Wednesday 30 November 2011

Favourite Christmas Gifts for a Foodie - Part 1: Artisan du Chocolate Advent Calendar



Picture by Richard Boll

As the stores become more manic over the coming days and you wonder what to get that foodie fiend nearest and dearest to you, I thought I would invest some time and calories finding the perfect presents for the Season.


Picture by Richard Boll
Artisan du Chocolat, the purveyor of some of the finest British handmade chocolates, has through offering its Christmas Advent Calendar, proved that life is a box of chocolates - perfect on the inside and the outside.

Picture by Richard Boll
Made in Ashford, Kent by a small producer, this is a box of chocolate nirvana. I was first introduced to Artisan's wares via Ms P's love of their exceptional chocolate salted caramels. They have however, excelled themselves with the offering of these individually boxed handcrafted chocolates. This is the ultimate gift for the foodie that already has the mixer, the baker and the candle-stick maker.

Each Calendar offers a selection of flavours and textures over 25 happy days and has the best-dressed boxes of goodness to be found this side of the international dateline. The calendar costs £35 (pricey but worth every penny for the whole box and flavoursome dice).

Artisan has a number of stores in central London (Selfridges being one) and they have an online shopping portal that ships internationally. So, buy one for the foodie you love and one to treat yourself.

https://www.artisanduchocolat.com/customer/account/login/

Telephone: +44 1233 505170

Saturday 19 November 2011

Cabana London: Fulfilling all of our Protein-Fueled Brazilian BBQ Dreams


The funky interior
I am on a mission to look HOT when we step off a plane in Australia in five weeks time. Two years have passed since our last sojourn, and I don't want the punters Down Under to think that we (really me) have gone to seed owing to the excesses of London life. This means curbing all of the fun things: booze, chocolate, tasty stuff. But joy of joy, we are allowed excessive amounts of protein. You cannot imagine our excitement when we saw that James Barber, formerly of Sake No Hana, Villandry and Hush, was about to open his Brazilian BBQ joint, Cabana, in Central St Giles, Covent Garden.


Having secured some seats during the soft-launch opening, I can report that the place got multiple ticks for those looking for some protein-fueled BBQ goodness. The funky interior shows the attention to detail that we have come to expect of Barber: think soaring colourful ceilings, banquettes made from patchworks of denim jeans, distressed raw wood floors and the theatre of an open BBQ pit.
 In many ways, Cabana is a traditional Brazilian churrascaria with the staff wandering the restaurant tempting punters with skewers of BBQ abundance. The main difference, however, is that whilst at most churrascarias you pay one price (between £19 - £27 in London) for all of the meat or seafood you can eat, at Cabana you pay per large skewer consumed (between £3.35 - £5.95).  I have to admit, I found Cabana better on a food quality and price basis than other London haunts.

Chicken coxinhas: the right hint of spice
Under the street food entrees, I can heartily recommend the chicken coxinhas (croquettes of shredded chicken with the right hit of spice £4.35). I do wish however that we'd had the ability to try the sweetcorn pamonhas (grated sweetcorn with a hint of cinnamon wrapped in a corn husk and steamed in coconut milk £3.35). As for the skewers, the chimichurri black gold rump, the chilli and cumin lamb (both £5.95)  and the spicy chicken ( £5.45) were all good. Fulfilling all of my BBQ dreams were the sticky baby back ribs (£5.45) that offered a big whack of chilli and sweet spice. A little disappointing were the spicy tiger prawns (£5.95) that could perhaps have been spicier and more abundant and the chicken sausage wheel (£4.50).
Pork tenderloin with Parmesan crust
Chimicurri black gold rump
Sides and salads included offerings such as sweet potato fries (£3.45), biro-biro rice (£2.85), spicy prawn and avocado salad (£8.75) or tomato and palm hearts (£3.65). Whilst we didn't partake due to the looking HOT restrictions, dessert were a limited offering of frozen yoghurt (natural, peanut butter or caramel with funky topping £3.95), ice-cream and sorbet (vanilla, melon, banana and kiwi, mango £3.65) or banana and caramel cheesecake (£4.95). The cocktail list was extensive and will certainly tempt us back in our post Aussie holiday haze.

Look at all of that BBQ goodness


Go for the great inexpensive BBQ and cocktails, funky interior and soaring ceilings and the friendly and attentive staff.




Cabana on Urbanspoon



Sunday 13 November 2011

Have Jamie Oliver & Chris Bianco at Union Jack's created the Best Pizza in London?


