I've written about Joe Allen before. Especially about what an awesome, friendly place it is and how great the burgers are there. A friend had booked tickets to the burger night event run by American food writer Daniel Young of the award-winning Young And Foodish website and ended up with two spare, so the wife and I joined to make four for the night.
Mr. Young organises regular events through his website, inviting punters to participate in comfort food themed nights. His Burger Mondays are over-subscribed successes on a regular basis and, due to excessive demand, the mid-summer outing to Joe Allen had been pushed to two nights. It was on the Tuesday that the four of us headed down to see what the fuss was about.
Now, Joe Allen and burgers are as much a part of Covent Garden as theatres. There is no getting around the fact that the burger is what a lot of people go there for. The atmosphere, staff and decor are nothing to sniff at either, making the offer of spare tickets an enticing one.
Mr. Young is a dab hand at organising food events. Merrily milling around between tables, offering opinions and topics for discussion amongst the diners, the evening was underway in a seamless and spritely fashion. Because of the number of tables and attendees, every table is made up of randomly assorted groups or couples which adds to the spirit of the event.
Without much ado, we were into the starters and boy were we excited. Buffalo chicken wing sliders with celery & apple salad is more or less the most appetising thing one can read on any menu (with maybe the exception of "pulled pork") so we were hankering to get stuck in. The sliders themselves were an absolute vision: chock full of greasy, deliciously tender chicken wing meat slathered in proper barbecue sauce (left).
Chicken wings are some of the juiciest, most flavoursome parts of the bird. They're also very cheap, which is why they're the base for most good home-made chicken stocks. However, removing the meat from the bones and covering them with sauce is a real touch of class. Combine this with the fresh well-balanced salad and blue cheese dressing on the side and you have one hell of a satisfying starter.
The main course was the standard main Joe Allen event: burger with bacon and cheese, onion inside and gherkin on the side, with skin-on fries in sharing bowls on the table. Amazing stuff as usual and we were so impressed/greedy that we tucked in so fast as to forget a photo. That said, I have taken Joe Allen burger photos before so I don't feel too bad about it. The burger, as ever, was a treat and about as good as you'll get in a proper London restaurant.
The dessert had excited me the second we saw the menu. Peach cobbler and clotted cream was a dish I was dying to get into. Cobbler is basically like a pie or a crumble except the top is made up of biscuit or dumpling. It's a wonderful thing but what we were presented with was a strange dish of stewed fruit with a sweet scone on top (right). It wasn't a traditional cobbler but a more modern interpretation, as Mr. Young explained.
Apparently the cobbler is under serious threat in the USA where crumbles are becoming ever more popular. If this was an effort on behalf of the kitchen to remind us how wonderful they can be, they did a good job. The balance was excellent, between spongy topping, soft fruit and a deliciously sweet note all the way through. The whole thing capped off a sensational evening of comfort food at a reasonable price.
Two things to take away from this: firstly, if you still haven't been to Joe Allen, it's high time you paid a visit there. Despite the recent sale of the premises, under new ownership it's still going strong and is the most fun place to eat if you want proper food in the west end. Secondly, Burger Mondays by Young And Foodish are a great event: well-run, properly-priced and damn fine burgers to boot.
Joe Allen
Friday, 28 June 2013
Tuesday, 11 June 2013
Taste Of London - Regent's Park, Sunday 24th June, 2012
With the yearly trip to Taste Of London, the usual expectations surface. There should be good food, lots of it and a decent selection of dishes to enjoy. Last year we went back with a friend - three is usually a pretty good number for an event like this - and ended up eating more or less as much as I can remember. This being my fourth consecutive Taste Of London outing, you know the drill: summary of dishes, menu of the day, done. Let's begin...
Our first stop was at a special Action Against Hunger pop-up and not a London venue at all. Four different restaurants had their turn at the tent, one for each day, and ours happened to be Michael Wignall's restaurant at The Latymer. The dish itself was one of rich complexity, especially on a tasting plate at a festival: slow-cooked pork belly with pork popcorn, white beans, smoked eel and sage & apple (left). It was a glorious, full-flavoured and well-balanced dish, kicking the day off to an impressive start.
