Wednesday 29 August 2012

Burger and Lobster

Spent the evening with 2 dear friends of mine, one of whom has been living in Brazil for the past couple of years.

Decided to go to burger and lobster (compromise as Amo doesn't eat fish and I'm off the carbs) and I've wanted to go there for ages

The atmosphere was much more informal than I expected, but I really like it. Literally there are only 3 things on the menu:

1) lobster - grilled or steamed, with lemon butter or plain butter
2) lobster roll
3) burger - with bacon and/or cheese, or plain

- all served with salad and chips (double salad for me)

There was also a chalkboard with some obscenely large lobsters which could be picked from the tank and ordered, very pricey but I'm sure some people love it!

we ordered 2 grilled lobsters and a burger. I think I've probably only ordered lobster in a restaurant a couple of times, and to be honest have never really been quite sure on how to each it and make sure I got the most meat out of it!

The food came very quickly - I guess that's a given when there's only 2 items to prepare.

Both the lobster and the burger looked great. I didn't taste the burger, but was assured it was delicious. The lobster was gorgeous! It was so tasty, and there's something really satisfying about pulling the chunks of meat from the claws. The lemon butter was super yummy and added lovely flavour to the lobster meat.

I really enjoyed the simplicity of the menu and the taste and service of the food. Definitely great value for money at £20 for lobster - look forward to going back!

Tuesday 21 August 2012

Baked by Me - Making baking simple

My sister is fast becoming the queen of all baking. Her cakes are amazing, and she obsessed with baking, pastry and anything Great British Bake Off related. It makes me very proud and excited about what the future holds.

So when she messaged me to tell me she had bought me a 'cookies in a bag' mix, I was slightly disappointed. Even I, a baking novice, avoided cake mixes and always try to make my cakes from scratch and a recipe (more often than not, failing miserably).

Bear (Beckie or @beeslovesteas to the rest of the world) had discovered Baked By Me, an online company who specialise is baking mixes. I always thought it was cheating. If only I knew how wrong I could be!

After Bear first mentioned them to me, I started following them on twitter and got really excited by the pictures and the amazing following that they have. Then I went on the website - wow! So many different mixes, and they have even got gluten-free mixes, which definitely helps with the no-carbs diet.

So I finally got my toblerone cookie mix yesterday. In a really sweet package with very simple instructions.

So I followed them, adding 2 large eggs and 70ml of oil to the mix. From opening the pack to having lovely warm cookies on a plate - 30 minutes. And they were soft, delicious and my kitchen smelled heavenly, even this morning when I woke up. I took them to work (after leaving a few for hubby) and they were an absolute hit!

I am an absolute convert - Baked by Me have identified a way to make home baking easy, enjoyable and with some amazing mixes and flavours, there's so much variety to choose from.

Follow them on twitter @bakedbymeuk or visit their website http://www.bakedbyme.net/

Choc chip gluten-free cookies for me next, will let you know how they go!

The Fat Duck = Mindblowing!

Mairi and I have been the best of friends for 12 years. One thing that we've always been good at is celebrating our birthdays, which are only 15 days apart (I'm younger). After years of many great parties, we thought it would be good to do something really special for our big 3-0. I suggested London Marathon, climbing Kilimanjaro or the Inca Trail. Mairi, who wasn't really a fan of the physical challenges, suggested something so genius that I couldn't believe that I didn't think of it - A meal at Fat Duck.

After weeks of trying to book a table, we found out that it was easier to book a table for 4 then 2. So we booked our table of 4, twisted Pete and Mike's arms to come with us (didn't take much) and our birthday treat was planned - 18th August was the date.

The excitment had been building for a few weeks, and we arrived in Bray not knowing what to expect! Our first surprise came when the taxi driver dropped us off and pointed to the restaurant, which looked like a little cottage. It was very cute and unassuming (great description Mairi).


We were greeted by really lovely staff, and were one of the first groups to arrive for lunch, which actually proved to be really good as it meant that none of the surprises were ruined. All throughout our meal, the staff were amazing. Attentive without being intrusive, witty and willing to answer any of our silly questions, of which we had lots.

We decided to start of our meal with a bottle of English sparkling rose, which was delicious. Before we had even received our drinks, we received our first taste was to come. Each of us was given an aerated beetroot and horseradish 'bomb' - it lieterally melted in the mouth!
We had decided before we even arrived that we would get the wine pairing to go with the meal, which was good after once we'd seen the wine bible, there was no way that we could have chosen wine ourselves, so decided to leave it in the expert hands from the sommelier.
And then the meal began, and I'm not sure any of us were ready for it! All I can say is that it is definitely the meal that kept on giving!
The first course was a nitro poached aperitif. The waiter put egg whites infused with gin and tonic (the boys chose Campari) in a bowl of liquid nitrogen, and it became like a ice bomb. He added a twist of lemon and lemon spray, and then we had downed it in one. It was the most refreshing thing ever, and really tasted like a cold ice shot of G&T delicious.


