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[Food] Restaurant Thread 2022







Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Apr 30, 2013
14,124
Herts
Coombeshead Farm, Lewannick, East Cornwall

Number 2 of 4 Cornish restaurants to be reviewed on this thread following our trip to the West Country.

Founded by Tom Adams (Pitt Cue) and April Bloomfield (River Cafe, Bibendum, and, ahem, Spotted Pig), this is a 66-acre farm and restaurant with (5) rooms.

We only ate there, as we were staying at the Endsleigh 35 mins away. We did however wander into the main house in our search for the dining room and saw two couple who were staying enjoying preprandial drinks; they said the rooms were great.

Prior to our allotted dining time (in fact there is only 1: 7pm) we had a drink in the local pub. I’m not saying it’s the worst pub in England, but… actually I am. The 18 punters stopped talking as we walked in and turned to stare at us. The two 14-year olds playing pool sneered, the 10-year old playing darts started throwing them with real venom, and the 6-year old turned his back on us and farted. We sat at a table in the corner with our two drinks (a pint and some non-alcoholic nonsense, since you ask) about 5 yards from the end of the bar.

‘Can you smell that BO?’ asked the GLDHI
‘Yes. I thought it was you’
‘You’re so funny’ said in a voice that could be mistaken for sarcasm

We moved tables - it was that bad.

I would put the name of the pub, but I have no desire to publicise it. There is only one in Lewannick - don’t drink in it.

Anyway… we find the restaurant building: a long room in a barn with 6 tables for 8 all set for 2 - the 5 couples staying and us.

‘You could get a lot more people in here’ I say to the waiter (there are 2 chefs, 1 waiter, and 1 kitchen skivvy)
‘Yes, but we don’t want to. We like it as it is’

Here’s the menu:

I see the new site manages to rotate images just as easily as the old one - apologies.

9D217110-B673-4FB4-8C3D-0D70E1B506EF.jpeg


‘That butter’s made here’ opines the GLDHI
‘Shirley not?’
‘Is it?’ I ask the waiter
‘Yes. There’s an old woman up the road with 6 Guernsey cows. We get all our milk from her and make all our dairy products here’

It’s that type of place. Raise, slaughter, butcher, and cook their own meat - mostly pork; cure their own ham and bacon, lots of foraging - you know the sort of place.

The food quality was superb - easily 1 star cooking.

5 courses, £72. Plus a free loaf to take away with you.

Fabulous.
 


MattBackHome

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
11,873
Coombeshead Farm, Lewannick, East Cornwall

Number 2 of 4 Cornish restaurants to be reviewed on this thread following our trip to the West Country.

Founded by Tom Adams (Pitt Cue) and April Bloomfield (River Cafe, Bibendum, and, ahem, Spotted Pig), this is a 66-acre farm and restaurant with (5) rooms.

We only ate there, as we were staying at the Endsleigh 35 mins away. We did however wander into the main house in our search for the dining room and saw two couple who were staying enjoying preprandial drinks; they said the rooms were great.

Prior to our allotted dining time (in fact there is only 1: 7pm) we had a drink in the local pub. I’m not saying it’s the worst pub in England, but… actually I am. The 18 punters stopped talking as we walked in and turned to stare at us. The two 14-year olds playing pool sneered, the 10-year old playing darts started throwing them with real venom, and the 6-year old turned his back on us and farted. We sat at a table in the corner with our two drinks (a pint and some non-alcoholic nonsense, since you ask) about 5 yards from the end of the bar.

‘Can you smell that BO?’ asked the GLDHI
‘Yes. I thought it was you’
‘You’re so funny’ said in a voice that could be mistaken for sarcasm

We moved tables - it was that bad.

I would put the name of the pub, but I have no desire to publicise it. There is only one in Lewannick - don’t drink in it.

Anyway… we find the restaurant building: a long room in a barn with 6 tables for 8 all set for 2 - the 5 couples staying and us.

‘You could get a lot more people in here’ I say to the waiter (there are 2 chefs, 1 waiter, and 1 kitchen skivvy)
‘Yes, but we don’t want to. We like it as it is’

Here’s the menu:

I see the new site manages to rotate images just as easily as the old one - apologies.

View attachment 153969

‘That butter’s made here’ opines the GLDHI
‘Shirley not?’
‘Is it?’ I ask the waiter
‘Yes. There’s an old woman up the road with 6 Guernsey cows. We get all our milk from her and make all our dairy products here’

It’s that type of place. Raise, slaughter, butcher, and cook their own meat - mostly pork; cure their own ham and bacon, lots of foraging - you know the sort of place.

The food quality was superb - easily 1 star cooking.

5 courses, £72. Plus a free loaf to take away with you.

