Having made the lavender ice-cream so easily, I thought I should see what else I could do with my thermomix! This time hibiscus flower ice-cream.
Wild hibiscus flower ice-cream |
Having made the lavender ice-cream so easily, I thought I should see what else I could do with my thermomix! This time hibiscus flower ice-cream.
Wild hibiscus flower ice-cream |
Lavender Ice-Cream |
I found a lavender ice-cream recipe on the Telegraph website, and thought it would be a good one to adapt for the thermomix.
Lavender Ice-Cream |
Midsummer House in Cambridge is the star attraction of Cambridge’s growing food scene. Owned by Chef Patron Daniel Clifford, the restaurant has held two Michelin stars since 2005, and has recently undergone renovation.
I’ve wanted to eat Daniel’s food for some time now, and the Craven meeting at the Newmarket race course nearby provided the perfect opportunity to visit the restaurant. Midsummer House is set in a Victorian villa, perched neatly between a river and an open park. As a result you have to approach it on foot – but this gives you time to take in the restaurant’s lovely setting… Tables are predominantly set in the rear conservatory, and overlook the charming garden, the trees hung with fairy lights. There’s even a Misdummer House Pashley propped up in the garden, adding to the slightly old-world romantic feel of the restaurant.
We began with a tomato and celery sorbet, olives, and cheese gougère made with parmesan, and filled with smooth warm gruyere, by far the best gougère I’ve had in terms of texture. The sorbet was clean, a culinary virgin mary, and very refreshing. We opted for the tasting menu, and for once I’ve remembered to photograph most of it.
Leek and potato, a quails egg and smoked haddock |
The quails egg had been just dipped in burnt onion powder and was perfectly soft and luscious. The fish was cooked exactly, and the translucent flakes broke easily into the leek and potato. I’ve had onion ash at Roganic, but this is much more intense and flavoursome, though much grittier in texture.
Rillettes of salmon, pickled vegetables, lemongrass sorbet and wasabi puree |
Slow roast quail, salad of fresh pea and wild garlic, sautéed morels, quail jus |
Alongside the quail breast, a ballotine of quail leg wrapped in potato offered an extra textural dimension. The quail was perfectly cooked and offset by the rich clean earthiness of the pea and garlic. The morels added a level of unami’ness which counterbalanced the delicate sweetness of the meat.
Cauliflower cooked under pressure with squid and rice crackers |
What could possibly elevate cauliflower cheese to a gourmet dish? Include some squid! Of course Daniel’s dish was much prettier than this, but yet again I was so fascinated by the combination that I’d tried it before I remembered to take a picture. The combination of the squid and the cheese hits that umami button head on, and allows the menu to continue to build in depth. Barely visible in the picture is a squid ink sheet of jelly, and diced squid buried deep in the dish. The metallic tang of the squid ink contrasts with the seaweed like greens, and the rich depth of the cheese.
Unsurprisingly I managed to miss the photograph of one dish – well – I was really enjoying the menu by then! But my notes have a dish of slow roast duck, with braised swiss chard, sweet potato and pink grapefruit. I’ve noted that the dish just lifts your palate back up the umami scale after the last two, with the pink grapefruit adding a note of acidity, and cutting through the meatiness of the duck.
Artisanal cheese |
The Hubby was offered a variety of cheeses, including some very nice Exmoor Blue, Roquefort, and Manchego.
A pre-dessert of fennel, black olive and lemon came as fennel cream and jelly, with lemon sorbet, shards of black olive tuille, and black olives. The combination of sour and savoury acted as a good palate cleanser after the cheese, but I can imagine it wouldn’t be to everyone’s taste. Personally I loved the combination.
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Caramelised apple, cinnamon ice cream |
Midsummer House is one of the few restaurants I’ve eaten in where I felt the chef had truly constructed a menu, rather than a random combination of dishes. The meal is structured in depth, and increases in intensity as you progress. The rooms are newly renovated, and the staff were attentive. During the summer guests are able to spend time in the garden, which given its setting, would be charming.
I was lucky enough to not only go into the main kitchen, but into Daniel’s development kitchen too, and the attention to detail is evident everywhere. Delicious food, a beautiful setting, and the added incentive of the stunning architecture of Cambridge on its doorstep.
Midsummer House
Midsummer Common
Cambridge
Having eaten Paul Foster’s GBM Menu the night before, we moved on to his tasting menu.This is a better reflection of both the ethos of the kitchen, and of their technical skill. Ingredients can be foraged from the meadows around the mill and the emphasis is very much on local and seasonal produce. Paul is a very accomplished chef, and here you get a better sense of his vision and his developing style.
