# Sunday, January 27, 2008

Which is to say, it shines out like a shaft of gold when all about is dark; the culinary scene is so very, very dark in Helsinki. If you can live with the geological pace of service, this restaurant provides the best food we have experienced in Helsinki.

Our initial impressions from their website were coloured by the outrageous mark-ups on their wine-list; most prices seemed like outright robbery. There were literally a handful of less insanely priced wines, and we chose two that should allow us to have a good time no matter what came out of the kitchen. Our impressions were improved by the design of the dining room, which was suitably minimalist with large tables that were well-spaced. It was a shame they felt the need to have background music playing.

Since we were dining on a Saturday there was only a surprise menu of various course-lengths to choose from. We took the bullet and went for the nine-course tasting menu.

It started off extremely well with three little 'gifts from the kitchen'. Firstly came a cep ravioli with cep foam in a cep broth. This was very mushroomy with great purity of flavours, quite delicious. Following on came blinis with turbot roe, smetana ice cream and red onion spaghetti. The blini had a great crunchy texture, the ice cream interesting and tasty, the spaghetti quite lovely and the roe very pleasing. It took forty minutes for these two amuses-bouches to be served. The final offering was duck confit with beetroot ice cream and beetroot broth. The duck was very rich and crunchy with an excellent flavour that was perfectly matched by the powerful beetroot, its slightly vinegary tang giving this a good bite.

The last amuse bouche followed very quickly after the second, so at this point we were a tad concerned about the random pacing of the meal, the slow arrival of the first real course demonstrated the speed was glacial. However, the dish was quite excellent. It was a shelled oyster with the oyster water whipped into a foam (a l'Arnsbourg) with exotic fruits. The fruit sweetness perfectly balanced the flavour of the oyster and the whole dish was a delight.

Foie gras followed, which is always a bit of a worry in places so far from foie gras-land. We were not disappointed by this. The piece of pan-fried foie was utterly delicious and the pate was just great with some good shavings of black truffle to add decadence. It came with a melon sorbet that had a delightfully pure flavour and a little 'Swiss roll' made from a sheet of melon stuffed with foie gras puree. Lovely stuff.

Next came a scallop with cauliflower and scallop risotto, shaved black truffles, tarragon sauce and a deep-fried tiny baby squid. This seemed to have been hanging about for a while before it had been served, but it was lovely. Not only was the scallop perfectly cooked, but the risotto was very flavoursome and matched the scallop wonderfully. Perhaps the calamari was a bit salty, but it did not detract from an otherwise excellent dish.

Our final fish course was a piece of sole with ginger sauce. David detests ginger so was pleased the fish had not been smothered with it as the fish was cooked wonderfully and had a great meatiness. This came with three little ravioli of lobster that had a reasonable lobster character but were not amazingly thrilling.

Then came a course to cleanse the palate. Carrot puree with tarragon sorbet, a granite of carrot and a lemon and ginger sorbet. Again, this looked like it had been waiting around a few minutes too long, as the sorbets had melted slightly. Yet, the flavours were most pleasing. The tarragon sorbet was particularly intense. David avoided the ginger option but it was extremely refreshing and powerfully flavoured.

We then had a truly marvellous piece of milk-fed veal that was served with sweetbread, shaved black truffles and a potato puree. The veal was meltingly tender and excellently cooked, as was the piece of sweetbread. The pace of the meal may have been sluggish in the extreme, but this was another dish that stopped us from making a scene as it was so good.

Three microscopic pieces of cheese followed. They were in reasonable condition but it was a shame that a restaurant of this obvious quality could not manage to have a cheese trolley.

Before dessert we chose three different glasses of dessert wine to share. They had an excellent selection on offer all available by the glass. The Deiss 1989 Altenberg Gerwurztraminer SGN was mind-buggeringly good.

The pre-dessert was the only really disappointing dish we had. It was titled 'Crepe Suzette a la Chez Dominique'. This consisted of a hard wafer of a crepe, on top of orange blossom ice cream and orange sauce misted with some Grand Marnier and orange water. It was quite bland, the wafer was too hard and it had obviously been hanging around (again) as the ice cream was liquid. It was a small dish so we were not forced to endure its boring nature for long.

Dessert itself was a concoction of berries with berry ice cream and sorbet, fresh berries and a berry sauce. Nice fresh flavours that perked one up at the end of the meal.

