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Week 6 – The Grapes of Wrath

May 20, 2018 by admin

Bolney Vineyard

Three days out of five this week were devoted to Wine. A visit to a couple of Vineyards on Wednesday, a day off for Wine Revision the following day, and then Friday morning the WSET Level 2 Award in Wine and Spirits Exam.

As mentioned previously the Wine studying was stressing many people out and we were all so relieved to just get the Exam over with so we could focus on our Food and Cooking. The exam itself is 50 multiple choice questions that lasts an hour. As with many multiple choice exams there are 4 potential answers to choose from and in many cases two answers were readily discountable, and therefore you had a 50/50 chance even if you were unsure of the answer. This coupled with the modest pass rate of 55% makes it sound relatively straightforward, however in the previous year there were many students who failed. One of the difficulties is that so many of the Grapes we studied produce wines that can differ in character –  even from the same region – and can vary further when the same grape is used in another country in a hotter climate or at a higher altitude etc – all elements that can effect the resulting wine.

An example of a question could be “Premium wines made from Cabernet Sauvignon grape age well because they have ?” And the possible answers are

– high tannins and low acidity

– low tannins and high acidity

– low tannins and low acidity

– high tannins and high acidity

unless you have studied well you will not have the answer in your brain and therefore it becomes guesswork. The answer in this case is high acidity and tannin. Did you guess right ? In any event it is now done and we all await the results, as without a pass we will not graduate.

It did help visiting the Vineyards earlier in the week – in fact we went to two,  Bolney and Ridgeview, both in West Sussex.

Simon briefs the students

Ridgeview is only make sparkling wines but some which have already won prestigious awards,it is family owned having begun its life in 1995. They are now producing around 300,000 bottles a year from 6 Vineyards. Simon Roberts who has taken over the business from his Father demonstrated am amazing passion for the business as he took us around and organised the Wine Tasting. All of Ridgeviews wines are named after London establishments and a curious fact was provided to us when asked why this is the case – the Inventor of the ‘method champenoise’ was not French but an Englishman – Mr Christopher Merret.

Mr. Merret attended the Royal College of Physicians and produced a paper in December 1662 on winemaking,  describing the process of making sparkling wines involving a second fermentation at which stage sugar was added to provide the bubbles. This process was being described several years before the monk Dom Perignon began his own Champagne experiments in France. Who would have guessed it !

Yes this is the shape of a Cork before insertion

The other vineyard was Bolney which is producing still and sparkling wines all with fruity undertones – the basic style of English wines. All of the their vines are European but grafted onto original American vines  as a pest called Flaxus had killed off all European vines back in the 1700s and the only Vines that were hardy enough to survive were those imported from the USA. We also learnt that there are currently almost 600 Vineyards in the UK and in 2016 they produced 4.15 bottles of wine. 66% of all bottles are sparkling, and the major two grape varieties grown are Chardonnay and Pinot Noir.

 

 

 

The only real disappointment was that in neither of the Vineyards were we able to properly see the Winery in action, and what would have been excellent would have been to see the sparkling wine going through the process of having the frozen yeast deposit in the neck being cut away and then topped up with sugar ( dosage) and rebottled etc. We saw the machinery and the tracks the bottles would follow but no practical example.

The visits were fun though and many students ended up purchasing boxes of wine, so Leiths are now well supporting the English Wine Industry.

Did we cook anything this week ? Yes we did  – it was creative duck day wherein we were obliged to Confit the legs and make a Duck Jus, but then were given free reign on how to serve the rest of the duck. My own concoction involved using the Confit meat with potato to make Duck Croquettes, and I used them as a starter, with my main course comprising of pan fried duck breast in a Honey and Chinese 5 spice glaze, accompanied by Wilted baby gem, a soya gel, crispy shards of duck skin and a deep fried egg yolk. This last component was one of the most advanced elements I had tried and it involved separating the egg and dusting the fragile yolk in flour,egg wash and panko crumbs before deep frying at 180c for a minute or so. As you can imagine the yolk is so easily broken so I was praised for attempting to be creative in this way. ( And of course I did break a few yolks on the way )

Creative Duck Day

I was pretty pleased with my dish – albeit the Jus was greasy and I really wished I had not plated with it, but we were then led around other kitchens to see what other students had produced, and there were some spectacular and beautifully presented dishes. We have some real talent at school and even if I was pleased enough with my own plate I was in awe of some of the others.

We also made a Pate De Campagne using chicken livers and minced Pork together with Pistachios. This was quite simple to prepare and really tasty, especially when served with the Onion Confit we had prepared, and the Walnut and Raisin Bread which grew to be a monster.

A bit of a strange week focusing on the Grape but next week we are back to cooking full time without the preoccupation of Wine studying on our minds. So it’s full steam ahead to week 7 and back to the dreaded and time consuming  timeplans !!!

 

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS, LEITHS LIFE

Hide – Worth seeking out !

May 19, 2018 by admin

 

If you decide to visit Hide after reading this review please take note that the restaurant is very aptly named in that we walked straight past its nondescript And well hidden frontage and continued walking down Piccadilly towards Marble Arch. By the time we arrived at another excellent dining destination – Coya- I realised that we had ventured to far and we made an abrupt U turn and headed back towards Green Park station. Hide and Seek – where are you Ollie ?

Actually I was a huge fan of Ollie Dabbous’s first restaurant, simply called Dabbous, that opened back in 2012. Somehow I managed to be in the know at the time and secured a table early on in its run, thereafter becoming the latest hot ticket in town as reservations became like gold dust in what was a relatively tiny Industrial space requiring you to literally books months and months in advance to try Ollies take on modern Cuisine.

Whilst opening a few other ventures in the meantime, including the restaurant at the Henrietta Hotel, the doors of Dabbous closed permanently earlier this year, presumably for him to focus his attention on this new huge Dining Space set over 2 floors overlooking Green Park.The Restaurant has apparently cost £20 Million to put together and whilst it was not clear how this cash has been spent there is a grandiose Art Deco Wooden Staircase impressively linking Hide Ground to Hide Above but surprisingly Above is no more luscious then Ground which I think is a mistake. I would have thought there was an opportunity here to create a different ambience over the two levels but in fact the decor is almost identical. Notwithstanding my own personal thought on decor, Ollie is not taking any chances with his new venture. He has surrounded himself with quality people including Lucas Shelby – National Chef of the Year 2917 and others from well known establishments such as L’Autre Pied and Le Manoir. Additionally the restaurant is a co Venture with Hedonism Wines contributing to a cellar of 6000 bottles – the largest in London. These wines are all contained on an iPad which you can gleefully play around with hours if you so desire, but I restricted myself to a few minutes and found a Russian / Soviet Champagne for £600 from 1968 – maybe a nod to Hedonisms Russian Oligarch Owner.

There are wine pairings on offer with the 8 course tasting menu that costs £95 with the wine at an additional £65. We are at lunch though and do not feel like an extended 8 course meal and therefore go A La Carte. The menu is split into Grazing – snacks ranging from £3 to £9 and then the more conventional Starters/Mains etc with starters between £12 and £16 And Mains from £26 to £32.