Mussel broth, with lemon spots, cucumber, stonecrop, buckthorn, dill and a dash of parsley oil |
This is a delightful dish, and begins the evening with the lightest and most delicate of broths, teeming with flavour and scent. Everything is crisp or succulent, and thought through. The lemon puree adds acidity, but by being combined with agar allows you to taste it in droplets, rather than overwhelming the dish. As summer approaches, this is the perfect starter. [For molecular cooks, the lemon dressing is achieved by combing lemon juice and agar in a water bath at 90ºC for 1 hour – I shall blog it once I’ve tried it this weekend]
Now, Hubby and I were gossiping so much about our racing finds at Newmarket, that I managed to completely miss photographs of two courses. This is not unusual if I’m enjoying a menu! One of those dishes is the hake brandade, with a slow cooked hen’s egg, and a scattering of crispy bacon. The egg of course perfectly cooked at 62ºC, with its unctuous yolk breaking over the salty hake.
Asparagus, chickweed and cobnuts |
Here seasonal ingredients are the star, with new season asparagus, asparagus purée, raw asparagus, chickweed, and grated cob nut.
The second photograph I missed was an amazing beer dish, with a Adnams beer noisette, a slightly sweet pickled onion, some melt-in-the-mouth oxtail and flaxseed. I may not have taken a photo, but my note book is full of little stars.
Salt baked lamb rump and shoulder, with yoghurt, wild garlic, celeriac an celery leaf |
Egg custard tart, apple, buttermilk, nutmeg |
Yes, you probably gather from my photo that I delved straight into the dish before remembering to take a photo – of course it looks prettier than this! As well as the custard, there were crisp batons of green apple, slices of raw apple flavoured with caramelised toffee apple, and buttermilk. Very dense, smooth and creamy, with a distinct savoury edge delivered through the saltiness of the custard. This almost has the savouriness of a cheese course.
Chocolate mousse and soil, sea buckthorn granita, and hazelnut |
This dessert has many elements: there’s chocolate soil (made with cocoa, ground almonds, flour, butter and sugar), a chocolate mousse scatter with cocoa nibs, a sea buckthorn granita, powdered hazelnut scattering (made with hazelnut butter mixed with maltose), and a tiny garnish of yarrow. Somehow like the best jaffa cake deconstructed – but better. Where others rely on orange, Paul uses the acidity of the sea buckthorn to contrast to the rich earthiness of the chocolate. One would imagine the whole dish to be slightly too bitter and tart, but the various nut elements ground the dish. There’s also the contrast of textures and temperatures at play, all working harmoniously on the plate.
I enjoyed Paul’s Great British Menu, but on the whole I prefer this one – the dishes are more complete, and worked together better to give sense of direction to the meal. Tuddenham Mill isn’t far from London, has rooms (which deliver room service breakfast!), and staff who are enthusiastic and charming. I understand it’s also possible to go on a foraging walk around the meadow, which would be fantastic fun. Add in a trip to Midsummer House and Alimentum, and you have a culinary weekend you’ll be talking about for a very long time.
Tuddenham Mill
High Street
Tuddenham
By happy coincidence I found myself booked into Tuddenham Mill whilst Paul Foster, the Mill’s Head Chef, appeared on the Great British Menu. Even better, Paul’s menu was already available to guests, and we were able to try the complete menu before some of the dishes had even aired.
Paul has spent time in some very impressive kitchens before moving to Tuddenham in 2010, and worked at Le Manoir aux Quat’Saison, at the eponymous Sat Bains, and had stages at The French Laundry and L’auberge de lille in Lyon. Here his style is a combination of local and foraged ingredients, and modern techniques. Tuddenham Mill itself is perched on a beautiful stretch of water, and has retained many of the traditional elements of the mill, whilst providing a modern dining experience. On the night we ate this menu Paul wasn’t actually in the kitchen, but he did cook us his tasting menu the following night, which is reviewed here.
Pork neck carpaccio, pork skin scratchings, croquette of pig’s head, ribwort plantain purée, and budding chickweed |
The pork neck carpaccio is delicious, as are the croquette, full of rich yet almost delicate flavour. By contrast the fine shaving of turnip was over-soused, and overwhelmed the radish, green apple and asparagus, which were raw. I have no problem with raw ingredients, actually I rather like them, but the contrast did mean that there wasn’t as much cohesion to the dish as I might have expected, and distracted us from the pork. The ribwort plantain (which is sautéed with shallots and chicken stock) is lovely, but might have achieved a little more umami intensity.
