RSS

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 local produce. Show all posts
Showing posts with label local produce. Show all posts

E:S:I


A day off with no plans prior to pub time! What to do, what to do? The excellent Emily and Georgia, of Total Food Geeks fame, soon offered a solution to my quandry, offering the prospect of lunch merriment to punctuate 15 mile "training" walk.

They suggested E:S:I (Englishman: Scotsman: Irishman), a place I'd spotted recently, but never ventured inside. I was delighted to go with this, as it looked intriguing.

I ventured forth on my coastal route, encompassing Cramond, Silverknowes, Granton and Newhaven, bringing me round to sunny Leith.

Even at a distance of 11 miles, I managed to maintain my new found meticulous promptness. I was warmly greeted and shown to a nice table on the upper level of the stylish triple-decker layout. The table came with good light from the large windows, and an excellent view of chef carefully preparing the starter, in the open kitchen.


Georgia and Emily soon arrived, and we swiftly turned our attention to the menu. Today was the first day of service for E:S:I's Christmas menu, which offered a nice blend of classics and originals.

We agreed that all options sounded good, but soon settled upon our choices. Georgia started with the salmon, on recommendation, and followed with the traditional turkey 'n' trimmings. This sounded way too good to Emily's ears, so she made it two for salmon and turkey. I opted for the intriguing Thai turkey soup, followed by gnocchi.

As the merry banter flowed, our dishes arrived. G and E's salmon looked excellent. It was served with a vibrant chutney, packed with fruity goodness, and oatcakes.


In terms of looks, I had a touch of food envy, as my soup looked a little underwhelming, by comparison.


But what it lacked in looks, it more than made up for in flavour. It was a beautifully subtle dish, full of lovely aromatics. I thought it one of the more imaginative attempts at a "festive" dish that didn't abandon the principles of what the restaurant is all about, the rest of the year.

It's a little too early in December for the turkey and trimming treatment, for me, but I must admit when G and E's dish arrived, it did look good.


The sprouts, which looked like they'd been stir-fried, stood out.

My gnocchi was extremely good. My good friend Mina, from LQ: Istanbul, is quite the connoisseur of gnocchi, and I have learnt a little from studying at her side. Of similar dishes that we've sampled across Edinburgh (and there have been quite a few, over the years) the only place that's served better gnocchi is The Bonham, which given our general adoration of that place, is high praise indeed.


It had a particularly pleasing marriage of different textures, with the use of chestnuts another example of a smart seasonal, festive twist.

The dreaded "lunch hour" meant that G and E had to fly back to the office, but I lingered and considered things a little further over a good cup of coffee, before hitting the trail homeward.


Overall, I was extremely impressed. The new festive menu was really nice, and will no doubt get better as the month goes on. The setting is cool, with the feel of a sharp, modern art gallery about it, a feel which is enhanced by the stylish art work, on the walls. I took the opportunity to look over their evening menu, so I'll definitely be back to sample their Steak Night, held every Thursday. I look forward to that visit, early in the new year, muchly.

Scores
Blythe scores E:S:I
4/5 for food
3/5 for presentation
4/5 for service
4/5 for setting
giving an overall 15/20

Today lunch questers were: Emily, Georgia, Blythe

We ate: salmon, soup, turkey, gnocchi

We drank: ale, lager, cranberry juice, sparkly water, coffee

We wore: Emilian spectacles; Georgian blonde tresses, Blythian rosy cheeks

Total bill: c.£58

E:S:I on Urbanspoon

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Cafe Marlayne

Blythe’s Verdict
Café Marlayne has been a Thistle Street staple throughout the 2000s, attracting high praise from many of its customers. Around a year ago, they expanded their operation, opening a second outlet on Antigua Street, in much bigger premises than the intimate Thistle Street surroundings.

The first thing I noticed, once I'd taken in the full extent of the place, is that it's very much a "two-in-one". The front half is a café, offering a relaxed atmosphere and seating to match, while the back room is a bright bistro.

I was prompt, as MJ has conditioned me in to being, and had a moment to survey matters. Christmas had broken out, it being 1 December, with some nicely understated trimmings giving touches of festive cheer. The bistro room is a little strange. While it is simply appointed in white, with clusters of artwork on the walls, it has the feel of a back-room bistro that you might find attached to a village pub. It’s the kind of room that could turn its hand to many things, perhaps doubling as the place you'd hold local fundraisers, when the kitchen isn’t serving posh nosh. This sense of flexibility could be used as a strength, but I’m not sure things are quite optimal, as they stand.

The kitchen sort of pours out of the door, in a slightly curious fashion. Where I was seated I had a full view of everything that was going on, and I didn’t personally feel it added much to my enjoyment of things.


