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Entries tagged as ‘fine dining’

22_09_09 – Rockpool Bar, Spice Temple, Sydney

September 22, 2009 · Leave a Comment

I met up with one of my friends, having just finished a snow season in Jindabyne, he was on his way back to either the Sunshine Coast or Perth. Jarmin took my old job at Hans Oversnow driving the snow cats for the ‘09 season.

We had a late lunch at Lowenbrau Beer House near the rocks because we had a late dinner res at Neil Perry’s Spice Temple. We got suited up and headed into Rockpool Bar and Grill for a few drinks beforehand. We ordered a few glasses of white wine off the Bar’s very well balanced and excellent looking wine-by-the-glass list. This place is also well known for its massive and award-winningly good wine list.

Whilst having a sip of my ‘07 Vouvray, Neil Perry walked into the bar area and came over to say hi. I had a quick chat with him before he was called back to the kitchen.

Downstairs, a few minutes later, we checked into Spice Temple.  The interior is really amazing.  After a struggle trying to pick something from the menu, we decided the best thing was to go with the banquet.

  • Cabbage and radish pickle
  • Cucumber with smashed garlic
  • Silken tofu and preserved egg with soy chilli dressing
  • Shredded lamb shoulder with salt chilli
  • Fried squid with five spice and dark chilli paste
  • Fish drowned in heaven facing chillies and Sichuan peppercorns (Leatherjacket Sichuan style)
  • Three shot chicken (beer, chilli oil, soy)
  • Stir-fried David Blackmore’s wagyu brisket with baby eggplants and chilli
  • Broccolini with oyster sauce
  • Steamed rice
  • Orange granita

And it was all only $69/person!!!

It was excellent, highly recommended.

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August 09 – Wasabi, Noosa

August 31, 2009 · Leave a Comment

WASABI

Head Chef Shinichi Maeda knows how to make sushi! Wasabi has moved to a great location – on the water – at Noosa Sound from their previous Sunshine Beach location.

Wasabi has a great wine, sake, champagne, cocktail list but the real star is the food. Chef Maeda knows what good food tastes like and uses the freshest produce to make every plate a winner. Everytime I visit I am amazed at the taste sensations that are presented at the table. People nodding and savouring each flavour on the delicately arranged plates is a very common sight in Wasabi.

I almost religiously order omakase - chef’s selection. The main reason is that the best produce can be used to make the day’s selection. If you are ordering a-la-carte must try dishes are

  • any of the gaki dishes
  • hiramasa ponzu
  • maki escondido
  • tuna tartar shin-style
  • anything with ocean trout in it
  • I haven’t even started on any of the hot dishes! …

Try lunch there on a Sunday or get there for sunset drinks at the bar area before you dine …

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WASABI

2 Quamby Place, Noosa Sound Q 4567

(+617) 5449 2443 www.wasabisb.com

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Fri 24_07_09 – Gordan Ramsay, Shrek The Musical, Pacha NYC

August 8, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Gordon Ramsay has a restaurant at an upper Midtown ritzy location being The London (W54th St). He has two restaurant, the serious one Gordon Ramsay, and a cheaper more casual one called Maze at The London. We had a lunch booking for Maze (the Gordon Ramsay only opens for dinner) and it was excellent. The menu was very interesting and all the dishes were executed perfectly. I had the Veal Terrine with Sweetbreads, Pan fried Tasmanian ocean trout, orzo and fennel heart cassoulet with peekytoe crab and the farmhouse cheese selection. It really was excellent and much more affordable than I thought.

Some of the other dishes, were Tortellini of beef short rib, escarole, trompette royale and dashi, Smoked rainbow trout, avocado sauce mousseline and fennel crisps, Pan fried sablefish, braised leeks, smoked eel and red wine sauce and Berkshire pork loin with black pudding, romanesco, apple and cider jus.

Maze by Gordon Ramsay at The London

Shrek The Musical was playing at The Broadway Theatre so we decided to see it. The theatre was nice and although the first half was pretty slow, the second half definitely picked things up and it was quite funny. Before the show we had dinner at Mario “Iron Chef” Batali’s tapas restaurant “Food was excellent and it was the first time I got to try razorclams.

Mario Batali’s Casa Mono

That night after the show we had a VIP table reservation for Todd Terry’s debut at the club. It was a process to get in, about 3 security checks and ID checks (photos were taken off our ID because they couldn’t be read by their machine scanner). We got there fairly early and it was quiet but just a little after midnight the club was really getting full. Todd Terry came on and played an awesome set, Clif and Jade went home a little earlier than Kiri and I (oops).

