Monday, 8 September 2014
Puglia: not down at heel, just rugged good looks
Puglia might not have the polish of the Amalfi coast or the elegance of Tuscany, but therein lie its charms, as Chris Leadbeater discovered on an early autumn visit
The Corner Ristorante does not look promising. With its drab brown concrete walls, each of them bereft of windows, it seems the sort of establishment where you might encounter dirty beer glasses and broken pool cues, angry glares and the unspoken threat of violence.
But we are tired and hungry – "fresh" off a plane into Bari, and assessing our options at this late hour in the city's unremarkable suburb of Palese. They are not plentiful. I glance again at the grubby framed menu attached to the lintel – and push tentatively at the door.
We tumble into a tomato-sauce advert. Inside, families of all ages are dining with Italian gusto: babies smiling; mothers clucking; children pushing portions of pasta around plates that are too big for them; groups of men in intense conversation. The smell coming from the kitchen is heady and rich. Ten minutes later, as our antipasti appear, my wife raises an eyebrow and a fork heavy with mozzarella, and declares: "This is better than I expected."
This unfussy neighbourhood eatery could be a symbol of the region in which it sits. The most south-easterly nugget of the country, Puglia is – famously – the heel of the Italian geographical boot. Like most heels, it is scuffed and scratched, worn down by the tread of daily existence. Here is a distant agricultural cousin of the dilettantes of Milan and Rome, filled out by farmland and shaped by the seas that gnaw insistently at its limestone sides – the Adriatic to the east, the Ionian to the south, the Gulf of Taranto to the west. It is unglamorous, under-appreciated, flinty and awkward. Yet peer within, and you glimpse an example of Italy at its purest – rural and unhurried, a place of small towns and a life quite ordinary, where citrus trees sway in the breeze and days drift by in silent sunshine.
Alberobello's trulli
Such a scenario is exactly what we are seeking as summer slides into autumn – though we do not find this desired tranquillity in Bari. The Puglian capital is noisily Italian, right down to the traffic that clogs its veins. There is beauty, however, amid the chaos – the 12th-century Cattedrale di San Sabino, calm incarnate as it rears over Piazza dell'Odegitria; the more diminutive church of San Gaetano, concealed down the alley of Strada San Gaetano, where washing hangs from balconies; the thick flanks of the (largely) 13th-century castle, still guarding the city.
We sip coffee in the shadow of the latter, preparing for a drive south-east that will take us on to the Salento peninsula – the lower tip of the region. First, however, we must delve into the rust and dust that wells up immediately below Bari – factories perspiring on the lip of the Adriatic; numerous shipping containers lined up at the port, a vast metal jigsaw. This industrial zone stays with us doggedly, past Monopoli, and on to Brindisi, where ferries chug across to Greece.
And then, somewhere near the village of Torchiarolo, the mood changes. The SS613 has discreetly abandoned the sea, and on each side of the road, the landscape has peeled back to reveal rustic Italy, the occasional vineyard ebbing away in furrows. Lecce provides an urban interruption, but in fine fashion, the Piazza Sant'Oronzo still cradling a Roman amphitheatre. Beyond, the SS101 completes the transition, funnelling us to the lower edge of Salento, where Gallipoli is a seafront flurry of fishing boats and fruit stalls – patched-up hulls and boxes of tomatoes jostling for space alongside the Gulf of Taranto.
Attention, though is diverted. Some 700 miles to the north, Juventus are playing football in Turin, and Gallipoli is transfixed. In the streets behind the castle, commentary seeps from doorways. In one location, a man watches through the window of a friend's house, chair planted on the pavement. It is a rare example of Puglia turning its weathered face to the rest of Italy. We will not come across many more.
Villa Bosco degli Ulivi
Our destination is a further 25 miles south, and it gazes not at Piedmont, but at the water. Almost. A retreat from the world, Bosco degli Ulivi is tucked two miles inland, nearly at the tip of the peninsula, just above the "town" of Torre Vado. Indeed, it is so well hidden that, initially, we struggle to find it, re-tracing the same spiderweb lanes until we stumble upon the driveway. As its name suggests, it lies in an olive grove, though the first sign of its presence is a flash of afternoon light on its windows. A three-bedroom property, it is a cocktail of modern and traditional. The villa is boldly 21st century: cement floors and hard counters in the open kitchen; white linen on the beds; a swimming pool outside. But the loamy red soil under the trees is classically Puglian. At the rear of the garden, a pajara – a squat stone storage structure of indeterminable age – lingers, its interior coolness still infused with the tang of animal fur and damp straw.
And so we switch between the villa and Torre Vado – where the titular 16th-century tower continues to watch for invaders. Families dot the beach in parasol clusters as, adjacent, unpretentious eatery La Kambusa doles out more pizza-based nutrition for hungry bambini.
On our third evening, we return to Bosco degli Ulivi knowing that we have help. Think Puglia, the agency through which we have rented the property, offers an in-villa dining service. Gina Vesuvio sweeps in, ushers us away with the unquestionable authority of a kitchen matriarch, and prepares a feast. There are plates of prosciutto and heaped bowls of big-eared orecchiette pasta with lumps of turnip; strips of pork marinated sharply in lemon juice, and a fruit salad of local peaches and plums. We have little in the way of shared vocabulary, but the meal needs no translation. At the end of the night, she nods curtly and departs, leaving us to contemplate our bulging stomachs.
It would be easy, in the wake of this, to snooze like pythons in a digestive daze for the rest of the week. But this is a region that, for all its earthiness, demands exploration.
The plan, on the brightest of Tuesdays, is to forge anti-clockwise along the shore. Below Torre Vado, Santa Maria di Leuca protects the corner of the peninsula, its lighthouse monitoring the spot where the Gulf and the Ionian confer. On this morning, their meeting is almost polite – gentle surface ripples, small boats bobbing in a search for squid.
But beyond this point, a salty toughness makes itself felt. The coast, as we cut north, is a spartan mix of bare rock and spiky cacti. At Il Ciolo, a gorge forces its way to the sea, water frothing urgently within. Castro is another defender, its 12th-century castle glaring at the road. And if the gilded resort of Santa Cesarea Terme softens the situation with its gelaterias and holiday homes, Capo d'Otranto reasserts the idea of rough and rugged, Italy's most easterly extremity thrusting its elbow into the confluence of the Adriatic and the Ionian. Forty miles away, Albania broods in the haze.
We meander on, into the town of Otranto, which succinctly unites this clash of styles. Its medieval walls are high, sturdy, and foreboding. But the aroma of grilled swordfish that emanates from La Bella Idrusa, a restaurant on the quayside, insists that we sit and eat.
We return to the villa, rest, then – two days later – go again, this time up the west edge of the peninsula, back to Gallipoli and on into the idyllic enclave of Santa Maria al Bagno, as it clings to its natural harbour. Perched on the sheltered waters of the Gulf, this side of Salento lacks the cragginess of its eastern counterpart. The tiny port of Santa Caterina sits bathed in sea-sparkle, while Torre Squillace poses on a splendid crescent of yellow sand.
Our final halt is at Porto Cesareo, where a thin causeway crosses over to the island of Lo Scoglio. Here, Ristorante Lo Scoglio dispenses a serious version of Italian cuisine. There are cashmere sweaters around shoulders, studious frowns for the benefit of the wine list, and the refined clicks of cutlery on crockery – on a veranda in sight of another blocky watchtower. For all this, the house risotto is gloriously simple, a fleet of prawns lost in sticky rice. Somehow, the clock accelerates, and as we drive back to Torre Vado, we are granted the sort of sunset that dares you not to pull over and stare.
Perhaps the small hand continues its breathless sprint, because the weekend dawns with unappreciated speed. But the joy of the region is that even the trundle back to the airport throws out slivers of the wonderfully picturesque.
Ostuni decorates its hilltop like birthday-cake icing, its buildings starkly whitewashed. Then comes Alberobello, the engaging oddity whose celebrated trulli – conical houses that taper upwards, pushing architectural snouts into the sky – have garnered it Unesco World Heritage status. Suddenly there are tour buses and exhaust fumes. But even amid a forest of out-stretched camera-phones, it is clear that Unesco's global rubber-stamp is as close as Puglia comes to shouting about its charms. And as we nibble at gelati from Bar Pasticceria del Corso, we marvel that, in a country known for the quality of its shoes, even the heel can be endlessly pretty.
Getting there
EasyJet (0330 365 5000; easyjet.com) flies to Bari from Gatwick; British Airways (0844 493 0787; ba.com) flies the same route until November. Ryanair (0871 246 0000; ryanair.com) flies to Bari and Brindisi from Stansted.
Staying there
Bosco degli Ulivi sleeps up to six, and is available from £2,483 per week in September and October, through Think Puglia (020 7377 8518; thethinkingtraveller.com). In-villa dining is €80 (£63) for two-three people, €120 (£95) for groups of four-seven (plus cost of ingredients).
More information
viaggiareinpuglia.it
Credit: The Independent
Seville city guide: a day in Alameda and Macarena
The Alameda and Macarena districts of Seville offer an alternative from the city's usual tourist sights, with their cool cafe-bars, art spaces, independent boutiques and markets
Share 1326
Many visitors to the sultry southern Spanish city of Seville stick to a set route of cathedral, Alcázar palace and the Jewish quarter of Santa Cruz, without venturing further afield. While these monuments and flower-filled plazas, dotted with traditionally tiled tapas bars, shouldn't be missed, if you head into the less touristy areas of La Alameda and La Macarena (both no-go areas 15 years ago) you'll find a mix of avant-garde eateries, communes and independent shops – without a flamenco apron in sight.
1. Get your bearings at Las Setas , architect-artist J Mayer H's soaring cluster of six parasols in the form of giant mushrooms that houses a market, a rooftop walk, a bar and an archaeological museum. It landed, somewhat controversially, like a spacecraft on an old car park three years ago and kickstarted a new wave of shops opening in the surrounding area.