As I pondered, bread arrived, as did water, then some hand-written menus, and soon I was joined by my dining companion, Jane, who previously quested with us at Leith Lynx.

Both Jane and I agreed that the bread was tasty, as we contemplated our menu choices. Jane opted for the chef’s salad followed by trout, while I went for soup then lamb.

Our starters arrived promptly, as a large party of early Christmas revellers took up residence at big table, next to ours.


My soup, a blend of butternut squash, sweet potato and coconut was very good. It lacked an extra dimension to elevate it beyond that, but was a really well-judged marriage of flavours. I was very pleased with it. This was all looking very good.

Then we sat for an extremely long time before our main courses arrived. Of course, the attention of the staff was taken up by the patrons at the big table, but a good deal of the time, the staff seemed almost entirely absent, presumably tending to the needs of customers in the front café.

Over the coming Christmas madness, service is likely to be a little less than perfect in a lot of places, so I had some sympathy for the staff, as this was the first day of the advent season, and I’m sure they’ll iron out most the kinks, in the coming days.


When the main courses arrived, they were excellent. I tasted a little of Jane’s trout, and it was lovely. My two chunky pieces of lamb were very soft and tender, deeply flavourful and extremely satisfying. For me, the dish could have used a bigger dollop of yoghurt, but that’s my inner honorary Istanbulian talking. The herb dressing was packed with flavour. A plate of vegetables, for us to share, were simply prepared and provided solid accompaniment.


With service having taken a considerable length of time, Jane had to bolt back to work, as soon as she'd finished her trout, as she was constrained by the strict application of the “lunch hour”, while I had time to digest things, and finish with a little espresso.


Overall, the quality of the food was excellent. My main course was one of the best I’ve eaten, of late. However, the service we received wasn’t good. I’m sure the start of the festive season explains this, at least in part, but the venue’s split configuration, and their choice to have staff managing service across both parts of the place, doesn’t lend itself to good service, as far as I could see. If you’re looking for a quick, business lunch, I don’t think this is the place for you – I’m not sure that’s a market they’re targeting, either. On a relaxed afternoon, with a nice glass of wine, I can think of nothing better than letting the world drift by while extremely tasty dishes sporadically appear, so when that’s what you have on your agenda, I’d recommend you pay Café Marlayne a visit.

Jane’s Verdict
I started with the salade du chef, which today comprised endives, mushroom, bacon and gruyere, with a drizzle of mustard. It was very tasty, with a perfect balance of salty smoky bacon with sweet mushroom and gruyere. Personally, I could have lived without the mustard, but that’s just me.


My fillet of trout with capers and pine nuts and a beurre noisette was perfectly cooked, with nicely crisped skin, but not too crispy, and again a nice balance of salty capers and sweeter pine nuts. There was a good contrast between softness and crunch. Yum!


There was big gap between starter and main, so points off for service, but overall it was all very tasty.

Scores
Blythe scores Café Marlayne:
4/5 for food
4/5 for presentation
2/5 for service
3/5 for setting
giving an overall 13/20

Jane scores Café Marlayne:
4/5 for food
4/5 for presentation
2/5 for service
4/5 for setting
giving an overall 14/20

Today’s lunch questers were: Jane, Blythe

We ate: squash, sweet potato and coconut soup, chef’s salad, trout in beurre noisette, lamb rump with yoghurt and herb dressing

We drank: water, espresso

We wore: chic black, lilac shirt and tie

Total bill: c.£25

Cafe Marlayne on Urbanspoon

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Henderson's Restaurant

My review today comes from Henderson's, perhaps the most legendary of Edinburgh veggie institutions, but I feel I must explain that my intentions had been a little different. Earlier I'd decided to head, with faithful lunch companion Phil, to The Allotment on Castle Street. However my hunt for veggie delights came to a very abrupt holt when we found our choice of venue had in fact closed down. Not a great start to my second review! In disbelief we did the thing that people do when they get to a shop that's quite clearly shut, they still peer in expecting there to be some form of life. The notice cellotaped to the door confirmed our suspicions...


I have to say it wasn't somewhere I visited a lot, but Phil was acquainted with the owner who'd first opened it as a juice bar a few years back. More recently the menu had been refreshed to include a range of healthy soups, wraps and superfood salads. Right in the heart of the city it bucked the trend of chain coffee shops and restaurants, offering an alternative for peckish shoppers and workers alike. We were both really saddened to see the place closed not just because we were hungry! But because we know how hard small independent businesses work to succeed. We fear The Allotment has succumbed under the weight of hefty council rates and regulations that are squeezing the life out of many streets in Edinburgh.