Flatbread

From the grazing menu we go for a Charcoal Flatbread with CEP shavings And Lemon Thyme – raw thinly sliced mushrooms on a beautifully baked bread – a lovely little alternative to the normal bread and butter side whilst awaiting the main event. There were also other versions available involving Ricotta and crushed green herbs or Sesame Labnah, pickled vegetables and crushed seeds.

Mrs.West started with Chesnut parcels in a light duck broth – little Tortellini shaped parcels bobbing about in a pungent and intend,y flavoured broth – actually deeply coloured as opposed to the light broth advertised but so good I was not offered a taster. I had opted for the Red Prawns with fragrant herbs in a chilled broth made from prawn shells. It was a picture on a plate, raw delicate prawns complimented with strong dill and fragrant aniseedy baby fennel. The broth was earthy and well balanced – a delightfully refreshing dish perfect for a Summers Day. I had also opted to pay the £18 supplement for additional Exmoor Caviar – adding a little extra saltiness to the meal but unclear as to where in Exmoor they had unearthed Sturgeon?

Since discovering Sweetbreads some years ago I cannot resist them when found on a Menu and here was no exception. This was to be roasted Veal Sweetbread with an unusual accompaniment of Smoked Almond Praline coupled with cooked and raw root vegetables. This was a revelatory meal with the almond sauce complimenting the unctuous sweetbread perfectly and the texture provided by crunchy baby turnips and radishes. Mrs West chose one of her Restaurant staples – Octopus- another picture of a plate having been barbecued and dressed with Moscatel Grapes, Lovage And White Miso. Another meal where not one morsel came my way but I was advised was soft,sweet but with a little smokiness and crunch from the Hot coals. The rest of the menu was also extremely inviting with a Grilled Spice Quail with date syrup,Globe artichoke and toasted grains looking very much like a meal that would require testing on a second visit.

Ollie has invested in a soft serve Ice Cream maker for this restaurant and on offer in the desserts were both Sheeps Milk and Barley Malt ice creams. However we chose a Pear Sorbet with Chervil Syrup And Toasted Angelica Seeds – an unusual combination – but the Chervil Syrup was amazingly good and who would have thought that it would go so well with the intensely flavoured Pear Sorbet.

Anothe dessert – which I believe could become their signature dessert – was the Warm Acorn Cake with smoked caramel and a choice of liquor to flavour it, served with Cornish clotted cream on the side.

The Cake was akin to a Brioche sitting in a small round pot upon which the Smokey Caramel sauce was poured over together with our choice of rum. The taste was a little like a luxury bread and butter pudding with added caramel and alcohol and was finished hastily whilst piping hot. Exceptional.

We were now more than satisfied, and whilst the Cheese and Savoury selection looked curious, including a Tarte Fine of Kentish Apples and homemade black pudding this would also need to await a second outing.

So other than a chance missed Decor wise, a fantastic addition to Londons Dining scene,  and whilst as good as anything produced at the now defunct Dabbous hopefully the size of the new restaurant will avoid the necessity to book 12 months ahead.

A curious note to end with – the new Restaurant will be open all day offering breakfast with croissants at £4 etc. Was it this Cafe style opening hours that had led half of the Ground floor of the restaurant to be populated by young families (many of Russian descent) with prams and kids running around? This is not the atmosphere I was expecting and not one I enjoyed – this is not MacDonalds or PizzaExpress and to my knowledge does not have a kids menu ? Obviously evenings will be different, but this was a little surprising and whilst clearly not detracting from the 5 star food did affect noise levels and comfort in the restaurant, albeit I am sure as long as people are spending their hard earned cash then Ollie will not be complaining – £20Million is a lot to recover in Londons highly competitive Restaurant scene. Go now !

 

Rating

Food 5  Blazingly Hot Pan 

Service 5  Blazingly Hot Pan 

Hide, 85 Piccadilly, W1 8JB

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS, RESTAURANT REVIEWS

Week 5 – Sweet Week !

May 12, 2018 by admin

Plated Dessert Day – Michelin Star worthy ?

With the Bank Holiday Monday and the Friday scheduled as an optional day focusing on an all day lecture  entitled “ Starting a Food Business” many students took this week as a very short one and were in the kitchen for only 3 days. Those 3 days were all based around Sweet things with the Tuesday being a “ Mis En Place” day for the following days highly anticipated “Plated Dessert” event- a chance to show off our presentation skills using various components of sweet products we were to prepare over a 2 day period.

First off though we were to make our own breakfast of Pain Perdu (French Toast  to you and me) accompanied by Pan Roasted Strawberries and Elderflower Sabayon. The task was to ensure we all understood how to make a sabayon and tick that box. I certainly ticked the box as to preparing the components of the dish but gave no thought to plating and basically piled my strawberries onto my toast followed swiftly by my sabayon, which, despite being the right consistency etc, just filled my plate ending up like a cup of sick on a plate. Amazingly my teacher commented that it looked appetising – I had to steal myself wondering if he was being ironic or not. Here’s my effort which I was too ashamed to post on Instagram – especially when I saw the same dish being beautifully plated by other students. The taste was faultless but maybe I would need to up my game “presentation wise” for the big day tomorrow !

The centrepiece of our Plated Dessert was to be an Almond Pannacotta so this was duly made after infusing toasted almonds with a warmed up mix of milk/cream and sugar, then scalded and being mixed with gelatine so that it would set overnight. A quick almond crumble and a Lemon Gel were wizzed up and these would be added to additional sweet things on the following day, including a Hibiscus Meringue and the very messy spun sugar we would entangle ourselves with ! This basically involved making a caramel with the addition of liquid glucose and once arriving at the temperature of 152c having a viscose mix that could be “spun” and made into threads. In theory this enabled you to be as creative as your mind would allow you to be. EG – Making latticed baskets on the back of lightly oiled ladles, coils around Knife Steels, angel hair balls etc. In practice it meant that I was desperately trying to make a latticed disc by spinning the sugar over a Cutter, but the experience was far more difficult and messy than anticipated. It is certainly something that you need practice at, and the schools kitchen is better to do this in than at home due to the mess that ensues and the difficulty of cleaning pans and utensils with hardened caramel encrusted upon them. Having said this I had actually tried at home the weekend before and my kitchen became a nightmare with spoons and pans coated in molten sugar and shards of hardened caramel scattered across the floor – all being cleaned up before my wife came home to avoid EU kitchen crisis talks !

Effectively our Plated Dessert was Chefs choice in that we could decide how many, and how much of the various components on our finished plate as we so desired – providing the Pannacotta was the central theme. We were also provided with fresh apricots and raspberries to use as required. I made a quick Aprict and Vanilla Purée as I has a plating idea that required streaks of a colourful purée on one side of my plate. The end result was something I was quite proud of ( despite the consistency of my purée being difficult to paint with in the way I wanted) and came as close as I could to a dessert you may see in a Michelin star restaurant. Other students also produced some beautiful dishes proving evidence that a relatively small selection of sweets could be presented in so many various ways- an enjoyable and informative exercise.

