Jenny and I are keen readers of the Wednesday edition of the Metro as it’s the restaurant review edition. Aside from the reviewer normally tending to be quite funny (though I think sometime she uses too many foo foo words Jenny quite likes learning the new lingo) the restaurants that are reviewed, when positive, are made to sound quite appealing. When we read the Taste of McClements review we immediately though of each other and made a booking. The earliest we could manage between us was tonight (about five weeks after the review) so, fully expecting the restaurant to be booked out, we were surprised to find we were the only diners. The WHOLE night!
But first, a step backwards is necessary to explain the concept behind the restaurant and an explanation of why we were both excited to visit Taste of McClements and to make the special trip to Kew Gardens (not really a place either of visit on a regular basis) to do so.
Chef-restaurateur John McClement first gained a Michelin star in 2004 for McClements in Twickenham in 2004. However, after losing the star one year later, the restaurant was eventually closed in 2006 and relaunched as the more casual La Brasserie Ma Cuisine (now The Grill Room) because he felt that Michelin starred restaurants just didn’t make money. His stable now boasts six restaurants including Taste of McClements. Launched in Kew in November last year it has been written up as his attempt to win back a Michelin star because apparently he thinks there is a gap in the market in Kew for a restaurant for fine dining. Taste of McClements sits next to the Kew branch of Ma Cuisine which is an interesting move and I hope one that does not result in a case of one restaurant haemorrhaging the customer base of the other. It seems strange to be suddenly hearing a lot about this John McClement guy because out of the blue this week a colleague from work was telling me about how good Ma Cuisine was and he didn’t even know I had already booked in to go to Taste!
So, I’m now three paragraphs into this entry and I haven’t even said what Taste is all about. In essence the restaurant is all about the tasting menu. At dinner, for a measly £35, you are presented with 16 (18 if you count the amuse bouch and petit fours) elaborate tasting dishes. Spread over an up to three hour session this is definitely an experience to be savoured. The dishes are served, generally, in “courses” so you’ll get two or three at one time. You can also supplement the meal with a tasting selection of five wine for an extra £25 or seven glasses of wine and one dessert wine for an extra £45. With readers knowing how greedy I am you will know that such an offer I just couldn’t resist!
The restaurant deserves an entry which is almost as large as the one I wrote up for Fat Duck because, although not quite as scientifically engineered as Fat Duck, the meal took nearly as long and I believe the attention to detail paid to our dishes ran along similar lines.
As I mentioned in the introduction Jenny and I were the only diners in the restaurant tonight which led us to speculating what would happen on evenings where the restaurant didn’t have any bookings. Its hardly the type of meal which would attract walk-ins yet it seemed a waste to be all set up for fine dining and then have no one come in to take advantage of it. At any rate we appreciated the one on one service we received from restaurant manager Dominque Sejourne. During the meal I also saw the man himself, John McClement, take a sneaky peak into the restaurant.
First Thoughts
Physically speaking the restaurant isn’t very large and can accommodate up to 20 diners. I guess this helps the kitchen give the detail required to each of the dishes and also allow service to be quite individual and give the restaurant a sense of intimacy. I honestly don’t know how the restaurant makes its money because with the meal taking up to three hours to finish at a minimum it could probably do a maximum 40 covers in a night (realistically it will be much less than that) and with the meal itself being quite reasonably priced compared with the quality of the ingredients of the food one wonders where the profit margin is. Even building in the quite wine tasting menu I believe that the price is just too good to be sustainable. At any rate we were quite pleased to be able to sample the delights on offer.
What’s on Offer
I’m probably giving away a lot of the menu (though to be fair their own website has a pretty decent gallery itself) by going through each dish but we had so much fun eating it that I can’t help but share my excitement! Just a few comments about my photos – they didn’t turn out very well because the lighting in the restaurant was quite low and also the dishes appear much bigger than they actually were. On average the dishes, in substance, would fill a circle about 10cm in diameter I think. However, in combination I left the restaurant well satisfied and not at all hungry.
Final Thoughts
For the most part Taste of McClements gets their menu right. There were some dishes (normally anything that kind of had jelly like consistency) which were a bit strange for my palette but overall I enjoyed the dishes with many being an absolute pleasure to consume.
This is definitely a restaurant I’d recommend to the gastronomer or even anyone who is up for something a little different (though you may have to set aside the evening to do so!) This is fine dining at an absolute steal. (Oh! Also be sure to check out the toilet where you can re-perfume yourself!)