Our next stop was a double at Jamie Oliver's city restaurant Barbecoa. Their menu was one of the more expensive of the day but two of their savoury barbecue treats looked good to us. Pulled pork is something anyone who eats meat should like so the pulled shoulder with coleslaw was a no-brainer. Along with this, we had the crispy pig cheeks with piccalilli (both right). These were both enjoyable but reminded me too much of a mass-catered barbecue to be as great as they might be in a restaurant.
Next up was a dish from Pollen Street Social's stand. Following a Christmas meal which blew our socks off, the wife and I were determined to try something from them. Their main course dish of slow-cooked ox cheek with apple pomme purée and turnip was comforting, soft and rich (left). It was never going to be as fine as the outstanding food in the restaurant but it was a rather pleasant dish in all.
We swung by Gary Rhodes' Rhodes 24 stall, a standard of festivals past, for the main course dish of braised lamb with fondant potato and onion with gravy (right). The lamb was nice - though perhaps a little too similar to the dish we'd just tried - and very soft. The onion and gravy was delicious but sadly the potato tasted a little undercooked, a mistake that anyone who has watched MasterChef will tell you is pretty poor.
Whilst the wife and I were debating our next move, our friend went off-piste and snuck over to Bocca di Lupo to buy their signature dish of foie gras & pork sausage, served with polenta and balsamic vinegar (left). It wasn't something I'd been keen to try and after tasting it, I was convinced. Confusingly flavoured and constructed, the components of the sausage were lost amongst the sides and the seasoning. Not a good use of rather a lot of our crowns.
Despite our ups and downs with Gauthier Soho, there is one dish that holds a place in our hearts: the truffle risotto (right). It is still gloriously rich, creamy and indulgent, balancing the brown chicken jus with the light parmesan cheese and al dente rice. It's a great dish and one that I was happy to pay the equivalent of £6 per plate for.
The Savoy Grill was up next, with their Lake District sirloin steak served with Café de Paris sauce (left). I'd not heard of this sauce before and it is similar to Béarnaise without the strong tarragon flavour. In the event, the steak - which was cooked perfectly - did not really sing along with the sauce and left us wanting a bit more. Not a disappointment but nothing to write home about either.
One of London's finest (and now purveyor of a Michelin Star), Launceston Place was up next. They were serving a main course of slow-cooked pork belly with truffle mashed potato, apple jam and pork popcorn. The pork itself was pleasant enough and the combination was classic but the overall dish wasn't cohesive which I suppose is the very problem with Taste of London: restaurants have to pare their dishes back to be marketable as snack plates and sometimes it just doesn't work.
Oysters were next on the menu, as the signature dish from Kensington Place (left). At 4 tokens (£2) per oyster, they were about average for a market or festival and they were pretty fresh. What was nice about them was the break from some of the heavier food we'd been eating. However, as simple oysters, they were not a lot more than 'good'.
Continuing our seafood break in the day, we went for salt & pepper squid from Gordon Ramsay's Maze as another of the lighter dishes on show (right). It was indeed salty and spicy with chilli scattered throughout but it missed the mark on flavour overall. The squid itself was lost amongst all the seasoning and dressing, leaving us a little disappointed with the dish eventually.
We went back to meat with a stop at the Opera Tavern's stall and ordered their signature burger dish of Ibérico pork and foie gras (left). Slider-sized for easy festival eating and topped with truffled pecorino cheese, it was succulent, well-flavoured and perfectly-sized. My only criticism was that it was a little dry. It was certainly enough to pique my interest for a future visit. One thing that must be said is 14 tokens (£7) for a slider is rather dear, no matter how rich it is.
Another non-London venue had set up shop as a regular stand for the festival, with Heston Blumenthal's Hinds Head crashing the capital. As such, it was always going to be one of the places near the top of our list, and their braised ox cheek with smoked mash was a hearty plate, despite costing the equivalent of £6 (right). The meat was deliciously cooked as one would expect, with a delicious rich gravy. I couldn't really identify what the smoked mash brought to the dish; as a menu item it's something that tends to rile me as a diner: showiness for no real reason by and large.