2. Walk over the waffly waves of Las Setas to Calle Regina, a pedestrianised street crammed with tempting spots, starting with El Gato en Bicicleta at no 8, a bookshop-cum-art gallery packed with tomes on sex, design and poetry. A few doors up, at no 15, Latas y Botellas is a treasure trove of suitcase-friendly Spanish food goodies and La Cacharreria , at no 14 over the road, is good for a late breakfast at an outside table.
Wabi Sabi, Seville
3. Turn left into Calle Viriato where fashion, art and furniture emporium Wabi Sabi (Calle Viriato 9) is a light, lofty space perfect for showing local artists' paintings, and an eclectic collection of pieces: a turquoise planter's chair (€527) sits next to vintage bags (€37) and graphic-print dresses (around €62).
4. Red House (Calle Amor de Dios 7 ) is a roomy, cafe/art space that captures this area's relaxed vibe, where guests sit on curvy art deco armchairs surrounded by lamps made from soda siphons and birdcages – all for sale – and listen to poetry readings and DJ sets. The dynamic artist owners, Alvaro and Cristina, have opened a restaurant nearby – No-Lugar (Calle Trajano 16 ) – which has a vintage-y interior with ex-army workbenches and Moroccan ceramics. The fish tagine (€11) is reliably good .
5. For lunch, take a tapas hop around Macarena's Feria market. Start at the unassuming but innovative Quilombo (Peris Mencheta 6 ) with a smoked cod, courgette and orange salad, then cross to the market itself on Calle Feria; it is one of the city's oldest. Sample grilled sardines and razor-clams (€2.50) with a glass of manzanilla sherry (€1.50) at La Cantina or salchichon iberico (€2.20) at tables tucked under the 13th-century Moorish-gothic basilica's stone wall.
6. A few yards away is the Palacio de los Marqueses de la Algaba , a beautiful 15th-century palace that houses the Mudejar Centre. Mudejar was the architectural style practised by Moorish artisans under Catholic rule; the tall, arched window on the palace's market-facing facade is a perfect example. Inside the centre, you can see carved wood ceilings, and the azulejos (ceramic tiles) with intricate geometric patterns that Seville is famous for.
7. The main thoroughfare of the Macarena district is the narrow Calle San Luis. Pass the blue-and-white tiled dome of the eponymous baroque church, to the mould-breaking Rompemoldes at no 70, a sleek, contemporary version of Seville's craftsmen's quarter. This is an open, shared courtyard where you can see designers, artists and sculptors at work in their studios; many live upstairs.
No Kitchen
8. After a traditional Seville siesta, head to the recently opened No Kitchen (Calle Amparo 50). Simple, airy decor – white walls, wooden tables – focuses attention on the food: lightly (or no)-cooked dishes such as tender seared Iberian pork loin (€3.60) and smoked salmon with vodka and beetroot. The ceviche trend has hit Seville – scallop or sea bass come with kikos (small toasted corn kernels, €8.15).
9. Roof terrace bars are all the rage, for the welcome breezes and, of course, the views. One of the best is Roof on top of the Casa Romana hotel (Calle Trajano 15), which has a terrace where you can watch the Setas glow other-wordly blue and pink.
10. Local's tip
Don't miss out on the free open-air events along the Alameda. On any summer evening, you'll stumble across dance performances, live music, street entertainers and craft stalls for kids.
11. Where to Stay
Sacristia De Sa hotel
Seville isn't big on hip hotels, but the Sacristia de Santa Ana (22 Alameda de Hercules, doubles from €79) is a good spot. A converted 17th-century mansion, the feel is dreamy and romantic: with restored French antiques (many for sale), hand-painted headboards and rooms wrapped around a pretty wooden-balconied courtyard. Its suite (room 407) has three huge windows looking onto the Alameda. You can't beat the location for neighbourhood vibes, though street-facing rooms can be noisy, especially at weekends.
Credit: The Guardian
Share 1326
Many visitors to the sultry southern Spanish city of Seville stick to a set route of cathedral, Alcázar palace and the Jewish quarter of Santa Cruz, without venturing further afield. While these monuments and flower-filled plazas, dotted with traditionally tiled tapas bars, shouldn't be missed, if you head into the less touristy areas of La Alameda and La Macarena (both no-go areas 15 years ago) you'll find a mix of avant-garde eateries, communes and independent shops – without a flamenco apron in sight.
1. Get your bearings at Las Setas , architect-artist J Mayer H's soaring cluster of six parasols in the form of giant mushrooms that houses a market, a rooftop walk, a bar and an archaeological museum. It landed, somewhat controversially, like a spacecraft on an old car park three years ago and kickstarted a new wave of shops opening in the surrounding area.
2. Walk over the waffly waves of Las Setas to Calle Regina, a pedestrianised street crammed with tempting spots, starting with El Gato en Bicicleta at no 8, a bookshop-cum-art gallery packed with tomes on sex, design and poetry. A few doors up, at no 15, Latas y Botellas is a treasure trove of suitcase-friendly Spanish food goodies and La Cacharreria , at no 14 over the road, is good for a late breakfast at an outside table.
Wabi Sabi, Seville
3. Turn left into Calle Viriato where fashion, art and furniture emporium Wabi Sabi (Calle Viriato 9) is a light, lofty space perfect for showing local artists' paintings, and an eclectic collection of pieces: a turquoise planter's chair (€527) sits next to vintage bags (€37) and graphic-print dresses (around €62).
4. Red House (Calle Amor de Dios 7 ) is a roomy, cafe/art space that captures this area's relaxed vibe, where guests sit on curvy art deco armchairs surrounded by lamps made from soda siphons and birdcages – all for sale – and listen to poetry readings and DJ sets. The dynamic artist owners, Alvaro and Cristina, have opened a restaurant nearby – No-Lugar (Calle Trajano 16 ) – which has a vintage-y interior with ex-army workbenches and Moroccan ceramics. The fish tagine (€11) is reliably good .
5. For lunch, take a tapas hop around Macarena's Feria market. Start at the unassuming but innovative Quilombo (Peris Mencheta 6 ) with a smoked cod, courgette and orange salad, then cross to the market itself on Calle Feria; it is one of the city's oldest. Sample grilled sardines and razor-clams (€2.50) with a glass of manzanilla sherry (€1.50) at La Cantina or salchichon iberico (€2.20) at tables tucked under the 13th-century Moorish-gothic basilica's stone wall.
6. A few yards away is the Palacio de los Marqueses de la Algaba , a beautiful 15th-century palace that houses the Mudejar Centre. Mudejar was the architectural style practised by Moorish artisans under Catholic rule; the tall, arched window on the palace's market-facing facade is a perfect example. Inside the centre, you can see carved wood ceilings, and the azulejos (ceramic tiles) with intricate geometric patterns that Seville is famous for.
7. The main thoroughfare of the Macarena district is the narrow Calle San Luis. Pass the blue-and-white tiled dome of the eponymous baroque church, to the mould-breaking Rompemoldes at no 70, a sleek, contemporary version of Seville's craftsmen's quarter. This is an open, shared courtyard where you can see designers, artists and sculptors at work in their studios; many live upstairs.
No Kitchen
8. After a traditional Seville siesta, head to the recently opened No Kitchen (Calle Amparo 50). Simple, airy decor – white walls, wooden tables – focuses attention on the food: lightly (or no)-cooked dishes such as tender seared Iberian pork loin (€3.60) and smoked salmon with vodka and beetroot. The ceviche trend has hit Seville – scallop or sea bass come with kikos (small toasted corn kernels, €8.15).
9. Roof terrace bars are all the rage, for the welcome breezes and, of course, the views. One of the best is Roof on top of the Casa Romana hotel (Calle Trajano 15), which has a terrace where you can watch the Setas glow other-wordly blue and pink.
10. Local's tip
Don't miss out on the free open-air events along the Alameda. On any summer evening, you'll stumble across dance performances, live music, street entertainers and craft stalls for kids.
11. Where to Stay
Sacristia De Sa hotel
Seville isn't big on hip hotels, but the Sacristia de Santa Ana (22 Alameda de Hercules, doubles from €79) is a good spot. A converted 17th-century mansion, the feel is dreamy and romantic: with restored French antiques (many for sale), hand-painted headboards and rooms wrapped around a pretty wooden-balconied courtyard. Its suite (room 407) has three huge windows looking onto the Alameda. You can't beat the location for neighbourhood vibes, though street-facing rooms can be noisy, especially at weekends.
Credit: The Guardian
Monday, 1 September 2014
Top 10 seafood restaurants in Paris
Parisians take their seafood seriously, with deliveries arriving from the Atlantic and the Med daily. Local food writer Alexander Lobrano chooses the best places in the city for a taste of the sea
A shellfish platter at Dessirier restaurant in Paris
Ecailler de Bistro
If there's no way around the fact that wild seafood – as opposed to farmed – is pricey in Paris, this popular marine bistro run by Gwen Cadoret, part of one of the great oyster-producing families in France, offers superbly fresh shellfish and a simply-prepared catch-of-the-day menu for reasonable prices. Start with some Belon oysters from Brittany, and then tuck into a nicely cooked sole meuniere or maybe an immaculately fresh piece of turbot, and save room for the Paris-Brest, the choux pastry filled with praline cream, that's a house speciality. And their small but well-chosen selection of Loire Valley whites teams perfectly with any seafood feast.
• 22 rue Paul Bert, 11th, + 33 1 43 72 76 77, no website. Closed Sun and Mon. Average three-course meal €40
L'Îlot
Gallery owners, web designers and other hipster types from the trendy northern Marais pack this friendly, good-value little place on a side street for sparkling fresh shellfish and smoked or marinated fish. Order some taramasalata or tuna or salmon rillettes to go with your aperitif, and then opt for a big plateau des fruits de mer, or shellfish tray of whelks, oysters, prawns and other marine treats, or a crab. If you fancy something simpler, they also serve marinated herring, smoked eel and other fish.