The only Non Sweet “Cook” we would be preparing during the week was a Focaccia which we had prepared a simple version of during the Beginners Term ( an age ago !) , but were advised this would be more like the real thing – and it certainly was ! Everybody loved them ! Again we had to start the process the day before by making a “ Biga” basically a “Starter” involving flour,water and a tiny amount of fresh yeast that would sit overnight and help to enrich and ferment our Bread with an enhanced flavour.

The following day was a long process involving folding the mix as carefully as possible to aerate it,  proving it, and allowing it to be gently coaxed and oiled into a large baking tray before sprinkling with more oil, Rosemary and Sea Salt, and eventually the bake. The kitchen smelt wonderful as the bread began its baking time and the scent of Rosemary filled the room – we could not wait to get them out of the Oven and try them as we were on a full days cook and nobody had eaten lunch – 16 ravenous Students all clock watching at 4 having spent the rest of the day making Petit Fours. To a man ( or Woman)  I think the breads all came out successfully and thankfully in generous proportions. Some commented it was the best Focaccia they had ever tasted !

As mentioned most of the morning had been spent making Petit Fours which was not too stressful and quite fun. We all had to make Chocolate Truffles individually, Macaroons between 2, and the Table of 4 would make Nougat, Salted Chocolate Caramels, Lemon Marshmallows and a Passion Fruit Pate De Fruit ( basically a Jelly).

Each of us took responsibility for one of these tasks and produced a table of wonderful looking Petit Fours that were also photographed by the School and used on Social Media- one of our students recognising her burnt hands on a Twitter feed !

Other than a Demo the day before on how to make the above mentioned Petit Fours, there were non others during this week as one of the other afternoons had been set aside for One to One discussions with your class Tutor – a kind of Progress Report. Whilst various individuals would have specifics to discuss the overall feedback was again – “You need to up your Finesse” this is becoming the class Mantra and I think we all need to organise a T- Shirt with this slogan for our Graduation Day !

Next week will all be about Wine as the week culminates with our WSET Grade 2 Exam – we have a day off to revise, and a compulsory days visit to, not one, but two Vineyards ! The school (and we ) are desperate for us to pass the exam, and I think are very worried about our chances !

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: LEITHS LIFE

Scullys – The truth is out there !

May 6, 2018 by admin

Since opening his first restaurant in 2002 Yotam Ottelenghi has been the inspiration for many dinner parties across the UK, and has almost single handily introduced us to jazzed up salads, Mediterranean influences and ingredients from far and wide not heard of before by many aspiring cooks following his recipe books at home.

His 5 restaurants and delicatessens are usually heaving with people and the Ottelenghi empire has been a resounding success. As the group expanded we hear from time to time predictable staff fall out, and his protégés and other trained chefs moving on to do their own things- the latest being Scully in St James market a small back street area, that up until a year ago, was a dark desert but now boasts the Michelin starred Aquavit and the very impressive and exotic Ikoyi. So Scully is in good company when you consider its neighbours, but who is and what is Scully ? The Who – Ramael Scully was born in Malaysia, brought up in Sydney with a Mother of Chinese/ Indian descent and an Irish/ Balinese Father. That’s 6 nations potential food influences before you even start considering where Ramael has worked and travelled to. He arrived in the UK in 2004 and worked with Ottelenghi and the team eventually becoming head chef and creator of many of the dishes at NOPI, not to far away in Warwick Street, Soho. Not everyone I know are huge fans of Nopi so when I advised them I was to try the new Ramael Scully solo Restaurant there was not a lot of excitement registered.

Our Reservation was late after attending the play “Frozen” across the road at The Haymarket Theatre ( awful,slow, depressing play) and I needed a drink quickly after that experience.

 

 

 

The first thing that hits you upon entering are the rows and rows of huge jars of colourful – What ? – stacked up on shelves in the lobby area.

Let’s hope there are no human body parts in those jars

Some fruits and vegetables recognisable but others either the wrong colour or simply a mystery. Various products fermenting and pickling  but Green peaches ? Egg yolks ?

We were then led past the open kitchen area to a lovely booth like table for four and provided with our menus. First off was some wine. The list was not so large but with some interestingly sounding, but not so familiar bottles. We chose a Bill Downie from Australia, a Biodynamic wine using the Petit Verdot grape , a grape not so popular in Bordeaux anymore due to its late ripening and harvesting. The bottle was £45 and full bodied with a deep red/ inky colour with lots of black fruit flavours, very rounded and a hint of vanilla. Good start – needed some alcohol!

We were provided with a snack to keep us going – some little chickpeas that had been roasted with kefir lime leaves that tasted very aromatic and moorish, especially at 10.15pm as our table of four had not eaten for a very long time !

Turning to the menu- eclectic would be the word to use, or one of them, exciting, mysterious and containing many unknown elements – Very X Files – required further investigation or explanation by Mulder and Scully, or at least the Waitress ! It was split into snacks(4) , starters (6) and mains (6)and of course were meant for sharing. Actually we all agreed it was the sort of menu easier to say what we did not want as we were ordering 9 dishes which was just over half of the entire menu. First up were Puff beef tendons with Kilpatrick and Oyster Mayo (£9). Oysters Kilpatrick are a classic English recipe involving oysters with Worcestershire sauce, cheese and bacon. Here we had gigantic puffs of beef tendons that you could dip into an oyster mayo that sat upon the aforementioned ingredients.  Great   Type of snack food, would go well with a beer. My friends were a little shocked by the enormous puffs that arrived but I had expected something akin to a giant pork scratching and I was not a million miles away from what turned up.

Next up were crispy baby Sicilian artichokes with a black shallot Ailoli (£8.50) Another unusual dish, not exactly very colourful, but,  as it said on the tin, very crispy, dry admittedly,  but when mixed with the lovely oniony purée and little flecks of burnt shallots around the edges, was another hit.

Arepa, Eggplant Sambal And a Bergamot Labneh followed (£9). This would be the only “bread” we would be entertaining on the table, but you would not mistake it for bread, it’s made from a ground maize dough and here was puffed up into a flying saucer shape ( more X Files references) filled with air, being able to be broken up and dipped into the eggplant,pepper,tomato sambal and creamy labneh to make a satisfying mouthful. Then we had something that would be more refreshing unusual and really worked well. An early season Tomato and Coconut Salad , Green Strawberries and Tomato shrub. The list of ingredients felt like they should not be on the same plate.

The strawberries were in fact pickled green strawberries from one of the jars we had seen at the reception area, the coconut shredded, and the bowl also contained Tomato juices, which as my friend Claire exclaimed was “her dream Tomato Juice” . This really was a palet cleanser, as well as being an exotic and unusual salad, and we ended up with four spoons fighting for the remaining Tomato juice in the bottom of the bowl. Lastly from the starters was Char grilled sprouting broccoli , Chiankiang Vinegar and salted egg  yolk (£9.50) which our waiter advised was his favourite on the menu. I have no idea what the Vinegar was but the broccoli was beautifully grilled and to the side was a kind of egg yolk purée smeared across the plate with additions which we were explained to us but my brain cannot recall as by now was in overload. In fact each and every dish appeared to have so many previously unheard of ingredients (which I was not writing down and was drinking lots of red wine)  that I will not be able to do the Restaurant justice. Indeed the restaurant was already thinning out as it was relatively late and it appeared the waiters had more time to explain each and every dish and relished the list of ingredients they were imparting to us. With a keen interest in food and method of preparation etc I was very happy with this, albeit I can imagine it would not be everybody’s cup of tea.

