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[Food] Restaurant thread 2023



Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Apr 30, 2013
14,124
Herts
Anyone been to Dilsk yet? Looks promising:

Yep. Got invited to one of the later soft openings.

Good; I think you’ll like it.
 














Springal

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2005
24,785
GOSBTS


thedonkeycentrehalf

Moved back to wear the gloves (again)
Jul 7, 2003
9,353


Bozza

You can change this
Helpful Moderator
Jul 4, 2003
57,311
Back in Sussex
Disagree, it was just what Worthing needed, a class restaurant, loved going there, its a shame
The meals we had there were always very good. Great service and decent food that was a cut above anything else in town.

I say "was" because of Tern's arrival. Pitch closing may actually benefit Tern as it leaves it as the only fine dining restaurant in central Worthing now.
 




thedonkeycentrehalf

Moved back to wear the gloves (again)
Jul 7, 2003
9,353
We went to Andalucia in Ferring last week. First time we have been for a long time so didn’t realise quite how much they had expanded the seating out the back.

Food was good, the lamb tapas was a really succulent bit of meat. Deep fried chorizo covered dates were another big hit and the spiced cauliflower had an unexpected but nice hit of heat.

Four of us had a dozen dishes between us plus a jug of sangria and a ginger beer and the bill was £120 so quite reasonable. Also good to see that at 7:30 on a Thursday evening it looked like all of the tables were taken.
 




The Antikythera Mechanism

The oldest known computer
NSC Patron
Aug 7, 2003
8,090
We went to Andalucia in Ferring last week. First time we have been for a long time so didn’t realise quite how much they had expanded the seating out the back.

Food was good, the lamb tapas was a really succulent bit of meat. Deep fried chorizo covered dates were another big hit and the spiced cauliflower had an unexpected but nice hit of heat.

Four of us had a dozen dishes between us plus a jug of sangria and a ginger beer and the bill was £120 so quite reasonable. Also good to see that at 7:30 on a Thursday evening it looked like all of the tables were taken.
When I bought my first house in Chesley Close in Durrington in 1980 our neighbours were Manuel and Susan Quirosa. They had two young sons, Manolito & Luis. They went on to open the Andalucia Restaurant in Ferring, where I believe Luis is now the head chef. How time flies.
 




swd40

Active member
Mar 22, 2006
281
The meals we had there were always very good. Great service and decent food that was a cut above anything else in town.

I say "was" because of Tern's arrival. Pitch closing may actually benefit Tern as it leaves it as the only fine dining restaurant in central Worthing now.
Mr Tutt might think it was fine dining, but every visit proved otherwise. I would not put it up any higher than in terms of quality than Ami Bistro, which is hit and miss.
I keep banging the (not in Worthing) drum, but Parsons Table in Arundel surpasses Pitch on all fronts.
 


Springal

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2005
24,785
GOSBTS
CinCin for a work lunch today. Their set menu lunch is excellent value - £18 for 2 courses, £24 for 3 courses.

Arancino of Pork Ragu a highlight as was the buttermilk pannacotta.

Drinks a bit pricy - £6.50 for a 330ml Unbarred Pale ale but wasn’t my money.

Also enjoyed a nice beer in the sunshine at Bison Beer down the road
 






Springal

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2005
24,785
GOSBTS
Worthing has always lacked food sushi option - but no longer. Sakura down Portland Road / Place is a quality little takeaway. All freshly made for you, excellent value. They also do Katsu curry and bento boxes but did try those just a mix of rolls
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,716
The Fatherland
CODA
Friedelstrasse 47, 12047 Berlin.
2 Michelin stars.


CODA describes itself as a “dessert restaurant” but don’t go there expecting jelly and blancmange as you’ll be disappointed. Instead you get a 15 course tasting menu where pastry chef René Frank applied dessert techniques to mostly savoury ingredients.

I arrived at 7pm in a very nice ground floor restaurant space in a very graffiti strewn part of town. The front of the restaurant is covered in graffiti and the only clue to what lies inside is a heavy dark glass door with CODA in gold and a brass buzzer.

The concept and drinks options were explained over a glass of champagne. Half the dishes come with a small alcoholic concoction as part of the deal but they also recommend buying a bottle of something to have on the side, a Riesling was recommended and ordered. As an aside, the wine list is 90% champagnes, Riesling’s snd sake.

Next followed 15 courses of dishes which were a mix of intrigue and cleverness and at times fun; the Gouda waffles with dried powdered kimchi and the caviar popsicle two examples of the playfulness. The waffles looked exactly like the criss-cross things you have for breakfast oozing with cheese inside, the popsicle was artichoke on a wooden ice lolly stick, then covered in savory ice cream, covered in caviar then covered in white chocolate; not too dissimilar to a FAB lolly. Another good example of the concept was a tomato based dish with meringue made from ground chickpeas. All dishes were complex, all were tasty but as there was so much going on in each one you had to really concentrate not only with the verbal description but the item itself. Only two dishes were warm, most had been prepared during the day and assembled during the evening. The only “meat” dish was a smoked piece of pork rind which was like a small quaver.