Anyway, we gathered ourselves and with a lunch quest still to
do we set off instead for the mighty Henderson's on Hanover Street. Now being a veggie, Henderson's is somewhere I do frequent on a fairly regular basis (well the deli anyway). For those not acquainted, the Henderson's fold includes the restaurant downstairs, the deli upstairs, the bistro round the corner on Thistle Street, and the latest addition @ St John's (Church) in the West End. For almost half a century Henderson's has been serving up a 100% vegetarian menu to the people of Edinburgh, and for this I must congratulate them! Phil was keen to sit in the restaurant so our review only extends thus far but I'm sure I'll be back to write about the others.

The original Henderson's is at basement level and once you enter through the doors you are presented with a counter displaying an amazing array of colourful salads. I always find it hard going to a veggie restaurant as it takes me so long to pick - basically I want all the dishes! Whilst my brain whizzed Phil got straight in there ordering the focaccia pizza and selected a huge plate of three types of salad. The pressure was on now to decide, so what do you do when you're holding up the queue?... you pick the first thing on the menu - spinach, tomato and brie quiche also with a salad. The service was super quick with all our dishes ready by the time we'd paid at the till.

Spinach, tomato and brie quiche

Once seated Phil remarked that it was a strange choice as generally I'm not a quiche fan, and he was right of course as it turned out that Phil loved the quiche and I was enjoying the focaccia pizza far more, so we did a bit of swapping.


Focaccia pizza

The salads were all superb and tasted full of quality ingredients.

Trio of salads

The simple beetroot salad made with sesame seeds was a clear winner (being part of a green-fingered family, I know a good beetroot when I taste it!) Over lunch Phil reminisced about coming to Henderson's as a child with his Mum eager to ensure he ate healthily. It seems this place has lasted over the years delivering a consistently high standard of vegetarian food.

The plates of goodness were soon polished off and we sat back to take in the surroundings. Henderson's was buzzing with the lunch time crowd but we couldn't help thinking the owners might perhaps consider revisiting the décor. It felt a bit like the inside of an alpine lodge in need of a freshen up - but I can see it's not the no.1 reason people come here.

Overall Henderson's is a vegetarian delight in the centre of Edinburgh living and breathing the owner's motto to 'eat better, live better and strive to use local, seasonal produce'. It's all about the food and quality of ingredients - you won't find any nasties here! I would be confident to say that anyone who likes eating healthy food, veggie or not, would enjoy lunch at Henderson's Restaurant - veggie visitors don't miss it!

Scores

Phil scores Henderson's Restaurant
4/5 for food
3/5 for presentation
3/5 for service
3/5 for setting
giving an overall 13/20

Sandra scores Henderson's Restaurant
4/5 for food
3/5 for presentation
3.5/5 for service
3/5 for setting
giving an overall 13.5/20

We ate: Focaccia pizza, beetroot and sesame salad, pasta salad with mushrooms, tomatoes and rocket, beetroot coleslaw, spinach, tomato and brie quiche with salad leaves and olives.

We drank: Organic apple juice, water‬

We wore: Watsonian's FC fleece, white cardigan, country top and uncomfortable sling back shoes

Total bill: £16.65

Henderson's of Edinburgh on Urbanspoon

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

L'Escargot Bleu

Finally reconciled to ploughing a lonely Gallic furrow without the excellent MJ, I took myself down to Broughton Street, today, for a spot of lunch at L'Escargot Bleu. I'd bumped in to my friend Julian, the other day, when we'd just finished our quest with Jemma, in Cafe St Honore, and we'd made a plan to meet for lunch, soon. This was the plan coming to fruition.

The place comes highly recommended by my friend Andrew, whose other previous recommendation, Castle Terrace, turned out very nicely, so it was with an optimistic gait that I toddled down the road.

L'Escargot Bleu is another example of “Auld Alliance” cuisine: solid French principles coupled with the best of local produce. It has three outlets across Edinburgh (L’Escargots Bleu and Blanc, along with L’Epicerie, which offers high-quality ingredients for the keen home cook).

It was a gloriously sunny day, and I walked in to the restaurant to find it bathed in light and looking the picture of Parisian charm. I was soon joined by Julian, who heralded the arrival of many other patrons, to make it a busy lunchtime service.

Menu options included an a la carte, served all day, and a lunch/pre-theatre menu on the specials board. A couple of dishes were missing, due to the fresh, local ingredients not having arrived yet (!), but we had an excellent array from which to make our choices.

Is it boring that I chose soup? Possibly not, but it was boring for Julian, because he chose not to have a starter, meaning that the elapsed time between his arrival and his main course arriving totalled an hour. I’m getting things a touch out of order. There were a few reasons why things took so long.