Ok, onto the mains. Octopus with Salt baked Avocado and black garlic. 3 issues to be reported connected with this dish. First off  – “London transformed me Octopus wise “ . This was a hilarious comment from my friend Alex at the point of ordering the Octopus which had us all in tears. It sounds like one of those amusing comments reported in Time Out in their weekly page dedicated to  what strange things are heard in the streets of London.  It was directed at the fact that whilst living in France Alex would never order Octopus from a menu but since arriving in London it  has become one of his favourites because of the quality and the way it is prepared in London restaurants. Second, at this point the actual Chefs were bringing the food to us and asking us if we want the story behind each dish, which we certainly did. The explanation involved the Octopus being prepared in Sous Vide style for 6 hours at 75 degrees and thereafter flashed under the grill, the Avocados being baked in salt before being opened up and mixed with a little fresh avocado to retain the vibrant colour and then blitzed together with other ingredients and so on. On the side were some lovely little skinned Tomatoes, still whole, and maybe pickled and roasted ? Our chef was clearly pleased with the technical preparation that he was responsible for and his enthusiasm was infectious, and the taste of the dish justified the long preparation. (No photo as it came out blurry !)

We thought the Octopus involved a long prep but the Beef short rib Pastrami, Horseradish and pistachio involved beef in a brined marinade for 7 days and a process too complicated to remember and report but just to know it involved sodium nitrate to keep the beef a pink colour ( or it would turn an unappetising grey). The beef fell apart at the touch of a fork and it reminded you of a posh version of a pastrami sandwich from Brick Lane, which I think that was the objective. This plate of course had the added luxury of a Horseradish purée, pistachios coating the beef, baby carrots and nasturtium leafs to garnish. It was impeccable and would draw me back for a second visit in itself. Lastly was the Pork Belly with an XO sauce and Cime De Rapa. The XO is a Chinese sauce which supposedly contains all of the most luxuriant ingredients the Chinese could muster in days gone by. Cime di Rapa are Sicilian turnip tips with a very bitter taste but offset by the sweet XO sauce and blobs of onion purée on the side. The slow roasted pork belly had lots of fat adding to the umami taste in the mouth and if you could manage a bit of pork puff on the same fork you had another texture to enjoy at the same time. Another technically beautifully prepared dish that I would come back for tomorrow.

Notwithstanding the fact we were all somewhat full, the food was so good we wanted to see if the desserts could also deliver. My friend Alex is a sweet fiend so we chose 3 dishes to share and were presented one additional dessert free as the kitchen was closing and they had only one left and we were the last guests in the restaurant. No complaints there !

Desserts all ran to £6.50 to £7 and again were all original. A wacky parsnip and coconut sorbet with Pandan and coffee – another combination which seems alien (X files again !) together on a plate but had a curious but not unpleasant taste.

White Choc /Pink Peppercorns etc

Caramelised White Chocolate with grapefruit and Pink peppercorns, this came in the firm of huge shards of white chocolate studded with aromatic pink pepper sitting atop burnt grapefruit. Great taste combination.  Then a frozen ( harking back to our show which by then was thankfully a distant memory) Ginger Marshmallow with Rhubarb.

The marshmallow being frozen had the taste and consistency of half marshmallow/ half ice cream (in a very pleasing way) which coupled with the sour rhubarb was very pleasant. Our free dessert was the Matcha Ice Cream, Malt Cookie and Miso, a sort of avant garden Creme Brûlée, The Miso sitting in little blobs atop a malty biscuit encasing the matcha ice cream. The Miso here though was somewhat overpowering and was the one dessert we were not so keen on.

Midnight came around and we were still in the restaurant whilst the kitchen were cleaning down behind us. 2 of us had to make a dash for last trains, but I did so after congratulating the kitchen crew and shaking the hand of the chef who had been telling us the stories of our dishes. All four of us thought the inventiveness and originality of the food exemplary, and already commented that a return visit must be in order. Scully seems to have taken the heart of Ottelenghi and Nopi and ratched it up by quite a few notches to produce some technically astounding dishes.

The bill came to £320 for 4 including wine which for the level of food, the number of dishes and the location – just off Piccadilly Circus was not unreasonable. Incredibly you now have three restaurants more or less sitting next door to each other in a quiet location steps away from busy Piccadilly Circus which I would be happy to revisit anytime. This is the truth, and it is out there …..

Rating – Food – Blazingly Hot Pan 5/5 

Service – Also a 5 

Scully, 4 St. James Market, SW1Y 4 AH

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS, RESTAURANT REVIEWS

Camille O’Sullivan – Fringe Diva from Cork

May 5, 2018 by admin

A small group of us went to see Camille O’Sullivan a couple of weeks back at the wonderful Wiltons Music Hall in Whitechapel.

If you do not know Wilton’s you are missing a real historical and curious treat of a location. It can trace its history back to 1743 when it was originally an ale house, being purchased by a John Wilton in 1850 who enlarged the concert room ( that had been built 11 years previously) to become the Magnificent New Music Hall accommodating 1500 people. It was a successful location for 30 years or so before being ravaged by fire and then being purchased by the East End Mission and thereafter being operated as a Mission for many years.

After several reincarnations it was due to be demolished in the 1960s but a campaign was launched to save it and after being Grace II listed and adequate funds were found it reopened as a Theatre and Concert Hall in 1997. Between 2007 and 2015 more works have taken place to ensure a safe environment and utilising money from the Heritage Lottery Fund the building was repaired conservatively retaining many original features so that it is now established as a kind of shabby/chic environment where you are able to see original features, view a small museum and drink cocktails/ eat pizzas and marvel at an array of eclectic performances in its high ceilings original Music Hall.

Wilton’s Bar

Main Entrance area

So now you know about it you can go there yourself !

 

 

 

 

Turning to the artist Camille O’Sullivan. I was not aware of her until I read an advertisement regarding her concerts at Wilton’s where she should would be performing on a weeks engagement,and the flyer showed she would be singing songs from Bowie/Cave/Radiohead and Brel. Apparently she was named by The Daily Telegraph as one of the top 25 performances ever on Later with Jools Holland and I cannot understand why I did not know her as her favourite artists seemed to coincide with mine.

I have read she is regarded as a fringe Diva and that’s a great description of her and her act. She arrived in a Cape lit up with fairy lights and on the stage was a gingerbread house, rabbits and a wolf, which I understood was to give the impression of a children’s fairytale inspired by her reading of such stories to her daughter at night.

Her eclectic choice of songs ranged from Bowie’s “Five Years” (with Pink Floyds Eclipse tagged on the end), “All the Young Dudes”” Blackstar” and “Where are we now”to Nick Caves “The Ship Song”,from Dylans  “Twist of fate” to Cohen’s “Anthems” contains the beautiful phrase quoted by Camille before performing the song of “Theres a crack in everything and that’s how the light gets in”. Delving back further into history we had an astounding, emotional and poignant version of “Look Mummy no hands” a song originally written by Dollie Keane of Fascinating Aida fame. Then we had the amazing Jaque Brels “ Amsterdam” performed a Capella with just her own foot stomp to accompany her.