Ray noodles, with chicken skin, foraged sea vegetables including stonecrop and sea aster, pea mousse and lemon gel |
Next, by far the dish I was anticipating most – the barely cooked common ray, with chicken skin, foraged sea vegetables, pea mousse and lemon gel. The ray is brined, and then barely poached in a water bath for 10 minutes at 48ºC. The threads of flesh are then pulled from the fish like noodles, and plated in a brown butter and soy dressing. I absolutely love this dish, couldn’t fault it. The ray is succulent, delicate and delicious. The foraged elements work perfectly with the dish and are piquant, individual, but not overpowering. The pea mousse is sweet, but also slightly earthy, and the chicken skin provides the umami element. I’ve had fish with chicken several times before, but here it’s up to you to combine the chicken in the quantity you want – and this for me makes the difference… It doesn’t overpower the dish, it sits alongside it comfortably. The lemon purée is mixed with a little agar then piped around the plate – it provides a clean hit of citrus, with a good mouthfeel. This is one dish I will definitely make at home.
Goosnargh duck breast and hearts, broccoli, hazelnuts, and pink fir potatoes with douglas pine |
Whipped sea buckthorn, with Italian meringue, puffed rice, damson purée, ground ivy, and ginger syrup |
Tuddenham Mill
High Street
Tuddenham
Some months ago I attended the pisco fuelled launch of Martin Morales’ Ceviche. I’d been following Martin’s progress for months on twitter, and as a ceviche addict was particularly looking forward to getting my hands on some great raw fish. That night we found ourselves at the far end of the room and very little food made it to our table – as the waiting staff piled trays high with succulent beef, and raw fish, greedy hands grabbed at dishes as soon as they entered the room. They did manage to get great glasses of pisco to us, and bottles of beer, and we quickly divided up any morsels which did survive long enough to reach us. These morsels merely whetted my appetite, and it took some weeks before I was able to get a booking to try Ceviche for myself.
Making our way into the bright and cheerful room, @clareangela, @obotheclown and I were full of anticipation. We looked at the menu – it all looked so good! We decided to grab a number of dishes to share, so that we could try as much as possible.
My companions began with Cancha, crunchy Peruvian salted corn kernels, which they said tasted nothing like our popcorn kernels, despite looking like that. They thought they were very flavoursome.
Don Ceviche is a seabass ceviche in ají amarillo chilli, tiger’s milk, ají limo chilli, and red onions. Ají is the chilli element of the ceviche, and the tigers milk is the resulting citrus liquor, which includes lime juice. The dish is topped with crunchy sweet potato. The sea bass was meaty and fresh, and perfectly acidic. You will need to order more than one portion if there are a few of you though, as you won’t want to share.
In the background of that picture is also Sakura Maru – not strictly Peruvian but more of a Japanese influenced ceviche of sliced salmon in Nikkei tiger’s milk, made with satsumas, mirin, soy sauce and ají limo chilli. Again refreshing and moreish.
Causa Santa Rosa came as a beetroot salad, with Peruvian potatoes, coriander, with an olive sauce – smooth, clean, creamy, tangy – with crunchy deep fried sweet potatoes on top. Surprisingly addictive – given how creamy it looks – it’s a very refreshing salad. I don’t think the others liked this as much as me, but I found it a very good foil for the acidity of the ceviche.
Next, the meatier dishes – first rump steak marinated in ají panda chilli, anticucho sauce with grilled potato slices – tender, spicy and meaty, the beef disappeared as quickly as it arrived. It was a funny lunch, all having quite different food upbringings, we kept comparing dishes to things we’d eaten as children. Obo, reminisced about the beef of his childhood. We also had Arroz con Mariscos – seafood rice with pisco, ají amarillo chilli, rocoto chilli and red peppers.
When we moved onto Lomo Saltado (wok cooked slices of beef fillet, red onions, tomatoes, ají amarillo chilli, chips and salt ado sauce) Clare tried to educate me into the Northern thing about chips and gravy. As someone who hates gravy at the best of times, and certainly doesn’t want it on my chips, it was a bit of a moot point for me. The vegetables and the beef were yummy, but I can’t see myself taking up meaty soaked chips any time soon. Clare, however, had a small look of bliss on her face.
