returning to the UK after six months and going through the paces again to find another place to live in London. It’s an exciting time and though there’s plenty of stuff to fit into the week before Christmas, it’s going to be completely worth it.

A Wicked Musical

Wicked - The MusicalLast night I went along to see the one of the latest musicals to arrive in London – Wicked at the Apollo theatre in Victoria. Based on the characters and world set by Lyman Frank Baum’s Wizard of Oz, this musical tells the alternative story of how the Wicked Witch of the West became the person that the movie portrayed her as. The story does well to link in numerous elements from this classic movie, and the writers did well to fill the script with a huge number of one-liners from the movie.

The costumes and set are richly colourful and almost excessively over the top. In the first half alone, I’m sure there would have been at least fifteen different set of costume changes, and with many of them very decent replicas of what you might have seen in the original. I thought the costumes of the characters in the Emerald city were probably the most elaborate and most suitable, though all of the costumes throughout were spectacular.

I thought the biggest thing that let this musical down was its songs. Although this is a new musical compared to many in London’s West End, I thought many of the songs were a bit too cliché (the numerous key changes, the couple singing harmoniously, and the loud top note at the end) but didn’t really have anything to make it very memorable on their own. I personally would have been happier if this musical was just a play since the script writers are clearly clever people.

All of the cast did an amazing job of playing their characters and the original lead, Idina Menzel playing Elphaba (the wicked witch) definitely deserved to win her 2004 Tony Award for her role. The current cast even includes the Antipodean movie actor, Adam Garcia of Coyote Ugly fame who I didn’t recognise until my sister pointed him out.

Overall I thought the musical was innovative and fun but it’s a bit hard to justify the top priced premium circle/stall seats. The story, script, costumes and set are amazing but the music was a bit disappointing.

Thekua.com Rating: 8 out of 10

Need Memory? Visit Picstop

Extreme III Compact Flash 2GBI needed a new memory card for a new gadget of mine, and thought that I’d look to see how expensive things were here compared to the States since I’m heading there for Christmas. After looking around for best prices for the Extreme III CompactFlash 2GB card, the most reasonable looking place I could find was a place called Picstop. It’s got fantastic reviews, and even with the weak USD, the card ended being only about USD5 more with shipping.

I ordered it on Friday morning, the card was shipped that day, and even with standard shipping the card arrived at the office on Monday morning. I even posted a couple of queries via their website (which isn’t exactly going to win any awards) but got some fantastic customer service. Definitely check it out if you’re living in the UK and need something for your Digital camera.

Donzoko At Last

DonzokoI’ve complained about how difficult it is to get good quality sushi around London, and Laura pointed me out to a great little find called Donzoko, located in Kingly Street just off of Carnaby Street and one street behind Regent Street. I had tried once before a week or two ago, and found out that they don’t open for Saturday lunch, so when I returned for dinner on Saturday I was glad the little red lantern was lit up indicating, in the traditional Japanese manner, this shop was open for business.

I’m extremely impressed by how Japanese the entire place felt – with the smiling Japanese lady that greets you, the staff that shout the traditional irrashaimase, the little sushi bar out front, not to mention all the Japanese people sitting around, either drinking and smoking, or eating and smoking (though both latter habits are far less desirable). Downstairs is even a member’s area for presumably a more private sushi or drinking experience.

The menu at this place is extensive and offers much more than just sushi, including udon, grilled meats, tempura, and katsu type sets. There is even a special winter menu offering more unique dishes such as boiled taro, egg and other types of Japanese delicacies. Sushi can be ordered in many ways, either off the menu piece by piece, or roll by roll – which ends up a more expensive way (my most favourite sushi, unagi costing £2 for a single piece). Alternatively they offer both a sushi and sashimi set at much more value for money starting at £15 for a decent sized plate.

SushiAlthough I still wouldn’t say that sushi still ends up cheap (maybe it’s the amount that I eat), but this is definitely one place that is worth the money. All of the food is prepared immediately after ordering since they have many sushi chefs, and the sushi is much more like the stuff you’d get in Japan with that hint of real wasabi between the topping and the rice. They also serve it with real wasabi on the side (and I talk about real wasabi because the more authentic stuff has a much stronger effect than what that horseradish-based reconstituted powder stuff does). The quality of the sushi is fantastic, and the eel and the scallop ones I had were probably my most favourite out of the lot. We didn’t get a chance to try any of the other meals since we came solely for sushi, but we did have a small serve of Tempura as well that was delicate and extremely delicious with the dipping sauce.

Details: Donzoko
Found on: 15 Kingly Street, London, W1B 5PS
Contactable on: 020 7734 1974
Opening Hours: Mon-Fri: Noon – 2.30pm and 6pm – 10.15pm, Sat-Sun 6pm – 10.30pm
Highlights: Authentic high quality sushi at reasonable prices. Great selection of other Japanese foods, shochus, sake and beer.
Room for improvement: Smoking is allowed inside and if you turn up any later than 7pm you will want to book ahead.
The Kua Rating: 8.5 out of 10