Distributed to the best restaurants, hotels, bars and private members’ clubs in London Quarterly Editor Adam Hyman Design Formandcue Contributors Anna Sulan Masing Patricia Michelson Dominic Rowntree Zeren Wilson THE EYES & EARS OF THE INDUSTRY A quarterly newspaper for the hospitality industry THE CODE BULLETIN P P 3 CODE in conversation with… Bill Granger 5 Technology in restaurants THE CODE APP CODE ONLINE app.code-london.co.uk P P Issue 2 | March 2015 code-london.co.uk 7 Why the cheese board isn’t dead 8 Are you being served? P P @CODELondon 10 The Quaffing Cabinet 11 Destination CODE: San Francisco To serve. To fly. Restaurant brands go global. W elcome to the second issue of the CODE Quarterly. Somebody asked me the other day why we decided to start a print newspaper, when the majority of the media world is doing the opposite and going digital. Print media still has a future, and if done well, a bright one. No matter how integral technology is - and continues to become – in our everyday lives, I believe there’ll always be an appetite for newspapers, magazines and the like. Picking up a favourite magazine at the airport or settling down to the weekend papers is a chance to turn off from the outside world, put down your mobile phone, close the lid of your MacBook Air and remove yourself from everyday life for a few scarce moments. I don’t enjoy reading a lot online, which is one of the reasons why I wanted to publish something for the industry in print, that was different to the Bulletin, but still reaches people in the kitchen and front of house at restaurants around London. The growth in the industry is the reason for the airport destination board illustration at the top of this page. More and more now, restaurants and chefs are seen as brands – global brands. Many well-known restaurants from abroad have arrived in London in recent years, including Shake Shack and Salt & Partners from Japan, to name just a few. We’ve seen the likes of Noma take their offering to Tokyo and Heston Blumenthal do the same in Melbourne. And more of our homegrown talent is also venturing abroad with the likes of Burger & Lobster opening in Manhattan, MEATliquor going to Singapore and Jason Atherton and his growing empire now in Hong Kong, Singapore and New York. “More and more now, restaurants and chefs are seen as brands – global brands.” One person who has managed to become a successful global restaurateur is Bill Granger. I went to interview him at his Notting Hill restaurant to find out how a humble chef from Australia is now a global brand (p.3). Technology is playing an ever increasingly more important role in our everyday lives, yet the restaurant industry still seems to be playing catch up. Anna Sulan Masing looks at the impact of iPads replacing waiting staff and the rise of ticketing systems in restaurants (p.5). Like my attitude to media, I have a certain – some may say old-fashioned view – on technology in restaurants and I don’t think humans should ever be replaced with technology. You’ll see in this issue that we’ve launched a new feature, focusing on servers in London restaurants (p.8) and why they deserve recognition. they offer (p.7). Patricia’s article also focuses on the importance of matching wine with cheese, which is a good opportunity to mention Zeren Wilson’s piece on the London wine scene (p.10) Three months into 2015 and there seems to be no sign of the London hospitality industry slowing down. A recent article in the Evening Standard on the London hotel industry says that occupancy rates in the capital will hit a 20-year high of 84 per cent this year, with there being close to 140,000 hotel rooms now in London. The pace of restaurant openings is still going strong but every now and then we get reminded that restaurants are not immune and certain pockets of London are changing, be it for the better or worse, and this can impact trade and operational costs, and sadly places do close. Finally, an update from CODE HQ. We have our eyes and ears firmly set on Manchester, Liverpool and Leeds, as we get set to launch the CODE app in that region imminently. And our first CODE Hospitality Industry drinks night was well received. We’ll be in touch with information about the next few. I hope to see you at one of them across town over the coming months. The Guardian critic, Marina O’Loughlin has coined the term “use ‘em or lose ‘em” referring to certain old school gems that we all must support and eat at regularly, ones which so easily get forgotten amongst the hype of new restaurant openings. A person who has seen the industry change drastically since first opening in London over 20 years ago is Patricia Michelson of La Fromagerie. Patricia’s article looks at the cheese board and its place on the menu in restaurants, as well as encouraging restaurateurs and chefs to think a little outside the box when it comes to what As ever, questions and comments can be sent to me at [email protected] Adam Hyman Founder CODE — @AdamMHyman Image credit: Tom Cockram Galvanina is the true taste of Italy. A unique blend of the finest organic hand-picked fruit and the purest natural Italian spring water , these are the perfect posh soft drinks and magnificent mixers. We like to think they are every bit as beautiful on the inside as they are on the outside. For more details on the range visit galvanina.co.uk or contact [email protected] galvanina.co.uk @GalvaninaUK Available exclusively in fine wine shops and in the best restaurants. www.champagne-billecart.com AP - 396h x 273 mm - UK_Mise en page 1 03/03/2015 11:48 Page1 Signe d’exception Issue 2 | March 2015 THE CODE BULLETIN THE CODE APP app.code-london.co.uk 03 CODE ONLINE code-london.co.uk CODE in conversation with… Bill Granger Our editor, Adam Hyman, meets up with Bill Granger at his Notting Hill restaurant to discuss what it takes to be a global restaurateur. O ne of the first things that Bill Granger says to me is that he’s a “well meaning amateur.” It’s 