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They’ve just opened and
had a lot of press, but before you call me a foodie fashion victim,
they’re also on the 43 bus route, and so am I. The shop front is
a work of art in itself, with a gorgeous display of home made breads,
cakes and salads on sale to take away.
In the restaurant there
are just two large white melamine tables, round which everyone sits.
And everyone gets the same starter, they bring it regardless unless
you ask them not to. As it happens, it’s brilliant: three different
kinds of home made bread, on a board with olive oil; a shot glass
each of aubergine puree, a generous portion of green lentil salad
and a small herb and roasted pine nut salad. One of the breads had
small, sour plums in it – much better than it sounds. My Seven Hour
Cooked Lamb with root vegetables was a big joint of meat, perfectly
cooked and falling off the bone, with sweet potato, a roast onion,
parsnips, spud and carrot - a massive plateful which I couldn’t
finish, while L’s Prawns and Scallops in a Thai sauce didn’t look
much but he had to struggle to finish it. The waiter (a young woman,
but we don’t say actress or manageress any more, do we, so I’ve
made a policy decision to drop “waitress”) was quite happy to fix
me a doggy bag, she just put it in a carton from the deli counter
in the front. Which left me a bit of space for pud. The chocolate
brownie with crème fraiche ice cream was more than enough for two,
which is just as well cos I had to fight for every spoonful. “It’s
not often I think a dessert is worth six quid” he said, by way of
excuse. (There’s this squid, shivering on the Ocean Bed. “What’s
the matterwith you ?” asks a passing shark “I’ve got a headache
and a runny nose and I feel awful” said the squid. “Don’t you worry,
little squid, just jump on my back and I’ll take you home”, said
the kindly shark, but instead of taking him home, he swam up to
the Great Barracuda and said “Here’s that sick squid I owe you”)
There are a couple of
drawbacks to Ottolenghi: the total lack of soft furnishings makes
it quite noisy, and as you’re sharing a table with 18 others, this
is not the place for a confidential or romantic evening. It gets
crowded, too, they are doing a roaring trade and you may need to
book. It’s also quite expensive: our bill for dinner for two came
to £54 once we’d added on service. What you go there for is the
food, which is gourmet stuff, everything freshly made on the premises
and as good as anything in London. We dropped by for tea this afternoon
(just happened to be passing, OK?) I had a vast, home made meringue,
L had a chocolate fondant cake, which had that special fruity taste
you only get with really good chocolate. DM Recommended September
2004
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