The concept started to get a wear a bit thin after 8 or 9 courses and our minds led to a discussion about cooked meat or fish. Incidentally the restaurant used to have two sittings of 6-8 courses but the recent challenges to the sector led them to switch to a 15 courser in one 4 hour sitting.

I had a great time but would I go again? There’s no need. Would I recommend it? In its current 15 course format probably not. Would I eat the caviar popsicle again, for sure.

Tonight I’m at The Bird for beers, burgers and picklebacks to finish off my birthday weekend and celebrate the demolition of Wolves.
 
Last edited:


Goldstone1976

We Got Calde in!!
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Apr 30, 2013
14,124
Herts
CODA
Friedelstrasse 47, 12047 Berlin.
2 Michelin stars.


CODA describes itself as a “dessert restaurant” but don’t go there expecting jelly and blancmange as you’ll be disappointed. Instead you get a 15 course tasting menu where pastry chef René Frank applied dessert techniques to mostly savoury ingredients.

I arrived at 7pm in a very nice ground floor restaurant space in a very graffiti strewn part of town. The front of the restaurant is covered in graffiti and the only clue to what lies inside is a heavy dark glass door with CODA in gold and a brass buzzer.

The concept and drinks options were explained over a glass of champagne. Half the dishes come with a small alcoholic concoction as part of the deal but they also recommend buying a bottle of something to have on the side, a Riesling was recommended and ordered. As an aside, the wine list is 90% champagnes, Riesling’s snd sake.

Next followed 15 courses of dishes which were a mix of intrigue and cleverness and at times fun; the Gouda waffles with dried powdered kimchi and the caviar popsicle two examples of the playfulness. The waffles looked exactly like the cross-cross things you have for breakfast oozing with cheese inside, the popsicle was artichoke on a wooden ice lolly stick, then covered in savory ice cream, covered in caviar then covered in white chocolate; not too dissimilar to a FAB lolly. Another good example of the concept was a tomato based dish with meringue made from ground chickpeas. All dishes were complex, all were tasty but as there was so much going on in each one you had to really concentrate not only with the verbal description but the item itself. Only two dishes were warm, most had been prepared during the day and assembled during the evening. The only “meat” dish was a smoked piece of pork rind which was like a small quaver.

The concept started to get a wear a bit thin after 8 or 9 courses and our minds led to a discussion about cooked meat or fish. Incidentally the restaurant used to have two sittings of 6-8 courses but the recent challenges to the sector led them to switch to a 15 courser in one 4 hour sitting.

I had a great time but would I go again? There’s no need. Would I recommend it? In its current 15 course format probably not. Would I eat the caviar popsicle again, for sure.

Tonight I’m at The Bird for beers, burgers and picklebacks to finish off my birthday weekend and celebrate the demolition of Wolves.
Sounds interesting.

Happy birthday. HT
 


Herr Tubthumper

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
62,716
The Fatherland
Sounds interesting.

Happy birthday. HT
Thank you.

Here’s the menu…the dishes seem simple written down…the drinks don’t.
0699AAA1-9E22-40DC-B351-6A444F63B76E.jpeg
 




Springal

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2005
24,785
GOSBTS
Not a restaurant - but Baby Bao has a ‘sister’ place, Earls on Church Street - specialising in Bahn Mi. Absolutely fantastic for a sandwich. Good choice of options (meat and non meat) - their chocolate malted drink is nice as well
 


Guinness Boy

Tofu eating wokerati
Helpful Moderator
NSC Patron
Jul 23, 2003
37,351
Up and Coming Sunny Portslade
Got to stick my hand up for Wabi Sabi, new Japanese place on Church Rd, Hove on (I think) the site of the old Hins.

A friend had recommended Issa Sushi on the other side of the road but as we arrived it was obviously shut down. Both Mrs GB and me were still in the mood for Japanese and noticed this place almost opposite.

I'm always wary of recommending Japanese on here given the rather precise requirements of one of my fellow contributors but I have to say the lunch we had was amazing and took us straight back to our days living in Tokyo.

We got a range of dishes and shared them. Gyoza - an entry level test these days - passed with flying colours. Thin casing, delicious filling, piping hot and clearly freshly made. Tempura prawns were as good as that can get, served in a basket with paper to catch any excess oil. A rainbow sushi plate of rolls topped with bass, tuna or salmon was perfectly made, beautifully presented and just the right thing for lunch. Best of all (for me) they have soft shell crab. The Spider Temaki made with that, rice and julienned veg was my favourite dish of the lot.

£50 for two greedy people for lunch but you could easily do it cheaper, we over ordered by adding additional garlic rice that was unnecessary.

And, since I mentioned my fellow mod @Goldstone1976 in passing, I shall now come to the bit where I say we can't wait to go back in the evening and have a go at the sake menu. It seemed hugely comprehensive with ginjo, daiginjo and sparkling sake all on the list.

All in all it's a little more refined than Bincho and just as good. A solid 9/10.
 


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