10.45am on a Monday morning in early March and we’re sitting in his Notting Hill restaurant. The streets of W11 are quiet, yet it’s anything but in Granger & Co. I’m here to meet the man himself. The man who has built a business on creamy scrambled eggs and sweet corn fritters. We’re seated at a table for four at the front of his restaurant. It’s the only table in the airy dining room that isn’t fully occupied. He’s wearing a lightweight, two-tone cotton sweatshirt and a pair of designer grey slacks. I didn’t ask but they could well be from a funky men’s shop in Seoul or Tokyo, where Granger also has restaurants. Despite it still being winter in London, he’s looking tanned and his blond hair and Hollywood smile accentuate the Granger & Co. brand. As our flat whites arrive at the table, he removes his specs – a chunky ash grey pair from Oliver Goldsmith on the All Saints Road – and gently rolls his sleeves up to reveal a vintage Rolex on his left hand and a friendship bracelet on the other. But who is Bill Granger? And how has he managed to create a restaurant, in a notoriously difficult area, that is full at the beginning of the week with people who clearly don’t need to be in the office at 9am. Before I set out to interview Granger, I ask a few people who don’t work in hospitality if they know who Bill Granger is. They do but mainly for his TV appearances and numerous cookbooks. Yet, Granger has eleven restaurants scattered around the world, with a handful more in the pipeline. Last year, he opened four restaurants in four continents. Granger has done something that so many have failed to do. He’s become a global restaurateur. It was working in a restaurant back in Australia, where Granger first caught the restaurant bug. He was working part time while at art school, where he was studying design. He didn’t like it though. “I found it too structured. I fell in love with the energy of restaurants and it was my short attention span that drew me to the structure of kitchen life. I love the beginning, middle and end of service – my favourite part of a shift is still cleaning down the kitchen at the end of service”. It was a loan of $20,000 Australian dollars from his grandfather – Granger points out that it was most definitely a loan that was paid back – and an unfortunate incident for a couple that split up, which saw him open his first restaurant, bills, in the Sydney suburb of Darlinghurst. “I managed to acquire the site from a guy who had to sell it as he had just split up from his girlfriend. They were meant to be opening the restaurant together and he had run out of money.” “My favourite part of a shift is still cleaning down the kitchen at the end of service.” Today, Granger doesn’t need to rely on a couple parting ways and a loan from a family member to open a new restaurant. In February, he announced that he will open his third London restaurant in King’s Cross and is launching two new bills in Tokyo, including a flagship in the swanky district of Ginza. “I love what they’re doing with King’s Cross. Argent (the developers) have thought about the area as a whole. I also like it because it’s on the same tube line as where I live, so practically it makes sense. It may sound like a small thing but operationally it’s vital. It’s why I’d never do anything south of the river.” Image credit: Anson Smart Our interview is momentarily paused while a lady sits down at the next door table – a regular it seems – and Granger briefly turns his attention to say hello and to welcome our new neighbour. “I also enjoy taking the tube – you can really get a feel of what an area is like by seeing the sort of people that get on and off the tube and what they wear. I also really like the fact it’s a transport hub. We can play a little more with our offering. One of my favourite places is Florence train station and I’ve always dreamt of doing something by a train station.” I ask about Japan. A notoriously difficult market to break for a foreign business. Granger now visits the Japanese capital at least three times a year. It turns out it was a mutual friend of ours, Tyler Brûlé, founder of Monocle, who introduced him to his now business partners in Japan. “Ty put me in touch with some people he was working with at the time in Japan. It’s worked really well and they’re also our partners in Honolulu.” It strikes me that Granger and Brûlé evoke the same when it comes to their businesses; they are their business. Like Monocle, Granger represents an aspirational lifestyle. Image credit: Mikkel Vang It’s something you buy into. Later on in the interview, he goes on to say that he doesn’t really see his business as a restaurant group but rather a fashion brand. “There are an incredible amount of skilled people in the hospitality industry over here who have been well trained from places like The River Café and Momo.” “I’ve come to learn that you can never please everyone. Now I only do things that I want to do. Any creative expression must have integrity. It’s not for me to try and guess what other people want. You see it in what Ty’s (Brûlé) done. I was in his café and shop in Tokyo the other week and it’s his vision. You walk in, look around and it’s Tyler. Everything in there is what he likes.” Japan is an important part of Granger’s fledgling business. With Blue Bottle Coffee and Tartine bakery from San Francisco opening in Tokyo, he knows that the Japanese capital is having a third wave of food openings and it’s good to be part of that. I ask Granger, 24 years after opening his first restaurant, whether he ever thought he would have this global empire. “It was never my intention. This is all a fluke. I opened a few restaurants in Australia and to be honest with you, we got a little bored.” Granger and his wife, Natalie, as well as his three daughters all uprooted and moved to London. They’ve now been living in the capital for six years. “Creative people have to keep themselves inspired. I like being challenged and being