Showing posts with label Sweet Tooth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sweet Tooth. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 April 2014

After Hours Dessert with Mark Donald: Pop-up at Ozone Coffee Roasters, London

Last month, scrolling through Twitter, I stumbled across a retweet mentioning a four course dessert pop-up in London. A mere mention of dessert and my ears prick up. Anyway a few clicks and a couple of text messages later, I'd booked a place for me and a friend to go to After Hours on Good Friday - a perfect Bank Holiday activitity, especially considering my Easter egg stash gets smaller and smaller each year (I actually had none this time round *sniff*).

At After Hours, they champion modern and innovative dessert; inviting London's most exciting pastry chefs to create a spectacular four course tasting menu for sweet toothed attendees, held in independent coffee shops across London. They've worked with chefs from restaurants including The Fat Duck, The Ledbury, and Opera Tavern, but on this occasion - at Ozone Coffee Roasters in Shoreditch - Mark Donald from Hibiscus took centre stage.


Mark is currently sous chef at the acclaimed Mayfair restaurant. He's previously spent time at 2 Michelin-starred Restaurant Andrew Fairlie, as well as a five month stint at that famous Danish place, Noma. The £25 ticket, which seemed like an absolute steal, included the four desserts and a coffee with petit fours to round the evening off. There were three different sittings, of which we chose the latest option at 9.30pm, and beer/wine/cocktails/soft drinks were available at an extra charge.

Getting dressed up and going out solely for dessert is pretty much any girl's dream (unless you're health/diet obsessed, and if that's you, bore off). I'd not been to Ozone before, but it's a large idustrial styled space split over two floors; an espresso bar and open kitchen, completed with stylish booths and seating areas upstairs, whilst the in house roastery malarky goes on downstairs. They clearly run a well oiled machine.

We were sat in prime position at the open kitchen bar top, meaning we could watch all the theatrics of the chefs plating up the art-like desserts, and we could also get sneak previews of what was yet to come. Raising a toast to the long weekend with some prosecco, a little Easter inspired treat came our way. Nestled in an egg box, and in real egg shells, we had a coconut mousse with a passion fruit coulis. It's at this point that I will apologise for my lack of knowledge on exactly what we had; the menu teased us with listing just the names of each basic element, and I was too busy gawping at the dishes to take notes when they were served. So perhaps consider this an approximation on the After Hours pop-up..

The first course was 'Sweetcorn, Basil, Bergamot'A biscuit-y disk topped with a bergamot cream and adorned with plain and caramel coated popcorn, served with a glowing green quenelle of basil sorbet. It really was ALL about the sorbet, I loved how fresh and clean tasting it was.

Next up was 'Pistachio, Gariguette'. A pastry tart case, filled with 'Gariguette Strawberries' (an old and much-loved French variety that produces sweet and aromatic fruits early in the season) and a gorgeous pistachio crème pat/custard, sealed off with a delicate lid of caramelised sugar - as if stolen from a crème brûlée.The plate was sprinkled with pistachio and strawberry dust, and sauces of the same flavours. The vibrant red and green combinations looked fantastic on the white plate (it tasted as good as it looked too), and there really is nothing more satisfying than making that first crack in the sugar with your spoon.


The third course was a puzzler; 'Rhubarb, Ghruth Dhu'. The first part is pretty simple - rhubarb - we know that, having been only lightly cooked to still contain some of it's bite and sharpness. The other element seemed like a cheesecake of sorts, and it really did have that cheese-like taste.


Looking up the unusual name when I got home was a bit of a revelation. Gruth Dhu (or Black Crowdie) is a soft cream cheese with slightly sour, tangy milky flavour, which is what I was getting taste-wise. The actual cheese is rolled in pinhead oatmeal and crushed peppercorns, which explains the intensely black, black pepper custard, and the little oatcakes served with it too. The additional 'h' in the name must be to distinguish the fact that it's Mark's own clever take on the cheese.


Having this slight savoury course in amongst all the sweet was a good move as it prepared us for the last course. Titled 'Buen-no?' the only thing we could think of were Kinder Bueno's... Correct. I've not had a Kinder Bueno for years, and after this version, I very much doubt I'll have one again, at least not anytime soon; it simply can't compete. A wafer and hazelnut parfait, cased in white and milk chocolate, served with a scoop of wafer flavoured ice cream, splatters of silky chocolate sauce and crowned with wafer-y gold dust; majestic.