My soup arrived. It came in a very similar bowl to how I’d been served celeriac soup, quite the autumnal favourite, in both Rogano and The Mulroy. That is where the similarity ended. This soup was of a thin, milky consistency, and utterly without discernible flavour. To compound matters, the shape of the spoon made it incredibly difficult to get the soup out of the bowl, once you’d dealt with the top few spoonfuls. It was an abject failure – a thoroughly ghastly farrago. The spoon-bowl-shape situation meant that I left some soup in the dish. I was not sorry to have to do so, as I was really struggling to stay interested in the contents.

Thankfully, the main courses took a moment or two to appear, but when they did they fared considerably better. Julian was delighted with his chicken, which looked like good hearty fare.


I was pleased with the veal casserole. The meat had been braised to perfection, and fell apart at the mention of cutlery, but it lacked memorable, lingering flavour.


The roasted pumpkin, full of caramel cinnamon notes, that accompanied it, was probably the highlight of the whole meal. I could have happily munched my way through a hundredweight of that before all my teeth fell out from the attack of sweetness.


Many places that offer specific lunch menus are used to business lunches being served quickly to accommodate those fitting lunch into their working day. This was firmly not the case for L’Escargot Bleu. The patrons were very much at their leisure, and the service fit in around that model. I mention it more as an observation, than a criticism. Perhaps the sun just inspired a relaxed approach to life, today.


Good coffees rounded out what had been a decidedly mixed bag of an experience. It’s hard to think how I would have responded to the place had I ordered differently for my starter, but that’s something we’ll simply never know.

Overall, a place that serves me soup as bad as what L’Escargot Bleu had to offer is on a hiding to nothing. I left a bowl of soup unfinished. The only time this has previously happened was when I was nine years old and first introduced to oxtail soup via of the Knorr packet variety. I tried hard to let its other obvious charms win me over, but unforgivable sins are by their very nature unforgivable. Go sample the place for yourself, as it’s stylish and has good principles at its heart. Just steer well clear of the soup.

Scores

Blythe scores L’Escargot Bleu:
2/5 for food
3/5 for presentation
3/5 for service
4/5 for setting
giving an overall 12/20

Julian scores L’Escargot Bleu:
4.5/5 for food
4/5 for presentation
3.5/5 for service
4/5 for setting
giving an overall 16/20

Today’s late Lunch Questers were: Julian, Blythe

We wore: simple blue suit, complicated brown suit

We ate: celeriac soup, chicken breast with wild mushrooms and thyme, veal shoulder casserole, petits pois and carrots, roasted pumpkin

We drank: sparkly water, still water, coffees

Total bill: c.£40

L'escargot Bleu on Urbanspoon

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Castle Terrace



Blythe’s Verdict
I sometimes make good decisions. It’s a rarity, but when it’s time for a good one, I try to make it a really good one. I booked a table at Castle Terrace the night before the launch of the new Michelin Guide. When the restaurant was awarded a much-coveted star, a little over a year after first opening its doors, I felt like I’d made one of my more splendid decisions.

A nice welcome

Chef Patron, Dominic Jack, has learnt his trade in some interesting locations around the globe. Aside from the obligatory stint in France, he spent time in Haslemere, where my niece lives, and in Istanbul, a city for which I have an unending well of affection. So, from the outset, I have to admit to being somewhat pre-disposed to like the chap. What he chose to serve me in his restaurant, combining Gallic elegance with the crème de la crème of local produce did nothing to dent this initial impression.

Now, you can probably guess what my beamish Alabamian pal’s purple prose is going to say about the fussy French style. On our schedule, this is the last place that has even the merest soupcon of French influence, at least for a little while. After weeks of being gently but firmly bludgeoned around the head, I can eventually take a hint.

I’m happy to retire from ploughing this particular furrow for now, as I think we’ve incontrovertibly established that with places like this, The Mulroy, The Bonham, and Mark Greenaway, Edinburgh does this style of “Auld Alliance” cuisine remarkably well. And so it should. It does other styles rather less well, and I’m happy to try to seek out good restaurants in these styles, in the coming weeks. Of course, I’m off to L’Escargot Bleu on Tuesday, but I won’t mention it to MJ if you don’t.

I digress, excessively. Upon arriving at Castle Terrace, I was greeted by a whole symphony orchestra of staff, who showed me to my table. In a rare occurrence, my excessive promptness exceeded even MJ’s. Indeed, our esteemed guest, Edinburgh Foody, arrived next, followed by MJ.

Unfortunately, our fourth, Yelp’s Jenny, couldn’t make it along, much to her disappointment. I could say that I’d planned to treat her to lunch as a small thank you for organising the highly successful Yelp Eats week in Edinburgh, but you might suspect me of only saying that to make myself look like the bountiful host, so I’ll stay silent on the matter.