Fabulous.
I can't read that menu, but it may be my eyes.
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
“Chef Dave Mothersill, who has worked in some of Brighton’s best-known restaurants including the Salt Room, the Gingerman and Terre a Terre, is to open his first solo venture in the city. Furna, on New Road, will have just three dozen seats and will serve a decidedly upmarket tasting menu at £90 a head. Dishes will include mushroom agnolotti with black garlic, chestnuts and Wiltshire truffle, veal sweetbreads with kabocha, maple sherry and a roasted chicken sauce, and mirin meringues with clementines.”

Interesting.
 


bhafc99

Well-known member
Oct 14, 2003
7,455
Dubai




amexer

Well-known member
Aug 8, 2011
6,832
“Chef Dave Mothersill, who has worked in some of Brighton’s best-known restaurants including the Salt Room, the Gingerman and Terre a Terre, is to open his first solo venture in the city. Furna, on New Road, will have just three dozen seats and will serve a decidedly upmarket tasting menu at £90 a head. Dishes will include mushroom agnolotti with black garlic, chestnuts and Wiltshire truffle, veal sweetbreads with kabocha, maple sherry and a roasted chicken sauce, and mirin meringues with clementines.”

Interesting.
Brave move. Another restaurant Tasting Menu only. Appreciate many will try for the experience but surely a limit to number of people willing to pay for a meal out for 2 at £230 plus
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
Brave move. Another restaurant Tasting Menu only. Appreciate many will try for the experience but surely a limit to number of people willing to pay for a meal out for 2 at £230 plus
I feel opening any restaurant is a brave/madness move at the moment. That said, I do feel there is sufficient money in Brighton for this to work, as long as the quality is there. The venue looks great, if the food and service matches then it could work.

Am I correct in thinking it's where Fatboy's sushi place used to be?
 


Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,770
Fiveways
I feel opening any restaurant is a brave/madness move at the moment. That said, I do feel there is sufficient money in Brighton for this to work, as long as the quality is there. The venue looks great, if the food and service matches then it could work.

Am I correct in thinking it's where Fatboy's sushi place used to be?
No, it's further up New Road, more or less opposite the two pubs.
FWIW, I'm sceptical that it'll work, but if there are extremely positive reviews from restaurant reviewers, or multiple positive ones on here, I'll give it a go. At the moment, will give it a miss: funds are tight, and the prospect of a tasting menu doesn't appeal.
 




Springal

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2005
24,780
GOSBTS
No, it's further up New Road, more or less opposite the two pubs.
FWIW, I'm sceptical that it'll work, but if there are extremely positive reviews from restaurant reviewers, or multiple positive ones on here, I'll give it a go. At the moment, will give it a miss: funds are tight, and the prospect of a tasting menu doesn't appeal.
Was it where Polpo was ?
 




Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland
No, it's further up New Road, more or less opposite the two pubs.
FWIW, I'm sceptical that it'll work, but if there are extremely positive reviews from restaurant reviewers, or multiple positive ones on here, I'll give it a go. At the moment, will give it a miss: funds are tight, and the prospect of a tasting menu doesn't appeal.
I feel the same, it will need to get some stonking reviews before I’m tempted; there’s other places I’d rather visit/re-visit in Brighton.
 




thedonkeycentrehalf

Moved back to wear the gloves (again)
Jul 7, 2003
9,340
Opening a high end restaurant, tasting menu only, lack of staff across the sector, just before the new year when restaurants are historically quieter for the next couple of months and during a time when almost everyone has their budget being squeezed.

I wish the guy all the best but sounds like him (or his backers) have more money than sense.
 


Westdene Seagull

aka Cap'n Carl Firecrotch
NSC Patron
Oct 27, 2003
21,526
The arse end of Hangleton
Kindling, East Street, Brighton

Had been planning to go here for ages based on the very good reviews online and when friends said they were coming down to Brighton it seemed like the ideal opportunity.

Looked at the drinks menu and was pleased to see a couple of 0% beers on there - a pilsner and what the restaurant called an IPA. I was rather disappointed to be told they only had one pilsner left so ordered that and decided I'd switch to the IPA later - thankfully the IPA was in fact a Blonde beer and was very good.

On to the starters. A couple of us has lamb shoulder which was OK, rather small, and nothing to write home about. One person had the bread and butter and the bread was "like cardboard". Finally Mrs WS had a King Oyster mushroom with aerated potato and truffle. The mushroom was minute and the truffle virtually non-existent. The aerated potato is something to be avoided at all costs. It was a dish that made no sense and appeared to have been put together to be clever rather than a coherent tasty dish.

We all hoped the main would live up to the reviews. How wrong we were. One of us had beef rump - it was nicely cooked but clearly hadn't been rested for long enough, possibly even at all, as it was swimming in blood. One of the specials was a Barnsley chop - it didn't really resemble a Barnsley chop at all. We all know lamb is fatty but this chop consisted mostly of fat ( some of it almost raw ) followed by bone. There were two mouthfuls of actual meat and they were chewy. The final two mains were Hake with sorrel. The sorrel sauce was good but the cooking of the hake was, shall we say, unusual. Both hake fillets were half cooked - i.e. each one had a cooked side and a raw side. We duly complained about three of the dishes. The hake was removed from the bill after being closely inspected by the manager. The chop on the other hand was apparently perfect - it was just the diner's taste that was at fault. We didn't bother complaining about the vegetable sides that seemed as though they had just been picked and put on the plate bypassing cooking. So far not a good meal at all.