Next came red cabbage gapacho with mustard icecream and pickled cucumber. Delicious, and wierd to have a savoury icecream.

Then we went on to probably to our first theatrical experience. The menu described it as Jelly of Quail with Crayfish cream. However, what we got was the most beautiful lookjing plate, with lots of different components, none of resembled anything that looked like the name. Then, another waiter came out with a wooden block covered in moss. On top of the block where little plastic cases, with brown tabs that we had to put on our tongues (like the breath freshener tabs you can get). Once we had done this, which btw tasted like wood, the waiter poured water on the block and it suddenly filled our table with mist.


This, combined with the delicious jelly, cream and truffle toast was so amazing! And the smell of the moss and the woods lingered all throughout the course, very clever.

Next was the course that I've always been intrigued to try and probably one of the most famous on the menu - Snail Porridge. Firstly, we didn't expect it to be green. The snails were so soft and seemed to melt in the mouth. There was shaved fennel on the top, which I don't normally like, but this complimented the dish so well.

Following the snail porridge came the Roast Foie Gras. This was the dish I was least looking forward to on the menu. I have tried foie gras twice before and whilst I can taste that it is good, I can't get my head round how it is made, and have always felt a bit uncomfortable about it. Well, all I can say is I completely forgot about any moral grounds when I tasted this. Simply accomanpied with a Barberry sauce (never heard of this before, but its a bit like bitter blackberry) and crab biscuits, I think this was my favourite course. It was so so so so yum! The Foie gras was creamy and so soft.

Mad Hatter's Tea Party was the next course, and Mad it definitely was. Toast sandwich (seriously, toast with bread), self made consomme (by melted a 'gold watch' in hot water) poured over turnip and swede jelly. It was really fun to eat and the teapot and mug was really novel! I just need to also to add that we were really impressed with how accomodating Fat Duck were. Mairi has a fish allergy and can't eat fin fish, which can be quite difficult as this also includes anything with fish stock or sauce. They replaced everything that would include any fish with food of the same standard, and Mairi barely noticed that she was eating somethings that were different to us.

Probably the most unusual course was Sound of the Sea. This started with each of us being given a big shell with headphones coming out of it. Out of the headphones came the lovely calming sounds of crashing waves and seagulls, reminded me of my last trip to Skeggie :-)

Then came a block of foam, sand and fish, all edible. So we ate, and listened to the sea. So calming!  Mairi obviously couldn't have this course, but she was given an excellent braised pork belly, which i think was as good as the fish. The wine accompanying this was sake, pretty strong sake, and probably the start of us all beginning to feel pretty drunk (we had already had 2 glasses of fizz and 3 glasses of wine at this point!).

The next course, whilst still tasty was probably my least favourite, was salmon poached in a liquorice gel. The salmon was cooked amazingly, it was somewhere between sushi and poached, so soft, and the liquorice didn't actually taste too aniseedy. There was lovely vanilla mayonnaise and trout roe which added a lovely salty taste. I guess after all the spectacles we had so far, I found this course to be slightly on the boring side, but that doesn't take away from the lovely flavours.

The next course was probably the most substantial course of the meal. Lamb with cucumber. Literally the best lamb I think I've ever tasted. It had onion and dill gel on the side, and was so wonderful. Accompanying the lamb was a minty lamb consomme jelly, and some sweetbread with lamb crisps. All I can say is wow. The lamb consomme was to clear the palate and it really worked. The lamb crisps with the sweetbread - divine!

That being the end of our our savoury courses, we then were moving on to the desserts. To start of us was the hot and iced tea. I tell no lie, it was hot and cold in the mouth, 72 degrees of difference in temperature to be exact!

The next course was also interesting - Macerated strawberries. Make of that what you will. What came out was a gorgeous white chocolate gingham blanket, aerated strawberry puffs, strawberries (macerated!) and strawberry sauce, yum and very pretty!


The final proper dessert course was my second favourite course, and I'm not even a pudding person! But the BFG changed me! Beautifully presented, and then when you dived in, there was delicious icecream, cherries, aerated cherried, almond crisp, crumble - it was definitely the dish that kept on giving. Very rich, but surprisingly light. And accompanied with a sweet red dessert wine, which I didn't know existed, and was also my favourite wine of the meal!


Then came the cheese - an extra course, but we had to have one to share, just to see the cheese board! Mike doesn't like cheese, very strange, but he even tried a couple. Well put a tiny speck on the tip of his tongue, and then gagged, but at least he tried them. Really impressed that the majority were British cheeses, and all the ones we tasted were excellent!

I haven't talked much about the wine yet, but it was so wonderful. The sommelier was so fantastic, really knowledgeable and interesting, and took the time to really explain the wines to us, as well as telling us some good stories about his favourite wine. Every wine tasted completely really different once it was drank with the food, and for someone who doesn't know a lot about wine, I was amazed about how the wine tasted, and how it actually seemed to make the food taste better.

