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Antidote, London W1 restaurant review

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'Where is everybody? It's a question I continue to ask as the food arrives: I can't find fault with any of it'

This is quite the plate of food: stark, almost bleak in its monochrome simplicity. Everything is shades of pale: waxy potatoes, pearly cod, espuma in a colour that Farrow & Ball would probably call Stornoway Sound, tiny dots of darkest grey. But it's also remarkable in its flawlessness: the cod cooked just so, subtle maillard brushstrokes on top, flesh as tender and yielding as a truffle. The potatoes have been smoked; not the full essence de barbecue, but enough to give them personality. And the espuma is potato foam, as soothing as fine vichysoisse, as airy as a quip. Those dots? Black olives, desiccated into crunches of pure flavour.

I don't normally get so food porny (my word count won't let me), but it's clear we're not in any common-or-garden wine bar. To backtrack: I've been a fan of this corner site off Carnaby Street since it was La Trouvaille, much-loved by the earliest wave of networking web-foodies, back when meeting anyone off the internet was regarded as the weirdest of all possible behaviours. Latterly, it wasn't anywhere I'd go for food, but the winelist was a corker, and it was a wonderful place for an off-radar outdoor seat on a hot city night.


Avenue: restaurant review

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Down and dirty Americana arrives off Piccadilly the only trouble is, they're not very good at it

Avenue, 79 St James's Street, London SW1 (020 7321 2111). Meal for two, including drinks and service, £150

St James's Street off London's Piccadilly is home to businesses selling absolutely nothing anybody could ever need. It is a place only of wants. There are shops selling bespoke shoes and hats, guns and fine wines, yachts and Havana cigars. It is now also home to a restaurant that not only does nobody need (for who actively needs a restaurant?), it is a restaurant I can't quite imagine anybody really wanting.

Unsung food suburbs: Dandenong, Victoria

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Dandenong is treasure trove of ethnic food, with its own Little India and Afghan Bazaar precincts plus cafes and restaurants offering cuisines ranging from Balkan to Mauritian

Thirty kilometres southeast of Melbourne's city centre, Dandenongs rough edges are being smoothed by a $290m urban renewal project. The suburb is a cultural melting pot, with two-thirds of residents born overseas (twice the national average) and 71% speaking a language other than English. As a consequence it's a treasure trove of ethnic food, with its own Little India and Afghan Bazaar precincts plus cafes and restaurants offering cuisines that include Ethiopian, West African, Sri Lankan, Lebanese, Turkish, Polish, Balkan and Mauritian.

House of Tides, Newcastle restaurant review | Marina O'Loughlin

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'There's so much going right, it seems churlish to point out what goes wrong. But a few dishes could have the flavour thermostat turned down a few notches'

The arrival home of local boy Kenny Atkinson, Great British Menu fame and a couple of Michelin stars in his wake, has caused nothing short of hyperventilation among Newcastle's restaurant fans. Like Manchester and Glasgow, Newcastle has been spared the attentions of the star-makers, so there's little doubt this latest arrival comes with the full ponderous weight of expectations.

"Go on, give us a star," is the threnody that seeps from every flagstone crevice in this lovely old listed quayside building. "A little sparkler?" ask the young staff tripping around wonky floors there's not a straight line in the building as eager to please as puppies. "Just the one star won't kill you," Atkinson smiles as he pours dry ice over a zen garden of pebbles cradling Lindisfarne oysters, blootered by ginger, cucumber and lime. (OK, what he actually says is, "To remind you of early morning down by the harbour", which is very sweet.)

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Restaurant review: Loch Fyne Restaurant and Oyster Bar

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It could have been a perfect lunch at the end of a long morning, but Jay didn't find love in Loch Fyne's unique restaurant

Clachan, Cairndow, Argyll (01499 600 264). Meal for two, including drinks and service: £80-120

If there's one thing guaranteed to encourage an appetite it's wrestling with a live 6kg halibut, while standing in a boisterous wind off the Atlantic on one of those Scottish islands which serves as the last westerly rock before the Statue of Liberty, while not wearing quite enough clothes, because you're a southern git who doesn't understand what real weather is.

