Category Archives: Food
Mushroom Nachos
Emma is sadly leaving our team so, as is tradition, had leaving drinks. The Hop Poles is a pretty good venue for drinks being quite close to the station and also having some pretty good snacks at reasonable prices. For the most part the snacks are good anyway … this plate of mushroom nachos being a bit odd.
Even odder the whole thing was accompanied by barbecue sauce! Still, it went down very well with everyone!
Fish Finger Sandwich at the Sali
All You Can Ping Pong
When its all said and done £21 (factoring in the 12.5% service) for as much dim sum you can eat is not a bad deal here in London. It also means you’d choose dishes you probably wouldn’t normally so in some ways it is also good for encouraging adventurousness. I was very happy to introduce Cathy to All You Can Ping Pong (actually called Lazy Sum Days) and she and I certainly gave the All You Can eat aspect a good go.
Don’t think I’ll be needing to eat dinner tonight!
Peacock Bar: Chocolate Making
A recent offer came up for Afternoon Tea followed by a class of your choice – you could choose from cup cake, chocolate or cocktail making. Jenny was interested in getting a group of us girls together for such an event but thank god they didn’t want to do the cup cake making. To me cup cakes are so last year and that includes the multitude of offers you see around for cup cake making/decorating classes! We didn’t really know what to expect at the Peacock Bar but when Nimet and I arrived it was to see a Hen party going about their cupcake and cocktail making business. The girls who run the classes were dressed up rather cutely in that 1940s look which really set the feel for the day.
Jenny was running late for our class but luckily the organisers were fairly relaxed about things getting us drinks to occupy us whilst we waited for Jenny. It was good that they weren’t concerned with trying to start things exactly on time and that they had the flexibility to adjust the timing for us.
When Jenny did arrive we were a bit disappointed to find that afternoon tea wasn’t on offer – instead we got the chance to make chocolate and …. yes, cup cakes! Argh! As none of us had really read about the offer before arriving we weren’t actually sure what we were supposed to get! I guess the cup cakes were a substitute for our afternoon tea?
The pros of the day were, as I mentioned, the flexibility of the organisers (Jenny was late for over an hour but they didn’t mind!), a very casual and relaxed atmosphere, very friendly hosts, divine quality chocolate for our chocolate making (and we got to dip fruits to eat as we went along too!), with the cup cake making there were lots of different colours and extras to decorate our cupcakes (and we could eat as many as we wanted!) and finally even when we were finished they were happy to let us sit around (when they really needed to chuck us out as they had function.)
It turned out to be a fun day but I’m certainly going to overdose on sugar again with all my cupcakes!
Bugis Street Brasserie
Sometimes how good an experience you have at a restaurant really comes down to the dishes that you choose but I was very disappointed tonight with the Bugis Street Brasserie as none of our four dishes were particularly stunning. As one of the few Singaporean restaurants in London I was hoping for much more. You’d have wished that if the food wasn’t good that the service at least would be … sadly this was not the case. It was slow and inefficient. Like the restaurant wasn’t used to being so busy though undoubtedly it is always very busy so should have been used to it.
It wasn’t even particularly cheap at £18 for a main course, drink and service!
Jenny BBQ
Jenny has had a pretty amazing year this year with a new job, a new engagement (!) and a new house (!!) And with her birthday just having gone by a couple of weeks ago today she was having a celebration barbeque at her new home … which was a very lengthy journey on the tube (all the way to the end of the central line) and then a taxi at the other end! Not that I minded – she, after all, has to make quite an effort to come in central to do stuff with me.
She’d been blessed with some pretty damn fine weather and, if she’d had a pool, it would have been perfect conditions to don our cossies! We had to settle for walking barefoot in the grass and lounging around in her fairly sizable backyard. She’d gone to sooo much effort with the food. I love that about Jenny – she just gets so excited about her food. And they had sooooo much meat. Sean was on the barbie all afternoon and into the early evening grilling stuff for everyone. Not sure how many people turned up as it was a mixture of Jenny’s and Sean’s friends but it had to have at least been 45 people if I had to guess at a minimum?
A fun day.
Another BBQ at Caro and Nate’s
Who said England doesn’t do summer! Okay, admittedly the weather has been sketchy this entire week but today it was rather brilliant … and perfect to enjoy Caro and Nathan’s barbeque feed outdoors. The food was especially delicious today, mostly to do with Caro’s skills in the kitchen, but in part it must have surely been something to do with eating it outdoors.
Gaspar certainly enjoyed his time outdoors running around picking herbs and then giving them to me! And Cesar also certainly didn’t mind having his feed outdoors. Yum!
We finished with some very decadent and rich cupcakes
Awana
I’d gotten Su Yin a groupon voucher meal for two at Awana for her birthday as I’ve always been pretty happy with the food there and being Malaysian I thought she would enjoy it. She nicely took me as her plus one. We started with some (non) alcoholic cocktails before getting into the food proper.
The key dishes I like to enjoy at Awana is their satay, preferably chicken. Alas on the set menu was the beef satay! Okay it was pretty delicious being tender, juicy and with a hint of smokiness, but it was no chicken satay. Su Yin ordered what she thought would be a fresh prawn spring roll but it ended up being deep fried.
