Last Saturday we went to worship at the alter which is the food heaven of Marc 'Pierre' Wilkinson. The restaurant is tucked into a small parade of shops in Oxton, with a chip shop one side and a double unit tapas bar , the Courtyard, next door.
I don't think I have ever been to a one star Michelin restaurant before, although I may have been in Rome or Paris without realising it, so I was intrigued to see what makes a restaurant that special.
The venue limits covers to ten, so as well as our party of four there were two couples in. One were being treated as a wedding present, the others were 'regulars' as they continued to point out to anybody who would listen. More about them later.
We were served all night by two delightful waitresses who explained the construction of each course in precise detail. And what a menu we had. We started with roasted almonds, were treated to a leaf of watercress with champagne oyster sauce. Then followed carrot soup with a mint froth, celeriac with fois grois and a hens egg. and a selection of breads. The main was Gressington duck followed by the cheese board and finally roasted pineapple. It was all extremely yummy, and lived up to the £55 price tag, and the one star rating.
We accompanied the meal with a bottle of Mud House Sauvignon Blanc which was great and a bottle of Chateau Musar Gaston Hochar 2000 from Lebanon. It was here that the first crack in the operation showed itself. The bottle we were offered was corked, although only just. The waitress had to take advise from the chef before it was changed. That should not have happened, and what would have developed if he had disagreed? We were then offered a 1999 vintage as the second bottle with no explanation why, and finally, I got all the sediment in the final glass, after which the waitress said, ah, I think I should have decanted this wine!! Yes, love, you should have .
We did not let a dodgy bottle of red spoil the evening and we all agreed we would go back if the right occasion presented itself.
What happened next, however, would have cost the chef his star if it was anything to do with me. Previously mentioned self important couple indicated to the waitress that as they were regulars they would like to say hello to Marc. Out he came to talk to them about how he chats to other top chefs around Europe as he strives for a second star in a such a small premises. What he did not do is acknowledge the table of four punters who were right behind him. How difficult is it to say 'hello, was everything to your liking' as he passed?
Now he may think that being in the Gordon Ramsay school of rude, arrogant chefs is the way to get on, but it did him no favours on Saturday.
1 comment:
Hi Simon, I think your rare duck could have been a Gressingham, a cross between a mallard and a Pekin. Never had it myself. Once had Alesbury Duck at the Bell Inn, Aston Clinton. Memorable since they served it on my lap, so you wuz lucky. All the best,Dick
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