I had a moment or two to take in my surroundings. I must say I was largely underwhelmed by the look of the place. It’s neat and unfussy, but low on impact. At points throughout service it became clear that the room isn’t particularly well set-up for their needs, especially with the spectacular cheese trolley, of which more later, so this could use a little work, I think.

While we contemplated the menus, we were given a little tray of items to munch upon. This included a couple of savoury cookies, cheesy crostini, gougeres, and little pieces of crispy spinach and squid ink pasta. These were very ordinary, so let’s not speak of them further.



The waiting staff all did a momentary disappearing act, but soon enough, and with only very minor stage management, we contrived to order one of everything from the set lunch menu. With these choices made, a little amuse bouche soon made its way to our table.

A taste of carrot and coriander topped with a cumin crumble, was how it was described. A post-volcanic espresso is how it looked. Once a spoon was introduced, what we had looked like a soft boiled egg, topped with ash. But the taste. Oh my lord, the taste. It was a spectacular little concoction, with the dry crumb of the cumin topping balancing out the smoothness of the puree, with tiny chunks of carrot offering yet more textural variance. I could have eaten a small vat-load of the stuff.

I opted for the broccoli veloute as my starter. In pleasingly theatrical style, the dish came to the table as a small arrangement of broccoli, dunsyre blue ravioli and crème fraiche, over which the veloute was subsequently poured. I can safely say that never have I tasted a dish where more flavour had been extracted from the ingredients. The little blue cheese parcels were exploding with flavour and would have totally overwhelmed your average broccoli soup. However, we were not dealing with your average broccoli soup, here. The concentration of broccoli flavour within the veloute was sensational, easily strong enough to combat the fearsomely gutsy blue cheese. It was a flavour epic, with both sides battling for my affections, with the white flag of the crème fraiche serving to secure my total surrender. Splendid!

Velouté of West Gate farm broccoli

Just look at the vibrant colours!

My main course of partridge arrived, and looked a very bonnie little fella, resplendent in its Sunday best bonnet. It seemed a shame to cut into it, but I was soon reconciled to the task. The contents were of supreme quality. The tender, gamey meat of the partridge combined beautifully with the saltiness of the lardons, which were perfectly offset by the carrots and cabbage. Each mouthful, moistened by the partridge jus, was expertly judged to pack-in oodles of flavour to dazzle my palette. This was another absolute winner of a dish.

Partridge

It looks like a stylish hat for gnomes!


The theatre of the cheese trolley came next, with a dizzying cheese selection presented from which five were chosen by a combination of my fellow diners and the attendant waiter. These were lined up in order from mild to strong, and accompanied by fig jelly, quince jelly, grapes celery, and apple chutney. The homemade oatcakes were, I think, MJ’s favourite thing about the whole meal. The dinky slices of walnut bread were lovely, too. In addition, I had to lend a hand with the richly flavoured vanilla crème brulee, even though I don’t really do desserts.

Cheese trolley




We were left to contemplate our verdict, after this full-on flavour assault. I can’t fault Castle Terrace in terms of food and presentation. It offers what are without doubt some of the most flavour-packed dishes this city has to offer. I was blown away repeatedly by their intensity and power. The setting doesn’t match the pizzazz, nor does it offer a calming counterpoint, so there’s a little thought to be applied to the design of the place. The service, while hitting all the notes you’d expect, is sometimes a little fragmented, so could use a wee polish.

Overall, please join the queue to go and sample Dominic Jack’s exceptional food. It’s an absolute joy to behold and to savour. I got a real sense that this place is on an upward curve, as well. It delivers excellence, at the moment, but I have a feeling that this is only the start of some spectacular things to come. I’ll be back, hopefully once we’ve exorcised MJ of her French fanciness-hating demons, and I’ll expect great things, based on the supreme quality of what we sampled, today.


MJ’s Verdict

When B heard that The Castle Terrace was tipped to receive that all-important Michelin star, he booked us in for lunch before the list was released. Good call, I say, good call. I tried my darnedest to not be negative on the French cuisine, so I bucked up. I cannot tell you how many times I have walked past this restaurant on my way to various places, and it never quite clicked that it was a restaurant at all, but today I was paying attention as I strolled up to it and watched a lovely elderly couple meet up, embrace, and then enter ahead of me.

Upon arrival, there were several servers at the front doing various jobs, one of which took my coat, another took my name and then showed me to our table where my companions were already enjoying an artfully designed selection of homemade biscuits, cheesy puff-like things, green and blue fried pasta (if I heard correctly) and wee, thin, tall bread sticks, they were memorable for the design, if not the taste. We were on a bit of a tight schedule and so we had a perusal of the menu and all opted to go for the 3 course lunch special for £24.00 each (without wine pairings).