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Every vittle helps: Tesco opens New York style restaurant

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After buying the restaurant chain Giraffe, Tesco has just launched an NY-style diner, Fred's Food Construction, at one of its stores. But would anyone want to eat out in a supermarket?

If you are one of the many people who think, "wouldn't it be great if Tesco could insinuate itself even further into every aspect of British life", then I have fantastic news for you. At the Tesco Extra in Osterley, west London, Paul Goodale (a former restaurant director at Harrods, no less) has just launched Fred's Food Construction, a very on-trend diner selling New York deli-style subs and US "French dip" sandwiches. If it goes well, you can expect to see Fred's, in which Tesco has made a "small investment", rolled out in-store nationally.

It isn't the first time that supermarkets have tried to break into eating out, and Tesco has been more energetic than most. It part-owns coffee chain Harris + Hoole, and last year bought Giraffe, which now has four in-store restaurants at Tesco sites, with more to come. Apparently, its introduction of places to eat, drink and hang out after the Friday night shop is all part of a bid to make Tesco stores "warmer and less clinical". In an attempt to squeeze a few more quid out of its captive audience, of course.

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Fine dining's identity crisis: is this the end of posh restaurants?

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Haughty waiters, hushed rooms and and starched tablecloths are a thing of the past; today's top chefs are all about casual dining. But don't expect burgers and chips or rock-bottom prices

Mayfair restaurants are many things; fashionable is rarely one of them. By introducing a new, informal style of service, however, Marcus Wareing's once buttoned-up, two Michelin star restaurant newly reopened and renamed Marcus is bang on the prevailing trend of casual dining. It is a trend that, some argue, sounds the death knell for traditional high-end restaurants. That may be overstating it, but it certainly seems that fine dining is having an identity crisis.

Top chefs have rarely questioned the oppressive, buttock-clenching theatre: haughty waiters; hushed rooms; starched table linen; endless interruptions to pour wine and water. But from Gordon Ramsay's former wingman Mark Sargeant to Nathan Outlaw, suddenly they are lining up to throw off the shackles of fussy service. Wareing's eponymous restaurant is but the most recent, high-profile example.

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Indian fusion food an exciting new trend in Indian cuisine video

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Top Indian chef Manish Mehrotra from Delhi restaurant Indian Accent gives us an insight into Indian fusion cooking traditional Indian cuisine with a modern twist. Mehrotra demonstrates some of his imaginative blends of cuisines and discusses different regional cooking styles in India while respecting his cultural culinary heritage Continue reading...

8 Hoxton Square, London N1 restaurant review | Marina O'Loughlin

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'It's the very definition of a good time: unrushed, informal, menu stuffed with things you didn't know you were pining for'

Now here's a ridiculous idea for a restaurant: sell good food at reasonable prices, employ engaging staff who look happy to be there, don't mark up wine greedily, take reservations. How ludicrous. It'd never stand a chance. Absurdly, this second restaurant from chef Cameron Emirali and his front of house partner Luke Wilson doesn't have a burger on its menu, nor, as far as I know, employ PRs or host dinners for people with "meaningful internet presences". In terms of "design", they have done little more than titivate the fixtures and fittings left behind by the site's previous, short-lived incumbent, painted a few bricks white and installed their trademark tables with a handy inbuilt cutlery-and-menu section. They've not even got creative with the name: their first was 10 Greek Street and this is 8 Hoxton Square. Tuh. It's got hubris written all over it, and not even in Futura Bold.

Only, it hasn't. It's a smash, rammed to the rafters on a school night, with people talking and laughing and ordering another bottle from a wine list created with wit and without avarice. It's the very definition of a good time: unrushed, informal, menu stuffed with things you didn't know you were pining for. Savoury zeppole, for instance, a play on sweet Italian doughnuts, with a different filling each day: we land on 'nduja day, the pungent, scarlet sausage oozing through grease-free buns.