Benares were of course one of our top targets, having long been held as the very best Indian food I've eaten anywhere. Their starter dish was a rustic-sounding chicken tikka pie with spiced berry compote (left). It was very rich, filling and satisfying, but it didn't work as well as I would have hoped. The crust was a bit too hard, making it more of a tart than a pie. The contrast of compote to filling was fun, but there was too much potato in it and I wanted more chicken pieces to contrast with the filling and sauce. Unfortunately the whole thing was just a touch too mushy.
In search of yet more meat (remember, there were three of us), we headed over to the Pétrus stand for their appetising-sounding main course dish of suckling pig belly, apple & prune compote and sage jus (right). It was pretty good, despite being about as stereotypical a London festival dish could be. The mash on the plate was smooth and the pork was delicious. The compote was very tart and there may have been too much but it was good food for sure.
After some fifteen savoury dishes, we were (un)comfortably ready for desserts to start. Our first stop for pudding was the usually dessert-reliable Rhodes 24 for passion fruit tart with strawberries (left). Made in mould of a classic lemon tart, the texture was perfect. The strawberries added some lightness and contrast to the sharp sweetness of the tart and the excellent pastry. A fine effort and no mistake.
Our next dessert was another re-visit, to the Savoy Grill stand for their peach melba (right). This should have been great - an easily-produced, refreshing, summer dessert - but ended up being a damp squib. Too mushy and simplistic, it ended up being fruit salad with cream. The flavours weren't bad but it could've been so much more.
Our next stop was one that has been as much of a fixture as any on festivals past: the heavenly chocolate mousse cake from Theo Randall (left). Still a sumptuously rich and moist chocolate cake with light, sweet mascarpone cream, this is something that I could (and will) happily eat once a year for as long as I can hold off diabetes.
Club Gascon presented the penultimate dish of the day, with a typically extravagant dessert. Their dessert for the day was a 'Wahoo Cornetto', imitating the popular commercial ice cream (right). Instead of actual ice cream, they combined mousse, fruit, crumble and armagnac, topped with "space dust". It was fun, light and charismatic in every way but taste, leaving little or no impression on us as a single dessert.
By this point, we were outrageously full and the only reason we had a dish more was to take the count up to an even twenty for the day. And the fact that we had precisely six crowns left. Usually priced at ten, Bar Boulud were trying to clear out their dessert of a berry cupcake and chocolate éclair, so we tied off the day and our spending by indulging (left). These were perfectly acceptable but no more: lesser versions of what you can enjoy on their afternoon tea menu. Besides, at this point I was in no mood for any more, particularly rich pastry. The cupcake was the better of the two, with a fruity twist adding something lively to the plate.
After a few deep breaths, we were done. It had been a fun day, but a pretty exhausting one. And it had only taken three or four hours. As we reflected, we decided this would be our last Taste of London for a while. Several years in a row had taken their toll and a bit of the magic has been lost for now. Given that the 2013 edition is a few weeks away now (again, I hang my head in shame as to how long this has taken to post), I can't say I've been dying to go back this year and we won't be.
If you have not been, Taste of London is a great day out with some wonderful restaurants offering exquisite dishes. But it isn't cheap and it can get quite repetitive if you go for three or four years in a row. I would recommend it, but maybe every other year is the way to go.
Time for the menu of the festival, with this being one of those years where not a great deal stood out for me. In the spirit of equality and a big nod to my partner in crime, this is the wife's menu of Taste of London 2012:
Starter: Truffle Risotto from Gauthier Soho - "Still really good: creamy, nice taste and the truffle flavour is delicious"
Main Course: Slow-Cooked Ox Cheek from Pollen Street Social - "Creamy mash with delicate textured ox cheek and well-balanced sauce"
Dessert: Passion Fruit Tart with Strawberries from Rhodes Twenty Four - "The passion fruit was really strong and very nice with the strawberry. Excellent texture"
So there you have it. Not too dissimilar from what I would have picked if I'd been forced into it but it's good to get a slightly different perspective on things. I won't be there this year but I maintain that Taste of London is a great event in the food calendar and one which deserves to keep coming back.
Our first stop was at a special Action Against Hunger pop-up and not a London venue at all. Four different restaurants had their turn at the tent, one for each day, and ours happened to be Michael Wignall's restaurant at The Latymer. The dish itself was one of rich complexity, especially on a tasting plate at a festival: slow-cooked pork belly with pork popcorn, white beans, smoked eel and sage & apple (left). It was a glorious, full-flavoured and well-balanced dish, kicking the day off to an impressive start.
