There were, still are, many down sides to the pandemic; from
the serious to the trivial.
But as with all clouds there have been silver linings.
The upsides may not have outweighed, or come even close to the down sides, but
it would be wrong not to celebrate them.
Deliveroo has just announced an increase in sales of 99%+
over the last year, highlighting the rise in takeaways and eating in
necessitated by the closure of pubs, cafes and restaurants during lockdown.
But the whole notion of takeaways got a makeover last year,
as innovative and embattled chefs and restaurateurs looked at ways of surviving
the crisis.
Sure, Deliveroo kept delivering kebabs, pizza fried chicken,
but the new kids on the block were gastro pubs and high end restaurants,
offering a range of Dine at Home options to fill the space of eating out in
style.
For those of us who live beyond the M25 this has been an
even bigger benefit, as we can now get to try “London food” without a bank
account emptying train trip. And by London food, we are not being
entirely capital centric, we are talking about a range of top flight
restaurants suddenly becoming more accessible.
These offers are never going to replace the restaurant
experience, with waiter service, posh glasses, fancy cutlery and most
importantly of all, someone else to do the washing up, but they are a welcome
addition to the choice of dining experiences and as rural dwellers, we hope
they remain a viable option.
At least some of you, I am sure, will have seen our interview with Andrew Clarke, latterly of St Leonards and now working with the team at
the Tramshed in London.
If so you will have heard how he is a great pan of his Netherton pans - you can see him proudly photographing his collectionn.
And you might also have noticed us mention the treat that he sent to us. I hope that the following description tempts you give the Tramshed Project at Home a try too. This may have been a gift, but we have been back since and paid our way.
Starter
Burrata with blood orange and salsa macha
Burrata is, to my mind, a challenge. Silky, rich, indulgent, yes, but it can be a bit of a dairy mugging. The blood arange tamed it considerably, reining in its excess and highlighting its indulgent creaminess. Salsa macha was a first for us - to be honest, I had to look it up!. This will not be the last time, however. A definite winner.
Main
Butternut schnitzel, heritage carrots and cauliflower cream, pink fir potatoes.
The squash has been lightly steamed and then coated in breadcrumbs, oats and seeds to create a vegan take on a classic Schnitzel. All we had to do was brush it oil and bake in the oven.
It may not sound much, in and of itself, but add in the seasonal greens with butter, (the schnitzel may have been vegan, but we are not), pumpkin miso sauce and a grnish of blood orange, redcurrants, pickeld shallots and capers and woohoo, the whole thing is elevated to a new level. In our expereince the butternut has newer been bettered!
A side order of heritage carrots was served with cauliflower cream and sprinkled liberally with dukkah and pistachio, with a carb hit of Pink Fir potatoes to complete the meal.
To say that this was generous was an understatement - there was enough for 4 of us, not 2.
Dessert
Salted caramel tart
There may well have been enough of our mains to share, but there was no way this was going anywhere other than down my throat - absolute bliss.
Restaurants have had a hard time of it over the last 15 months and opening up is still presenting them with challenges nad struggles that we mainly do not see.
Please do what you can to support them, so that when all of this is over, they will still be there to feed us.
Netherton Foundry Shropshire 2021 ©
www.netherton-foundry.co.uk
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