a bit uncomfortable. Moving to London provided this.” “There are an incredible amount of skilled people in the hospitality industry over here who have been well trained from places like The River Café and Momo, for example. These great restaurants have given London great people, who have gone on to open their own great places. I was talking to a cab driver the other day and we were discussing how London restaurants used to be so formal and made the average Londoner feel uncomfortable. It’s become far more egalitarian now, like in Australia and Asia. I want people to come to my restaurants and be able to have a coffee and some toast as well as come and spend three figures on a meal.” I’m conscious that I’ve been talking to Granger for nearly an hour. It strikes me he’s not a man to just sit around in his restaurants all day and no doubt has a busy day planned. I start drawing things to a close and we touch upon where he likes to eat out when in London, which is always a sign of how well attuned someone is to the industry. He discusses his favourite local restaurants including Hereford Road, Royal China and the recently opened John Doe on the Golborne Road. “However, the older I get the more I find restaurants too noisy. Chris Martin was in here the other day and he commented on how good the sound level was in here. Sound is so important, as is lighting and air conditioning. It’s all about making customers comfortable. I now spend more money on the stuff that customers cannot see but make a real difference to their overall experience. He doesn’t hesitate when he announces The River Café as the best restaurant in London. “I know where the spend goes. It has the best staff and they use the best ingredients. It’s actually quite cheap for the quality.” He talks about his love for older restaurants. “Restaurants get better when they settle down and bed in – this takes years. But, once they’re established and you have a good team, restaurants are quite stable things. I believe having a successful restaurant is about knowing your first one hundred customers. If you know your first one hundred people who come to your restaurant – like I did with Granger & Co. – you’ll be able to make a business as they will then go and tell their friends.” I conclude by asking for his opinion on how we can get younger people to pursue careers the industry. “I think it’s good that we’ve got some glamour in the industry now but I’d always advise starting out small. I’m self-taught and I always think it’s one thing to have experience but having your own voice is so important.” We finish and I leave Bill to wander over to say hello to one of his regulars before he heads off to his next meeting with Avron Alhadeff, operations director of Granger & Co. The next day he was off to Australia for a week before returning to open Granger & Co. King’s Cross. I left Granger & Co. to head back into the West End feeling that Bill Granger may be well meaning, but he’s definitely not an amateur. LAVAZZA CALENDARS Established in 1895 by Luigi Lavazza, Lavazza is the leader in the Italian retail market and one of the worlds most prominent roasters. For a company whose primary mission is to spread real Italian espresso around the world, Lavazza take pride in having a strong presence at international haute cuisine events and on the menus of the most exclusive restaurants in the world. Lavazza represents unmistakable Italian style around the world, with a strong relationship with photography and art. The Lavazza calendar has been an extrodinary international advertising campaign to communicate the brand’s style and quality. It is present in 15 countries and has been shot by some of the worlds most reowned photographers. Lavazza’s entire history is marked by a series of brilliant insights, starting with the very concepts of blends, invented by the Lavaza family at the turn of the 20th century. This year is a special ocasion for Lavazza as they will be celebrating their 120th Anniversary and the history of the Italian family that devoted itself with passion and spirit of innovation, for four generations, to the ceaseless quest for quality perfection in each coffee. Lavazza Calendar 2014 Martin Schoeller 120th ANNIVERSARY Recipe innovation and colaborating with Top Gastronomy chefs such as Ferran Adrià, Carlo Cracco and Davide Oldani are Lavazza’s heritage and future into Top Gastronomy in the UK. THE LAVAZZA DIFFERENCE As well as beans, Lavazza has an innovative product range including a capsule range for away from home and in-home. Lavazza BLUE pods store the coffee in a controlled atmosphere and individually sealed, ensuring freshness and aroma of the coffee guaranteeing a perfect and consistent espresso every time. Lavazza Away From Home Business Department 01895 209779 ROTONDO INTENSO TIERRA Premium blend of 100% Arabica with a rich smooth taste and a velvety crema. Blend of 40% Arabica (Brazil and central America) and 60% Robusta (South East Asia). Full bodied blend with an intense and persistent flavour. 100% Arabica made exclusively with a blend of premium green coffees (Honduras, Peru and Columbia) Lightly fruity and sweet aroma. LAV9240 - Format spread for CODE.indd 1 www.lavazza.co.uk 25/02/2015 16:32 Issue 2 | March 2015 THE CODE BULLETIN THE CODE APP 05 CODE ONLINE app.code-london.co.uk code-london.co.uk Technology in restaurants: where is it taking us? Restaurants are slowly catching up with the rest of the world when it comes to technology. Anna Sulan Masing takes a look at what this means for the industry. A new industrial revolution is happening and it is not represented by an iron structure built in the middle of Paris. This revolution is supported by dark rooms in distant lands – servers processing your apps, your social media timelines, your daily steps through the city. In the world of service and hospitality we have online booking apps, with OpenTable being the main player; and iPads are now appearing on tables instead of