For mains it was more beef for me with the massaman curry and Su Yin opted for the lighter fish dish, which would have been my first choice except I’d had that before. For me the beef wasn’t quite as tender or juicy as I’d want it to be – I thought it would be fall apart tender and whilst it wasn’t tough, it was just a touch on the dry side.
Desserts were Pisang roti canai a sweetened crispy flat bread filled with banana in heavy milk served with chocolate and lemon grass ice cream and a guava cheesecake and banana ice cream. Both were quite good but I couldn’t really fit much of them in. I know. How odd. Maybe my drink had been much too creamy at the start.
Rasoi Vineet Bhatia
So technically my birthday is right around the corner but, except for my 30th, I’m not normally one who likes to celebrate. On the other hand, I’ll take any excuse to go out for a nice meal. Heh heh. Groupon had nicely co-operated by offering an excellent deal (half price on their tasting menu before service) on 1-Michelin starred Rasoi Vineet Bhatia, a very small and intimate, well hidden, Indian restaurant in Chelsea. Rehana had cause to comment it was almost like having a meal in someone’s dining room. You even have to buzz to gain access like you’re visiting a friend’s home for dinner. I quite liked the vibe, and despite the fact the weather wasn’t the greatest, appreciated the sky light that sat above our table. As a result of the intimate surrounds you are a lot closer to your fellow diners than is comfortable but with about 20 people in our room max it didn’t get too loud or overwhelming and thankfully no shouting required to be heard.
Rasoi Vineet Bhatia’s Indian style is best described as fusion in the way that Benares is, but more.
We started off with our “bread” course of pappadam with Mint and Mango Chutneys and two amuse bouche – which was a short of watermelon with spices mixed in and this beautiful mouthful of something which I unfortunately cannot remember the name of but Rehana said was the restaurant’s posh and refined take on some typical Indian dish. Incredibly delicious. If every dish was as good as these pre-starters then we were in for a real treat. And we were!
Spinach tikka chaat and warm potato-pomegranatea chaat were our first courses. The potato-pomeranate chaat in particular was a winner in this dish (the one on the left) – it was both sweet and spicy and tangy and all ingredients (not sure what the mysterious green sauce was) were so well in combination together. I wanted more but new that with six dishes to come, even if they weren’t going to be huge, I would have to pace myself.
Lamb dominated the next course and though not a fan of the meat found myself liking Gilafi lamb seekh kebab, lime lamb samosa served with herb and olive chutney respectively. Interesting ingredients to use in this dish.
And we come to what undoubtedly was my favourite dish of the night Wild mushroom and truffle oil laced khichdi (rice with lentils or simlar) sitting below Tomato “Makhni” ice cream. I could not go into just how amazing and exquisite the khichdi was and the tomato ice cream surprisingly did well to complement the dish. Incredible.
Apologies for the lighting on the next series of photos. The restaurant decided that it would be a good time to start some romance! Grilled Gun powder crusted sea bass, curry leaf upma, Moilee sauce, coconut chutney. After the amazing dish that had come before, everything following was going to pale in comparison to be honest but the sea bass did try its best. Taken alone it was a solid dish, sea bass was perfectly cooked and again had that touch of sweet and sour in the moilee sauce and the coconut chutney. Really good-sized portion on the sea bass too. Normally you’d get only mouthful sized portions on a tasting menu.
A melon and black pepper sorbet came next to cleanse the palette. I was happy that the chef continued to use distinctively different ingredients from the norm.
Then, as the finale to the savoury dishes, a bit of theatre with our Smoke cloud-Punjabi herb chicken tikka, Biryani rice, Sambhar sauce and “Salli” potatoes (though Rehana swapped her chicken for a paneer. Again another good solid and fun dish. Chicken was so tender and juicy and just the right level of smokiness leant to the tikka.
We were really quite satisfied at this point but had our final dish, dessert, to go. Cheekily called the Chocomosa: Warm marbled chocolate samosa with fresh rose petal-vanilla bean ice cream. Sooo good. Think fondue but inside a samosa wrapper and also mixed in white chocolate. The rose ice cream worked very well with this dish.
Petit fours wrapped up a pretty incredible dining experience at Rasoi. Food-wise there can be no complaints – all top-quality, well-thought out dishes that tasted incredible. Its not the kind of place that mixes ingredients just for the sake of being different – every ingredient was truly considered to see what it would add to the dish. From a service perspective the wait-staff were incredibly efficient and friendly and gladly not in our faces at every moment! Just the right level of service with the commitment to adjust our menu and their service to our needs.
The only minor drawback I would have in recommending this place is the price. At full price the restaurant is tre expensive – at £85 the tasting menu brings it up into nearly the same price category as such 2-Michelin starred restaurants as The Ledbury (http://www.thekua.com/sista/?p=13436) which is a big promise to deliver on something big. And they do deliver, only people might be reluctant to pay that much for Indian food, however fine it is. I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend as a special occasion venue.