She comes across as a warm and genuine character and many members of the audience were in tears from some of her renditions of the songs. It was a rollercoaster ride from Goldfrapp to Radiohead to a rocky encore of Princes “Purple Rain” which I certainly did not see coming. In between songs she made modest and amusing comments and asked the audience not to get her started as she was from Cork and could talk forever.

In an interview before the show Camille had been quoted as saying that”People should come to the show to express themselves and have a drink and laugh and enjoy life, be like a child again and enjoy the innocence of it all again. Be lured back to remembering that life can be good – see the joy to life and the darkness and it’s OK to spend 90 minutes with me and then wonder who you are after that” With a tagline like that and music from some of the best artists ever to have set foot on this planet you would be crazy not to enjoy this show. Her Wilton’s residency has ended but you can book now for her one off evening at The Union Chapel on November 29th. Wilton’s and the Chapel would both vie for me as the two best music performance spaces in London so get your tickets now and I will be seeing you there !

 

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS

Pique Nique – Bonjour Fantastique !

May 5, 2018 by admin

Restaurants come in all shapes and sizes and can often be surprising in choice of location. Pique Nique certainly embraces both of these categories, resembling a Swiss Chalet, shoehorned into a space in the corner of a small park,within spitting distance of the local tennis courts and around the back of a Premier Inn car park. It does not sound the most celebrius of settings but somehow it works. In fact it even has a small outside space itself with some tables and benches, which, when the weather improves, could indeed be used for a picnic, or failing that at least a barbi !

The restaurant has the same Owners as Casse Croute, a tiny very French all day brasserie around the corner in Bermondsey Street which is in itself a very French experience with menus written in French and is run by lots of seemingly non English speaking Gallic staff. The owner of both establishments is Herve Durochat who has history at Shoreditch House and has also spent time working with Jose Pizarro 25 metres down the road in Bermondsey Street.

Pique Nique has risen from the original construction that was built in 1929 as a Bermondsey workhouse and the opportunity arose for Herve to take it over when the council were looking for tenants to establish a business after renovation.

Are we in a Swiss Chalet ?

Like its Sister Restaurant the menu is in written in French and whilst my 2 guests and I exercised our pigeon French desperately trying to remember what “Volaille” was in our mother tongue, we were greeted by our charming (in a French way ) waitress asking us what we would like to drink. We chose a Le Temps des Copains 2015 (£42) which we were advised was one of their Biologically produced wines using 100% Syrah grapes.

The bottle appeared to have 2 Angels kissing on the front label ( one male,one female), and that was what it was like to drink. Like kissing an angel, silky smooth, medium bodied and easy to drink without food – this could be a dangerous start to the evening! With my friend Ed planning on cycling back home to North London alarm bells were already ringing.

After a little translation assistance from our Waitress we were ready to make our food choices which involved starters of mackerel tartar with mayonnaise, snail croquettes and a chicken en croute with a jelly. We decided to plump for the Chateaubriand at £57 which they advised could stretch to 3 persons with mashed Potatoes and a salad. We thought that should compliment the wine beautifully – or was it supposed to be the other way around ? The menu is ever changing and small- 5 starters , 4 mains and a couple of board specials, which included on that particular day Seasnails which we were told is a classic French meal at Christmas time. I had never heard of this as a seasonal meal, but even so, this being a cold May Day (not very Christmassy), and the fact that they were swimming snails as opposed to landsnails persuaded us to prefer the Chauteabriand to the offered sea molluscs! Maybe we will be braver next time.

In appearance our starters were a mixture of simple country plates combined with one not out of place in a fine dining establishment. More specifically the chicken was a large slab of what looked like a slice from a large pie, with pieces of pink meat encased by pastry with a colourful blob of jelly on top.

A very typical picnic style dish, tasting of earthy meat set off by the fruity apricot purée, with slivers of onions and scattering of parsley,and a little bit of excellent chewy pastry to give it the right mouthfeel. The mackerel was accompanied by pickled green cucumbers and dill mayonnaise and was tart, fishy and almost Nordic in taste due to the pickle, but cooled down by the Mayo.  My croquettes were plated in a more elegant style, sitting atop a vivid green parsley mayonaisse and when opened up , steam escaped before hitting you with the smell of more parsley and little cubes of fried bacon, followed by hot snails falling out on to the plate which when you ate with the crust of the deep fried globe gave you the snail soft and crunchy texture you were looking for combined with the salty bacon bits  – just beautiful and the first time I have eaten them in a croquette.

Wine and conversation were flowing freely and the second bottle was already open and we had not even got to our beef yet ! When it did arrive it was a sight to behold. We were told it would be prepared medium/rare (how dare we argue) and you could see from the colours of the meat it had been lovingly cooked. It had the perfect meaty sheen with the colours of the slightly more cooked edges running gradually into the pinker middle, uniform throughout, and carved to make it ready for an assault. A large bowl of mash arrived, and likewise a bowl of mixed leaves ( just to make us feel we were eating healthily) and we glugged another glass of Syrah to prepare our insides for the magnificent looking Chateaubriand.

B7A8717C-3029-44F5-9004-E2EE2E7C337A

The good news was it tasted as good as it looked with swimming in a meaty Jus which was great to add to the mashed potato. Only slight critical comment here was that I had read in Casse Croute that their mashed potato was akin to the legendary  Joel Rubechon standard ( 50% Cream/50%Potato) however this was not. Good but not too different to anything I could muster at home. It’s not a complaint – just an observation…..

By the end of the meat, and now on our third bottle of Syrah, we had to think long and hard about whether or not a dessert would be appropriate. So in true democratic style we ordered one between three- a Raspberry Soufflé which came which a large helping of Raspberry purée on the side which I insisted we spooned into the middle of the Soufflé. This was pretty epic in itself,  and actually a generous portion which was enough to satisfy three.

After this we stumbled out into the night, Ed off on his bicycle to lord knows where, me leading Diane to London Bridge station to ensure safe arrival there,  and me then off home – lucky enough to live within waking distance of a great little find which will be visited again. If you want some classic French fare and wine, and relax in a convivial atmosphere you would not go far wrong by visiting Pique Nique- and if your French language skills are better than ours you would even be able to read the menu !

Rating – Almost Blazingly Hot Pan 4.5

Service – Also a Gallic 4.5 

Pique Nique , Tanner Street Park, SE1 3 LD – you may need GPS or Google maps !

0207403 9549

PS – had breakfast there today and they do a stonking Croque Monsieur with real bechamel sauce and fantastic quality ham – the real deal !

 

 

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS, RESTAURANT REVIEWS

Week 4 Advanced Term – Mousseline Meltdown !

May 4, 2018 by admin

Seafood Feuilletee with Beurre Blanc

When was the last time you either ordered a Mousseline in a restaurant,  or,better still, made one at home ? Well we had our first introduction to Mousseline making on Monday and Tuesday this week, the first Salmon, the second Scallop.