waiters. Therefore, business sense means we need to investigate ways to get connected and tapped into the app-savvy foodie. So technology is booming, but where is it taking us? And how does it affect the hospitality industry, from the inside and as a guest? Thomas Keller stole headlines last year by signing up with Tock, a ‘comprehensive toolbox’ that includes a system allowing guests to pay up front. Tipping is eliminated, no shows are financially covered, and staff management is streamlined. With no show rates even at popular restaurants in the West End, on a Saturday night, reaching 20%, this is a big deal. And planning, after all, is the key to a good business model. As someone permanently connected to my smart phone, I confess, I love it all. I love the lurking on Twitter, I love the constant emailing, WhatsApp-ing and Instagram-ing. And the idea of pressing a button and paying for my meal, as I book the time and date that suits me, appeals. The ease, the instant gratification of a job done - that’s dinner sorted until my iPhone diary reminds me. But, there is this nagging feeling that all this efficiency is missing something. As a tiny violin plays ‘Video Killed the Radio Star’ in the back of my head, I am aware that this sounds like a well-worn topic that happens in every generation. Another facet of this topic is tipping. Tipping is a huge subject, and it is hard to delve into without references to Reaganomics or to how to organise a Tronc system. The tipping culture in Europe is different to the US and it is worth noting that a lot of these technology ideas are coming from the States. But, having worked in many pop-ups I know that within a ticketing system guests don’t tip for what they have already paid for. With this in mind, I wonder about the app Zapper. This sounds brilliant, a work lunch, a busy restaurant and you’re stuck waiting for your server to be free to take your money – being able to scan a code into your phone and walk away at your own convenience? Yes please. But it does distance guests from the waiter, and without having the moment of a real person in front of them, would guests forget to tip? “And so, a tip is like the hand written thank you note.” This instant-ness that apps offer is bringing the business and guests together, at a risk of forgetting the people in between from KP to GM. There is a chance that staff will feel like just a cog in the wheel, and a sense of career and pride in being part of the industry, could get lost. And, it is that in-between-ness that creates the convivial environment. And so, a tip is like the hand written thank you note – a personal gesture that says ‘thank you for making this experience, this moment of sharing time with friends, so great’. And just like thank you notes, sometimes we need our mothers (“a discretionary service charge has been added to your bill”) to remind us to write them. Seafood restaurant Rex & Mariano in Soho allows customers to order from iPads and therefor only charges 5% service on top of the meal. It makes perfect sense, but are the staff missing out? In October last year the New York Times Magazine ran an article ‘Can you Uber a burger?’ which likened the idea of dining out to events – “inspired by the way we pay for concerts, airline tickets and […] Uber”. The excitement people spoke about the possibilities with hospitality and technology in this article was catching – are we entering a brand new world? I spoke to a number of people in the industry based in London (GMs, op managers, chefs, waiters) about this topic of technology. Most wanted to be off the record, understandably as everyone is still thinking about these concepts and no one has a firm opinion yet. I did manage to corner Dan Doherty, Executive Chef at Duck & Waffle, with the question – “do you think ticketing systems will become status quo?” His answer was “hell no!” Pause. Then tempered with “I hope not”. This led us into a somewhat existential conversation about what is the industry? Pop-up restaurants are an eating experience more akin to concerts and theatre, therefore it is not surprising that the successful pop-up venture ‘Art of Dining’ is a collaboration between a set designer and a chef. Ticketing is an essential part of the pop-up business model, and who doesn’t like going to a special event? But, how about the average restaurant? The permanent spaces that need staff continuously, and places that want to train, support and develop their staff. How does technology feed into those dynamics? “Food and the service are part of that sense of sharing and togetherness.” And so it is about asking the question ‘what is this industry?’ For another project, I interviewed a chef about what cooking meant to him – he said he doesn’t cook for himself because food is for sharing. This resonated with me about what the food and service industry is. We go out to share a bottle of wine with friends, to share stories with family, to share space with other people, in a beautiful environment – to be part of something. Food and the service are part of that sense of sharing and togetherness. So how will technology interact with that aspect of this industry? iPads at Rex & Mariano, Soho Therefore, the answers to how technology can work in this industry, can be found in what we want food and hospitality to mean; what is our service culture? And how do we want staff to feel about the work they do? Good staff will always be needed, and that comes from valuing their input in the business. We know technology can’t solve all our problems, but I think now is the right time to think about what road technology will lead us down? Will this new industrial revolution build another Eiffel tower, and is that what we actually want? Anna Sulan Masing — @AnnaSulan Image credit: Katherine Leedale OUR PRODUCTS AND service ARE OUT OF THIS WORLD The Chef’s Deli and sister company The Vino Distributor; focus on quality ingredients and consistency of service. We are proud to be supplying