As the pickiest eater, I (generously, on the part of Edinburgh Foody and B) was given the choice of 3 starters, mains, and desserts. I chose the Brandade of salted North Sea cod, served with fondant potatoes; the poached fillet of North Sea Hake, served celery, potatoes, and a celeriac puree; and for B I ordered the Vanilla crème brûlée. (I’ll not go into what the others ordered, else I will just be repetitious)

granary and spelt breads
Before we the starters arrived, a server came around carrying a large curvaceous cork bark board filled with rows of sliced bread: white, granary, caramelised onion, sun dried tomato, and spelt. I chose a piece of the granary and spelt. A small dish of butter seemed to materialize from thin air and before we knew it, we were served tiny coffee cups of a carrot and coriander amuse bouche, with a light foam above it, covered with cumin crumble, which looked like dirt. The whole effect was magnificent and the tastes were so strong and clear that this was one of my favorite parts of the meal. 

Amuse bouche of carrot and coriander with a cumin crumble
Amuse bouche

Soon after, our starters arrived. B’s velouté of West Gate farm broccoli served with Dunsyre blue cheese ravioli, was interesting. The vibrant green velouté was poured on at the table. Edinburgh Foody’s Eel dish was flavoursome and intense. I love eel, but the jellied bit didn’t appeal to me — it’s a texture thing. My Brandade of cod was nicely presented. The traffic light plating had different squash pieces with an olive tapenade that directed my eye and fork nicely from one potato stuffed with the brandade to the other, stuffed and topped with crispy, tiny potato strings. I’ve never had brandade before, but I knew what it was. I was a bit wary of the possibility of brandade to go into the realm of oily and heavy, but this was light and not overpoweringly fishy. I even spread some on my spelt bread and nearly finished the rich starter.

Cod Brandade
Again, someone whizzed by and filled my glass and took away our plates. Before long, our mains arrived. I have to say that I tasted both other dishes, and I think I won. Not that they weren’t tasty, and well done, but I almost always go for the fish dish and my hake was light and well-cooked. The interesting lemon and lime marmalade that was glazed over the top of the hake cut into the creaminess of the celeriac and created a party in my mouth that made me look back in shock at the same (and more expensive, and pan-roasted) hake that was served to me the week prior at Café St. Honore. 

Poached Hake

Pork dish
Then came the bit of the menu I was not looking forward to: the dessert. I am not a sweet person (you may have heard B say that a time or two, but with me its true). I dutifully took photos and tapped on the well-executed sugar crust on the vanilla crème brûlée, but I did not taste it. I did, however, taste Edinburgh Foody’s mulled jelly and some sort of sorbet foam…it was a sugary hit of Christmas in my mouth… too sugary for my tastes, but she relished it and the skill that went into the dish was evident. 

vanilla crème brûlée


 
Then came the cheese tray; no, the cheese wagon. A server wheeled over a huge cart of cheese, with an array of chutneys, jelly squares, and other accoutrements. B chose 5 (with the help of Edinburgh Foody and the knowledgeable server) and they were arranged nicely and served with a few slices of bread and homemade oatcakes. If I ate cheese, I would be in heaven. The variety and obvious quality was apparent, and I did have an oatcake…and they were stunning… So much so, that I would love to go have a day and learn how to make them. I would buy the wee things by the box and live off them.

Actually, I probably could have been served the amuse bouche and the hake with a pile of oatcakes and I would have been as happy as possible.

Overall, Castle Terrace is good+ (as we say in the book world), but doesn't make it into my top restaurants in the world. The service was a tiny bit spotty (I had to wave at a server to get their attention to order, and we ended up paying on the way out), but they are terribly skilled in the kitchen and it is obvious in the quality of the dishes. I can’t pick too many holes in it at all, and God knows, I want to.

Mulled jelly dessert









Scores

Out of 20 Blythe gives Castle Terrace:
5/5 for food
5/5 for presentation
3/5 for setting
4/5 for service
giving an overall 17/20

Out of 20 Miriam gives Castle Terrace:
4/5 for food
5/5 for presentation
3/5 for setting
4/5 for service
giving an overall 16/20

Today’s Lunch Questers were: MJ, Danielle, Blythe.

We wore: Burgundy top with button bows, blue and green checked tie, heels (MJ not Blythe)!

We ate: carrot, coriander and cumin amuse bouche; broccoli veloute with Dunsyre blue ravioli, smoked eel with panna cotta and poached quails egg, cod brandade with fondant potatoes; hake with lime marmalade and celeriac, pork cheek, partridge on a bed of carrot and savoy cabbage; vanilla crème brulee, mulled wine jelly, cheeseboard.

We drank: sparkly water.

Total Bill: c.£90 (three course set lunch menu £24).