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The OFM 50: our favourite foods, recipes, restaurants and more

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From Portland to Paris, secret ingredients to world-beating chefs, presenting our second annual guide to the best cooking eating and drinking

Blood has gone out of fashion as a cooking ingredient despite its widespread use in many cultures, from coq au vin and jugged hare to blood "tofu" in China. In its latest investigations into neglected foodstuffs following on from headline-grabbing work with insects Copenhagen's Nordic Food Lab has been exploring the potential of pig's blood.

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Janetira Thai: restaurant review | Jay Rayner

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The 'Super Duper Spicy' mackerel curry at this restaurant is so ferociously fiery, you'll need to wash your hair. Worth it though, says Jay Rayner

Janetira Thai, 28 Brewer Street, London W1(020 7434 3777). No booking. Meal for two £60

The night before I visited Janetira Thai for lunch I washed my hair. This is a big job. It requires an official notice to the water company and an amber alert from the Met Office. Still, I thought it necessary. If everything I had read was correct, I was going to be eating a dish of such uncommon chilli heat and power that my body was likely to deliver an involuntary response, far beyond the hiccups and pain most people associate with a major dose of capsaicin.

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The joy of long, boozy lunches | Ian Martin

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I love a proper lunch in a posh restaurant. My ancestors would have shunned me

I love lunch. Proper lunch, I mean, with cutlery. I like the food, too twiddly and delicious to make at home. I like the sparkling gossip. Weirdly, I like hearing my own voice. Such a nice change from the dark interior monologue droning away in my shrivelled pickled walnut of a brain. Lunch is the perfect antidote to self-employment's slow poison of gazing for hours at a dull white screen slowly filling up with drivel (see comments below).

Yeah, I love everything that lunch promises the formal box, the informal contents. The company. Seriously, is there a lovelier word in the English language than "companion"? Someone you break bread with, peace on Earth, goodwill all round and let's have a pudding. The sitting there like some pampered Lannister weakling while strong and attractive young people bring platefuls of crazy eats to your table. Most of all though, I like the drinking.

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Tasting the perfect pizza ... in Melbourne

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Australia's Johnny Di Francesco beat pizzaiolos from all over the world in the Pizza World Championships in Italy. So what's his secret?

To become a world champion in pizza making, you have just one chance to get it right. One pizza, one panel of judges, plenty of brow-furrowing questions on how you made the thing.

I just kept thinking to myself, Make it like youre in the restaurant and its for a customer, explains Johnny Di Francesco, the Melbourne pizzaiolo who took out the top prize in the Pizza World Championship in Parma, Italy, last week. I was the only one to make my dough by hand, everyone else used machines. I think that helped.

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Timberyard, Edinburgh restaurant review | Marina O'Loughlin

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'The menu marries Nordic pickling, foraging, smoking and curing with classic French technique and a refreshing fondness for fine Scottish dairy products. Yay! Cream!'

Let's have a gander at the menu: sea buckthorn and thyme soda, Douglas fir and treacle, plum shrub soda, burnt lemonade. And that's just the soft drinks list. Little wonder Timberyard's arrival was welcomed with words such as "game-changing" and "paradigm-shifting".

Edinburgh is temperamentally closer to Copenhagen than, say, Bristol, so it's unsurprising to find a chef whose plates owe more to the likes of Kadeau, Relae and Noma than to home-grown hotshots. It's so uncompromising, so stripped back, you half expect to witness a spot of light butchery in the interior courtyard. They're doing the whole local produce thang, of course, but aim to take it further into a degree of self-sufficiency and zero waste. And dour Edinburgh, instead of clutching well-bred pearls to crepy throat at this terrifying modernity, has embraced it with an enthusiasm that's bordering on the unseemly.

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Blanchette: restaurant review | Jay Rayner

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Blanchette in Soho knows exactly what it's doing and that includes not annoying Jay Rayner with a silly tasting menu

Blanchette, 9 D'Arblay Street, London W1 (020 7439 8100). Meal for two, including wine and service, £50-£80

I tried to keep with the project, really I did. I told myself it would be fine, that this was what I was paid to do. By the morning of the lunch, however, I knew I couldn't live a lie any more. I didn't want to eat at the place I had booked. I won't name it. It wouldn't be fair to diss a restaurant I never even visited. But I have to say that the whole proposition looked like as much fun as root-canal surgery without the anaesthetic. The booking process had been terrifying enough. They didn't just demand an email address. They wanted a credit-card number, too. Why didn't they go the whole hog and ask me to pop over so they could snap an electronic tag on my ankle?

