Showing posts with label fine dining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fine dining. Show all posts

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Restaurant review - Momofuku seiōbo

Momofuku seiōbo is one of the hardest restaurants to book in Sydney - it is difficult to book, as you can only book 20 days in advance and it's like a first to login best dressed situation.  Some people probably found it easy to book, but I often found that the days I wanted to book were always booked out.

Finally, we got a reservation for my birthday! And I was excited to see what all the fuss was about.
Momofuku seiōbo is Momofuku’s first restaurant outside of New York City. Reservations for the main dining area can only be made in advance through our online system. We also have a 5-seat bar that serves a limited bar menu. Bar seating is first come, first serve. In the main dining area, we serve a tasting menu that changes constantly. The menu is inspired by the bounty of Australian ingredients and Sydney’s diverse food culture. Seiōbo is the Japanese goddess of the west and her sign is the peach tree. Momofuku seiōbo has three hats from the Sydney Morning Herald Good Food Guide.

- from the Momofuku website
The Star, Sydney's casino, is now full of great eateries, and Momofuku seiōbo is among them.  The staff were attentive and helpful, and the atmosphere was modern and relaxed. The bar seating allowed a view to the busy kitchen where we saw the chefs preparing our food.  Most people enjoy watching them laboriously and painstakingly preparing each course with care and delicacy, however, I am someone who prefers a bit of intrigue to mine.  I don't watch Masterchef or any of those cooking shows, but for those who do, I can imagine that

Smoked eel and apple - that was the description of this interesting starter.  It was lightly flavoured and got you looking forward to more.

Momofuku's pork bun was a lovely Asian start to the menu - they are like Taiwanese Gua Bao.  The dough was light and allowed you to appreciate the contents more rather than being overwhelmed and filled by the steamed rice dough.

Potato with roe, and parson's nose.  Who would have thought that a chicken's bottom would be so delightful!  This menu delights in constrasting textures and I am a big fan of salmon roe anyway.

Crab with chickpea and amaranth.  Amaranth is a grain, which was crispy here (I suspect it was similar nutritionally to quinoa).  A pleasant dish.

Wagyu beef cubes, radish and fermented beans.  You have to mix the dish and once mixed it doesn't look as beautiful as it did on presentation.  The contrasting crisp radish with the tender beef cubes was a delight to the palate and flavoursome.

Cauliflower with mushroom and smoked yolk.  Interesting flavour - but smoked yolk is probably not to my palate's high list.

Marron with seaweed and asparagus was well done and the meat was firm and not rubbery.

Deceptively simple looking peas with oxtail and custard - I liked this dish.  Peas were crisp and the oxtail was soft.  They really do love the crispy and soft combinations here.

Lamb with lettuce and violet mustard.  Lovely and tender.  I was getting rather full by this stage.

Curd with blackcurrant and mint.  A hint of sour softened by sweet.

I loved the presentation of this dish.  Sorrel with muntries and pistachio.  Sorrel added a really earthy flavour which I also found very different and interesting - yet I'm not sure that I found it to my liking.

Pear with jerusalem artichoke and sunflower.  What a lovely presented dish!  But alas for me, though the dish was sweet and it was beautiful to look at, I think the flavours were a little overwhelming.  More of the crunchy and soft texture combination.

An interesting end to the meal, was sweetened pork, which seemed an interesting end to a typical degustation.  It had a hint of Heston, adding a rather English flavour to the end of an otherwise Asian inspired meal.  I was so full by then I could hardly eat it anyway.

Overall, it was a culinary experience.  The flavours were definitely different, however, perhaps my palate is not as refined as I thought - some of the flavours were too earthy, too strong, which made them interesting but not necessarily tasty.  I think of it more like trying to look an original piece of artwork that is interesting and beautiful, but I wouldn't want to hang it in my house because I couldn't stomach looking at it everyday.  I am not sure that I would go again, but the restaurant had fantastic service, a good atmosphere and watching the kitchen certainly was entertaining, if you like those sorts of things.

Friday, April 6, 2012

London Day 6 - Food and Theatre

Today it was shopping day in Mayfair because we were having lunch at another fancy restaurant.  But first we did some shopping.  The best find of the day was coming across Sotheran's in Sackville street.

There were some Gould lithographs in the window so I made my sister go in and we spent an hour poring over the Gould prints - well, it was more like I pored over them and she watched.  Now THAT would have been my ideal souvenir to take home from London!  So I bought more clothes, another bag, nearly bought a print, and then my sister and I headed to Claridges for our lunch at Gordon Ramsay at Claridges.