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Tue 14_7_09 – Luxor, L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon

July 15, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Clif and I set our alarms and got up to check out the “early morning crew” in the casino. We were expecting to see a lot of seedos, but the place was full of , relatively speaking, normal looking people. I think Clif and I probably stood out the worst. We played a machine called Pompeii and had a bit of a win.

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After a fair old morning session, we attended the Luxor Buffet for lunch with Jade. Jade and Clif spent some time at the pool, and Kiri and I slept off some jetlag.

We went to a fairly famous restaurant called L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon in the MGM. This is the exhibition kitchen and an offshoot of the main restaurant – the chef who owns the restaurant was rated as “chef of the century”. You sit at the counter and watch the chefs in action. Kiri noted that you can always tell a good place by the calmness of the staff, these guys were cool as. The food was modern French and excellent. Some of the things we had were foie gras stuffed quail with truffled mash, seabass with baby vegetables and fennel foam, hanger steak with confit shallots, egg salad with iberico ham and asparagus, and spaghetti l’atelier. Excellent…

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Fri 10_04_09 – Rockpool Bar & Grill, Neil Perry

April 14, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We had a 730 res for Neil’s latest Sydney venture, Rockpool Bar & Grill, which is modelled on his successful Melbourne-based bar and grill.  Another taxi across town to Hunter St and we were there.

 

As you walk in the aroma is awesome, you can smell the faint scent of burning hardwood and charcoal.  The staff are very professional and well dressed. You get a sense of serenity and calmness when you enter the dining room and view the chefs in the open kitchen silently completing their respective tasks.

 

We immediately ordered some drinks without looking at the cocktail list.  Clif and I ordered a martini each – a drink that I really enjoy on special occasions – and the girls ordered a mojito each.   I got the feeling we should’ve chosen something off the list from the service staff.  I was asked what sort of martini I like and I answered “a dry one”, which I felt pretty stupid answering and when the girls asked if the bar staff can make them mojitos, they were told “yea, I guess they can”  (note: none of this was in way rude or inhospitable, it’s just we were probably ordering some low-brow drinks that caught the staff off guard).  The drinks came out and they were professionally executed and delicious starters – to our palate lol. 

 

Neil often says he doesn’t follow too many rules and goes with what he likes, so we just followed his lead.  We were offered water from another waiter with lemon and limes in hand.  We just asked for some plain water and he walked off with the lemon and limes, which I found a bit strange.  Obviously if you don’t purchase water, you don’t get lime – even if you enjoy it in your (plain) water.

 

The menu is very good and we all had some hard choices to make.  There were a few definites that had been decided on before we even walked in.  I was always getting the Four Raw Tastes of the Sea starter.  I had this at Rockpool a few years ago and thought it was amazing, particularly the use of olive oil.  The Mac and Cheese, Boiled Greens with Extra Virgin and Lemon and the Slow Cooked Egg with Bone Marrow and Red Wine Jus, were always going to be definites also.

 

We ordered the starters and had some Oysters with Mignonette Sauce.  We were given a choice of two oysters and went with Sydney Rock.  They were so fresh it was unbelievable.  The sauce, which I’d never tasted before, was also amazing.  Some nice bread was served with an equally impressive butter and we were offered more if needed which was a nice touch.

 

For entrée, three of the four meals came out and we waited about 10 minutes for the fourth one (slow cooked egg and bone marrow) to come out.  Clif’s sashimi was very nice and quite generous on the serving size.  Jade enjoyed the charcoal-grilled squid and pork belly and my four raw tastes hit the spot again.  I think it was the ocean trout with harissa and preserved lemon (could be wrong on the details there) that sealed the deal.  Sharing a ham plate was the perfect way to try the expensive and luxurious Jamon Iberico from Spain. We enjoyed a nice white wine, Sauvignon Blanc, with our starters.

 

Main courses were delivered together and professionally.  I ordered the Sirloin on the Bone medium rare, it was served perfectly cooked, on a plate with a slice of lemon – exactly the way I like it.  Clif also ordered a steak, Rib on the Bone, which again was cooked to perfection.  The steaks were served with a very well prepared béarnaise sauce, and a choice of other condiments.  I took horseradish cream and hot English mustard.  Personally, I thought the horseradish cream had too much cream in it and didn’t allow the horseradish to be itself.

 

Kiri ordered the Pigeon and Radicchio and Jade had the Swordfish Steak.  The swordfish steak was the best prepared piece of fish I have ever tasted.  The closest thing I can relate it to was chewing on fairy floss, that might sound weird but it was that light and moist, it just disappeared in your mouth – very nice.  Kiri’s dish was probably too rich in the end, especially as her entrée was quite rich also, but the pigeon was nicely presented and there was no sign of any of it being overcooked.

