Tropea has risen to the heights which fully justify its inclusion in the Michelin Guide. Thi was an exceptionally enjoyable meal.
Rating:- 🌞.
Tropea has risen to the heights which fully justify its inclusion in the Michelin Guide. Thi was an exceptionally enjoyable meal.
Rating:- 🌞.
I dined at The Wilderness where a meal was being served by Alex Claridge and Marius Gedminas in collaboration with the Head Chef from Konjö - more fully, Konjö Robatayaki Kitchen - Joel, a Chef originally from Wolverhampton but now employed at the sister restaurant of Jöro in Sheffield (see Blog 41, 27 October 2018). Könjo has been described as a a”Scandi-Japanese mash-up with a mouthful of Jöro’s favourite ingredients, street food style”. Could that be a fusion one step too far? It was time to find out.
The meal took the form of several courses of ‘snacks’ preceded by ‘bread’ and followed by a main course which was centred on quail with several other elements accompanying it.
The opening bread - a beautifully textured focaccia, gorgeously unctuous with sesame oil and accompanied by kimchi relish and gochujang honey butter - was a very good start and the subsequent snacks gave much pleasure - a fabulous, crispy, again delightfully unctious, beef fat hash brown lifted to celestial heights by a sashimi of tuna belly nestling on it and intermediate texture provided by corn XO and all complemented by the precisely chosen flavour of yuzu..
Then, a distinctly recognisable dish from ADC/The Wilderness - the sublime dish of hamachi with sliced green olive and jalapeño. To close the starters section there was subtle, delightful barbecued Cornish mackerel in a fig hot sauce with a side dish of a steamed and fried hot bun with zingy kimchi butter. Yes very, very good.
I made little impression on the multielemental main course but enjoyed my unusual dessert, some of which was recognisable from ADC, of toasted jasmine rice ice cream served with an optimally citric calamansi curd and the fun of puffed pawa rice, reassuring caramelised aerated white chocolate and the freshness of kaffir lime.
Many individual elements of the meal had been very enjoyable but as a whole it seemed incoherent with too many disparate dishes. The main was a hotchpotch. I am not too sure about Nordic-Japanese fusion. It may well indeed be a fusion too far. But, as always with Alex Claridge, this was an interesting and at times challenging meal. Who wants dull food?
The previous evening was passed in Stratford upon Avon. Prior to attending the Royal Shakespeare Company’s latest production at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre - Othello (easily the best production I have seen there for several years with no gimmicky casting, men playing men, fine mature actors declaiming magnificently, no racial confusions, splendid period costumes and excellent direction) - I had eaten another very good early evening dinner at the Hotel Du Vin, where I was staying the night.
To kick off I had a very fine Boulevardier, its subtle bitterness a tease to the appetite. Then a starter of a spot on chicken liver parfait which had an excellent texture, its richness nicely cut through by the accompanying plum and figgy chutney (I would have liked a bigger portion of this) which was served with two remarkably large slabs of toasted buttery brioche.
For the main, I chose pan-fried cod served with lentils, winter root vegetables and cavalo nero. This was very a fine dish - the cod was cooked perfectly, the flesh white, glinting and perfectly yielding, the lentils were perhaps a little too numerous for my taste but they were very nicely cooked, tender but still with body and their flavour enhanced the earthy pleasure of the winter vegetables. The deep fried cavalo gave a cheeky, happy crunchy texture which no-one could complain about. A fine dish indeed.
I needed a simple dessert. I was not in the mood for crème brûlée and opted for a simple dish of vanilla ice cream. I should be more ambitious with my choice of desserts but I do not need too much after my main course and my tastes in dessert are somewhat limited. So ice cream it was.
The Bistro du Vin really is very good.
Rating:- 🌛🌛🌛🌛.
29 October.
I feel it in my water - either still or sparkling - that Alex Claridge’s Albatross Death Cult (ADC) is to be the next Birmingham Michelin star recipient come the next Michelin star reveal ceremony, presumably to be held early in 2025. I’ve dined there more than anywhere else this year and have experienced the novelty of the food and genius behind the invention of it. It is special and should be recognised nationally for being so.
Having long ignored Claridge’s brilliance as revealed by The Wilderness, hopefully the Michelin inspectors will find it in themselves to celebrate his culinary achievements by recognising them in ADC. By doing so, they will not lose face and additionally be seen to do justice. Twenty four hours after Glynn Purnell’s announcement that he had closed Purnell’s, Michelin had, quite reasonably I suppose, removed the restaurant from its internet site, as had the Good Food Guide, and so it is to be hoped that at least one Birmingham restaurant finds its way on to the list of starred restaurants in the next edition of the guide. If that is to be the case then ADCcould well be that very restaurant. If it were located in London it undoubtedly would be, I have no doubt.
Purnell’s no longer in the guidebooks -
Michelin Guide -
Good Food Guide -
Things change. And for the present a new style of dining is riding high so much so that I found myself dining at an ADC collaboration with Highland Park whisky (in the past I had attended a similar collaboration at The Wilderness but it doesn’t hurt to repeat a pleasure from time to time.
It was a completely different evening compared with the night before when I had also visited the Jewellery Quarter to experience another one of Kaye Winwood’s enjoyable occasions at GULP (see Blog 439) - the dark evening with teeming rain had changed to one of pleasing late afternoon sunshine and blue skies. What a difference a day makes. How uplifting in mood. I was ready to enjoy what was on offer.
What was actually on offer were dishes which I have previously eaten at ADC and I, from my own point of view, might have liked something novel but on the other hand, almost all my fellow diners were first time visitors to the restaurant so for them the dishes were new and exciting and, as far as I could tell, greeted with universal acclamation.
So the first two items were pleasing canapés of Cornish mackerel sashimi - silvery and glinting, as subtle a flavour of the fish that one could wish for, and a delicate croustade packing with orange trout roe the colour of a translucent popping satisfyingly in the mouth like edible bubble wrap.