We did not stop for coffee as we had been there for over four hours and it was getting rather late. But the meal had been a great success. We were bowled over by the quality of the cooking, which was only slightly marred by the slowness in getting dishes to the table. You have to chose carefully from the wine list if you do not want to drink filth at outrageous prices. This was the best meal we'd had since we'd last been at l'Arnsbourg, demonstrating that this was indeed worthy of its two stars and marking Chez Dominique as a beacon in the culinary desert that is Helsinki.

Contact details and menus on their website.

Sunday, January 27, 2008 9:34:04 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
# Saturday, January 12, 2008

My packet of Lurpak butter has this to say about wonderful, wonderful mashed potato:

Lurpak's opinion of mash

When it is made properly it is a marvellous thing. I wouldn't make it with Lurpak Spreadable, though.

Saturday, January 12, 2008 5:25:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

I may have had a shitty time at Quick in France, but that made me more depressed than angry. I've just witnessed the true anger fast food establishments can generate at Doubting Dan's completely hilarious site. There is a man who is in touch with his anger; almost makes me want to go to Burger King with him. Almost... KFC is right out, though.

Saturday, January 12, 2008 5:09:38 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
# Friday, January 11, 2008

OK, my blog entry title is copied from here, but:

gorgon

Three hundred grams of quite ripe Gorgonzola Dolce slapped a satisfied smile across my face, even though it required wiping the excess cheese from it in order to discern the smile. I do like cheese, it is one of those partially-spoiled foods that can provide so much pleasure. Sigmund Freud had a bit of a problem with cheese, we are told, some problem with the symbolism relating to his lactating mother in a rancid, solid form. Weirdo.

Friday, January 11, 2008 11:22:43 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
# Thursday, January 10, 2008

Someone replied to my ad, Peter Sidebotham of Hand Picked Burgundy, and we went out for lunch. I can fault neither the lunch nor the company.

The first thing that needs saying about Andrew Edmunds is that the wine list is fantastic. It may be short, but there is an embarrassment of riches to choose from. We had two excellent bottles at knock-down prices that we greatly enjoyed.

I've been to Andrew Edmunds on countless occasions, and the food can sometimes be a touch miss rather than hit, but today it was on fine form. I started off with some really top hole rillettes of goose. This was very meaty and tasty, and came with an excellent compote of onions and some rather nice cornichons. Peter had some pigeon-flavoured pasta which he said he really enjoyed, it had big lumps of of pigeon meat in it which he claimed made it delicious.

I then had some tuna, which was seared almost to perfection, cooked on the outside and raw in the middle. Peter liked his venison stew, but said it didn't live up to the high quality of his starter. I suppose this was true of mine as well, but I still enjoyed it.

There were more great sweet wines on offer for dessert, and many offerings that I could have eaten if I wasn't so stuffed. May I recommend you choose the Baumard Quarts de Chaume should you be going here and need a half bottle of sweet wine. You should also choose the Clos des Lambrays 2002 if you need a red wine.

Lunch was excellent, Andrew Edmunds were on top form. The service was prompt and unobtrusive, the food was of a good quality and the wine list was just great. If I was being picky I would say they have too much of a white wine-friendly menu for their red wine-heavy wine-list, but they have enough things for one to prey upon.

A great lunch, made largely by the company (I feel the need to point out here that I paid for my share), but the food and wine were top bunny.

Andrew Edmunds, 46 Lexington Street, London W1R 3LH Tel: 020 7437 5708

Thursday, January 10, 2008 5:05:29 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
# Sunday, January 06, 2008

After the total shite of a Saturday, Sunday lunch was a complete treat. Le Buffet at Isbergues, an hour away from Calais provided excellent food and wine at complete bargain prices.

They had four set menus on offer, the most expensive of which was an inexpensive 60€. We chose a 45€ menu, which seemed to offer reasonable entertainment for the money.

We started off with three amuses bouches: a mousse of beetroot and some kind of fish, this was completely delicious, the fish was really tasty, not over-cooked at all. This came with a carpaccio of sea-bass with pistachios, which was a tad fishy but perfectly acceptable. The final amuse bouches was a soup of pumpkin, quite lovely. These all really perked me up and set me in the mood for an excellent meal.

The starters were great. I had some truly lovely foie gras with an apple sorbet and a cinnamon poached pear. This was brilliant, the parts all worked in harmony and were of excellent quality. The partner had some perfectly cooked scallops in a creamy mussel froth with some lovely root vegetable frites. The quality of these starters was very high for the price we were paying.

Le Buffet Scallop Starter

We all chose fillet of local beef for our main courses. It was perfectly aged and cooked as little as we asked for. It came with excellent mushrooms that were full of flavour and a little bowl of mashed potato and pumpkin velouté, which I could take or leave but everyone else liked. Again these were excellent quality for the price.

