Saturday, 11 June 2011

Locanda Locatelli

For my 21st birthday I went to the one Michelin starred Locanda Locatelli. I promised to send someone an email all about it. Being the food animal that I am, once I started writing, I started thinking I was a restaurant critic, with the following results:

I’ve read a few reviews which have described the interior of Locanda Locatelli as seedy, presumably because of the presence of Leather Sofas (imagine the words nailed to a wall and dripping with blood). So, rather than enjoying the comfortable cream sofas and the soft swivel armchairs, some critics would prefer to be wedged into a straight-backed slab of wood, modelled on an iron maiden. I found the dim lighting chic and relaxed. It is easy to see why 8 Seymour Street is popular with celebrities desirous of an intimate dinner.
It is pricy, and unless you are a movie star, it’s probably strictly for special occasions. My Dad had a field day with the 28 page wine list with a range of prices (my family agreed that an £800 bottle should, at the very least, contain the elixir of immortality).

To start, I had the Carpaccio served on rocket with Parmesan cheese. It was perfectly soft melt in the mouth beef. I’m not a fan of rocket but found this one soft and non-acidic. My brother and sister both had homemade pasta parcels filled with ricotta and asparagus, topped with soft baby asparagus and Parmesan. Despite not liking asparagus or ricotta, I enjoyed it the morsel I tasted: the sign of a great chef is to convert you to his or her choice of ingredients. My Dad had the special of pasta parcels filled with aubergine and walnuts. My Mum had pan-fried scallops.

My mother, sister and brother went for the special main course of slow cooked beef with mashed potato and morel mushrooms. It was a fantastic fillet of medium rare beef served with a red wine sauce. Needless to say, they weren’t sharing. My dad had honey roast breast of duck, with broccoli, garlic and chilli. The sweet and sour flavours lent the dish an Asian feel. I had the extravagant lobster linguine with tomato, garlic and chilli. It was delicious, although my inner spice freak would’ve liked a stronger chilli hit. We shared some deep-fried courgettes, which were like delicious vegetable chips.
                                  
I was disappointed that the chocolate fondant was not available on the night (having drooled over the menu in advance), but my second choice made up for it. The chocoholics (my Dad, my sister and I) went for the tasting of Amedei chocolate. This consisted of a soft chocolate cake, slightly let down by a crumbly chocolate base, a scoop of white chocolate ice cream with chunks of fudge, and the star was a pastry cylinder filled with warm chocolate mousse. My brother had another special, a white peach torte with white chocolate ice cream, which looked, and tasted, wonderful. My mum went for a lighter dessert, fragrant Catalan cream foam with berries and ice cream.

I was delighted with the selection tray of sweets which accompanied the hot drinks. One was an orange sugar-coated jelly, which was essentially, a very posh Jaffa Cake. Then a rich chocolate truffle, and my personal favourite, an almond biscuit, which was macaroon-like in texture but more rustic in appearance. I had a great meal, and I would recommend Locanda Locatelli to anyone who loves Italian food.

Overall: 9.5/10

Here is a visual representation of my meal. Probably not the greatest advertisement, but I had fun trying.

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