As a
starter, I had a charcuterie board, the highlights of which were the parma ham
and salami. I was not keen on the pickled vegetables served with it, but Rachel
liked them. She had the Carpaccio served with beetroot, parmesan and red
cabbage. She found the dish to have perfectly balanced flavours and said that
after eating the starter she felt like she’d never eaten beef before.
My main was Anjou pigeon on a bed of lentils with Bruschetta. It was extremely tasty, although I felt there was slight overkill with the amount of lentils. I resisted the caveman urge to pick up and gnaw the leg when I couldn’t get any more meat off-could have done with a sharper knife. Rachel had veal capelletti-all of the pasta dishes are available as a starter or main course, and I can recommend these delicious fresh pasta parcels with rich game and mushrooms.
My main was Anjou pigeon on a bed of lentils with Bruschetta. It was extremely tasty, although I felt there was slight overkill with the amount of lentils. I resisted the caveman urge to pick up and gnaw the leg when I couldn’t get any more meat off-could have done with a sharper knife. Rachel had veal capelletti-all of the pasta dishes are available as a starter or main course, and I can recommend these delicious fresh pasta parcels with rich game and mushrooms.
For
dessert we shared a tasting plate, which deserves a drum roll ellipsis … panna
cotta with a quince-like jam, ice cream in espresso, Amalfi lemon tart and
flourless chocolate cake. Up until this meal, I would never have ordered a
lemon tart by itself, but it is Theo Randall’s signature dessert for a reason.
The flourless chocolate cake was almost overwhelmingly intense but delicious
nonetheless. It was a cake worthy of Gregg Wallace-esque excitement (something along the lines of 'I want to dress like a hippo and wallow in it'). The only part I didn’t go nuts for was the ice cream in the cup of
espresso, as I’m just not sold on cold coffee, but the vanilla ice cream and
flavour combination worked well.
Theo
Randall has an extensive wine list of varying prices, with bottles starting
from about £34. We went for an excellent Valpolicella.
Overall:
8.5/10
Not forgetting, of course, my visual representation of our dessert:
No comments:
Post a Comment