The interior is very art deco.  There were a lot of choices on the menu, and we decided to go with the lunch tasting menu.



Cute looking bread, there were 3 types to choose from.

Canapes

Kingfish cerviche

Pressed Foie gras, comfit of rabbit and smoked duck 

Braised Beef Featherblade

   Bream fillet

Sorbet refresher



Chocolate sphere with honeycomb - you pour the hot milk chocolate sauce on it and the sphere melts to reveal the inside. LOOKS so awesome!!

Truffles

We managed to score last minute tickets to War Horse, and I was so excited to go!  I was hoping that I wouldn't be disappointed (like I was with the Yorkshire Pudding at Trinity) and I really enjoyed it, and I nearly cried.  The puppetry is amazing, as I was told it would be.  Those Handspring Puppets were amazing.  It made the movement so much more real!



Thursday, April 5, 2012

London Day 5 - Museums and gastronomy

Today was designated Museum day.  The British Museum was first on the books.  I had heard so many things about the museum, I was eager to see it.  I even set aside 4 hours for the museum.

Like all things old in this town, the front facade was impressive, in that Old English way.


However the inside was modern, light and full of people!  The first room was full of antiquities and even a secret door!



However, it was later that I found out that the first room with all those antiquities was actually all the rejects from the other rooms, because all the other rooms were filled with MUCH more impressive things.


Mummies, Sarcophagi and Canopic jars


 Egyptian statues and the Rosetta Stone


Roman Statues



Parts of the Parthenon

Assyrian carved reliefs

I decided to give Asian artifacts a miss, having been to Japan and Taiwan's National Museums.  I lost myself in the shops for a while and ended up buying a few books for myself and the kids.  My sister and I then went for lunch at Hakkasan.
Grilled Shanghai dumpling and BBQ Pork Cheung Fun (rice noodles)

BBQ Organic Pork ribs

Duck and rice steamed in a leaf


Mmm yum!  After that we made our way to the Natural history museum.  Outside there was a falconry display - I love hawking and falconry!  I wish I could handle a beautiful bird of prey!

The Natural history museum was PACKED.  Kids all over the place and a 45 minute queue to get in to see the dinosaurs, so we decided to give them a miss.
 
The ceiling was beatiful with its botanical paintings

 Fish of the Deep DEEP Sea


Pickled animals

Fossils on the walls

Hummingbirds

I had to admit I was a bit disappointed.  I was expecting more from the museum - more British and European natural history things.  So far everything seemed stock standard Natural History museum stuff.  So a bit of shopping after the museums was on the books.

Down to Harvey Nichols to check out the store.  Different brands, not as upmarket as Harrods, but some of the clothing seemed more like things I would wear.  Then I went and bought another pair of Prada shoes and some more Shiseido makeup.

After shopping we went to our prebooked dinner destination Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, which was awarded 1 Michelin Star in 2012.  The food here is inspired by historic British gastronomy. Heston Blumenthal and Executive Chef Ashley Palmer-Watts spent years researching and exploring Britain’s gastronomic past, consulting with food historians, Royal Palaces and endless hours at The British Library.  The result is a menu that has achieved worldwide recognition from food critics, chefs and customer alike.  Recipes used for inspiration date as far back as the Royal Courts of King Henry VIII and have produced classics such as Mandarin Meat Fruit for example.  Fortunately the dress was comfortable rather than formal.
It is often thought that the heavy use of spices during the middle ages was a way to disguise the taste of rotten meat but, in fact, the exotic spices introduced to Britain over time by the Romans, Venetian merchants and knights returning from the crusades were far too expensive to be wasted on meat that wasn't fresh; instead, spices were added to show how rich, refined and extravagant you were.


Meat Fruit (c.1500) - Mandarin, chicken liver parfait and grilled bread
Don't be fooled, that mandarin is actually pate!


Rice and Flesh (c. 1390) - Saffron Calf tail and red wine


 Spiced Pigeon (c. 1780) - Ale and artichokes



Cod in cider (c. 1940) - Chard and fired mussels


Slow cooked Angus - one of the specials for the day

 Tipsy cake (c. 1810)  - Spit roast pineapple



Chocolate bar (c. 1730) - Passion fruit jam and ginger ice cream


Brown bread Ice cream (c. 1830) - Salted butter caramel, pear and malted yeast syrup

Dinner was superb.  Well deserving of its 1 Michelin Star. I was so stuffed I couldn't even finish the complimentary mousse and brioche at the end.