• 4 rue de la Corderie, 3rd, +33 6 95 12 86 61, fr-fr.facebook.com/lilot.paris . Closed Sun and Mon. Average à la carte €35
The Sunken Chip
Really good fish and chips in Paris? Well, yes, actually. And before anyone gets shirty about it, know it's not only run by two Brits (as if that matters) – Michael Greenwold, chef at the excellent Roseval bistro, and Michael Whelan, another accomplished cook – but the reason it's so fine is the fish: squid, pollack, cod, bream, monkfish and others come from cult Breton fishmonger Thomas Saracco. It's perfectly battered, comes with good chips, and even mushy peas if you fancy. They also do a decent chip butty.
• 39 rue des Vinaigriers, 10th, + 33 1 53 26-74 46, thesunkenchip.com . Closed Mon and Tues. Average €15
La Table d'Aligre
The neighbourhood surrounding the Marché d'Aligre, one of the best food markets in Paris, continues to emerge as a serious new restaurant district, and this light, airy, reasonably-priced fish house is one of the more popular recent openings. Start with some sautéed prawns or anchovies from the Mediterranean port of Collioure, and follow with fish or shellfish cooked à la plancha, or Spanish style on a metal griddle - maybe skate with a Grenobloise sauce or sea bass with lemon butter. Desserts are simple, like roasted pineapple with caramel sauce, and there's a nice selection of wines served by the glass and carafe.
• 11 place d'Aligre, 12th, +33 1 43 07 84 88, tabledaligre.com . Closed Sun and Mon lunch. Lunch menus €14.50, €17.50 and €22. average à la carte €40
Clamato
After making a splash with his first restaurant Septime, young chef Bertrand Grébaut opened this inventive Gallic raw bar last autumn, and it's been heaving ever since. The menu varies with the catch of the day and the kitchen's inspiration, but among the other small plates, the ceviches and carpaccios show off just how cosmopolitan French seafood cuisine has become. A great selection of organic wines and craft beers makes the inevitable waits caused by a no-reservations policy somewhat more palatable.
• 80 rue de Charonne, 11th arrondissement, + 33 1 43 72 74 53, septime-charonne.fr. Closed Mon and Tues. Average three-course meal €40
Dessirier
In a silk-stocking district of western Paris, this sleek and pleasantly intimate seafood brasserie with a contemporary décor owned by two-star Michelin chef Michel Rostang is a brilliant place for a splurge on all the good things that come from the sea. Acting chef Olivier Fontaine's menu assiduously follows the seasons, with dishes like red mullet with a gratin of asparagus in the summer and scallops with preserved lemon puree in the winter. Correctly seeing off some fishwives's wisdom, their oyster and shellfish stand is open year-round with unfailing quality. Gracious service and good people watching, too.
• 9 place du Maréchal Juin, 17th, + 33 1 42 27 82 14, restaurantdessirier.com . Open daily. Prix-fixe menus €38 and €48, average à la carte €75
Gaya
Three-star chef Pierre Gagnaire's Left Bank seafood table in the stylish rue du Bac is a favorite with local book editors and antique dealers, who appreciate the clubby but cordial atmosphere and the kitchen's intriguingly creative approach to fish cookery. In general, Gagnaire champions a minimalist approach to cooking seafood, as seen in dishes such as sea bream carpaccio with cubes of pink grapefruit geleé with Espelette pepper, shaved radishes and daikon, or squid sautéed with black pepper in a saffron spiked soup of Spanish mussels. Some of the more elaborate dishes are as cerebral as they are delicious, including a mousseline of fera (an Alpine lake fish) with crayfish in an emerald green pool of nettle and watercress puree. Impeccable service and a brilliant wine list.
• 44 rue du Bac, 7th, +33 1 45 44 73 73, pierre-gagnaire.com . Closed Sun. Prix-fixe menus €48, €65, average à la carte €85
Huîtrerie Régis
This miniscule no-reservations raw bar in a white-painted shop-front in the heart of Saint-Germain-des-Pres serves some of the best bivalves in Paris — the owner brings them in daily from the Marennes d'Oleron region of the Charente Maritime on France's Atlantic coast. Clams, prawns or sea urchins are also occasionally available, but since all customers are required to order at least a dozen oysters, most focus on the shellfish, which is served with good bread and excellent salted butter.
• 3 Rue de Montfaucon, 6th, + 33 1 44 41 10 07, huitrerieregis.com. Closed Mon. Average €45
Prunier
With its listed green mosaic art-deco façade, this grand old luxury liner of a restaurant - owned by former fashion honcho Pierre Berger- on one of the leafiest and most unselfconsciously bourgeois avenues in Paris seduces at a first glance, and it just gets better when you step inside. The ground floor dining room with its brass art-deco signs, black stone walls with jazzy gold inlay, railway carriage tapestry-covered banquettes and honey-coloured lighting is a corporate engine room at lunch, but a very sexy place after hours, when there's a whiff of Helmut Newton about the place. Beyond the appetising mis en scene, chef Eric Coisel's shrewdly updated traditional French seafood cookery is superb, including dishes like oyster-and-seabass tartar with caviar, octopus salad with piquillo peppers and black olives, and steamed sea bass with baby vegetables au pistou. Superb shellfish in season, and famous for its caviars.
• 16 Avenue Victor Hugo, 16th, +33 1 44 17 35 85, prunier.com . Closed Sun. Menu Simone €67
Rech
Gastro-entrepreneur Alain Ducasse, who's become the successful curator of a small cluster of "heritage" restaurants (Parisian addresses with noteworthy history and local personality) added this 1925 vintage seafood brasserie to his stable several years ago and has finally got it right. Today, after a recent redesign that gave the duplex restaurant a soothing New England like mostly oyster-shell toned decor, it's one of the best places for a serious seafood feast in the city. Skillful young chef Adrien Trouilloud is supplied daily by Jégo Frères, a first-class fish monger in Etel on the Gulf de Morbihan in Brittany. Start with oysters or a carpaccio, and then tuck into skate à la Grenobloise or an impeccable sole meuniere – and don't miss the giant éclair for dessert.
• 62 Avenue des Ternes, 17th, + 33 1 58 00 22 13, restaurant-rech.fr . Open daily. Lunch menu €39, average à la carte €90
Sorce: The Guardian
A shellfish platter at Dessirier restaurant in Paris
Ecailler de Bistro
If there's no way around the fact that wild seafood – as opposed to farmed – is pricey in Paris, this popular marine bistro run by Gwen Cadoret, part of one of the great oyster-producing families in France, offers superbly fresh shellfish and a simply-prepared catch-of-the-day menu for reasonable prices. Start with some Belon oysters from Brittany, and then tuck into a nicely cooked sole meuniere or maybe an immaculately fresh piece of turbot, and save room for the Paris-Brest, the choux pastry filled with praline cream, that's a house speciality. And their small but well-chosen selection of Loire Valley whites teams perfectly with any seafood feast.
• 22 rue Paul Bert, 11th, + 33 1 43 72 76 77, no website. Closed Sun and Mon. Average three-course meal €40
L'Îlot
Gallery owners, web designers and other hipster types from the trendy northern Marais pack this friendly, good-value little place on a side street for sparkling fresh shellfish and smoked or marinated fish. Order some taramasalata or tuna or salmon rillettes to go with your aperitif, and then opt for a big plateau des fruits de mer, or shellfish tray of whelks, oysters, prawns and other marine treats, or a crab. If you fancy something simpler, they also serve marinated herring, smoked eel and other fish.
• 4 rue de la Corderie, 3rd, +33 6 95 12 86 61, fr-fr.facebook.com/lilot.paris . Closed Sun and Mon. Average à la carte €35
The Sunken Chip
Really good fish and chips in Paris? Well, yes, actually. And before anyone gets shirty about it, know it's not only run by two Brits (as if that matters) – Michael Greenwold, chef at the excellent Roseval bistro, and Michael Whelan, another accomplished cook – but the reason it's so fine is the fish: squid, pollack, cod, bream, monkfish and others come from cult Breton fishmonger Thomas Saracco. It's perfectly battered, comes with good chips, and even mushy peas if you fancy. They also do a decent chip butty.
• 39 rue des Vinaigriers, 10th, + 33 1 53 26-74 46, thesunkenchip.com . Closed Mon and Tues. Average €15
La Table d'Aligre
The neighbourhood surrounding the Marché d'Aligre, one of the best food markets in Paris, continues to emerge as a serious new restaurant district, and this light, airy, reasonably-priced fish house is one of the more popular recent openings. Start with some sautéed prawns or anchovies from the Mediterranean port of Collioure, and follow with fish or shellfish cooked à la plancha, or Spanish style on a metal griddle - maybe skate with a Grenobloise sauce or sea bass with lemon butter. Desserts are simple, like roasted pineapple with caramel sauce, and there's a nice selection of wines served by the glass and carafe.
• 11 place d'Aligre, 12th, +33 1 43 07 84 88, tabledaligre.com . Closed Sun and Mon lunch. Lunch menus €14.50, €17.50 and €22. average à la carte €40
After making a splash with his first restaurant Septime, young chef Bertrand Grébaut opened this inventive Gallic raw bar last autumn, and it's been heaving ever since. The menu varies with the catch of the day and the kitchen's inspiration, but among the other small plates, the ceviches and carpaccios show off just how cosmopolitan French seafood cuisine has become. A great selection of organic wines and craft beers makes the inevitable waits caused by a no-reservations policy somewhat more palatable.
• 80 rue de Charonne, 11th arrondissement, + 33 1 43 72 74 53, septime-charonne.fr. Closed Mon and Tues. Average three-course meal €40
Dessirier
In a silk-stocking district of western Paris, this sleek and pleasantly intimate seafood brasserie with a contemporary décor owned by two-star Michelin chef Michel Rostang is a brilliant place for a splurge on all the good things that come from the sea. Acting chef Olivier Fontaine's menu assiduously follows the seasons, with dishes like red mullet with a gratin of asparagus in the summer and scallops with preserved lemon puree in the winter. Correctly seeing off some fishwives's wisdom, their oyster and shellfish stand is open year-round with unfailing quality. Gracious service and good people watching, too.
