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Welcome to Lunch Quest: Edinburgh, a jolly little blog capturing our appreciation of Edinburgh eateries. We'll post weekly reviews of our chosen lunch spots, and hope to offer you a good steer on where to eat in our favourite city.

Showing posts with label Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Festival. Show all posts

Bumper Festival Bulletin

To be helpful to our visiting friends, here to sample the joys of the Festival City, we thought we’d put together a bumper blast of likely lunch spots, to help you out when hunger strikes.

These are the collated thoughts of some of our readers, based on their experiences over recent times. Full reviews of a couple of these places will appear on the site, over the next couple of months.

Here’s a brilliant recommendation from Raqui – The Baked Potato Shop, in Cockburn Street. Raqui, a friend from Israel (we’re keen for the Huerta sisters to get Cake Quest: Jerusalem up and running!), says that it does excellent kosher vegan haggis. And, MJ vouches for it as well! She used to grab a ‘small’ potato on her way to the station to catch the train south. What more can I add to that!

We’ve always enjoyed Chez Jules on Hanover Street. We went there for a truly epic Christmas lobster feast, last year, and we were there for Bastille Day, this year. It offers excellent value, well-executed dishes, in a really friendly atmosphere.

Frauke extols the virtues of Harvey Nichols’ Forth Floor, which promises stunning views across the city and the River Forth, and food that never disappoints.

Mel is a fan of the Buffalo Grill on Chapel Street, which offers a small, affordable lunchtime menu, always served to a high standard.

Peter’s Yard is a perennial favourite with our merry little band of creative types. I have to admit that I’ve not yet managed to get along to it, but I hear it offers sumptuous soups, excellent coffee and cakes, and delicious crispbread aplenty. MJ swears by the place – it’s one of her go-to places to eat if she is anywhere near the university…or not. She has been known to travel across the city to buy a loaf of freshly baked bread from their selection.

Our Cake Quest chum Sarah, upon reading our Mosque Kitchen review, wished to highlight the charms of nearby Kebab Mahal It’s not a million miles away from the Mosque, both in terms of location and culinary approach, and has been a favourite for many a year.

Mina and Emir recommend The Bonham. We have eaten there on countless occasions, and keep going back for more. Their risotto is a particular favourite, but their overall consistency of extremely high quality is to be relied upon.

No list like this would be complete without a mention of The King’s Wark on The Shore. If you’re looking for a top quality meal in an informal, homely pub setting, this is the place to go. I ate mushroom and brown bread soup there once, and I don’t think I’ve been served a better bowl of soup since. Their mussels are always a winner, too.

Two Thin Laddies is recognizable by its bright yellow exterior right on the main junction in Tollcross. Also a perennial favourite of MJ and friends, this café offers freshly made sandwiches, baked potatoes, delicious soups, salads, and daily changing specials like mac and cheese and chorizo pasta dishes. And, they do a mean brunch too.

One cannot forget the lovely Earthy Foods in Newington. Not only do they do a fantastic selection of locally grown produce, fresh baked goods, plants, holistic household items, and gardening supplies, they recently installed a butcher upstairs and have extended the café downstairs. MJ regularly pays homage, and each time the food is just as good as she remembered. Wholesome salads, quiches, interesting sandwiches and an array of teas and coffees make this a café/shop worth the trip out to EH9.

And remember, we’ve already talked at length about the Mosque Kitchen, Tapa, Loudons, and Domenico’s all of which may lay claim to your lunchtime affections.

Chez Jules on Urbanspoon

Buffalo Grill on Urbanspoon

Kebab Mahal on Urbanspoon

The Kings Wark on Urbanspoon

Earthy Market Cafe on Urbanspoon

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The Mosque Kitchen




From the outside; hard to photograph due to traffic.



The menu!



The MQ does retain some of its communal charm.
Blythe’s Verdict
Over the past few years, the Mosque Kitchen has quickly grown in to an Edinburgh staple, coming in to its own during festival time. Its location, neatly placed between the seething hubs of comedy merriment that are the Pleasance and the George Square/Bristo Square nexus plays some part in that. Its well deserved reputation for no-nonsense, reasonably priced, high quality, stamina enhancing festival fuel covers the rest.