We had a white chocolate mousse with very rich dark chocolate sauce for dessert. The sauce was very powerful, and the mousse quite delicate, they matched perfectly. The chocolate was served with a passion fruit and mango sorbet, which was quite refreshing. They also brought out some green and orange lollipops with this that were hilarious but a bit too sweet to finish.

The menu was very well-balanced and in command of seasonal variation. And, it has to be said, a complete bargain. The wine list was very well chosen and had perfectly reasonable mark-ups. Finishing off with a huge bumper of green Chartreuse really put a smile on my face. An excellent meal that didn't break the bank and left us all with a warm glow of satisfaction. The best place to eat in the Pas-de-Calais, without a doubt.

Restaurant Le Buffet, 22 rue de la Gare, Lieu-dit Molinghem, 62330 Isbergues. Tel: +33 (0)3 21 25 82 40 http://www.le-buffet.com/

Sunday, January 06, 2008 4:23:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

We are in France to pick up cheap Champagne and stopped off at the hamburger chain Quick for a much-delayed lunch. I thought I was so hungry I could eat anything, how wrong I was.

The food was totally, stomach-churningly, soul-meltingly vile. I can hardly bring myself to think about it again so utterly nauseating was it. I've had many nasty experiences in my life and this will be a memorably disgusting one.

I ordered a Supreme Cheese burger, that was wet, with meat that tasted vaguely of piss and cheese that stretches the definition of cheese to beyond breaking point. The bits of fried cheese they offered as a seasonal special were too vomit-inducing to eat more than the smallest mouthful one could foolishly ingest. They had 'rustic frites' as another special. These were slightly raw in the middle but tasted only of burnt potato skin. They, too, buggered the imagination as far as horribleness was concerned.

What I shall euphemistically call 'the meal' was a ranking depressing experience in recent years. To be honest, even the three day old wet sandwiches served up in the Woolwich loony bin have more claim to be edible than this shit. I felt personally offended by the total crap they had the gaul (ha!) to charge us money for. It was completely inedible. No, it was worse than that, it was the contents of the seventh circle of culinary hell. I've had more enjoyable kicks to the testicles than this offensive shite. Never, ever again. No way. Not on your nelly. Death is too good for the designers of the Quick menu, as far as I am concerned. Way below sub-interest, to be a bit briefer.

Sunday, January 06, 2008 4:22:12 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback
# Saturday, December 29, 2007

Dr Wadge of the Food Standards Agency has made the excellent point on his blog that so-called 'detox' diets and supplements are a waste of time and money. They are obviously a pile of toss and anyone who buys them is misguided at the very least. I couldn't agree with his suggestion of spending the money you save not buying them on Neil Young albums, though, perhaps Bent or Lemon Jelly...

Saturday, December 29, 2007 7:12:01 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback
# Friday, September 14, 2007

The great British fry-up is under threat. Older readers will remember that in Peter Palmer's opinion we will not be missing much. Now the best breakfast one can get is in one's own kitchen.

Friday, September 14, 2007 3:58:59 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [1]  |  Trackback
# Wednesday, August 29, 2007

After our hearty but unchallenging lunch at Chez Yvonne we moved distinctly upmarket to the two-star Au Crocodile. This venerable restaurant (opened in 1971) was all kitted-out to advertise their new TGV tasting menu, created to welcome the fast train route into Strasbourg, with model trains and station names everywhere. We didn't opt for this menu and instead went for a different tasting menu.

After we had chosen out menu and some great wines from an extensive but geriatric wine list, which included such horrors as a selection of 1970s Pinot Blancs or Muscat from the fifties, we were brought out some spoons of nitrogen-frozen mint foam. Nice enough, but nothing special. This was followed by a 'cappucino' of cardamom and carrot. Again this was amusing enough but somewhat trite.

Oddly, the menu offered a choice for the first course, but for nothing else. David went for a boneless quail stuffed with raw goose liver, which was quite excellent, whereas everyone else has grilled duck foie gras with rhubarb and sweet and sour sauce. This foie was extremely good and perfectly grilled, but the rhubarb and sweet and sour flavours were somewhat overwhelming.

We then moved on to roasted sea bass with mashed carrots and potato dumplings. The fish was fresh, flavourful and so skillfully cooked it was almost raw. The mashed carrots could have been straight out of a jar for three-to-six month-olds. There was a degree of debate about the potato dumplings, Daniel loved them whilst everyone else found their play-dough texture and lack of flavour disgusting.