It’s a painstaking process of ensuring all your equipment is fridge cold, blitzing up the product in question in a Magi, and then using a dough scraper to push the salmon/ scallop through a Box Sieve to achieve a super fine purée. You then have to emulsify it by adding double cream,gradually, on a one to one basis in a bowl over ice, which takes forever. You sort of lose the will to live and then – if like me – you accidentally get some of the cold water from your ice bowl into your mixture it does not emulsify properly which you only understand when you try to gently poach it but it just collapses into a pile of nothingness. Well worth all the effort !

Not a great start to the week, but at least the lemongrass and ginger broth for the Salmon Mousseline was very tasty.

The scallop Mousseline ended up in Tortellini married with crab and prawns in an enriched Pasta we had made earlier. This was another bit of a fiasco with not enough Pasta machines to go around, people getting their pasta stuck on the bench, on each other’s pasta (as there was not enough space on the bench), and most people rolling to thin in the machine causing many headaches when shaping. Notwithstanding this chaos I ended up with a dish that looked somehow presentable and tasted pretty good even with a collapsed scallop mix – gratefully masked by the addition of crab and prawn.

The following day we were all so happy to put Mousseline behind us and move on to something new. However it was not really new – we had to debone a chicken again but this time stopping at the legs/ thighs so that we could use the meat from them to mince up with other ingredients for a stuffing that was to go into our Chicken Ballotine. We had to recall how to debone the chicken as there was to be no new Demo in class – albeit we thought there would be – and this caused a headache for some. I find it quite satisfying deconstructing the chicken to its skin and then filling it again with the breasts and stuffing – beats Mousseline any day of the week.

Skin before being reloaded

Thursday was an all day cook utilising Puff Pastry made earlier in the week to make Seafood Feuilletees with a Beurre Blanc sauce. We all think we can make a Puff blindfolded now, so we are Masters of the Universe Puff Wise ! With our “Roasted in a JClothe Ballotine” we had to make a Chicken and Thyme Jus – basically a posh gravy with great depth of flavour and silkiness, if you get it right, and some Veg and a layered potato accompaniment – Chefs choice. This dish all went well for me other than the Potato which ironically was the only thing I had bothered practising at home. In my kitchen at home I had use waxy Charlotte Potato’s with clarified butter to make a Pomme Anna in a small frying pan (Jamie Oliver recipe) and it was fab. In school they had different Pots, I used duck fat which made it grey and greasy and the pots just collapsed as either I had cut them too fine or they were not waxy. I will know better next time. But the Jus was perfect and Chicken pretty good too.

Had an unfortunate accident with our Apricot Sorbet during the week. I had left it on the side whilst being marked and one of my erstwhile colleagues dropped a heavy large saucepan from the top shelf which crashed down on top of our sorbet spraying it in all directions. I laughed at the culprit whose apron and jacket had been splattered only to be told that I had not seen my own Orange back yet which was somewhat resembling a Jackson Pollack painting.  My Chef Whites will need a good wash this weekend !

Our Non cooking activities started off Monday morning with an extremely entertaining Spirits session. The presenter Peter Wilson was very engaging and used pictures of his dog Ruby in his slide presentation to indicate it was time for a drink. It was a little challenging for some to start their Monday morning drinking Vodka/ Gin/ Whiskey and Cognac before lunch, but made all the more memorable by Peter, not once, but twice, tripping over the wires to his laptop bringing the slide presentation to a stuttering stop, his laptop crashing to the floor and on one occasion with accompanying glassware. His Irish humour shone through and we all enjoyed his 3 hour lecture.

We also had a Chocolate Demo and tasting which was quite popular and certain students became excited by the knowledge we would be experimenting with chocolate next week.  The final day of the week was an all day Demo that in the morning involved Terrines,Confit And Foie Gras, and in the afternoon a Croissant masterclass.  I love Foie Gras and some of the food plated up and given out to taste was some of the best we have had for the whole course , even if some people had ethical issues with the Foie Gras process. We were all a little shocked to learn that each 100 grams of Foie Gras contains 400 calories so we probably all consumed in excess of 2000 calories during a two and a half hour Demo!

Who knew that Foie Gras was also behind the invention of the Sous Vide ? A producer of Foie Gras in France was tired of losing 50% of his produce when being cooked as it was melting away. He came up with the idea of sealing it in a bag and cooking it in water to ensure none of the product disappeared, and thereafter, after this success, he went on to work with Alain Ducasse and Thomas Keller and came up with the Sous Vide method of cooking and machine. Good food history there !

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Another good week, and a long weekend to look forward to before next weeks sweet offerings.

 

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS, LEITHS LIFE

Brat – Thanks for the timing of your Review Giles !

April 29, 2018 by admin

Tomos Parry busying himself in full view of his clientele

Brat is Tomos Parrys (relatively) new Restaurant in Shoreditch having opened just over a month ago. It has already received superlative reviews from many well read and infamous Restaurant critics, and my reservation for this Saturday just happened to coincide with Giles Corens review appearing in The Times the very same day. I read Giles column with avid interest (as I do every Saturday), Mr.Coren being my “go to” reviewer and my literary food hero, if that’s not to strong a phrase.

So now I have the opportunity, within 24 hours, of comparing our experiences – it’s David versus Goliath , Giles with a readership of probably millions and me of approx 12 – if I am lucky ! Giles starts his review in somber mood trying to get us to feel sorry for him explaining that he has the unfortunate life experience of only going to wonderful new restaurants only once, due to his occupation of Food Critic. This compells him to find new experiences to report and write about for his readership, and therefore precludes him from enjoying, for a second time, some of the most wonderful dishes he has been fortunate enough to savour on his first visit. Sort of understood Giles, but there is nothing to stop you doing this in your spare time as I do, and I have a full time job and go to school from 9 to 5 , 5 days a week too ! I will be happy to arrange repeat visits for you, and even accompany you if you need them to be organised ? 😂😉

Anyway back to Brat. Tomos Parry was the wonder kid who was receiving stellar reviews and visitations from the rich and famous at Kitty Fishers, Shepherds Market when it opened in December 2014. Then he left and whilst I have no clear idea what was behind this, it has culminated in the opening of his new venture in Shoreditch named Brat, apparently being the slang name of Turbot, the signature dish of the new restaurant. It is a joint venture with Ben Chapman whose company owns the Smoking Goat next door, in a building that was, until recently, an old East End Strip Pub called The White Horse ( memories I have of that place !)

It is a 1930s building with the entrance through a small door, outside of which there were a queue of people when we first walked past (just before 6) which I assumed were eager punters without reservations.

Upon entering you continue along a corridor and up a steepish staircase to the upstairs dining room where I immediately spot Mr.Parry busily at work at the open fireplace/ wood fired oven/ coal area. The room is inviting , all wood, bar down one side for walk ins, and all the cooking being performed right in front of you within an area basically doubling up as kitchen and pass, space being at a premium. Indeed so close to the oven/ grill was our table we were feeling as smoked as the food by the end of the evening – but that’s not a complaint.