Our next stop was a double at Jamie Oliver's city restaurant Barbecoa. Their menu was one of the more expensive of the day but two of their savoury barbecue treats looked good to us. Pulled pork is something anyone who eats meat should like so the pulled shoulder with coleslaw was a no-brainer. Along with this, we had the crispy pig cheeks with piccalilli (both right). These were both enjoyable but reminded me too much of a mass-catered barbecue to be as great as they might be in a restaurant.
Next up was a dish from Pollen Street Social's stand. Following a Christmas meal which blew our socks off, the wife and I were determined to try something from them. Their main course dish of slow-cooked ox cheek with apple pomme purée and turnip was comforting, soft and rich (left). It was never going to be as fine as the outstanding food in the restaurant but it was a rather pleasant dish in all.
We swung by Gary Rhodes' Rhodes 24 stall, a standard of festivals past, for the main course dish of braised lamb with fondant potato and onion with gravy (right). The lamb was nice - though perhaps a little too similar to the dish we'd just tried - and very soft. The onion and gravy was delicious but sadly the potato tasted a little undercooked, a mistake that anyone who has watched MasterChef will tell you is pretty poor.
Whilst the wife and I were debating our next move, our friend went off-piste and snuck over to Bocca di Lupo to buy their signature dish of foie gras & pork sausage, served with polenta and balsamic vinegar (left). It wasn't something I'd been keen to try and after tasting it, I was convinced. Confusingly flavoured and constructed, the components of the sausage were lost amongst the sides and the seasoning. Not a good use of rather a lot of our crowns.
Despite our ups and downs with Gauthier Soho, there is one dish that holds a place in our hearts: the truffle risotto (right). It is still gloriously rich, creamy and indulgent, balancing the brown chicken jus with the light parmesan cheese and al dente rice. It's a great dish and one that I was happy to pay the equivalent of £6 per plate for.
The Savoy Grill was up next, with their Lake District sirloin steak served with Café de Paris sauce (left). I'd not heard of this sauce before and it is similar to Béarnaise without the strong tarragon flavour. In the event, the steak - which was cooked perfectly - did not really sing along with the sauce and left us wanting a bit more. Not a disappointment but nothing to write home about either.
One of London's finest (and now purveyor of a Michelin Star), Launceston Place was up next. They were serving a main course of slow-cooked pork belly with truffle mashed potato, apple jam and pork popcorn. The pork itself was pleasant enough and the combination was classic but the overall dish wasn't cohesive which I suppose is the very problem with Taste of London: restaurants have to pare their dishes back to be marketable as snack plates and sometimes it just doesn't work.
Oysters were next on the menu, as the signature dish from Kensington Place (left). At 4 tokens (£2) per oyster, they were about average for a market or festival and they were pretty fresh. What was nice about them was the break from some of the heavier food we'd been eating. However, as simple oysters, they were not a lot more than 'good'.
Continuing our seafood break in the day, we went for salt & pepper squid from Gordon Ramsay's Maze as another of the lighter dishes on show (right). It was indeed salty and spicy with chilli scattered throughout but it missed the mark on flavour overall. The squid itself was lost amongst all the seasoning and dressing, leaving us a little disappointed with the dish eventually.
We went back to meat with a stop at the Opera Tavern's stall and ordered their signature burger dish of Ibérico pork and foie gras (left). Slider-sized for easy festival eating and topped with truffled pecorino cheese, it was succulent, well-flavoured and perfectly-sized. My only criticism was that it was a little dry. It was certainly enough to pique my interest for a future visit. One thing that must be said is 14 tokens (£7) for a slider is rather dear, no matter how rich it is.
Another non-London venue had set up shop as a regular stand for the festival, with Heston Blumenthal's Hinds Head crashing the capital. As such, it was always going to be one of the places near the top of our list, and their braised ox cheek with smoked mash was a hearty plate, despite costing the equivalent of £6 (right). The meat was deliciously cooked as one would expect, with a delicious rich gravy. I couldn't really identify what the smoked mash brought to the dish; as a menu item it's something that tends to rile me as a diner: showiness for no real reason by and large.