some of the best restaurants in the UK. We hope you will visit our website and get in touch. W www.thechefsdeli.com E [email protected] T 01992 700 585 Issue 2 | March 2015 THE CODE BULLETIN THE CODE APP CODE ONLINE app.code-london.co.uk code-london.co.uk 07 Why the cheese board isn’t dead La Fromagerie’s Patricia Michelson encourages restaurants to think outside the box when it comes to the cheese course. A recent report from the Michelin HQ implied that fine dining was dead. If that is true then the clunking cheese trolley is dead too. However, the gospel according to La Fromagerie, says it is alive and well and just a little bit different. This is not an article telling you how to put together a cheese board, nor a huge amount of rambling inconsequential so-called bon mots about cheese. I am putting the ball firmly into your court, so that by the end of this article you will be fired up and I will present a copy of my book CHEESE as a prize to whoever sends me the most exciting cheeseboard list they would ideally like to serve in their restaurant, club, pub, wine bar or corporate dining room. I want to know the reasons why you put this together and how it works with the wine or drinks list, as well as any involvement from the kitchen with the accompaniments. It can contain three, five, 10, 15 or 20 cheeses. I look forward to seeing what you all come up with. Over the 25 years I have been in the cheese business, I have encouraged customers, engaged with producers and cheese makers and honed my craft in the retail and restaurant sector to give La Fromagerie its identity and style. My motto has been to never waiver from the origins of the business, which was to highlight the small production of true artisan cheeses. The humble simplicity of it all right now is that it is the time for the cheese board or course to show how well it can be integrated into a menu in its own right; supported by the chef and the sommelier and most of all by the front of house who want to be inspired and showcase the cheese. I’ve lost count how many times I’ve heard restaurants say that the cheese course is a loss making part of the menu. That there is more waste than sales; and restaurant reviews scarcely give a column millimetre to the cheese offer – more often than not referring to the five or six ‘smears on a plate’ looking unappetising and also so expensive for what is offered. But the cheeseboard is easy when you understand how it works and why it can be a lynchpin to the rest of the menu, especially the wine list. “The cheeseboard is easy when you understand how it works and it can be a lynchpin to the rest of the menu.” I love what is happening with dining at the moment – the great buzz with bars showcasing wine by the glass and utilizing Coravin equipment – and alongside this serious approach to wine are small tasting plates including cheese and other easy to prepare foods. I love this idea but I also sometimes despair – because the wine is obviously the star – but the other products, especially the cheese, are a sort of afterthought. Although there are places showing a real sense of occasion with the cheese offer and who I am sure get their figures right. I thought I could do something with this and started a Friday ‘bar and cheese evening’ at our No.6 part of the shop in Moxon Street. Would customers be interested in the cheese as much as the wine? Would I know how to marry the two effectively and make it work on all fronts – both bottom line and on the table? We already have a café area in the shop serving cheese plates all through the day until we close and for the past 13 years we have grown in confidence in the way we put our selections together; and also through the special events in the evening centred on taste and pairings. In the 12 months that No.6 Friday nights have been operating, we can see it is successful and something to push forward and explore as a stand-alone business. I know that we are lucky with the diverse selection of cheese, but I am also an avid wine enthusiast and our list is geared to how it works with cheese too. The tasting notes for the wines are just as well informed as those for the cheese. I have worked with restaurants showing how a cheese board can look exciting and interactive, but now I have to show how fewer cheeses can also be able to sit alongside several different styles of wine and even chosen one at time rather than a selection of several on the plate. The juiciness of Epoisses can be great with a Burgundy, Bordeaux or Languedoc Roussillon (yes it can and does work even with a white wine!). I’ve always been of the opinion that to get to grips with cheese and wine, it is easy to match by region, but once you have the taste in your mind you can dance around the wine list from white to red to rosé. However, you do need to have time with a colleague who will be willing to explore the idea of exciting, if not unorthodox, tastes placed on the cheese part of the menu. Think about writing a short list in a box on the menu with four or five cheeses chosen for their taste and style with a selected few wines. A customer can then choose one or more with a specific glass of wine. You can then update this list regularly to keep the momentum going. Right now we are getting new season produce, so don’t leave chef out of the equation either. Take asparagus for instance. A raw salad of asparagus with shavings of Ticklemore goat cheese, a dressing of fruity olive oil and a squeeze of lemon would be a lovely little course to serve on the cheese menu with a glass of Verdicchio or Sancerre. Or a homemade chilli jam with Gorgonzola Naturale and a glass of Chianti. This sort of detail is a delight for a customer who would probably have skipped the cheese. So, I am suggesting the following; have a word with your cheese supplier and ask for several cheeses to taste with various styles of wines, beers and even spirits or cider of your choice. It is a great opportunity to meet your supplier