Castle Terrace Restaurant on Urbanspoon

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS

Union of Genius



Outside
Small but bustling

MJ's Verdict

Today I realized that maybe I moved to Leith a bit too soon. Ok, that’s not quite true (I rather enjoy living out of the centre), but I know that if I still lived on Forest Hill, I would be spending most of my lunchtimes walking down the wee street beside the Sandy Bell and crossing Forest Road, and popping into Union of Genius.

Perhaps I’m a bit biased. I have this raging dislike (hatred may be too strong a word, wait till later in the week and we shall see) for fussy food, and this small café that only serves soups is right up my alley. First of all, anyone whose first tweet to me wishes me luck on my PhD gets approval in my book. I need all the bloody luck I can get. Secondly, there are a lot of things to recommend this wee shop, aside from the 6 changing soups:

1.     They use locally sourced ingredients. Under this point we may include their use of altering breads from local Polworth bakery, Dough Re Mi; coffee from Artesan Roast Coffee, and The Chocolate Tree Hot Chocolates.

2.     They mark their soups in a friendly manner for picky eaters like myself: Vegan and Veggie. So I know which soups to avoid (creamy soups, or those with coconut…ew). (As an aside, I also appreciate the mayo being marked on Koyama’s menu)

3.     They use compostable packaging and will gladly compost it for you if you return it. And in doing so, you get a nice initial on your loyalty card. This is an interesting concept, and one I hope catches on.

4.     You get more than one piece of bread to go with the soups.

5.     They are just so darned nice. 


Happy to serve us soup!

Ok, so all that being laid out in an orderly fashion, on to the food. I had the minestrone soup (vegan) and it was tasty. Made with wee pasta balls and hearty chunks of vegetables that were not blitzed into oblivion, as is the usual way here in Europe (I’m pretty sure I didn’t encounter a blended veggie soup till I moved here; where I’m from, we like out vegetables chunky in soup or battered and deep fried). The soup was good. It had the right amount of seasoning and the olive bread that was recommended was a good accompaniment in the Italian theme of my lunch, but didn’t blow my socks off. Peter’s Yard still gets my bread-bakers-deliciousness award. 

Minestrone 1/2 eaten with olive bread
The coffees were reasonably priced (£1.80 for a good sized americano) and from good Artisan Roast beans. Everyone finished theirs, so I assume they were also relatively pleased.


Everyone seemed to really enjoy their soups; I’ll be checking up with UoG on Facebook to find out what each day holds as they get through their first days and hit their stride, right in time for winter.

p.s. they have free wifi. I tweeted a photo of the shop right before I went in. 


Angus's Verdict

Calde Verde (Chorizo and Kale)
 
First choice on the extensive soup board (6 if I recall) was Chorizo & Kale. I suspect it’s a childhood memory, but I always associate kale with enjoyable Saturday morning walks alongside kale fields with a crunchy hard frost and a weak winter sun low in the sky, and for that reason alone this soup had to be tried. Chorizo & Kale is a perfect combination of Mediterranean and Scottish, and the spicy and “meatiness” of the Chorizo really permeates the soup, which when combined with kale (which is a properly serious bit of Scottish greenery), makes for a full bodied soup – not heavyweight or stodgy, but full of flavour and chunkiness. Would I have this soup again, yes, definitely.


The bread (which comes in the price) came in a variety of types and I had the eight seed bread, which came in two decent sized slices and was a tasty, chunky and seedy (in a good way), being covered in poppy seeds. To finish I had white hot chocolate with cardamom, which tasted like Christmas had come early. I am no big fan of hot chocolate, preferring the sharper taste of coffee or tea in my milky drinks, but this was light, warm, milky and spicy and very pleasant. If I was passing Union of Genius on one of those cold winter mornings I mentioned earlier (fruitlessly searching for frosted kale on the Middle Meadow Walk?) then I would definitely stop in for another of these.




Mel's Verdict

I like soup. I have it nearly every day for my lunch in winter so I was more than happy to accompany Blythe, Miriam and Angus to Union of Genius, a new soup café that opened on Forrest Road. I was impressed by the choice of soup on offer - about 6 different flavours in total - the majority of which where either vegetarian or vegan which was nice to see. I was tempted to get the lentil, but in the end chose the minestrone which came with some lovely soft brown olive bread.

  
Minestrone, up close and personal

The soup itself was what you would expect from a minestrone; hearty, tasty and packed full of veg, but an interesting difference was having little beads of pasta scattered throughout it rather than having the small strands of spaghetti in it like I’m used to. This reminded me of pearl barley and made the soup seem even more comforting so it was a winner with me. I would definitely get it again but at £3.80 a go for a large portion (including the bread) it’s not something I could do everyday, but it would be nice as a monthly treat.