It was 'Coffee & Swedgers' before hometime. Apparently this word is commonly used in and around the Glasgow area (Mark is Scottish) to describe penny sweets bought from ice-cream vans. 'Swedgers', however, can also be used to describe pill or tablet based illicit drugs such as ecstasy; so the vintage sweet tin masquerading a wealth of bite sized 'sugar highs' is all very tongue in cheek

A strong caffeine hit in the form of an espresso and we dived in. Classic cinder toffee, with it's honeycomb appearance, had a wonderful honey flavour too. A lime curd filled macaron; subtly sweet and citrusy. A sugarcoated sea buckthorn jelly dome; bigger, better flavoured and less chewy than a Jelly Tot. And finally the opinion dividing bacon fudge; very soft maple-y fudge, coated in crumbs which resembled Frazzles crisps. I liked the weirdness of it, but my dessert night accomplice wasn't so sure.

All in all, a perfect night was had. We ate, drank and bascially watched an elaborate performance in the kitchen. For £25, it was a FEAST for the eyes and for the belly.

BTW: Amazing photos of the evening can be seen in cwiss's Flickr Photostream - puts my poor phone snaps to shame.

Wednesday, 1 January 2014

Start as you mean to go on..

 HAPPY NEW YEAR! I hope you had a good one. I've been a little quiet lately thanks to too much Christmas scoffing and boozing (I'm most certainly entering 2014 a little rounder than I'd like) but I thought I'd start the year with a good'un - about cake no less.

I sent a geeky letter to Waitrose a few months back, in the hope of possibly winning some fancy Le Creuset cookware, not because I just wanted a new pen pal. No surprises, I didn't cut the mustard and wasn't included in their letters section, but I did get a nice reply. I titled it 'Being True to Beetroot', and here it is..

"I've always been fascinated by vegetable cakes; I remember the revelation as a child that carrot cake did in fact contain carrots, to which I then inspected every slice to get a glimpse of those flecks of the orange veg. So, I was thrilled to find some alternative recipes in the latest Waitrose magazine, and, mixer in hand, I directed myself to the kitchen straight away - also, the fact that The Great British Bake Off has just started again has meant that I've had a thirst for baking for the past couple of weeks! 

I thought I would share a photo of the lovely beetroot cake I made following Lily Vanilli's recipe. Now, I'm not going to lie, it was a fair bit of effort - lots and lots of grating - I was literally caught red handed making a mountain of washing up, but it was totally worth it. I've had beetroot cake in various guises before, mainly chocolate or richly spiced cakes, but this one made with polenta really brought out the earthiness that you typically associate with this root vegetable, and the mascarpone frosting, not being overly sweet, made it a very grown up bake - despite it's vivid colour!

So, thank you for including the recipe, it was delicious, and I'll be sure to try out the Fiona Cairns butternut squash and Harry Eastwood courgette ones too. They certainly make eating cake feel more virtuous."

.. What I didn't say was that I'd actually made this cake a week or so before the magazine came out, and seized the opportunity to be in it to win it (don't hate me Waitrose!). I've had Lily Vanilli's 'Sweet Tooth' book, which the recipe is from, for quite some time and made numerous things -successfully - from it. I've also visited her teeny little bakery, that's only open on Sundays, near Columbia Road's flower market in East London, it's the best place for a naughty brunch, but be prepared to queue as it's very popular. Sweet Tooth is a baking bible. If you're into cakes/tarts/biscuits/etc then this is an absolute must. Its filled with beautiful recipes which have interesting flavour combinations - bacon and maple syrup tea cakes, hot toddy tarts, baked apple cider doughnuts - and it explains in quite straightforward terms the 'sciencey' bits behind baking, with plenty of tips to tighten your technique. It has become my go-to book for anything sugar related, and with lots of ideas on decoration (without a poncey piping set), you can really create some masterpieces at home.

So, if Santa didn't bring you the book for Christmas this year, may I suggest you treat yourself a little New Year's present, it's worth every penny. Oh, and make sure you try the beetroot cake.