As recommended by Giles I started the evening with an amontillado and tonic, and boy oh boy what a refreshing nutty thirst quencher it was , especially as I had been shopping vintage clothes with my wife for the past 2 hours and was completely parched. Thereupon the menu appeared with a list of snacks, starters and mains all of which I would have happily eaten – that’s just how inviting and intriguing (albeit at the same time seemingly simple) the menu is. Narrowing it down to just a few dishes to share was extremely difficult but we went for the Oysters Roasted with Seaweed, Langoustines, and at Giles behest, as he commented that “it was the greatest new dish invented in this country in decades” the Chopped Egg Salad with Bottarga. The latter not being something I would  have rushed to order without Giles’s revelatory recommendation.

The Oysters were maybe one of the best Oysters I have eaten, lightly smoked, and just warmed through to give an even more satisfactory mouthfeel than an Oyster normally provides. Langoustines were very lightly roasted/steamed ? with Rosemary so that there were almost raw. The meat was soft and silky sweet as anything, and by sucking on the head you had just a hint of the rosemary coming through.

The aforementioned Egg Bottarga combination was indeed a great combination, served on rye sourdough with a little parsley and cress running through it. Unsure if it was “Epochal” as quoted by Giles – it had the feeling of eating very underdone scrambled eggs with salty fish eggs running through it, all in a very positive and enjoyable way, with the crunch of the toast complimenting the softness of the topping.

We had not ordered other starters nothwithstanding the temptations on offer as we were saving ourselves for a 1.2 kg Turbot retailing at £55 which I thought we just could not miss , understanding it is the star of the show. ( You can also spend £65 for a 1.6kg Fish for sharing between 3/4. )

There appeared to be a bit of a run on Turbot at that precise time as ours took sometime to appear and I am guessing there is just not enough space to accommodate that many Turbot over the raging coals at one time. They are roasted in special “cages” seemingly purpose made for them, and after being exposed to the wood charcoal fire they are rested for a short time in the wood oven and then basted in their own gelatinous juices with an oil style Pil Pil emulsion before being presented at your table.

 

 

Mr.Parry personally delivered ours to the table explaining the backbone had been cut out and that we could eat the burnt bones on the frill as well, comparing them to Pork scratchings, Fish style,recommending we sprinkle sea salt on them first. Indeed I did try them in this way and it was possible to crunch through some of them redolent indeed of eating a salty pork rind. My wife immediately cut the fish head off and dived in to all of the meat around that, this representing her favourite part of most fish! It was, I must admit, orgasmic meat, with the flesh sliding off the bones that were left intact, and the browned flesh and skin emitting the smokiness of the cooking process in a “please sir I want some more” way.  The only accompaniments on offer with the fish were a Tomato salad and smokey potatoes. We went for the Pink Fir Apple Potatoes which had been roasted skin on, and were gnobbly and gnarly, good, but I would have preferred them to have been crunchier on the outside, softer inside and even smokier, but a minor criticism. Could you oblige Mr.Parry ?

Our plate,when we were finished,consisted of just a few bones scattered around as we had decimated the fish and both of us were sated and very satisfied. Indeed so much so we could not sample the desserts of which they were only four on offer including a brown bread ice cream which I fancied but restraint entailed.

I had been drinking a couple of glasses of red Samaur as recommended by the Sommelier to go with the fish and it was light and fruity and went very well with the meaty Turbot. (£11 a glass).

I spoke to Mr.Parry on the way out and relayed my joy of the Turbot and also commented on the fact that the Beef Chops looked ominously fantastic too but that I could not have tackled one after the Turbot. He commented that he has had couples doing just that – finishing off a £1.2 Kg Turbot and following up with a steak. Maybe these are couples who, like Giles, are afraid they will never repeat the visit here and focus on eating everything on the menu in one gargantuan food frenzy ?

Brat is what restaurants should be all about, the whole experience crying out to be enjoyed again, with a menu you were desperate to tick off every entry leaving you no option but to organise a repeat visit ASAP. I will be – but I guess I will not be seeing Giles !

Rating – Food Blazingly Hot Pan 5/5 

Service -Almost Blazingly Hot Pan 4.5/5 (delay on the Turbot) 

Brat, 4 Redchurch Street, Shoreditch,E1.

 

 

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS, RESTAURANT REVIEWS

Week 3 – A surprise visit from Pru !

April 28, 2018 by admin

Tarte Tatin

Monday morning and it’s Calves Liver – not exactly the food that would have been top of my favourite dishes to tackle at the start of a new week. It appears I was not alone in my thoughts as – guess what ? – not a huge number of liver fans out there amongst the students ! The positive elements to accompany the liver were a Tare Sauce ( involving Soy Sauce, Mirin, Sake, Ginger and other ingredients) and a Coriander Crumb with a Roasted Shallot- maybe these could help to disguise the taste of the liver ?

Yuck, Liver, but was praised for my presentation

Well they certainly assisted but for me it’s a textural thing, so although the dish was tasty, the sauce really good ( and it could probably work with other meats)  the main element still made the dish inedible !

During this first morning we also started to make a Rich Vanilla Ice Cream ( not to go with the liver), and slow roasted Tomatoes (8 hours !), whilst scorching Red Peppers to loose their skins for the base of our Red Pepper and Tomato Consommé to be completed tomorrow.

Tuesday morning saw us hard at work whisking like crazy our Egg Whites and Shells for our next Consommé and who should pay us a visit at this precise time ? –  none other than Prue Leith herself, performing a tour of the kitchens watching us trying to make our crust and getting it to rise to enable our Consommé to clear. She stopped and looked over my shoulder and made a comment about the rise on my crust which gave me an opportunity to have a quick chat with her about the alchemy of the process. She is quite an imposing and elegant figure and it was an unexpected pleasure to get to meet her briefly. Maybe inspired by this little chat my Consommé was quite successful and clear, however my Pepper Brunoise were too small so I need to rethink my knife skills further to achieve what they are looking for. Mmmmmm………

Tuesday also saw us making Puff Pastry, I am quite happy with this process and even quite enjoy it – seems all of us are in agreement as it is much easier than Flaky pastry as you do not have to worry about adding the butter in stages – with Puff, once the butters in, its in ! Just remember how many rolls and folds and keep your edges and corners straight and you should be fine!

The Puff was to be used on Wednesday for a classic Tarte Tatin- something I have never cooked before. This process involves caramelising apples in sugar and butter, preferably without letting them burn, laying on top your chilled Puff Pastry, and then finishing it off in the oven still in the frying pan, before inverting on to a plate for service. The inverting process can be tricky as you can easily burn yourself with piping hot caramel splashing about, but I think we all managed to produce something worthy and no trips to A&E! We served our Vanilla Ice Cream with this, and the hot and cold Combo was a real pleasure to eat even if my Ice Cream was commented upon as having a bit a fudgy texture.