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Top chefs reveal their biggest kitchen mistakes video

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Do you ever feel incompetent in the kitchen? Don't worry, the professionals have probably made bigger mistakes than you. From trying to grate melting butter to throwing away £400 worth of white truffles and stabbing colleagues with knives, chefs from Duck & Waffle and other top restaurants share their biggest kitchen errors. Watch the video and share your own embarrassing mishaps below Continue reading...

Top 10 affordable restaurants in rural Tuscany

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Dining out in Tuscany's tourist centres can be a pricey business, but once you get into the rural areas you can find some of the region's delicious specialities at more affordable restaurants

Do you know a great place to eat in Tuscany? Share your suggestions in the comments below

As long as you avoid the bisteccafiorentina (T-bone steak) and extravagant seasonal ingredients such as truffles and porcini mushrooms, eating out in Tuscany is not as expensive as you might think. The choice of wine will influence the bill considerably, but the vino della casa, more than drinkable and positively delicious in most country eateries in Tuscany, will only push the bill up a few euros. While some of the places listed below could not be classed as "budget" restaurants, a pasta dish or a main course plus either an antipasto or a dessert would come to around 15. At others, you can get a full meal for that price.

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Britain on a plate | Tom Kerridge

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Tom Kerridge on the honest traditions of food in Britain and his new column in Cook, Britain on a Plate, starting 3 May.

Watch Tom in action in our exclusive short film.

Initially, it wasn't the food that got me into cooking. It was the people. My first job, washing dishes in a pub kitchen in my hometown of Gloucester, was just like being back at school. We were a pack of naughty boys cracking rude jokes with the added thrill of knives and fire. It was the dark side of life, and I loved it.

You meet some phenomenal people when you work in food in Britain. Butchers, fishmongers, a whole host of funny old geezers with tales to tell. On top of that, there's great stuff to eat. It's definitely the best job in the world.

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Roti King, London NW1 restaurant review | Marina O'Loughlin

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'The mutton curry is so dark, so brooding, so lacking in social graces, it makes other curries look like terrible fops'

Sorry, folks, but this week's restaurant is not pretty. Neither its interior nor its location, a slip road behind scabby old Euston. Scaffolding currently mummifies the frontage, and it's at the bottom of some dusty steps, in a dingy basement with little more than a JustEat decal outside to indicate that it serves, you know, food.

The name above the door is, for now, Euston Chinese. (Don't Google it you'll only find howls of pain from people who've suffered its ministrations.) Laminated menus are sticky and dog-eared; it's only later that I realise they're recycled from a previous outlet. There's not a penny here unpinched. It's enough to make a restaurant aesthete sob into his pressed-tin ceiling chart.

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Plum and Spilt Milk: restaurant review | Jay Rayner

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Dishing up big-fisted flavours, and elegant with it, Plum and Spilt Milk in King's Cross is on the right track

Great Northern Hotel, King's Cross, London N1 (020 3388 0818). Meal for two, including drinks and service: £120

There is a man eating alone at the table next to us in Plum and Spilt Milk, the restaurant of the newly restored Great Northern Hotel at London's King's Cross. He looks utterly content, with his plate of devilled kidneys on toast. I like to think that a lot of people eat here alone, for if a terminus restaurant has any purpose at all, it is to offer a place for the solo traveller to occupy themselves.

In my late-teens, I InterRailed around Europe most summers and became obsessed with the great train stations of what we then called the Continent: the vaulting cathedral of Milan, nurtured by Mussolini as some ludicrous tribute to fascism, and through which every European journey appeared to be routed regardless of destination; the city-within-a-city of Munich station, where you could get a shave, eat dinner and take in a dodgy movie without ever setting foot outside; the more hokey charms of Ventimiglia on the French-Italian border, where at midnight the café was always full of travellers changing trains and the espresso machines steamed constantly as if in tribute to the old puffers that once passed by.

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