and look at the possibilities together. Look at your drink list and highlight the wines that you know your customers like and which you are willing to serve by the glass with the cheese course. Then start tasting and matching. You may find that as you taste the cheese and the wine, other options come to mind, which could be relevant to your style of business and menu. Don’t just think of goat cheese with a Sancerre – why not look at a Southern Rhone red or a cocktail with a fancy gin? “Exciting wine and cheese pairings would benefit from just a few well-chosen words on a menu to emphasise their taste and style.” At the moment, although I have an extensive cheese selection from all over Europe, I am also bringing in American artisan farmhouse cheeses, as I want to highlight them with great US wines. I am more than happy to enjoy a fine Stilton with a glass of Champagne or a chewy Livarot with whisky, or a perfect slice of Montgomery Cheddar aged 14-18 months with a glass of Pomerol. And my new addiction is the classy Pessac-Leognan white Graves with Ossau Pyrenees ewe’s milk and St Nectaire. Exciting wine and cheese pairings would benefit from just a few well-chosen words on a menu to emphasise their taste and style. It’s also far more engaging and rewarding than just putting, ‘cheese £9 or supplement.’ The cheese board is now a voyage of discovery to be dipped into and explored. The input of the front of house and sommelier – along with the kitchen creating interesting seasonal and regional accompaniments – can give the customers a delightful experience of their expertise and, most importantly, their suppliers’ knowledge. Patricia Michelson Founder and director, La Fromagerie — @LaFromagerieUk THE CODE BULLETIN In association with The Dumbwaiter THE CODE APP 08 CODE ONLINE app.code-london.co.uk code-london.co.uk Are you being served? The Dumbwaiter thinks that the thousands of servers in London’s restaurants deserve recognition for their outstanding drive and passion. In each issue of the Quarterly, we will feature two people who have stood out over the past three months. If you’d like to nominate someone for the next issue of the CODE Quarterly, please email: [email protected] Sam Inch Waiter at Café Murano Martina Franco Gota Waitress at Bó Drake Age : 26 Nationality : British Age : 24 Nationality : Spanish Who inspires you? My Dad. He’s hard working and took jobs he didn’t particularly enjoy to earn money, which allowed me to do a job that I love. Why did you go into hospitality? I left college having studied media studies and I was never really interested in it. I started working with the breakfast team at Beefeater to earn some money and I fell in love with restaurants. If you weren’t in the industry, what would you be? Ski instructor. What makes a good waiter/waitress? Being approachable, personable and friendly. If you have the wrong attitude, then so will the customer. Café Murano 33 St James’s Street, SW1A 1HD cafemurano.co.uk Restaurant pet-hate? Upselling. I hate it when you’re made to feel awkward for not ordering the special of the day or an extra cocktail that you didn’t want in the first place. Best place for a coffee during your break? Monmouth. It’s the best coffee in London. Best place for a post-service bite to eat? Subway in Tottenham Court Road. It’s open 24-hours and fills you up after a long shift! Who inspires you? Charles Vexenat. He’s a French mixologist with a big beard and he makes amazing molecular cocktails. His energy and passion is infectious and he made me fall in love with cocktails. Why did you go into hospitality? My grandfather was running a restaurant at 60 years of age and I started helping when I was 12 by clearing the empty glasses and carrying trays. I loved the atmosphere. If you weren’t in the industry, what would you be? An actress. What makes a good waiter/waitress? The ability to make your customers laugh. I love being able to make a miserable customer Bó Drake 8 Greek Street, W1D 4DE bodrake.co.uk laugh and smile. You have to be the face of the business. The most important thing is to make people happy. Restaurant pet-hate? When people are constantly texting/tweeting/ talking on their phones. You’re out for dinner – enjoy the moment! Best place for a coffee during your break? The ground-floor café at La Bodega Negra. Maybe a shot of Tequila instead of a coffee though! Best place for a post-service bite to eat? Chotto Matte. The food is really inventive and very tasty. The service is also warm and friendly which makes me want to go back. Issue 2 | March 2015 THE CODE BULLETIN THE CODE APP 09 CODE ONLINE app.code-london.co.uk code-london.co.uk Guess the restaurant In association with The Dumbwaiter Think you can spot your favourite restaurant at the blink of an eye? The Dumbwaiter’s been out and about, snapping away in some of London’s best restaurants – all you have to do is match the picture with the name. Answers are at the bottom of the page. Good luck! Spring Fera LeCoq 3 Blacklock 1 Hutong 2 Beast 5 6 8 4 The Manor 7 Holborn Dining Room Kitty Fisher’s 9 10 The Drapers Arms Answers : 1 Spring | 2 Kitty Fisher’s | 3 Holborn Dining Room | 4 Fera | 5 The Drapers Arms 6 The Manor | 7 Blacklock | 8 Hutong 9 LeCoq | 10 Beast THE CODE BULLETIN THE CODE APP CODE ONLINE app.code-london.co.uk code-london.co.uk 10 The Quaffing Cabinet In association with Our resident wine expert, Zeren Wilson, discovers his glass is more than half full when it comes to the state of wine in London’s restaurants. ‘B lessed are the wine drinkers...’ – Is that how it goes? Something like that, anyway... We’re a lucky lot here in London, that’s for sure. Have we ever had it so good? There has been a palpable shift in the wine-drinking atmosphere over the last few years amongst a whole clutch of restaurants and wine bars, a line that can be traced back to the opening in 2005 of the groundbreaking first Vinoteca in Farringdon. From the joy and shock at the eye widening value and quality of the list at 10 Greek Street when they first opened, through to the launch of the Coravin “wine by the glass without pulling the cork” system last year, there has been enough going on in between to see it as some kind of ‘minirevolution’, an added impetus to a change that began around ten years ago. “The West End, centre of town, and even the City now bristles with good options.” The trailblazer for wine offering in the fine dining restaurant world was indisputably Arbutus in Soho, opening in 2006, with more than sixty wines offered by the 250ml carafe, and gaining a Michelin star just eight months later. At the time this was way ahead of the number of options you’d find anywhere else. When Sager + Wilde opened in 2013, it represented (in my mind anyway) a moment when the landscape ‘shifted’ further, a spot that brought attitude, chutzpah, and a ferociously exciting list that had a healthy bias to lesser seen fine Californian wines (this lover of Golden State wine was chuffed) alongside some of the finest wines on the planet at margins that would make most Michelin starred joints blush: on a hitherto dismal stretch of Hackney Road. Five years ago this just wouldn’t have seemed feasible. For many years, Andrew Edmunds in Soho (established in 1986) was one of the only places offering serious wine in a restaurant environment at bloody reasonable prices, enough to dictate the decision to eat there, based largely (though not solely) on the fact you could drink Pol Roger by the glass and then pile into something else from the board, knowing that the value in drinking here was incomparable in central London. Shampers is another stalwart that remains, doing its thing on Kingly street with zero faff and bypassed by the scenesters, serving proper wines at margins that make you smile, while serving up the marvellous squid with chilli and ginger. Another marker for the renewed energy and vim in the on-trade wine scene has come from the ongoing influence of the ‘natural’ wine movement, and the arrival of Terroirs near Trafalgar Square in 2008 seemed to add a new dimension to the discussion of wine, one that is still being explored and debated with gusto across the industry, and now filtering into the mainstream. ‘Orange’ wine and whites with grippy tannins from extended skin maceration, are no longer the preserve of chin scratching wine nerds: these are wines being increasingly written about, tasted, and poured in restaurants and wine bars across town. It’s encouraging that the wine scene finally seems to be keeping pace with the giddying pace of London restaurant openings, and I’m selfishly pleased that some of this has even pushed out closer to where I live: the dazzling list at Verden in Clapton (five years ago, in Clapton? No chance); the daily changing and intriguing list at Primeur on the Canonbury/Stoke Newington borders; new arrival Vinarius on Roman Road; quirky and ‘natural’ heavy P. Franco, also in Clapton – no longer the need to trek into town every time. Hoorah. The West End, centre of town, and even the City now bristles with good options, many which lend themselves to casual drop-ins. Compagnie des Vins Surnaturels is a very welcome addition to Covent Garden; The 10 Cases Bistrot à Vin beside the restaurant is another gem; Newman Street Tavern; The Remedy in Fitzrovia; the excellent value Champagne at Bubbledogs; the 28:50 sites; new opening Portland are already listing some belters; a well chosen, thoughtful list at Spring; the sharp list at Lyle’s...and it goes on... Coravin have made quite a noise, and are increasingly being used all over the shop. Walk into Goodman steak restaurant and the Coravin options present themselves on the first page. 8 Hoxton Square (sister restaurant to 10 Greek Street) have been pouring from magnum using the system, and 28:50 have poured legendary Burgundy producer Domaine de la RomanéeConti. Both Sager and Wilde and Mission E2 are having fun with it. Other early adopters include Hawksmoor, The Ledbury and Fera at Claridge’s. It has twisted a few people’s melons, man. This year shows no sign of slowing up. As well as having the best name of any wine merchant, Planet of the Grapes have been plying their trade quietly for years at their Leadenhall Market and Bow Lane sites, and have just signed the lease for a new bar near Moorgate, with another in the pipeline, and I’m already hearing news of interesting new wine led ventures planned in the coming months. A final indicator of this Brave New World of wine drinking may be the convergence of good wine with the street food phenomenon, with Ruth Spivey’s Street Vin appearing at Hawker House on Kingsland Road: when you’re necking Château Figeac 1994 alongside short-rib tacos and pork belly stuffed bao buns opposite ‘Whisky Roulette’ in a former 19th century hardware store, you know that something’s changed. We may not be about to inherit the earth, but London appears to be pretty blessed right now with a different kind of Sacrament. More wine, vicar? Zeren Wilson Food writer, wine consultant and founder of bittenandwritten.com — @bittenwritten Issue 2 | March 2015 THE CODE BULLETIN THE CODE APP app.code-london.co.uk 11 CODE ONLINE code-london.co.uk Destination CODE: San Francisco In association with CODE Travel Guides Move over New York – San Francisco is where it’s at. CODE’s Adam Hyman visited the city by the bay and fell in love with its vibrant, independent dining scene. I t started with a phone call to Ken Friedman in New York – co-founder of The Spotted Pig – who had recently opened a restaurant in San Francisco. “Come to Tosca, pre-order the roast chicken, and then go to Chez Panisse. It’s the most influential restaurant in North America.” So, we did just that. As well as lots more. San Francisco not only boasts the weather we long for in the UK, as well as the lifestyle, but it currently has one of the most exciting restaurant scenes in the States. “...go to Chez Panisse. It’s the most influential