We were lucky to get seats around the only table in the café so we took advantage of the situation and ordered drinks. I went for a cappuccino and when she brought it over the owner apologised for not having any chocolate sprinkles to put on the top as it was their first day of trading. This did make the top of the coffee look a bit bare and the froth look a bit more foam-like than normal but the coffee itself tasted fine and was a nice end to a lovely lunch.

Cappuccino

What really made this place stand out for me among all the other soup and sandwich places in the area though is its recycling policy. All the cups, bowls, lids, bags and cutlery are compostable so if you take the packaging back to the shop they will make sure it gets disposed of correctly. I really like this idea- we have recycle bins at my work but I know a lot of other places don’t so it’s a great way of encouraging people to think about their waste. And every time you take your packaging back you get your loyalty card stamped which you can then trade in for a free coffee when it’s full- so I hope by the time my cards full they’ll have invested in some chocolate sprinkles to cover my free cappuccino with!

Blythe's Verdict
Freshly opened today, Union of Genius is “Scotland’s first soup café”. Located on Forrest Road, on the same side as sushi favourite Koyama, it brings together a “souper-group” of local producers to provide punters with much wholesome soupy goodness, along with lovely cakes from Love Pure Cakes, and stand-out hot chocolate from The Chocolate Tree.

Now, I’m not sure if I’ve mentioned this, but I rather like soup. In fact, I’m working on structural ideas for a Lunch Quest: Soupy Soup League Table. The whole idea of a café dedicated to soup fills me with a huge amount of happiness. So it was with considerable delight that I set forth for Forrest Road. On my way, I was joined by my former Widget-Adviser-in-Chief, Angus, who had filed a lovely review from Bath for LQ: Roving Reporters, last week. When we arrived, we were greeted by special guest, Mel, and the ever-prompt MJ.

First things first: Union of Genius is wee. It has one window table, which could seat around six, with an additional shelf area for another two folk. So, you need to time it perfectly to secure a seat. Upon arrival, we found the seats taken, so made a quick plan for which locality we would repair to for a spot of al fresco souping, as we queued. We were delighted to see esteemed friend of Lunch Quest, Tony, two places in front of us in the queue, making similar plans.

The staff were extremely welcoming, and though they spoke of first day nerves and a mild sense of chaos, they served us accurately and with a sound knowledge of what they were all about. Each bowl of soup comes with two generous slices of bread. On a recommendation, I matched my cream of wild mushroom soup (from a choice of six options) with an olive bread (from the selection of four different breads).

Cream of mushroom soup

In a rare union of timing genius, as MJ completed ordering procession of ordering, the window table freed up. We were delighted to plonk ourselves down. This meant that we had the take away bowls and cutlery, instead of crockery, but we were more than happy with this arrangement. This also meant that the return of our packaging for composting (all materials are compostable and they encourage you to return them, so this can be turned in to a reality) was all the easier.


I was extremely pleased with my soup. I cook mushroom soup a fair amount, and I thought this was an excellent example. The olive bread worked very well as an accompaniment, so kudos to the recommendation. It was still not quite as good as the soup from the , but a solid match for the soups at The Mulroy and The Bonham.

With soup consumed, we turned our attention to coffees. I opted to try the Genius Mocha. It was a rich, dark treat, with a truly joyful depth of flavour.

Overall, Union of Genius is an excellent addition to the lunch circuit. Given its compact size, it’s more likely to be a take away stop, but I’d be delighted to wolf down a bowl of their hearty fare at my desk. Despite their first day nerves, I don’t think they have many issues to iron-out. I’m happy to recommend that you head along to sample their soupy delights, at your earliest convenience.





Scores

Out of 20 MJ scores Union of Genius:
4/5 for food
4/5 for presentation
5/5 for service
4/5 for setting
giving an overall 17/20

Out of 20 Angus scores Union of Genius:
5/5 for food
5/5 for presentation
5/5 for service
5/5 for setting
giving an overall 20/20

Out of 20 Mel scores Union of Genius:
5/5 for food
3/5 for presentation
4/5 for service
3/5 for setting
giving an overall 15/20

Out of 20 Blythe scores Union of Genius:
4/5 for food
3/5 for presentation
4/5 for service
4/5 for setting
giving an overall 15/20

Today’s Lunch Questers were: Miriam, Mel, Angus, Blythe

We wore: Beard, green top with diamante detailing, stripey trousers, high performance action

We ate: Minestrone (2), Chorizo and Kale, and Cream of Wild Mushroom soups

We drank: Americano, Cappuccino, White Hot Chocolate and Cardamom, Genius Mocha

Total Bill: c.£25 (soups £4 for large bowl; coffees/hot chocolates £1.80-3)


Union of Genius on Urbanspoon

  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • RSS