We finished with a lúcuma ice-cream – mainly because I insisted they try it. I’d had it that mad pisco-fuelled night, and just remember being blown away by the similarity of ice cream made with fresh lúcuma fruit pulp to our own butterscotch pudding flavour. Completely impossible to describe, the similarities between lúcuma fruit and butterscotch is amazing – I kept trying to convince our waitress that we had something similar but I don’t think she believed me.Ceviche is a great place to go for some casual fresh food with chums. There’s a pisco bar at the front serving tapas style dishes – so whether I’m looking for a quick plate of clean food for myself, or a relaxed environment to share dishes – Ceviche is going on my regular list.
Ceviche,
17 Frith St
London W1D 4RG
Based in Cambridge, Alimentum joins the small but growing band of fine dining restaurants in the city. Mark Poynton, the Chef Patron, came from Cambridge’s Michelin starred Midsummer House, before moving to Alimentum as Head Chef in 2008, and becoming the Chef Patron in 2010.
Mark has developed a very steady and loyal local following, as well as an increasing number of visitors keen to try his developing style. I was lucky enough to find myself in Newmarket for the races, and Alimentum went straight onto my list of restaurants to visit. The promise of such culinary riches also tempted along the very talented Paul Winch-Furniss, and it’s his marvellous pictures you see here. We arrive separately, both windswept, but are quickly ushered into the warmth inside. There’s a lobby bar, all very plush and smart, and giving way to the restaurant. By using the same scarlet colour palette, the two spaces are neatly combined, but are also quite distinct – two ends of the same spectrum, and very polished.
In this smart bar we chat, while little treats are put onto highly polished mirrored tables – salt and vinegar popcorn, distinctly vinegary and definitely more pleasant than it sounds, paired with smoked paprika and hummus macaron – the smoked paprika induces that memory of prawn cocktail flavoured crisps, but the hummus grounds it, giving it a more satisfying flavour.
At the table we decide to have a tasting menu, and begin with a pea mousse with cottage cheese, lemon and ham – this is light, vibrant, with the acidity of the cheese balancing the creaminess of the pea mousse. The whole dish is topped with crispy Joselito gran reserva (one of the finest jamón ibérico de bellota).
This is followed by new season asparagus with a hen’s egg: there’s asparagus puree, raw green asparagus, barbecued white asparagus and a confit egg (in rapeseed oil at 62º for those of you who like these details, the same temperature as a water-bath egg, but here more delicate, silky and flavoured by its rapeseed bath). There is also a slice of truffle brioche, a pickled morel, a goats curd ice-cream and grated truffle to top the dish. I have eaten at least two other variations of this dish in recent months, but here the morel and the goats cheese take it in a different direction, adding depth and contrast to the overall composition.
Next sole, with a toast puree and a pickled fennel puree, silky leeks, pickled grapes, semi-dried pickled grapes, and soused fennel topped with a yeast foam. The yeast foam is piquant and lifts the dish, whilst the fennel and grapes add a sweet sharpness to the soft and delicate fish – a perfectly modern elevation of a classical sole Veronique.
This is followed by a crab meat and scallop mousse, encased in a translucent cylinder of pink-grapefruit jelly, with shards of charred spring onion, prink grapefruit, a stack of crabmeat in marie-rose sauce, and a cube of pressed chicken wing. The combination of fish with umami rich chicken is becoming increasingly popular, but here the pink grapefruit with its strong acidity cuts through the dish – I felt it somewhat overwhelmed the delicate mousse – but it’s an interesting combination.
Then pressed duck, together with a stip of succulent barbecued duck breast, beetroot quinoa, turnip and orange puree, little turnips dressed with turnip leaf, a beetroot gravy and roasted beetroot, both red and yellow. Here the menu steps up a notch, with increased flavour and intensity. Though I wouldn’t have described the duck as particularly hitting that umami button, it did certainly fully round out the meal, and the delicacy of the turnip, and the sweetness of the beetroot weren’t drowned out by the savouriness of the meat – a good combination – with the quinoa adding texture and earthiness. (And yes, Mr Poynton is another chef with an enamel grill in his kitchen, though not a certain egg on this occasion.)
Pre-dessert is a passionfruit curd and granita, with a coffee tuille and coffee ice-cream, and a saffron meringue. This was a perfect dish – the light but intense acidity of the passionfruit cuts through the rich and rounded depth of the coffee elements, and the metallic saffron tips the scale in a different direction, so that it’s not simply a contrast between the other two flavours. Texturally it’s a perfect contrast between cold, smooth, zingy, and crisp too.
The second dessert is a dark chocolate pavé, with a breadcrumb, maldon salt and olive oil crust, caramelised puff pastry at the base stuffed with popping candy, together with a pear sorbet and pear puree on cocoa nibs. The chocolate mousse was intense and smooth, and the textural elements cut through the density. Little cubes of pear scattered the plate and the pear sorbet refresh the palate in-between.