• 9 place du Maréchal Juin, 17th, + 33 1 42 27 82 14, restaurantdessirier.com . Open daily. Prix-fixe menus €38 and €48, average à la carte €75
Gaya
Three-star chef Pierre Gagnaire's Left Bank seafood table in the stylish rue du Bac is a favorite with local book editors and antique dealers, who appreciate the clubby but cordial atmosphere and the kitchen's intriguingly creative approach to fish cookery. In general, Gagnaire champions a minimalist approach to cooking seafood, as seen in dishes such as sea bream carpaccio with cubes of pink grapefruit geleé with Espelette pepper, shaved radishes and daikon, or squid sautéed with black pepper in a saffron spiked soup of Spanish mussels. Some of the more elaborate dishes are as cerebral as they are delicious, including a mousseline of fera (an Alpine lake fish) with crayfish in an emerald green pool of nettle and watercress puree. Impeccable service and a brilliant wine list.
• 44 rue du Bac, 7th, +33 1 45 44 73 73, pierre-gagnaire.com . Closed Sun. Prix-fixe menus €48, €65, average à la carte €85
Huîtrerie Régis
This miniscule no-reservations raw bar in a white-painted shop-front in the heart of Saint-Germain-des-Pres serves some of the best bivalves in Paris — the owner brings them in daily from the Marennes d'Oleron region of the Charente Maritime on France's Atlantic coast. Clams, prawns or sea urchins are also occasionally available, but since all customers are required to order at least a dozen oysters, most focus on the shellfish, which is served with good bread and excellent salted butter.
• 3 Rue de Montfaucon, 6th, + 33 1 44 41 10 07, huitrerieregis.com. Closed Mon. Average €45
Prunier
With its listed green mosaic art-deco façade, this grand old luxury liner of a restaurant - owned by former fashion honcho Pierre Berger- on one of the leafiest and most unselfconsciously bourgeois avenues in Paris seduces at a first glance, and it just gets better when you step inside. The ground floor dining room with its brass art-deco signs, black stone walls with jazzy gold inlay, railway carriage tapestry-covered banquettes and honey-coloured lighting is a corporate engine room at lunch, but a very sexy place after hours, when there's a whiff of Helmut Newton about the place. Beyond the appetising mis en scene, chef Eric Coisel's shrewdly updated traditional French seafood cookery is superb, including dishes like oyster-and-seabass tartar with caviar, octopus salad with piquillo peppers and black olives, and steamed sea bass with baby vegetables au pistou. Superb shellfish in season, and famous for its caviars.
• 16 Avenue Victor Hugo, 16th, +33 1 44 17 35 85, prunier.com . Closed Sun. Menu Simone €67
Rech
Gastro-entrepreneur Alain Ducasse, who's become the successful curator of a small cluster of "heritage" restaurants (Parisian addresses with noteworthy history and local personality) added this 1925 vintage seafood brasserie to his stable several years ago and has finally got it right. Today, after a recent redesign that gave the duplex restaurant a soothing New England like mostly oyster-shell toned decor, it's one of the best places for a serious seafood feast in the city. Skillful young chef Adrien Trouilloud is supplied daily by Jégo Frères, a first-class fish monger in Etel on the Gulf de Morbihan in Brittany. Start with oysters or a carpaccio, and then tuck into skate à la Grenobloise or an impeccable sole meuniere – and don't miss the giant éclair for dessert.
• 62 Avenue des Ternes, 17th, + 33 1 58 00 22 13, restaurant-rech.fr . Open daily. Lunch menu €39, average à la carte €90
Sorce: The Guardian
Friday, 29 August 2014
10 of the best restaurants in Palma de Mallorca – on a budget
Savouring the best cuisine in the Balearics needn’t be costly, especially if you go for the lunchtime menú del día. We hunt down the best bargain restaurants in Palma de Mallorca
Cathedral and Harbour, Palma
The Mallorcan capital has the best restaurants in the Balearics – and some of the worst. It’s easy to find yourself in an overpriced hole surrounded by other glum tourists. But innovative, cosmopolitan food is at hand, and there are bargains to be had in Palma. Many places offer a lunch deal, a menú del día, which is a great way to sample top-notch food that would blow the budget in the evening.
The Room
The Room, Palma
The former fishermen’s district of Santa Catalina, with its rapidly gentrifying streets, may not seem the obvious choice for a good-value meal but La Crisis (Spain’s economic meltdown) is keeping prices keen. The Room serves lunches as fresh and simple as its white walls and chunky wooden tables. Its three-course €13 menú del día, including a drink, is a steal – a starter of couscous with nectarines and mint blew away the summer heat.
• Carrer de Cotoner 47, +34 971 281536, theroompalma.es . Open Mon-Sat for lunch and dinner
Bunker’s
Bunker's, Palma
Round the corner, Bunker’s menu reflects chef Luigi Valdambrini’s Roman roots. It’s small, so you can watch Luigi slaving away in the kitchen as you gorge. It’s only open in the evenings but prices are excellent for the quality: aubergine caponata with raspberry vinegar and honey, topped by a quail’s egg, is €8; wild boar pappardelle €14.
• Carrer de Soler, +34 971 220504, facebook.com/BunkerPalma . Open Tues-Fri 10am-11.30pm, Sat-Sun 7.30pm-11pm
Diner Palma
Diner, Palma
A little piece of Americana has landed in Santa Catalina – cue red vinyl booths, chrome counters, vintage signs, and the best burgers in Palma. Choose from a sensible-sized regular at €5.50 to a 300g double Texas at €11. There’s also a branch near the bus and train stations. Both restaurants are often packed with locals so don’t feel too guilty.
• Carrer de Sant Magí 23, Santa Catalina +34 971 736222, dinerpalma.es . Open daily 24/7
Celler Sa Premsa
Celler Sa Premsa, Palma
This cavernous hall will get you back on the Spanish track – it’s about as traditional as it comes, all bullfighting posters and slightly surly waiters, but the cooking is spot-on. It concentrates on Mallorcan specialities such as tumbet (slices of aubergine, potato and red pepper) at €5.30 and conill amb ceba (roast rabbit with onions) at €9.85. The three-course menu including a drink is €12.75.
• Plaça Obispo Berenguer de Palou 8, +34 971 723529, cellersapremsa.com . Open Mon-Sat, midday-4pm and 7.30pm-11.30pm
La Juanita
Chef Albert Medina at La Juanita, Palma
“This is not a restaurant, this is chaos,” said Albert Medina when I called to book a table in this tiny new place in the still-gritty barrioof Sa Gerreria. Albert is owner, chef, washer-upper and a whirlwind of energy. He cooks simply brilliant food right in front of his guests – diners is too formal a word. Lunch dishes, such as courgette salad and palometa fish with capers, range from €5-€7. There is no menu in the evening. I had prawns, chicken with a cucumber dip, squid in tempura and pork fillet with samfaina (similar to ratatouille). Expect to pay €20-€25 including wine. Albert also does cookery lessons for a bargain €15pp.
• La Sala dels Flassaders 4, +34 653 441208, no website. Open Mon-Sat 1pm-4pm and Thurs-Sat from 8.30pm.
La Ruta Martiana
La Ruta Martiana, Palma
There’s a bunch of vibrant bars in Sa Gerreria and the best way to explore them is on the massively popular Ruta Martiana (Martian route) on Tuesdays, when each place offers a special tapa and a drink for €2. Just look out for the cartoon Martian in the windows of participating bars: top spots include Bar Farina (Carrer del Pes de la Farina 10), Molta Barra (next door) and Ca La Seu (Carrer de Corderia 17). It’s a marvellous way to spend a night – bar-hopping, people-watching and eating your fill for a few euros.
• rutamartiana.wordpress.com
Quina Creu
Quina Creu, Palma
Still in Sa Gerreria but a notch above, this bistro bar is about as sophisticated as it gets in Palma – a long dark bar, black-clad waiters, slightly saucy films projected on to a screen. Pick out pinchos (€1.50) from the two dozen on offer or order from the menu (cod fillet with alioli and quince gratin was €2.85) and watch a hip crowd drift in and out. Its three-course menú del día is €12.50 with drink (not available Saturdays).
• Carrer de Corderia 24, +34 971 711772, quinacreu.com . Open Mon-Sat midday-1am
Simply Fosh
Restaurant Simply Fosh
Palma’s best-known chef is a Brit, Marc Fosh. Simply Fosh is right in the heart of the city, in the refectory of the 17th-century Hotel Convent de la Missió. It’s expensive in the evenings but its set-lunch menú del dia is more affordable at €28. Three courses might include a strawberry salmorejo (like gazpacho) starter with avocado, coriander and langoustine, a main of rump steak with white asparagus, chervil and pink pepper, and chocolate, mint and gooseberry for pudding.
• Carrer de la Missió 7, +34 971 720114, simplyfosh.com . Open 1pm-3.30pm and 7.30pm-10.30pm daily
La 5a Puñeta
This neighbourhood bar near Plaça del Mercat is open at lunch but is more fun at night – be prepared to fight your way through the crowd to get to the bar and a long line of fantastic pinchos, such as sardines and green pepper topped with serrano ham. The dishes are replenished through the evening, so keep an eye out for new ones. Pinchos €1.65, wine from €1.65 a glass.
• Carrer de les Caputxines 3, +34 971 711571, no website. Open Tues-Sat midday-4pm and 7.30pm-midnight, Mon 7.30pm-midnight
Cervecería Anfos
Cerveceria Anfos
This restaurant turns a casual wander into Palma’s market, the Mercat de l’Olivar, into a foodie’s bargain hunt. You scour the fish stalls for a deal of the day – I found turbot at an amazing €11 a kilo – take it to Anfos and they cook it for you (€3.50pp). There are no frills in decor or food: everything is seared on the griddle, drizzled in olive oil and served. There’s a menu if you’re too scared/lazy to shop. Starters around €6, mains €12.
• 1st floor, Mercat de l’Olivar, +34 971 729120, facebook.com/Cerveceria-Anfos . Open Mon-Sat 8.30am-7pm
Sorce: The Guardian
Cathedral and Harbour, Palma
The Mallorcan capital has the best restaurants in the Balearics – and some of the worst. It’s easy to find yourself in an overpriced hole surrounded by other glum tourists. But innovative, cosmopolitan food is at hand, and there are bargains to be had in Palma. Many places offer a lunch deal, a menú del día, which is a great way to sample top-notch food that would blow the budget in the evening.