 

The sides we ordered were boiled greens, sautéed mushrooms and Neil’s mac and cheese.  All went well with our order.  Particularly impressive was the Mac and Cheese, it tasted so nice!  Neil, I’d love to know what cheese you used on this particular dish.  Was there a blue cheese in there?

 

We enjoyed a nice Shiraz with the mains and hunted out the dessert menu. Crème Caramel and Lemon Tart were the final choices and we asked the sommelier to match a dessert wine with each.  Crème caramel is one of my favourite desserts, this did not disappoint.  We were all amazed at how much of a positive effect a well-chosen dessert wine can have on the dish. 

 

The (only) negative first: the bathrooms were a long way away, I guess you aren’t spoiled for choice for options when you renovate a heritage building.  Some suggestions (humbly): leave a small plate, possibly the bread plate, for the duration of the meal to place samplings of the mains or some of the shared side dishes on; serve the patrons lemon or lime with their water whether it’s plain or not;

 

Overall, what an experience! The smoky aroma, the wines, the service, the ambience, the decor and, of course, the food – all very impressive.  I mentioned at the start how serene the place felt, that was further enhanced by the (not over-) confident staff who knew what they were talking about and the way the food was “the hero”.  I would highly recommend this restaurant to anyone who enjoys fresh produce cooked with the respect it deserves, fine service and the smell of burning charcoal.

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新 太 郎 – Sushi Shintaro

January 15, 2009 · 2 Comments

SUSHI SHINTARO

Mori Building, Basement 1

Namiki Dori, 7-5-4, Ginza

Chuo-ku, Tokyo

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Sushi Shintaro was recommended to me by my friend from Japan, Shinichi Maeda.  Shinichi runs the highly successful Sunshine Beach restaurant Wasabi  www.wasabisb.com

I simply asked Shin-san the other day, “what’s the best sushi in Tokyo” and he replied Shintaro in Shinbashi.  With no instructions, or address I found it on the net and located it via GoogleMaps.  After arriving in Ginza, we used the Sony Building as a reference point and eventually found the building.  I took a guess at the kanji and headed down into the basement.  

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We were greeted enthusiastically in a small restaurant with a counter in front of the itamae-san (chef) .  The apprentice could speak english and he thought he recognised me, I asked him if he knew Shin and they did.  We ordered お任せ –  omakase and were on our way...

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We started with the following assorted dishes

  • Some fish skin and pickles
  • Traditional fish sashimi from the olden days (kohada)
  • Toro – the best bit of tuna I have ever tasted in my life covered in fresh wasabi and grated radish
  • Anago – a large saltwater eel fillet, it seemed like pan-fried and served with japanese lime
  • Japanese-tea steamed octopus served with a specialty salt
  • A scallop which was quickly fried, wrapped in a sheet of nori and then handed to us

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The piece of fatty tuna was the best thing I’ve ever tasted and Kiri really like the sea eel.  The chef told us that the famous Tetsuya from Tetsuya’s in Sydney dines there at least once a month and his favourite is the sea eel.  The chef had been to Australia once to visit his “old friend” Tetsuya and sample his famous ocean trout dish, which is now on Shintaro’s menu (or a version of it).  The chef was so famous he was having a photo shoot for a Japanese gourment magazine in the middle of our lunch…

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After the starters, it was a full course of nigiri zushi.  This is not an exhaustive list of what we had, just what I can remember

  • Kohada
  • Aji – horse mackerel
  • Shime saba – mackerel
  • A white fish
  • Ocean trout
  • A flat fish that was wrapped in a large sea leaf before being cut
  • Uni – sea urchin.  This was served gunkan battleship style
  • Ebi – prawn. The prawns were pulled out a tank in front of us and lightly cooked
  • Red clam, and finish with;
  • Maguro – tuna 

After the serving of nigiri – which is amazingly filling – we were served a fish soup and green tea.  The cold sake we were served and the Asahi Premium beer that we ordered went perfectly with the meal.  The chef was happy to oblige when we asked for a photo, have you seen a guy this cool before?

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After we finished, we paid our bill and there was a reporter there waiting to interview him.  Also, they all had a chuckle at Kiri’s bag: after her zip had fallen off the other day I replaced it with a fake piece of tuna sushi.  Another photo, this time with the English-speaking apprentice. Gochiso- sama deshita.

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The bill?  If you have to ask, you can’t afford it!

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