I will say that by this point we were getting suitably drunk, after all the wine, sake, fizz and general merriment, that is enough to make anyone giddy! Then to add to it, the next course was whisky gums, that were really strong, and tasted like pure whisky. Very novel way of presenting as well!



The final treat was a sweet shop bag, which lots of sweet treats in. To be honest, I was done in at this point and decided to save something to take home for the hubby (which he loved btw). All the others ate their sweets and by the looks on their faces, I would say they enjoyed them!



So there it was! The best meal ever, literally, fact! There were points where I literally had tears in my eyes, it was that good! Very lucky to have experienced it and shared with such wonderful friends. Maybe turning 30 wasn't so bad after all!!



Sunday 5 August 2012

The Broad Chare

As the whole country have been getting into the Olympics, so have I. My third live Olympic event, I've just spent a fab weekend in Newcastle to watch the men's quarter final football. The game was brilliant, even if Honduras didn't win (always root for the underdog).

I've really started embracing twitter. It's only taken me about 2 years to understand the hashtags and following, but now I've got it. And also have realised how useful it is to find out information, like getting recommendations for places to eat!

Thanks to @jayrayner1 and @nellyscupcakes, we are some delicious food over the weekend.

For dinner last night, we went to the Broad Chare, on recommendation from Jay. From arrival, we were really happy to find a cosy and warm pub, with a buzzing atmosphere. The upstairs dining room was great and full of people when we arrived. This was also the perfect place for hubby, as they served real ales.

The menu was impressive. Decent British food, but with style. We both decided that this would be a good place to have fish, so both opted for fish dishes. I ordered Whole baked plaice with bacon and mussels, whilst hubby went for homemade fish fingers with chips and mushy peas.

And boy was it tasty! My fish was so well cooked and juicy, and the saltiness of the bacon with the mussels worked a treat.

To be honest, everything on the menu looked great. As we were finishing our food, another table had ordered the 7hr lamb. Wow! It looked amazing and the smell was wonderful. It serves 5-6 people, so would have been very greedy for us to order for ourselves, but definitely a reason to go back with friends. They also do a rib of beef for 2 people, which we decided not to order this time, but our waitress told us how good it was, so another reason to come back!

Now, I'm definitely much more of a savoury girl and would choose a starter over a pudding, or have the cheese board. However, all the puddings on the menu sounded so good, I had to try one. We ordered Eton mess to share and weren't disappointed. It was like an ice-cream sundae but with chewy meringue and lovely strawberries. Perfect to be eating while watching Mo Farah win his gold
Medal on the iPhone.

Big thumbs up @_thebroadchare. Thanks for having us and look forward to coming again!

Thursday 2 August 2012

The Deadly Cs

I know it's boring and doesn't go hand in hand with loving food (or writing a food blog), but I'm officially on a diet.

The last time I was on a diet was in 2003 - it lasted two months, I lost lots of weight, but was utterly miserable. So I've avoided them ever since.

However, whilst most people diet and watch what they eat before a wedding, I did the opposite. I drank and ate more than ever. The food was just because I love food, and always manage to find any excuse to eat more (such as planning a wedding)

But the drinking was tactical. The run up to a wedding often leads to excessive boozing, hen does (multiple), celebratory nights out and also the drinking in the quiet of home, trying to drown away the stresses of planning the biggest day ever.

For me, it was the hen do. I was determined to be the last girl standing and therefore decided I needed to get my alcohol tolerance up. I do not advocate excessive drinking, or think its big or clever, but I have become a lightweight in my older years. That, along with the combination of my boozy mates, student siblings and bridesmaid who is obsessed with shots, meant that I was more worried about being drunk and asleep by 8pm than walking down the aisle.

So I trained up. And drank. Every night. For a month. Hubby also jumped on the bandwagon. We weren't drunk every night, but I had at least 1 glass of wine (sometimes 3!). And you know what. It worked. They tried, but whatever they gave me to drink, I managed and more. And I was the last one standing - YES!! However, you can imagine what this did to my waistline.

Then came the honeymoon, which was wonderful, but spending a week in new York is not conducive to healthy eating. Couple this with a week in an all-inclusive resort where champagne and cocktails were free-flowing 24 hours a day!

So after 2 months of half-hearted going to the gym and trying to avoid chocolate, I signed up to a personal trainer. Who took one look at me and said 'sweetheart, your problem is the carbs'. As if I didn't know that - the girl whose favourite meal is lasagne, chips and garlic bread, it was always going to be the carbs.

So my diet consists of avoiding the 3 deadly Cs - carbs, cheese and chocolate. I mean, that is pretty depressing. But I've been doing it for 2 weeks and you know what, it's not been that bad. Eating out is a bit more challenging (but Bincho last week was fine!) and I'm already a bit bored of chicken and salad, but I am feeling fresher and more lively so must be doing something!

So I'm determined to eat well and great food, and find great places to eat where I can avoid the Cs. I will find them, and talk about them and maybe help some other miserable people on diets find a bit of light at the end of the tunnel.

Who knows if it will work, or how log it will last, but I will keep you posted!