The Room
The Room, Palma
The former fishermen’s district of Santa Catalina, with its rapidly gentrifying streets, may not seem the obvious choice for a good-value meal but La Crisis (Spain’s economic meltdown) is keeping prices keen. The Room serves lunches as fresh and simple as its white walls and chunky wooden tables. Its three-course €13 menú del día, including a drink, is a steal – a starter of couscous with nectarines and mint blew away the summer heat.
• Carrer de Cotoner 47, +34 971 281536, theroompalma.es . Open Mon-Sat for lunch and dinner
Bunker’s
Bunker's, Palma
Round the corner, Bunker’s menu reflects chef Luigi Valdambrini’s Roman roots. It’s small, so you can watch Luigi slaving away in the kitchen as you gorge. It’s only open in the evenings but prices are excellent for the quality: aubergine caponata with raspberry vinegar and honey, topped by a quail’s egg, is €8; wild boar pappardelle €14.
• Carrer de Soler, +34 971 220504, facebook.com/BunkerPalma . Open Tues-Fri 10am-11.30pm, Sat-Sun 7.30pm-11pm
Diner Palma
Diner, Palma
A little piece of Americana has landed in Santa Catalina – cue red vinyl booths, chrome counters, vintage signs, and the best burgers in Palma. Choose from a sensible-sized regular at €5.50 to a 300g double Texas at €11. There’s also a branch near the bus and train stations. Both restaurants are often packed with locals so don’t feel too guilty.
• Carrer de Sant Magí 23, Santa Catalina +34 971 736222, dinerpalma.es . Open daily 24/7
Celler Sa Premsa
Celler Sa Premsa, Palma
This cavernous hall will get you back on the Spanish track – it’s about as traditional as it comes, all bullfighting posters and slightly surly waiters, but the cooking is spot-on. It concentrates on Mallorcan specialities such as tumbet (slices of aubergine, potato and red pepper) at €5.30 and conill amb ceba (roast rabbit with onions) at €9.85. The three-course menu including a drink is €12.75.
• Plaça Obispo Berenguer de Palou 8, +34 971 723529, cellersapremsa.com . Open Mon-Sat, midday-4pm and 7.30pm-11.30pm
La Juanita
Chef Albert Medina at La Juanita, Palma
“This is not a restaurant, this is chaos,” said Albert Medina when I called to book a table in this tiny new place in the still-gritty barrioof Sa Gerreria. Albert is owner, chef, washer-upper and a whirlwind of energy. He cooks simply brilliant food right in front of his guests – diners is too formal a word. Lunch dishes, such as courgette salad and palometa fish with capers, range from €5-€7. There is no menu in the evening. I had prawns, chicken with a cucumber dip, squid in tempura and pork fillet with samfaina (similar to ratatouille). Expect to pay €20-€25 including wine. Albert also does cookery lessons for a bargain €15pp.
• La Sala dels Flassaders 4, +34 653 441208, no website. Open Mon-Sat 1pm-4pm and Thurs-Sat from 8.30pm.
La Ruta Martiana
La Ruta Martiana, Palma
There’s a bunch of vibrant bars in Sa Gerreria and the best way to explore them is on the massively popular Ruta Martiana (Martian route) on Tuesdays, when each place offers a special tapa and a drink for €2. Just look out for the cartoon Martian in the windows of participating bars: top spots include Bar Farina (Carrer del Pes de la Farina 10), Molta Barra (next door) and Ca La Seu (Carrer de Corderia 17). It’s a marvellous way to spend a night – bar-hopping, people-watching and eating your fill for a few euros.
• rutamartiana.wordpress.com
Quina Creu
Quina Creu, Palma
Still in Sa Gerreria but a notch above, this bistro bar is about as sophisticated as it gets in Palma – a long dark bar, black-clad waiters, slightly saucy films projected on to a screen. Pick out pinchos (€1.50) from the two dozen on offer or order from the menu (cod fillet with alioli and quince gratin was €2.85) and watch a hip crowd drift in and out. Its three-course menú del día is €12.50 with drink (not available Saturdays).
• Carrer de Corderia 24, +34 971 711772, quinacreu.com . Open Mon-Sat midday-1am
Simply Fosh
Restaurant Simply Fosh
Palma’s best-known chef is a Brit, Marc Fosh. Simply Fosh is right in the heart of the city, in the refectory of the 17th-century Hotel Convent de la Missió. It’s expensive in the evenings but its set-lunch menú del dia is more affordable at €28. Three courses might include a strawberry salmorejo (like gazpacho) starter with avocado, coriander and langoustine, a main of rump steak with white asparagus, chervil and pink pepper, and chocolate, mint and gooseberry for pudding.
• Carrer de la Missió 7, +34 971 720114, simplyfosh.com . Open 1pm-3.30pm and 7.30pm-10.30pm daily
La 5a Puñeta
This neighbourhood bar near Plaça del Mercat is open at lunch but is more fun at night – be prepared to fight your way through the crowd to get to the bar and a long line of fantastic pinchos, such as sardines and green pepper topped with serrano ham. The dishes are replenished through the evening, so keep an eye out for new ones. Pinchos €1.65, wine from €1.65 a glass.
• Carrer de les Caputxines 3, +34 971 711571, no website. Open Tues-Sat midday-4pm and 7.30pm-midnight, Mon 7.30pm-midnight
Cervecería Anfos
Cerveceria Anfos
This restaurant turns a casual wander into Palma’s market, the Mercat de l’Olivar, into a foodie’s bargain hunt. You scour the fish stalls for a deal of the day – I found turbot at an amazing €11 a kilo – take it to Anfos and they cook it for you (€3.50pp). There are no frills in decor or food: everything is seared on the griddle, drizzled in olive oil and served. There’s a menu if you’re too scared/lazy to shop. Starters around €6, mains €12.
• 1st floor, Mercat de l’Olivar, +34 971 729120, facebook.com/Cerveceria-Anfos . Open Mon-Sat 8.30am-7pm
Sorce: The Guardian
The emerging fine food scene in Málaga and around
Andalucía is known for sea, sun and even tapas but not, so far, its fine restaurants. Now it's hoping to take on the gastronomic powerhouses of Catalonia and the Basque Country
Tapas from Malaga province
'Today you're going to eat food that will make you cry!" shouted Fernando Rueda by way of introduction. I was buckling my seatbelt. I don't think I'd even offered my hand or my name. He was shouting because Málaga's late-morning traffic was loud, and because he liked shouting. "It will take you back to your grandma, and her house, and her kitchen," he said. "Welcome to the white magic of Andalucían gastronomy!"
Fernando is a food historian and sociologist, author of a 12-volume guide to Málaga's cuisine, and head of Gastroarte, a union of 30-odd chefs and producers created in 2012 to celebrate Andalucía's food.
Málaga, he told me, is the food hub of southern Spain, in terms of produce and dining: "It has the most important goat-breeders in Europe. The French take 95% of the milk to make their cheeses. Andalucía produces half of the world's olive oil. Know where it all ends up? Shipped to Italy for bottling as Italian extra virgin."
But it wasn't all about cross-border trafficking. "Málaga has fantastic sardine and boquerón [anchovy], amazing shellfish, tropical fruits like mango and avocado. It has the last cane honey [molasses] to be produced in Europe. It's the second most mountainous area in Spain and has all the climates and conditions you need for every kind of produce."
We were leaving the city's outskirts and I commented that the land looked very dry and steep for growing, say, wine. Fernando scoffed. "They are ideal for our moscatel. This is the only region in Spain that produces red, white, rosé and dessert wines." We hit a corner at 120kmph. "And sherries."
Despite all this, both city and region have been undersold for decades. Part of the blame lies with years of package tourism that have seen the city of Málaga as the "airport place".
Fernando also pointed to underlying psychological reasons. "Until recently, Andalucíans were almost ashamed to talk about their cuisine and offer it to visitors. From the 1960s, restaurants trying to please the tourists started serving a few stereotypical dishes, and buried the old recipes, which they associated with the past, and with being poor. "Now – and this is a long consequence of the return to democracy – they're beginning to realise this cuisine is part of their identity, their culture and the landscape they see every day."
I said part of the blame might lie with visitors to the Costa del Sol asking for full English breakfasts.
"How can they print menus in English only?" he sputtered, as if the fact was still shocking.
Heading inland
Before lunch, I got to sample some of the olive oil not sold to the Italians. Finca La Torre (fincalatorre.com), near the small town of Bobadilla, 60km north of Málaga, has just won the Spanish ministry of agriculture's prizes for both best olive oil and best organic olive oil of 2012-2013.
Victor Perez Serrano, 31, who makes it, showed me around his hi-tech plant overlooking 57 acres of gnarly, grey-green olive trees. For me – as for most people – olive oil is just a little dip for before a meal or something to splash on a salad. But Victor, presenting me with a cup of dark-green oil drawn from a huge metal tank, told me to sniff it first. "Can you smell banana, almond, and recently-cut grass?"
With a little imagination, I could, and there was a sharp aftertaste, an almost chilli-like bite. "We like it to have a kick here in Andalucía," he said, seeing my eyes watering.
Nearby Antequera is an ancient town surrounded by olive groves. Fernando said it was known as the "Florence of Andalucía" because of its many old churches and civic buildings. But our minds were on Arte de Cozina, a rustic, traditional-looking restaurant, where we were to have lunch with Álvaro Muñoz García, the business brain of Gastroarte. Beside us on the patio, a group of oldish Spaniards were tucking into a banquet of tapas.
"I'm trying to make Andalucían food into something like a brand," said Álvaro. "It should be something people recognise and value. We want to spread the word and take on the likes of Catalonia and the Basque country, which have a solid regional identity."
Dips at Arte de Cozina.