Transported from its al fresco beginnings, adjacent to the Mosque, to fresh new premises just around the corner, how has the place coped with the transition from pigeon-friendly to four-walled splendour? I think the answer is: very well.

Many elements remain: the trademark paper plates and plastic spoons; the lightening canteen-style service; and the pleasing array of richly flavoured delights, catering with consummate simplicity for vegetarians and unabashed carnivores alike.




Chicken Curry with samosa.



Meat curry (lamb perhaps?)




Daal and meat curry.



Daal and chicken curry.
What’s lost is some of the camaraderie enhancing powers of the big communal tables, previously a valuable source of festival gossip and buzz, but with a couple of ten person tables, there’s still some potential for that cultural exchange to take place.

The new place is simple, bright, and relaxed. It lacks some of the undoubted charm of the old place, for sure, but they could have really screwed things up with their move indoors and they’ve not fallen in to any of the obvious traps, so well done.

I ate a meat curry, with rice and daal. The daal was excellent – as good as you’ll find in the city – and the full-flavoured meaty chunks were supremely satisfying. Round the table, we’d each chosen something a little different, but there seemed little dissention and a lot of empty plates.

Overall, it’s an unmissable Edinburgh lunch spot that represents excellent bang for your buck. If you’ve not been there, go, and if you haven’t been for a while, go back and sample it again. You won’t be disappointed.

MJ's Verdict

I have to admit that, not so secretly, I didn’t think there would be any dissention in the ranks when we went to the Mosque Kitchen. For a venue that serves its offerings in plastic bowls, it has remarkable consistency. 




Saag Aloo and vegetable curry.
I never went into Imans, so I can’t say how much the venue has altered since being taken over by the MQ, but over all it's inoffensive. The food, however, fares a bit better. Like B said, we all had slightly different meals from the cafeteria style servers.  I chose saag aloo with vegetable curry on rice (I didn’t really choose the rice so much as all meals are served on a big pile  of it). The vegetables were well cooked, not overly soft and had a nice kick. The saag was well flavoured, but the mushy consistency and look makes me think of baby food; ok, Indian baby food. It’s not the best saag I’ve ever had, but it was the best damn saag I’ll likely ever taste for 4.50. And everyone else’s clear plates and thumbs up indicated a generally joyous consensus all-round.


The coffee after was ok (for an India café). But we didn’t try the desserts in the glass counter which looked to try to be something for all, and seemed likely to be brought in and not made in house (though the thought of the stoic looking men who served me saag, making dainty cupcakes, is kinda fantastic). There were massive, American-sized cupcakes which looked like at some point they were normal cupcakes that turned mutant and ate one another till they grew three times the normal size; standard size cupcakes, baklava, some sort of Danish pastry and what looked to be gajar halva.




Monster-sized cupcakes.



Gajar halva (I think)



Normal, and pretty cupcakes.




Baklava
It is only right that Lunch Quest: Edinburgh, reviewed the Mosque Kitchen, not only is it a staple of Edinburgh (and especially relevant during the Fringe and term times), it is the first place B and I had lunch together many months ago, though, I prefer our current company to the pigeons we shared the table with last time.



Scores on the Doors

Out of 20 Blythe gives the Mosque Kitchen:
4/5 for food
4/5 for presentation
4/5 for service
3/5 for setting
giving an overall 15/20

Out of 20 Miriam gives the Mosque Kitchen:
3/5 for food
2/5 for presentation
3/5 for service
3/5 for setting
giving an overall 11/20


Today's Lunch Questers were: Miriam, Gary, Grant, Toy, Blythe.

We wore: Made-to-measure dark blue suit, green floaty dress, purple hooded garment, friendly spectacles, jaguar tie pin.

We ate: A range of curries and sundries

We drank: Mecca mineral water, Espresso/Black Coffee

Total Bill: c.£40 (Curries – £5.50, Coffees – £1.50, Water – £1)

Mosque Kitchen
West Nicholson Street
Edinburgh


Mosque Kitchen on Urbanspoon

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