The petit four were a cassia bark jelly, a coconut and lime truffle, and a ‘seared’ marshmallow. I must admit that I didn’t try any of those, but given that Paul promptly finished them off for me, I’m assuming they were pretty good. I did look though, and the jellies were perfect cubes, the chocolate glossy with its brush of pink lustre, and the marshmallows suitably squidgy.
The service at Alimentum is professional and well-informed, and the proficient sommelier will guide you through the menu with appropriate pairings. It’s a good-looking room, and I’m sure the intense scarlet silk elements look very rich in the evening, though they brought warmth during the lunch service too. Mark’s cooking is accomplished and experimental, and thought has been put into the menu. The dishes change frequently with the season, with the chef always striving to achieve new heights – I think we can expect greater things from Mr Poynton in the future. If you’re coming to Cambridge, Alimentum must be on your list of places to try. Indeed given that Cambridge is a scant 45 minutes from London by train, I’d argue it’s worth popping up for lunch, and for a wander around the ravishing architecture of the old town just a few minutes away.
Alimentum
152-154 Hills Road,
Cambridge
CB2 8PB
Alyn has quickly become one of my favourite chefs, but sometimes there isn’t sufficient opportunity to record each dish in great depth – in this instance we had hot-footed our way from the Gaucho Polo Tournament at the O2, and arrived at the Westbury after 10pm, with guests in tow. Alyn had very kindly put together a number of dishes for us, and they were so delicious that I want to record them here, if only visually. For the full Alyn Williams experience you need to head to the Westbury Hotel for yourself, for what I still think is one of the best-valued menus in town at just £55.
Langoustine, grapefruit curd, sea beets, served on hay… |
Mackerel, with squid ink craquelure, piquillo red pepper and ricotta |
Gull’s egg, with ransom leaf, nettle compote, braised snails, and veal tail cooked in buttermilk |
Asparagus, wild hops, salmon and beer |
Oxtail, beef, pureed beetroot, mustard foam, ransoms, croutons |
Mash |
Cheesecake, passion fruit granita, honeycomb |
Lemon posset, caramel, caramel malteser and plum jelly |
Blush cider sorbet, rhubarb jelly, sorbet, gold leaf |
Rhubarb Muffins |
Black olive, and pistachio |
Alyn Williams at the Westbury
37 Conduit Street
The Westbury Mayfair Hotel
London W1S 2YF
I’m a little bit obsessed with blood oranges at the moment, and served this with a chocolate tart. It’s based on a recipe by Galton Blackiston.
275ml water
175g caster sugar
425ml of blood orange juice
We all know the Roux family – you’d have to be living in a culinary vacuum not to have heard of Le Gavroche and the Waterside Inn – but how often do you hear people talking about Roux at Parliament Square? Unlike Le Gavroche, which I find far too twee, in terms of decor, Parliament Square has a clean, modern interior, and the food is a balance of fine French cooking and modern molecular techniques. The Head Chef, Toby Stuart, has worked in some great kitchens, including Cliveden, Orrery, The Square, Richard Neat (in Cannes), and Galvin at Windows. Toby is joined by Steve Groves, the winner of Masterchef: The Professionals in 2009. I’d originally booked a table for two, but at the last minute we were joined by Kristen and Alan who live in New York and are very keen diners themselves.
To begin there’s a celebration of spring: a tomato jelly, with goats cheese mousse and a green tomato vinaigrette. This amuse it both clean, but also has the right mouth-feel to pique your interest.
Tomato jelly, with goats cheese mousse and a green tomato vinaigrette |
Altlantic brill with a baked crust, a ragout of chanterelles, white onions, brown shrimp and a shellfish jus gras |
Caramelised onion polenta with spring vegetables and homemade ricotta cheese |
Coconut panna cotta, passionfruit jelly, and lime granita |
Rhubarb and crumble souffle |
If soufflés are not your thing, perhaps chocolate is? On a bed of chocolate soil, we have a chocolate cremosa, sea salt and caramelised peanut parfait, coriander and Kaffir lime. The dish is lightly dressed with a banana espuma. Kristen loved this dish, and it is apparently one of Toby’s signature dishes…. Tempting, but that soufflé is exceptional.
Chocolate cremosa, sea salt and caramelised peanut parfait, coriander and Kaffir lime |
Roux at Parliament Square
12 Great George Street
London
SW1P 3AD