Arte de Cozina was where Gastroarte started and it holds a special place in the members' hearts. Chef Charo Carmona told me she learned everything from her mother. Instead of a menu, she handed me a set of beautiful facsimiles of vintage recipes detailing the history and ingredients of each dish: three delicious porras (dips), quails in gazpacho, chicken escabeche, a buttery beef dish called pelona de lomo and a hearty empedraillo (chick-pea broth). I've eaten well all over Spain, but this was special, like eating peasant fare from the pages of Joseph Townsend's 1791 travelogue A Journey Through Spain in the Years 1786 and 1787, reimagined for a modern diner.
The meal ended with no fewer than four desserts, outstanding among which was the Moorish-sounding almojábana, a kind of cheesecake. Álvaro told me: "Eight centuries of Islam, a unique feature of this region, are all there in the food."
I could see in that the food stirred deep emotions in Fernando, who ate carefully, reverently. Álvaro uttered hyperbolic benedictions: "Fatally delicious", "scandalously good". For Andalucíans, food is often a complicated conflation of raw – almost erotic – pleasure, with friendship, family and nostalgia.
Charo told me of a nonagenarian who had come back to Antequera to die after living elsewhere in Spain for decades. "He asked me to make a maimones (garlic soup) just like his mother did," said Charo. "I told him I had no idea how his mum cooked, and anyway, we were talking about nearly a century ago. But I prepared some soup and he ate two bowls. He never stopped weeping while he was eating."
Málaga city
Malagatheseen from Alcazaba castle.
In Málaga itself, things were more modish. I visited the Picasso museum, strolled around the new harbour district, and decided that Málaga was, like most medium-sized cities in Spain, convivial and likeable. I tried prize-winning raciones of swordfish and cod at a tiny, madly busy tapas bar, Uvedoble (Spanish for W). At Oleo, a stylish white cube of a restaurant, I had a delicious tasting menu that featured rib of slow-cooked pork in garlic, mackerel sushi and meat-and-bechamel croquettes with mint.
Andalucian food is held together by what Fernando called the "Roman troika" – olive oil, wine, wheat. Saffron, coriander and rice, introduced by the Moors, also pop up. What I felt above all was the social and emotional value of food – pleasure before pretentiousness – and that even the high-end places had deep connections with traditions, enhanced by the edible riches of the two seas – Mediterranean and Atlantic – and the sun-baked land of the south. This was localism without any banner being waved.
West of Málaga
Sollo restaurant
At Sollo, a restaurant that opened in late September in the hilltop town of Benalmádena, just outside Málaga, Diego Gallegos cooked the most memorable meal of my three-day trip. Diego, just 29, has Peruvian and Brazilian heritage but grew up in Andalucía, and runs the small restaurant with his wife, Susana, and one assistant cook. He regards Gastroarte as a sort of mentor.
"Fernando believed in me when I was a novice. Now I feel we can speak on equal terms with people from established food regions. Here in Andalucía we've not valued our creativity. There's still a tendency, especially in the north, to look to France for ideas. This region has long been the poor relation of Spain."
Last year, Diego spent €12,000 (saved up while working for a local hotel) on travels to Brazil, Peru and San Sebastián. He worked as an unpaid intern at some of the best restaurants in the world, including Alex Atala's D.O.M. in São Paulo. "Diego is an innovator," said Fernando, "not an imitator. He wants a Michelin star inside two years, and he'll get one."
He may get more than that. Diego works with a local fish farm, experimenting with sturgeon meat and caviar. He served us tiny tastes of some of the most exquisite food I've ever had, including eccentricities such as water melon roasted in red fruit and vermouth, and a dessert of extra virgin olive oil yoghurt.
Susana, learning the ropes of fine-dining service, juggled cutlery, talked about the wines, presented everything just so. I thought of places on the coast, serving so-so paellas and sangria.
"One of the main purposes of Gastroarte is to stop visitors getting ripped off, too," said Fernando. "Málaga is a port: it's outward-looking and we've always liked foreigners. Now you can tell people that you ate caviar near Torremolinos!"
I also want to tell people about what I ate next. The high point of the meal was a dark, mysterious-looking truffle. It was all I've ever dreamed of in a dish. It was a bit like chocolate, but with an acidic quality. It looked like a dessert and was sweet, but also savoury. It had the texture of damp coal dust, and legs like a glass of vintage wine. My face told them I had no idea what I was eating. It was a morcilla, they said, made with sturgeon's blood. A black pudding. Fernando's "white magic". My Lancashire roots. My favourite food. Grandma's kitchen! It was my cue to cry, but another course arrived.
Where to stay
Room Mate Larios, Málaga
On one of Málaga's main squares, this hotel has been given a bold refurb that works well with the original art deco fittings. The ground-floor bar is a beauty, and the roof terrace a popular meeting place.
• Doubles from €79 B&B, larios.room-matehotels.com
Molina Lario, Málaga
This smart hotel with neutral décor is close to the centre of Málaga and the cathedral, just across from the harbour. It has a rooftop pool, a good restaurant and outstanding breakfasts.
• €148 B&B, hotelmolinalario.com
Where to eat
Arte de Cozina, Antequera
This traditional restaurant is in the servants' quarters of a 17th-century mansion. The homey feel belies the artful and lovingly prepared dishes; it's also a hotel, with doubles from €40.
• two-course lunch €20-€25, drinks extra, artedecozina.com
Oleo, Málaga
Asian and Andalucían tapas are the speciality of this restaurant in the CAC modern art gallery. But it does not compromise its quality with any daft fusions or faddy ideas.
• €25-30, facebook.com/OleoRestaurante
W (Uvedoble), Málaga
It is easy to walk past this place if you don't know the address, but it is one of the best tapas bar in Málaga. It's small and very popular, so go early (7.30pm is early) and grab a table on the street.
• €20, uvedobletaberna.com
Restaurante Sollo, Benalmádena
Extraordinary, ambitious dishes at this out-of-town restaurant feature sturgeon meat, caviar, trout ceviche and ox-steak – all beautifully presented. Open for dinner only.
• Tasting menu €49.50, sollo.es
Traga Tapas, Ronda
In spectacular Ronda, this friendly, fun place is where former El Bulli chef Benito Gómez serves some of the most innovative tapas in Andalucía. They can be washed down with local Schatz organic wines, too.
• €25-30, Calle Nueva 4
Source: The Guardian
Tapas from Malaga province
'Today you're going to eat food that will make you cry!" shouted Fernando Rueda by way of introduction. I was buckling my seatbelt. I don't think I'd even offered my hand or my name. He was shouting because Málaga's late-morning traffic was loud, and because he liked shouting. "It will take you back to your grandma, and her house, and her kitchen," he said. "Welcome to the white magic of Andalucían gastronomy!"
Fernando is a food historian and sociologist, author of a 12-volume guide to Málaga's cuisine, and head of Gastroarte, a union of 30-odd chefs and producers created in 2012 to celebrate Andalucía's food.
Málaga, he told me, is the food hub of southern Spain, in terms of produce and dining: "It has the most important goat-breeders in Europe. The French take 95% of the milk to make their cheeses. Andalucía produces half of the world's olive oil. Know where it all ends up? Shipped to Italy for bottling as Italian extra virgin."
But it wasn't all about cross-border trafficking. "Málaga has fantastic sardine and boquerón [anchovy], amazing shellfish, tropical fruits like mango and avocado. It has the last cane honey [molasses] to be produced in Europe. It's the second most mountainous area in Spain and has all the climates and conditions you need for every kind of produce."
We were leaving the city's outskirts and I commented that the land looked very dry and steep for growing, say, wine. Fernando scoffed. "They are ideal for our moscatel. This is the only region in Spain that produces red, white, rosé and dessert wines." We hit a corner at 120kmph. "And sherries."
Despite all this, both city and region have been undersold for decades. Part of the blame lies with years of package tourism that have seen the city of Málaga as the "airport place".
Fernando also pointed to underlying psychological reasons. "Until recently, Andalucíans were almost ashamed to talk about their cuisine and offer it to visitors. From the 1960s, restaurants trying to please the tourists started serving a few stereotypical dishes, and buried the old recipes, which they associated with the past, and with being poor. "Now – and this is a long consequence of the return to democracy – they're beginning to realise this cuisine is part of their identity, their culture and the landscape they see every day."
I said part of the blame might lie with visitors to the Costa del Sol asking for full English breakfasts.
"How can they print menus in English only?" he sputtered, as if the fact was still shocking.
Heading inland
Before lunch, I got to sample some of the olive oil not sold to the Italians. Finca La Torre (fincalatorre.com), near the small town of Bobadilla, 60km north of Málaga, has just won the Spanish ministry of agriculture's prizes for both best olive oil and best organic olive oil of 2012-2013.
Victor Perez Serrano, 31, who makes it, showed me around his hi-tech plant overlooking 57 acres of gnarly, grey-green olive trees. For me – as for most people – olive oil is just a little dip for before a meal or something to splash on a salad. But Victor, presenting me with a cup of dark-green oil drawn from a huge metal tank, told me to sniff it first. "Can you smell banana, almond, and recently-cut grass?"
With a little imagination, I could, and there was a sharp aftertaste, an almost chilli-like bite. "We like it to have a kick here in Andalucía," he said, seeing my eyes watering.
Nearby Antequera is an ancient town surrounded by olive groves. Fernando said it was known as the "Florence of Andalucía" because of its many old churches and civic buildings. But our minds were on Arte de Cozina, a rustic, traditional-looking restaurant, where we were to have lunch with Álvaro Muñoz García, the business brain of Gastroarte. Beside us on the patio, a group of oldish Spaniards were tucking into a banquet of tapas.
"I'm trying to make Andalucían food into something like a brand," said Álvaro. "It should be something people recognise and value. We want to spread the word and take on the likes of Catalonia and the Basque country, which have a solid regional identity."
Dips at Arte de Cozina.
Arte de Cozina was where Gastroarte started and it holds a special place in the members' hearts. Chef Charo Carmona told me she learned everything from her mother. Instead of a menu, she handed me a set of beautiful facsimiles of vintage recipes detailing the history and ingredients of each dish: three delicious porras (dips), quails in gazpacho, chicken escabeche, a buttery beef dish called pelona de lomo and a hearty empedraillo (chick-pea broth). I've eaten well all over Spain, but this was special, like eating peasant fare from the pages of Joseph Townsend's 1791 travelogue A Journey Through Spain in the Years 1786 and 1787, reimagined for a modern diner.