Benares were of course one of our top targets, having long been held as the very best Indian food I've eaten anywhere. Their starter dish was a rustic-sounding chicken tikka pie with spiced berry compote (left). It was very rich, filling and satisfying, but it didn't work as well as I would have hoped. The crust was a bit too hard, making it more of a tart than a pie. The contrast of compote to filling was fun, but there was too much potato in it and I wanted more chicken pieces to contrast with the filling and sauce. Unfortunately the whole thing was just a touch too mushy.
In search of yet more meat (remember, there were three of us), we headed over to the Pétrus stand for their appetising-sounding main course dish of suckling pig belly, apple & prune compote and sage jus (right). It was pretty good, despite being about as stereotypical a London festival dish could be. The mash on the plate was smooth and the pork was delicious. The compote was very tart and there may have been too much but it was good food for sure.
After some fifteen savoury dishes, we were (un)comfortably ready for desserts to start. Our first stop for pudding was the usually dessert-reliable Rhodes 24 for passion fruit tart with strawberries (left). Made in mould of a classic lemon tart, the texture was perfect. The strawberries added some lightness and contrast to the sharp sweetness of the tart and the excellent pastry. A fine effort and no mistake.
Our next dessert was another re-visit, to the Savoy Grill stand for their peach melba (right). This should have been great - an easily-produced, refreshing, summer dessert - but ended up being a damp squib. Too mushy and simplistic, it ended up being fruit salad with cream. The flavours weren't bad but it could've been so much more.
Our next stop was one that has been as much of a fixture as any on festivals past: the heavenly chocolate mousse cake from Theo Randall (left). Still a sumptuously rich and moist chocolate cake with light, sweet mascarpone cream, this is something that I could (and will) happily eat once a year for as long as I can hold off diabetes.
Club Gascon presented the penultimate dish of the day, with a typically extravagant dessert. Their dessert for the day was a 'Wahoo Cornetto', imitating the popular commercial ice cream (right). Instead of actual ice cream, they combined mousse, fruit, crumble and armagnac, topped with "space dust". It was fun, light and charismatic in every way but taste, leaving little or no impression on us as a single dessert.
By this point, we were outrageously full and the only reason we had a dish more was to take the count up to an even twenty for the day. And the fact that we had precisely six crowns left. Usually priced at ten, Bar Boulud were trying to clear out their dessert of a berry cupcake and chocolate éclair, so we tied off the day and our spending by indulging (left). These were perfectly acceptable but no more: lesser versions of what you can enjoy on their afternoon tea menu. Besides, at this point I was in no mood for any more, particularly rich pastry. The cupcake was the better of the two, with a fruity twist adding something lively to the plate.
After a few deep breaths, we were done. It had been a fun day, but a pretty exhausting one. And it had only taken three or four hours. As we reflected, we decided this would be our last Taste of London for a while. Several years in a row had taken their toll and a bit of the magic has been lost for now. Given that the 2013 edition is a few weeks away now (again, I hang my head in shame as to how long this has taken to post), I can't say I've been dying to go back this year and we won't be.
If you have not been, Taste of London is a great day out with some wonderful restaurants offering exquisite dishes. But it isn't cheap and it can get quite repetitive if you go for three or four years in a row. I would recommend it, but maybe every other year is the way to go.
Time for the menu of the festival, with this being one of those years where not a great deal stood out for me. In the spirit of equality and a big nod to my partner in crime, this is the wife's menu of Taste of London 2012:
Starter: Truffle Risotto from Gauthier Soho - "Still really good: creamy, nice taste and the truffle flavour is delicious"
Main Course: Slow-Cooked Ox Cheek from Pollen Street Social - "Creamy mash with delicate textured ox cheek and well-balanced sauce"
Dessert: Passion Fruit Tart with Strawberries from Rhodes Twenty Four - "The passion fruit was really strong and very nice with the strawberry. Excellent texture"
So there you have it. Not too dissimilar from what I would have picked if I'd been forced into it but it's good to get a slightly different perspective on things. I won't be there this year but I maintain that Taste of London is a great event in the food calendar and one which deserves to keep coming back.
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