This week we also had our first experience of making a Jus. You see this in top restaurants all the time and other than appreciating it is some kind of sauce to finish and enhance a dish I was unaware of the real process involved to make it. In essence it is a stock based reduction sauce which starts off – in this case – by browning chicken wings to get a nice depth of colour and then using them with browned vegetables to make a stock. We would be making this over 2 days and end up reducing to taste and serving it on Friday with a Sous Vide Chicken breast. This involved another process new to most us – brining and cooking a chicken breast Sous Vide style. You could simplify this style of cooking by just saying it’s chicken cooked in a bag , which essentially it is, but held in a water bath at 64degrees for an hour and a half and when it’s finished you know that it will be cooked with all the moisture retained. Finish it off in a searingly hot pan for 30 seconds or so and you have a beautifully cooked, moist chicken breast with a crispy Caramelised skin, taking out the risk of over or under cooking it. Cheating ? Who knows, but as we were advised in the Sous Vide Demo, you should always ask yourself whether this way of preparation will enhance your dish or not. If not don’t do it !

The other very tricky task we “endured” this week was a Rabbit Ravioli. Whilst the rabbit filling aspect was relatively straightforward (braising, chopping small, sauce to mix through) the Construction of the Ravioli itself drove us all to distraction. We can all make Pasta now but we were advised to pass it through the machine to the final setting ( so thin you can read your time plan through it!) and then lay out on cling film on the bench before cutting out 7.5cm circles , filling with a teaspoon of rabbit filling, and enclosing with another pasta circle making sure you squeeze air out, don’t wrinkle it, make sure you have a good seal etc etc…….This was a nightmare as the pasta was sticking to the table, breaking up as we tried to close over the filling, and eventually our teachers decided that we should have gone to the penultimate setting on the machine and also used different size cutters.

Rabbit Ravioli with Mustard Sauce, so over it …..

Half of us had already progressed to far for this advice to assist and had become somewhat disillusioned by the whole process. “I am so over this” was heard a number of times around the kitchen. Next week we will have a similar experience making Tortellini so hopefully we can improve !

Demonstrations were varied as always including another Wine Demo focusing on Other Black Grapes And Red Wines ( ah …Malbec at last !) and a very time consuming process of making mousselines, which apparently we had to pay attention to very closely as we will be doing this next week to. Passing a chicken breast by chopping it fine and scraping it through a Box Sieve for 30 minutes or more looks like so much fun ! Roll on week 4 !

 

Filed Under: LEITHS LIFE

Hola ! Work Experience in Pizzaros !

April 24, 2018 by admin

Back in October we treated our friend Alex to a birthday Lunch at José  Pizarro in Broadgate Circle which was part of a special American Express sponsored event called “Desert Island Meals” where numerous Chefs were asked to Host and present their favourite meals at a special lunchtime service.

Therefore José was present at a very pleasant lunch where he served some of his favourite meals. This enabled me to meet with him and also approach him with the possibility of gaining some work experience at one of his restaurants. He said that of course he would help and gave me his personal e mail address. It was not until March that I followed up, but José answered with 24 hours and cutting a long story short I was offered 3 days work experience at his main restaurant in Bermondsey Street., all being organised via his Deputy Chef  –  Adri.

So I found myself at 8am on Saturday at the restaurant to complete an 8 hour shift and was greeted by Carlos and another Jose as Adri would not be present on the day. They showed me around , gave me a Pizzaro Chefs jacket and apron and set me to work. Basically I was prepping along with the other staff various bits and pieces including :

– dicing a few bags of pears as uniformly as possible for a pear compote

– being given a large chunk of pig skin and having to cut off as much of the remaining meat and gristle etc as possible to create a very thin layer of skin for being roasted into pork scratching – much more difficult than you could imagine

One day I will be a Chicharon !

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

– prepping a large tub of chicken livers to ensure no sinew or greenish bits which can taste bitter

Also I was given the job of making the marinade for their roasted cauliflowers that consists of picking the leaves of loads of Thyme,Oregano And Rosemary. Cutting up shallots and then blitzing them with Olive Oil and Salt, before sieving and then coating each cauliflower with the sauce and bagging them up in Vacuum bags for use later.

It was a fairly varied day and quite interesting. The team were great fun albeit I had language difficulties as Carlos is Peruvian, Jose Spanish, their English not perfect and both have very strong accents. This meant me insisting they repeated themselves on numerous occasions and they probably felt I was deaf or stupid !

Sunday was a totally different experience as I was working from 2pm  to 11pm and found myself working at the Pass and the front of the kitchen for the whole shift. The restaurant has an open kitchen where people can even sit at the bar running along the length of the kitchen so you are visible to the customers from every angle. Adri was working on Sunday and paired me with Alex (who is English) who was working alongside Carmen (Spanish and great fun) , the two of them basically running the kitchen for most of the day/evening.

They got me involved in many tasks and I was helping to plate up desserts and prepare other simple cold things like the anchovies for service, Cannelloni and the charcuterie. Indeed we were running short on the charcuterie so I was taught how to use the butchers slicer and was tasked with slicing up loads of chorizo, Lomo and Salami. When I was told I had to wear a chainmail glove I realised how dangerous this machine could be but thank good no injuries to report !

It was amazing watching Carmen work as she had so many pans on the go at the same time whilst also preparing various fish and Meat on the plancha – everything she plated up looked amazing and her timing and organisation were a sight to behold. When she had a spare minute to talk I established she had been training in Spain for 4 years including experience in Michelin starred Restaurants in San Sebastian. This compared to Alex who is an ex Art dealer and only joined the team 3 months ago without any formal training. They however worked well as a team with Carmen explaining her skills to Alex, who in turn was helping her improve her English. Their dynamics were quite fun and I really enjoyed my time spent in their company. I could imagine learning a lot from Carmen in a short time should I have the opportunity. She also got me preparing more of the pig skin, and actually said my first 2 pieces were amazing, albeit me third let me down, but I was stupidly happy to receive a compliment from someone with her abilities !

The kitchen was fairly busy during the course of the day as the London Marathon was on and there were a lot of people milling about in the area. When the kitchen closed at 9.45 people were still streaming in hoping for a meal but Carmen refused them in her very direct Spanish style!

At around 10.30 we started clearing down and transferring all of the unused garnishes and foods etc to new storage boxes , clingfilming and returning them to fridges, before a massive cleaning operation ensued involving every millimetre of every surface being scrubbed and disinfected which was somewhat time consuming.

Adri released me just before 11pm advising that it would still be another hour before he inspected all and the team would be going home, showing again the long hours involved for the staff. Adri told me that he is very thankful for the way Carmen runs the kitchen and he could not do it without her. He was very pleased with the support I gave and said I could return any time to help – they always need an extra pair of hands. I joked with him that of course he was happy with free labour but I knew that many of the staff there were working for only £7.50 an hour, so rewards are not so high even if you are not working as slave labour disguised as work experience.

I enjoyed my weekend at a Pizzaros and in many ways it was more educational, and I felt more useful, than down in Padstow due to it being a smaller environment where all hands on deck was more appreciated. I also enjoyed seeing the customers enjoying the fruits of our labour- it gave me a weird sense of satisfaction that they were appreciating something we were responsible for producing.

So a big thanks to all of the team at Pizzaros and to the man himself – Jose – for allowing this experience to happen. Good luck in the future chicos and chicas  !

 

 

Filed Under: LATEST NEWS, RESTAURANT REVIEWS

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