The meal ended with no fewer than four desserts, outstanding among which was the Moorish-sounding almojábana, a kind of cheesecake. Álvaro told me: "Eight centuries of Islam, a unique feature of this region, are all there in the food."
I could see in that the food stirred deep emotions in Fernando, who ate carefully, reverently. Álvaro uttered hyperbolic benedictions: "Fatally delicious", "scandalously good". For Andalucíans, food is often a complicated conflation of raw – almost erotic – pleasure, with friendship, family and nostalgia.
Charo told me of a nonagenarian who had come back to Antequera to die after living elsewhere in Spain for decades. "He asked me to make a maimones (garlic soup) just like his mother did," said Charo. "I told him I had no idea how his mum cooked, and anyway, we were talking about nearly a century ago. But I prepared some soup and he ate two bowls. He never stopped weeping while he was eating."
Málaga city
Malagatheseen from Alcazaba castle.
In Málaga itself, things were more modish. I visited the Picasso museum, strolled around the new harbour district, and decided that Málaga was, like most medium-sized cities in Spain, convivial and likeable. I tried prize-winning raciones of swordfish and cod at a tiny, madly busy tapas bar, Uvedoble (Spanish for W). At Oleo, a stylish white cube of a restaurant, I had a delicious tasting menu that featured rib of slow-cooked pork in garlic, mackerel sushi and meat-and-bechamel croquettes with mint.
Andalucian food is held together by what Fernando called the "Roman troika" – olive oil, wine, wheat. Saffron, coriander and rice, introduced by the Moors, also pop up. What I felt above all was the social and emotional value of food – pleasure before pretentiousness – and that even the high-end places had deep connections with traditions, enhanced by the edible riches of the two seas – Mediterranean and Atlantic – and the sun-baked land of the south. This was localism without any banner being waved.
West of Málaga
Sollo restaurant
At Sollo, a restaurant that opened in late September in the hilltop town of Benalmádena, just outside Málaga, Diego Gallegos cooked the most memorable meal of my three-day trip. Diego, just 29, has Peruvian and Brazilian heritage but grew up in Andalucía, and runs the small restaurant with his wife, Susana, and one assistant cook. He regards Gastroarte as a sort of mentor.
"Fernando believed in me when I was a novice. Now I feel we can speak on equal terms with people from established food regions. Here in Andalucía we've not valued our creativity. There's still a tendency, especially in the north, to look to France for ideas. This region has long been the poor relation of Spain."
Last year, Diego spent €12,000 (saved up while working for a local hotel) on travels to Brazil, Peru and San Sebastián. He worked as an unpaid intern at some of the best restaurants in the world, including Alex Atala's D.O.M. in São Paulo. "Diego is an innovator," said Fernando, "not an imitator. He wants a Michelin star inside two years, and he'll get one."
He may get more than that. Diego works with a local fish farm, experimenting with sturgeon meat and caviar. He served us tiny tastes of some of the most exquisite food I've ever had, including eccentricities such as water melon roasted in red fruit and vermouth, and a dessert of extra virgin olive oil yoghurt.
Susana, learning the ropes of fine-dining service, juggled cutlery, talked about the wines, presented everything just so. I thought of places on the coast, serving so-so paellas and sangria.
"One of the main purposes of Gastroarte is to stop visitors getting ripped off, too," said Fernando. "Málaga is a port: it's outward-looking and we've always liked foreigners. Now you can tell people that you ate caviar near Torremolinos!"
I also want to tell people about what I ate next. The high point of the meal was a dark, mysterious-looking truffle. It was all I've ever dreamed of in a dish. It was a bit like chocolate, but with an acidic quality. It looked like a dessert and was sweet, but also savoury. It had the texture of damp coal dust, and legs like a glass of vintage wine. My face told them I had no idea what I was eating. It was a morcilla, they said, made with sturgeon's blood. A black pudding. Fernando's "white magic". My Lancashire roots. My favourite food. Grandma's kitchen! It was my cue to cry, but another course arrived.
Where to stay
Room Mate Larios, Málaga
On one of Málaga's main squares, this hotel has been given a bold refurb that works well with the original art deco fittings. The ground-floor bar is a beauty, and the roof terrace a popular meeting place.
• Doubles from €79 B&B, larios.room-matehotels.com
Molina Lario, Málaga
This smart hotel with neutral décor is close to the centre of Málaga and the cathedral, just across from the harbour. It has a rooftop pool, a good restaurant and outstanding breakfasts.
• €148 B&B, hotelmolinalario.com
Where to eat
Arte de Cozina, Antequera
This traditional restaurant is in the servants' quarters of a 17th-century mansion. The homey feel belies the artful and lovingly prepared dishes; it's also a hotel, with doubles from €40.
• two-course lunch €20-€25, drinks extra, artedecozina.com
Oleo, Málaga
Asian and Andalucían tapas are the speciality of this restaurant in the CAC modern art gallery. But it does not compromise its quality with any daft fusions or faddy ideas.
• €25-30, facebook.com/OleoRestaurante
W (Uvedoble), Málaga
It is easy to walk past this place if you don't know the address, but it is one of the best tapas bar in Málaga. It's small and very popular, so go early (7.30pm is early) and grab a table on the street.
• €20, uvedobletaberna.com
Restaurante Sollo, Benalmádena
Extraordinary, ambitious dishes at this out-of-town restaurant feature sturgeon meat, caviar, trout ceviche and ox-steak – all beautifully presented. Open for dinner only.
• Tasting menu €49.50, sollo.es
Traga Tapas, Ronda
In spectacular Ronda, this friendly, fun place is where former El Bulli chef Benito Gómez serves some of the most innovative tapas in Andalucía. They can be washed down with local Schatz organic wines, too.
• €25-30, Calle Nueva 4
Source: The Guardian
Sunday, 24 August 2014
Hyères, France: A forgotten gem that still has a sparkle
Elbows propped against the parapet, I leaned forward and squinted towards the blurred horizon.
Behind me piled the fractured bones of Hyères’ ancient castle; beneath, tumbling picturesquely down the hillside, spread the church towers, terracotta roofs and winding alleys of the medieval walled city, segueing into neat Belle Epoque boulevards lined by palms swaying in sweet-scented Mediterranean zephyrs.
But something rather critical was missing. Where, I inquired, is the sea?
“Ah. Well. It’s out there.” Julie waved apologetically towards the south-east. “Just a little hard to make out through the haze – about 4km away.”
Sorry – four kilometres? What kind of coastal town isn’t even on the coast?
The answer: a forgotten one. At least, forgotten by Brits. As the Côte d’Azur seaside resort without a seaside, perhaps the fact that Hyères slipped off our radar– for a century – is no great surprise, but it is a boon for those not wedded to a sea-view room.
It was this that had attracted me to “Les Palmiers”, nicknamed for the 7,000 palm trees shading the town’s streets and gardens; I was curious to learn what became of the first-ever resort on the Côte d’Azur.
In the late 18th century, aristocratic travellers – notably from the UK – arrived in search of winter warmth. (“The sun shines 300 days a year,” claimed Julie Cuisinier of Hyères Tourist Office, my shepherd for the weekend.) In 1860, Tolstoy came. Then other writers: Dumas, Conrad, Edith Wharton. “I was only happy once,” sighed Robert Louis Stevenson, “... and that was at Hyères.”
After Queen Victoria’s sojourn in 1892, the English elite followed. Ranks of ice cream-hued mansions and grand hotels sprang up along broad boulevards. But fashions change. Promenades and balls were overtaken by sun-soaking.
Hyères is not so very far from the sea, but far enough: its star waned as those of Nice and St -Tropez soared. Yet, as Julie was happy to demonstrate, it has been doing very nicely in the hundred or so years since fickle British heat-seekers spurned its charms.
Julie had brought me to the old castle, founded by the Knights of Fos in the 11th century, not to appreciate its architecture or aesthetics – Louis XIII’s destructive tendencies wrecked those four centuries ago – but because its perch on a rocky knoll is ideal for getting one’s bearings.
To south-west and east, verdant hills are scattered with the homes of the wealthy, including the extraordinary Villa Noailles; designed in 1923 for influential patrons of the arts (Mondrian and Giacometti contributed to decor, Cocteau, Man Ray and Dalí filmed here), it floats on the hillside like a Cubist superyacht moored alongside the old town.
Julie directed my gaze across the glimmering salt pans – a centuries-old source of income – to the Med and the Iles d’Or just offshore. Long havens for pirates, today Porquerolles’ beaches and wineries attract holidaymakers, while Port-Cros, France’s smallest national park, offers delightful hiking trails.
We ambled down to Castel Sainte-Claire, Edith Wharton’s former home. Hyères is renowned for its gardens, both private and commercial – cut flowers are still big business here – and those created by the American author are spectacular. Designed to flourish year-round, cactus and agave dominate the upper terraces, with huge magnolias and a big araucaria tree below.
Indeed, many of the upper lanes of the walled old town are proxy gardens, ablaze with bougainvillea, wisteria and magnolia adorning colourful Romanesque and Renaissance façades.
Snaking through cobbled and stepped alleys, we reached the main square, Place Massillon, dominated by the Tour des Templiers. It’s an imposing tower humbled by history; after the Templars disbanded in 1319 and their heirs, the Knights of Malta, also let their grasp slip, it became a granary.
Today it hosts exhibitions, but its external might and rooftop vistas are more memorable than interior displays. The square itself is annexed by tables spreading from surrounding cafés and restaurants, hemmed in by the shopping bags of market-goers recharging with a glass of rosé after a morning’s bartering.
As we descended along pedestrianised Rue Massillon, a heady blend of aromas beguiled me into the double-fronted Côte Sud, an emporium of Provençal goodies. One half, redolent with the scent of lavender from piled Marseille soaps, sells orange wine and pastis from the keg, while its siamese twin is an épicerie cramming the essence of a North African souk into one claustrophobic shop: dates, almonds, olives, candied fruit, spices and yet more spices.