restaurant in North America.” Ask someone to name an American city that they’d recommend visiting for restaurants and no doubt most would say New York. But an 11 hour flight from London gets you to, what many call, America’s best food city. San Francisco has long been a food destination in its own right, with the likes of Alice Waters and the late Judy Rodgers, to name but a few. Landing at San Francisco International on a balmy Friday evening in October, we Uber’d to our hotel. The Kensington Park hotel (Doubles from £170; kensingtonparkhotel.com) is perfectly located on Post Street, just off Union Square, for a long weekend in the city. Rooms in the 1925 Gothic style building have views across the topographically challenged city. “Getting a reservation here makes booking a table at Chiltern Firehouse look like a piece of cake.” Dinner that night – jet lagged to the max – was at Tosca (toscacafesf.com). April Bloomfield and Ken Friedman have revamped the iconic bar. Although the jukebox, piano and murals on the wall remain in place, Tosca is now a restaurant too. Yet, it’s distinctly different to their New York establishments. An open-kitchen looks out onto a dining room with dark wood and red leather banquettes. A meal of roasted treviso, crispy pig tails, gemelli pasta with black pepper and pecorino Toscana and that roasted chicken with ricotta, pine nuts and marsala shows off Bloomfield’s skill in the kitchen. You can see why it made Bon Appétit’s 10 best new restaurants of 2014. An early morning run before the city awoke on Saturday morning, took us past Zuni Café, which resulted in us booking a table for brunch the next day. A flat white from Blue Bottle Coffee (bluebottlecoffe.com) – they have now expanded into Japan – kept us going in the 90-minute queue at Plow in Potrero Hill (eatatplow.com). The rest of the locals came prepared with Thermos flasks of Mimosas; the American’s have such commitment and dedication to brunch. Lemon and ricotta pancakes, apple sausages and the best crispy fried potatoes in the city, were worth the wait and fuelled us for the short train ride on the BART to lunch at Chez Panisse in Berkeley (chezpanisse.com). Alice Water’s Shattuck Avenue restaurant has been so influential in shaping modern day American restaurants and San Francisco is scattered with Chez Panisse alumni who have gone on to open their own places. Our lunch in the upstairs café was grown-up yet relaxed. The sort of experience you get at The River Café in London. Although it was unnecessary after a full day of eating, we finished the day with a late dinner of pork chops and burgers at Nopa (nopasf.com). Far too many Manhattans at Nopa, meant the third day in the city started with fuzzy heads. The weather had been kind to us yet again and it was off to brunch at Zuni Café (zunicafe.com). We were first through the doors to the famous restaurant in the triangular building on Market Street at 11am. Fifteen minutes later, every table was occupied. Bloody Marys, oysters, Caesar salad, scrambled eggs with summer truffles and shoestring fries – this restaurant is still at the top of its game 35 years after it opened. Visits to Delfina Pizzeria (pizzeriadelfina.com) and Bi-Rite Creamery (biritecreamery.com) – their flavours include strawberry balsamic, honey lavender and salted caramel – reassured us just how diverse and individual San Francisco’s food scene is. It’s not about chasing trends in this city. State Bird Provisions (statebirdsf.com) – getting a reservation here makes booking a table at Chiltern Firehouse look like a piece of cake – had come highly recommended by both Oliver Peyton and Marina O’Loughlin. We decided to chance it and rocked up without a reservation at 6pm on Sunday evening and, by some twist of fate by the culinary Gods, we managed to get a table thanks to a last minute cancellation. The décor is similar to that of Beard in Tokyo, but it’s fair to say that this is some of the most distinctive food I’ve eaten in a long while. It’s difficult to try and compare it to anywhere else. A kind of fusion menu that manages to remain focused. There are only fifteen dishes on the menu but they also bring out dishes on trolleys and trays – a mashup of cichetti and dim sum – for you to choose from during your meal. A sexy meals on wheels, if you will. Sweetcorn pancakes with local Mt. Tam cheese, guinea fowl dumplings in a broth, roasted bone marrow with mushrooms and pink peppercorn and a small plate of duck ham. Buttermilk fried state bird (quail is the bird of California) and bacon-curry with crispy beef sweetbreads and pickled squash. If there’s one restaurant in San Francisco to visit, this is it. The next morning we had one more place to visit that was on our hit list. Some may say we’d left the best till last. With our Rimowas in tow, we headed to Swan Oyster Depot (sfswanoysterdepot.com) for cold beers and fresh seafood. We headed off to San Francisco airport, with Scott Mackenzie playing, full of fresh crab, smoked salmon and oysters. I fell in love again with San Francisco eight years after first visiting. Just be sure to wear some flowers in your hair. Adam Hyman Founder, CODE — @AdamMHyman Issue 2 | March 2015 THE CODE BULLETIN THE CODE APP app.code-london.co.uk CODE ONLINE code-london.co.uk THE CODE APP Exclusive benefits for hospitality professionals THE EYES & EARS OF THE INDUSTRY THE CODE APP IS AVAILABLE TO ANYONE WHO WORKS IN HOSPITALITY AND GI V E S EXCLUSIVE ACCESS TO OFFERS AT OV E R 100 RESTAURANTS AND BARS ACROSS LONDON DOWNLOAD AT APP.CODE-LONDON.CO.UK [email protected] K CODE-LONDON.CO.UK @CODELONDON The marketplace for leading hospitality jobs and talent Jobs For more information or to advertise with CODE Jobs please call 020 7104 2065 or email [email protected]. CODE-LONDON.CO.UK/JOBS @CODE_JOBS THE CODE BULLETIN | CODE ONLINE | TH E CODE AP P Published by Nexus CODE Ltd | Designed by Formandcue — formandcue.com 12
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