Praise be to Jesus, I have been doing a jig because restaurants have begun to open in Renzo Piano's ground-breaking St Giles development in Covent Garden, London. For months, I have excitedly passed the five large double-height glass box restaurant spaces in the courtyard, hoping that something fantastic, independent and unique will come of such a talked about space. Unfortunately, my jigging has not turned into jiving, as I fear that the space is most likely going the way of most High Streets in the UK or America - choca-block-full of (higher quality) chain restaurants (think Zizzi, Byron, Fishworks, Sofra......).
Post-industrial distressed interior

Ms P and I were however dancing a tango after we learnt that Chris Bianco of Pizzeria Bianco, the man who supposedly makes the best pizza in US was teaming-up with Jamie Oliver to open a new joint in one of Renzo's glass boxes.  Our dance steps were slowed slightly when we discovered that they would be offering British-themed retro inspired food - including pizza (Ms P's nonna would be turning over in her very Italian grave).
Simple sausage and bacon

We were still excited to launch ourselves on the venue this week, during its soft-launch period. The once cavernous glass box has now been filled with a retro-fit post-industrial distressed furniture look that only partially succeeds (making new look old is an art form best left to Chinese and Italian antique dealers - otherwise try to buy some of the real thing). The large wood fired pizza ovens and BBQ station did add a warming note and a sense of theatre.
Bloody mary mussels

On the food front, I can report that London's obsession with small plates has not abated. Union Jack's is offering small mini morsels such as prawn & Morcambe bay shrimp cocktail (£6),  smoked trout pate with feisty horseradish on baby Yorkshire puddings (£5) or Cumbrian ham hock terrine with radishes and piccalilli (£4). Ms P opted for the wood-grilled sausage and bacon with ale and mustard sauce (£4.50). She noted that the sausages went down a treat,  offering the right mixture of meaty-smokey flavours but that they were a little overcome with the strong mustard sauce. My bloody mary mussels in a bag (£5) offered all the great parts of a the drink (tomato with Tabasco but perhaps too strong celery overtones) with fantastic mussels. (I couldn't however see a bag anywhere - I presumed that they would be baked and presented in a parchment bag). Perhaps a slight change to the menu is required).
The Stargazy Pizza

The Old Spot

Union Jack's doesn't 'do' mains in the traditional sense, but offers a selection of 'flats' from its roaring wood-fired pizza oven. We were assured by the staff that these were very different to pizzas and owing to Mr Bianco's reputation, we took their word for it. Ultimately the offering is pizza. I can report happily that my Stargazy pizza of sweet melted onions, fennel seeds, squashed tomatoes, Cornish sardines, rocket and shaved fennel (£10) was delicious, with a very thin crisp base that you associate with pizza that you find throughout Italy. Ms P opted for the porky goodness offered by the 'Old Spot' that mixed roasted shoulder pork, quince & Bramley sauce, Bishop Stilton, crackling & watercress (£12). The crackling was a winning note, and even though it mixed meat and fruit (a no-no for Ms P's palate), she lapped it up.

Puddings were a glorious sounding mix of such things as sticky treacle tart with clementine soured cream (£4), bitter chocolate mousse with "gary-baldy" biscuits (£4) or a retro take on an Arctic roll (£4). I had heard that the cheese on offer was some of the best British cheese in town, and I can assure you that the huge hunk of Stilton I was presented had the right mix of acidic, salty creaminess (I also really liked the homemade crackers and fruit paste) especially for the cheap price on the menu.

Coffee and tea (proper pot, not teabag!) were on the right side of good and I can report that the wine list is sensibly priced for punters on a budget.

So have Jamie Oliver and Chris Bianco created something fantastic, independent and unique? Will Ms P and I be tangoing down there constantly for many years to come? Well, I can assure you that the staff we engaged with were some of the most enthusiastic and friendly that we have come across in our many years in London (Store Street Espresso should take classes from them). Generally the food was good, very well priced and I can say that the pizzas were a shining light. Independent and unique, perhaps, owing to the marriage of British themes and pizza - but overall the twining of the two just doesn't gel for me. Whilst a British topped pizza and Mr Bianco's reputation enticed me through the door, I will return, but I won't make it my regular. I am sure others will flock, if you are in the area try them out, but alas alack, whilst we will return there will not be a constant tango from us at the front door. Not London's best pizza, but in the days and months ahead, perhaps with changes to what's on top of the pizzas, that assessment will change.


Union Jack's
Central St Giles,
St Giles High Street
Covent Garden
London WC1H 8AG
Web: http://www.unionjacksrestaurants.com/

Union Jack's on Urbanspoon