Now for the real disaster. Why do French classical chefs of the old school feel the need to churn out Asian/fusion shit. It doesn't make them modern and it doesn't make the diners happy. Two skewered langoustines were topped by a lemongrass foam. With this there was a risotto of flavourless chanterelles topped by a fried quail's egg itself garnished with flakes of fried ginger.

Underneath the vile foam the langoustines had a mouth-coating rich texture and were cooked to perfection. They deserved better.

A palate-cleansing oxtail consommé with a herb-filled ravioli floating in it followed. Considering how repulsive consommé normally is this was a delight, light yet full of flavour.

The meat course sounded quite dull: Lamb chop with white beans, artichoke, broad beans and garlic cream. However, the lamb was of the very finest quality and cooked quite brilliantly. The white beans were cooked in some animal fat and so therefore better than they sounded, whilst the garlic cream was packed with garlic goodness and rich, creamy flavour. The dish ended up being most pleasing, and not just another boring piece of lamb.

The cheese trolley was big and heavy, befitting a restaurant of this calibre. The cheeses themselves had obviously been very well-stored: the Munster was in great condition and there was a truly impressive tomme de chevre. Even the Epoisses didn't stink of piss.

Another dish more suited to the elderly and toothless was gratinated rhubarb, strawberries and banana. No.

Our final course was strawberries, blueberries and raspberries in a bowl with lychee foam. The foam has a quite nauseating texture, but tasted fine. The fruit was good and fresh although the blueberries were farmed. This was a bit odd considering that Alsace has the best wild blueberries in France.

Petits fours and chocolates included nice patés de fruits.

The meal left us with mixed emotions. The quality of ingredients and the standards of preparation were undoubtedly very high. We found imagination and real personality to be lacking. It was a very pleasant meal and a lovely restaurant but it has clearly seen better days; it is closer to losing another star rather than re-gaining its third.

The most vivid memory will probably be of the effortless way the sixty-something Mme Jung presided over the dining room in her impossibly tight-fitting dress and bouffant hair that would rival any of Gaudi's creations.

Finally, for the porcelanophile, we should note that every dish and amuse-bouches came served in different tableware from a variety of manufacturers, all white and elegant.

Contact details and menus on the Au Crocodile website.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007 5:55:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback

Four of us traveled to Alsace for a weekend's dining, what better place to start than one of the most traditional dining establishments in Strasbourg?

Chez Yvonne S'Burjerstuwel is a cosy little place right near the cathedral. Daniel and David visited before quite by chance a couple of years ago, and so impressed were we by the quality of traditional food on offer that we thought a second visit was in order.

The menu is simple enough, filled with Alsace treats that should keep anyone satisfied and stuffed. We started off with some snails, presskopf and some foie gras. Their snails are the best we've had in Alsace, served out of their shells in a pitted plate filled with bubbling butter, Riesling and garlic. The are quite delicious. Jeff seemed very satisfied with his presskopf, which was served in a jar of reasonable size and kept him going for a while. The goose foie gras terrine was excellent.

We then moved onto the main courses, which included the main reason David wanted to re-visit. On the previous visit the waiter described a dish called Maennerstolz as a "Good sausage, big sausage, good sausage for men!". Upon our return from the trip we discovered that said sausage can be up to a metre long and translates as 'man's pride'. How could we refuse?

Maennerstolz man's pride sausage This time, we didn't. The owner of the establishment came up to me as I was gawping at the sausage and said "It is a good job you are not a woman if your mouth falls open every time you see a big sausage." The sausage itself was really good, very meaty and smokey. Dan and Jeff both chose huge slices of suckling pig and Daniel went for a traditional coq au Riesling. Coq au RieslingThe meat in this was sadly a little dry and tough and was the least successful dish we ordered.

The desserts are quite formulaic. The Granite of vendanges tardives Gewurztraminer was delicious and pleasingly vinous. There was an option of mixed sorbet swimming in eau de vie which was both refreshing and pleasingly alcoholic. Good as it was, skip the creme brulée, it is just too much like every other creme brulée.

The wine list was quite short, but there were a few gems worth picking out. The Andre Ostertag wines are very good. They have some great Marc Kreydenweiss eau de vie with which to end your meal.

This is a great place for large portions of traditional food. Don't go if you are afraid of meat, or suggestive comments from your serving staff. It is quite the bargain for traditional food of this quality.

Contact details and menu on the Chez Yvonne website.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007 4:55:22 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |  Trackback