We all hesitated about ordering dessert. In the end I opted for another 'IPA' to be safe and one of our friends had a coffee ( a luke warm coffee ). Two foolish souls decided to brave dessert with only partial success. The goats cheese with blackberries was very nice but the chocolate dessert ( I forget the actual ingredients ) was pretty dire, summed up by our friend saying "that's the worst thing I've ever put in my mouth".

A very disappointing meal all in all. The service was very slow and the servers very confused. The 'discussion' about the faults wasn't very appreciated. Kindling seem to want their dishes to be fine dining but they appear not to have the skillset to achieve this. Score 2/10 - one point for the three edible dishes and one for the 0% beers ( the highlight for me ). None of us will be returning.
 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,339
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
Opening a high end restaurant, tasting menu only, lack of staff across the sector, just before the new year when restaurants are historically quieter for the next couple of months and during a time when almost everyone has their budget being squeezed.

I wish the guy all the best but sounds like him (or his backers) have more money than sense.
Depends who they know I suppose. It seems very risky to be sure but they're probably one good Rayner / Dent review away from having three months of bookings. With that set up they may also be trying to get Brighton a one star place finally. But it looks very shit or bust.

That said I can remember taking my one walk a day during lockdown past Rockwater on Hove seafront and being astonished at the amount of money being lavished on the place when the site was a traditional failure that had to resort to Hen Nights and the whole sector was closed. They seem to be doing pretty well at the moment.

I've barely eaten out this year due to our new puppy being fairly clingy but he's getting better now and can be left with the dog sitter for an odd night. I'd be very tempted to do a high end tasting menu rather than yet another trip to Salt Rooms / LFM / Chilli Pickle, but then I probably wouldn't go out to eat for another three months after that unless it was a work trip away on expenses.
 




BLOCK F

Well-known member
Feb 26, 2009
6,723
Kindling, East Street, Brighton

Had been planning to go here for ages based on the very good reviews online and when friends said they were coming down to Brighton it seemed like the ideal opportunity.

Looked at the drinks menu and was pleased to see a couple of 0% beers on there - a pilsner and what the restaurant called an IPA. I was rather disappointed to be told they only had one pilsner left so ordered that and decided I'd switch to the IPA later - thankfully the IPA was in fact a Blonde beer and was very good.

On to the starters. A couple of us has lamb shoulder which was OK, rather small, and nothing to write home about. One person had the bread and butter and the bread was "like cardboard". Finally Mrs WS had a King Oyster mushroom with aerated potato and truffle. The mushroom was minute and the truffle virtually non-existent. The aerated potato is something to be avoided at all costs. It was a dish that made no sense and appeared to have been put together to be clever rather than a coherent tasty dish.

We all hoped the main would live up to the reviews. How wrong we were. One of us had beef rump - it was nicely cooked but clearly hadn't been rested for long enough, possibly even at all, as it was swimming in blood. One of the specials was a Barnsley chop - it didn't really resemble a Barnsley chop at all. We all know lamb is fatty but this chop consisted mostly of fat ( some of it almost raw ) followed by bone. There were two mouthfuls of actual meat and they were chewy. The final two mains were Hake with sorrel. The sorrel sauce was good but the cooking of the hake was, shall we say, unusual. Both hake fillets were half cooked - i.e. each one had a cooked side and a raw side. We duly complained about three of the dishes. The hake was removed from the bill after being closely inspected by the manager. The chop on the other hand was apparently perfect - it was just the diner's taste that was at fault. We didn't bother complaining about the vegetable sides that seemed as though they had just been picked and put on the plate bypassing cooking. So far not a good meal at all.

We all hesitated about ordering dessert. In the end I opted for another 'IPA' to be safe and one of our friends had a coffee ( a luke warm coffee ). Two foolish souls decided to brave dessert with only partial success. The goats cheese with blackberries was very nice but the chocolate dessert ( I forget the actual ingredients ) was pretty dire, summed up by our friend saying "that's the worst thing I've ever put in my mouth".

A very disappointing meal all in all. The service was very slow and the servers very confused. The 'discussion' about the faults wasn't very appreciated. Kindling seem to want their dishes to be fine dining but they appear not to have the skillset to achieve this. Score 2/10 - one point for the three edible dishes and one for the 0% beers ( the highlight for me ). None of us will be returning.

Sounds like a disappointing meal was had by all.
What the f—k is an aerated potato? Sounds like something that should be sold in a bag along with the crisps and nuts in a boozer, possibly called Potato Puffs.😁😳😮
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,683
The Fatherland








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