“As a child, I would dream of the autumn, when quince was in season,” Julie told me, picking up a squidgy, red wine-coloured block. “My pocket money went on pâte de coing – quince cheese.”
I was also enchanted by a retro-looking biscuiterie, its window stacked with boat-shaped orange navettes, croquants a l’orange and orange macarons. There is, as you’d guess, no shortage of orange trees in these parts.
Outside the Porte de l’Horloge, the main gate piercing the medieval walls, more unfamiliar fruits were piled on market stalls stretching along the thoroughfares of the new town. Here, at Julie’s urging, I tried kaki (persimmon).
Smooth-skinned and orange as an unripe tomato, it exploded at first bite, spattering pips and juice down my chin as I slurped its plum-sweet flesh.
At Dominique 1888, Julie introduced me to a more sophisticated Hyères speciality: Princesses d’Iles d’Or, dark truffles heady with pungent orange, among the wonders conjured up by chocolatier Christophe Chapalain. Complementing two dozen or so flavours of bite-sized chocolates are macarons and cakes of almost unbearable beauty.
This is affordable art: a modest-sized cake – a micro-masterpiece in confectionery, gleaming with yellows, greens and reds, topped with berries – costs just €3 plus change.
Fuelled by kaki and chocolate, I was ready to explore further afield, and joined local cyclists Frédéric and Carine to tour the city’s southerly highlights. We started at Giens, a foot-shaped peninsula jutting into the Med, linked to the mainland by a “double tombolo” – an isthmus comprising two sandbars that enclose a lake and saltmarsh.
Pedalling north along the car-free Route du Sel (Salt Road), we paused to admire the kite-surfers soaring improbably high above Almanarre Beach to our left.
To our right, the Etang des Pesquiers lake gave way to glistening, squared-off patches: the Salins des Presquiers saltworks, studded with pink exclamation marks – a couple of hundred pink flamingos that arrive in summer from the Camargue or Africa.
Salt has been extracted here for over two millennia, and produced on an industrial scale from the Middle Ages, until production halted as recently as 1995.
“Today the water level is controlled,” said Frédéric, “to ensure optimal feeding for the flamingos and other birds.” We stopped to climb a viewing platform and watch egrets nesting in the canal encircling the marsh – originally a moat constructed to protect the salt.
That white gold was among the treasures that attracted Greek sailors around 400BC; they founded the trading post of Olbia, sited where the isthmus meets the mainland. We pulled over to peer through a fence at the remains of the port, currently being excavated; more buildings and amphorae still lie underwater.
The Greeks’ successors decided that the risks of coastal living outweighed the benefits – hence the castle and town being founded on an inland hill. What might Hyères be today if they had stuck by the sea? Another Nice or Cannes? Perhaps – but its charm is enhanced by its reticence. It’s time Brits revisited our former playground.
Like that forgotten favourite toy you find at the bottom of the games box, or the album you used to love that slipped behind the CD player, Hyères is a gem that amply rewards rediscovery.
Getting there
Paul Bloomfield travelled from London St Pancras to Lille by Eurostar, then by TGV to Toulon, courtesy of Voyages SNCF (0844 848 5848; voyages-sncf.com). Return fares start at £119.
The closest airport is Marseille, served by easyJet (0843 104 5000; easyJet.com) from Bristol and Gatwick, Ryanair (0871 246 0000; ryanair.com) from Stansted, and British Airways (0844 493 0787; ba.com) from Heathrow.
Staying there
Castel Pierre Lisse (00 33 4 94 31 11 18; castel-pierre-lisse.com), a small mansion once owned by Edith Wharton, offers doubles from €100 (£80) including breakfast.
Source: The Independent
Top 10 tapas bars in Madrid
Spain’s capital is awash with tapas bars but how do you find the good ones amid the sea of tourist-traps? Madrid-based food writer James Blick tracks down 10 of the best, from classic bodegas to slick new dining spaces run by young chefs
Casa Gonzalez
Were Woody Allen to set one of his romantic European whimsies in Madrid, Casa Gonzalez – with its picture-perfect yesteryear facade, smartly tiled interior and moreish hoard of conserves, cheese and charcuterie – would be a shoo-in for the romantic Spanish bar scene. What’s more, the good-humoured and well-moustached owner Paco (whose grandfather founded the place in 1931) keeps a knockout cellar at this wine bar-slash-deli. Nab a table near the big bay window, load it with jamón ibérico de bellota (acorn-fed Iberian ham, €10.10), cured manchego cheese (€6), and a spicy bottle of red and watch the light fade over the cobblestones outside – a most cinematic start to any tapas crawl.
• Calle León 12, +34 914 295 618, casagonzalez.es . Open everyday, Mon-Thur 9.30am-midnight, Fri and Sat 9.30am-1am, Sun 11am-6pm
TriCiclo
The buzz from the blogosphere was deafening last year when TriCiclo opened in the capital’s leafy literary quarter. Young chefs Javier Goya, Javier Mayor and David Alfonso were doing something that felt very new in Madrid: serving inspired, internationally-inflected tapas in a pompous-free bar environment. Their seasonal menus include diverse ingredients like cod glands, pig ears, Kaffir lime leaves and kumquats (not in the same dish, thankfully) and most plates are available in small tapa sizes, meaning you can taste a little of everything. Reservations for the white and woody dining room are essential, but – and this is a Madrid truism – there’s always space at the bar.
• Calle Santa María, 28, +34 910 244 798, eltriciclo.es . Open Mon-Sat 1.30pm-4pm, 8pm-12.30am
La Venencia
Time grinds to a meditative standstill in this dimmed, tobacco-stained cavern, where the only tipple is dry sherry from a barrel (from €1.70 a glass) and the only tapas are sliced-to-order cured meats, fish and cheese (try the mojama – salt-cured tuna: a mouthful of ocean for €2.30). By day, sherry-soaked locals ruminate over copitas of Amontillado, but at night it regularly ignites into a raucous knees-up (cheap and stronger than wine, sherry creeps up on the unwary). Be on notice that the proprietors run a strict ship: photography is forbidden, as is tipping, and please don’t bother Lola, the slightly senile black cat curled up down the back.
• Calle de Echegaray 7, +34 914 297 313, no website. Open daily 12.30pm-3.30pm, 7.30pm onwards
El Tempranillo
Friday night, 10pm – dinnertime in Madrid and the cheek-by-jowl tapas bars along Calle Cava Baja are heaving. Escape the tyranny of choice within the boisterous brick walls of tumbledown El Tempranillo, a culinary rock that does – alongside more elaborate dishes – a top-notch selection of pinchos (slices of baguette topped with everything from foie with roast apple to cuttlefish with caramelised onions, from €2.80-€5.50). “Solo vinos españoles” – only Spanish wines – is scrawled in a defiant hand atop the excellent wine list, and the vino is stockpiled in a gloriously ramshackle wall-to-wall wine rack. There are only a few tables, so go early if you’d like to sit.
• Calle Cava Baja 38, +34 913 641 532, no website. Open daily 1pm-4pm, Tues-Sun 8pm-midnight
Bodegas Ricla
To the untrained eye, this shabby bodega might seem a culinary long shot but ageing, hole-in-the-wall Ricla – with its tin bar, swollen wine vats and lazy ceiling fan – is a homespun treasure trove of fine food and drink. Founded in 1867, it is family-run, with puckish brothers Emilio and Jose Antonio behind the bar while mum Ana tirelessly shuttles her homemade fare from the Lilliputian kitchen. Locals heave in for tiny tumblers of vermouth on tap, razor-sharp boquerones en vinagre (pickled anchovies, €2.80) and Ana’s spectacular callos a la madrileña (even the most apprehensive palates will surrender to her smoky take on Madrid’s infamous tripe stew, €5.90).
• Calle de los Cuchilleros 6, +34 913 652 069, no website. Open Mon, Wed-Sun 1pm-4pm, Mon, Wed, Thur 7pm onwards, Fri-Sat 7.30pm onwards, closed Sun eve and Tues
La Casa del Abuelo
The tangy smack of freshly fried garlic draws you through the door of this striking dark wood and marble tavern, still run by the family that founded it in 1906. The must-try gambas al ajillo (€9.90) is a palate-searing blend of plump Mediterranean prawns, fresh parsley, dried chillies and indecent wads of garlic, whipped-up before your eyes by gabby, old-boy waiters who’ve been doing this dish for decades. Pair it with the house red (a sweet tempranillo that plays perfectly off the garlic) while scanning the photo wall of famous former diners, infamous matadors and the sepia-stained faces of long-gone Abuelo bartenders.
• Calle de la Victoria 12, +34 910 000 133, lacasadelabuelo.es . Open daily, Sun-Thur noon-midnight, Fri-Sat noon-1am
Celso y Manolo
Recently opened Celso y Manolo is a lovingly nostalgic nod to Madrid taverns of old, housed in the retro surroundings of a former family-run tasca. The original 1950s marble bar remains, the lights have been dimmed – a moody antidote to this cities’ penchant for bright bars – and the homely menu zeroes in on regional ingredients: grilled organic Cantabrian lamb chops (€8), Catalonian red shrimp (€12.50), or a salad of sweet Huesca tomatoes the size of babies’ heads (€8). Its version of Madrid’s original street food, the much-maligned bocadillo de calamares, is a winner thanks to lashings of lemon-infused alioli (€4.50), and there are some lovely Madrid wines by the glass.
• Calle Libertad 1, +34 915 318 079, celsoymanolo.es . Open daily 1pm-5pm, 8pm-midnight
La Castela
On the moneyed east bank of the central Retiro Park, La Castela fiercely guards the traditions of a true Madrid barrio bar: lightening-fast waiters, a generous (and here, elaborate) free tapa with each drink and a loud, loyal local clientele. However it’s the food – simple with a soupçon of sophistication – that makes this unassuming taproom truly sing. Their unctuous rabo de toro (bull tail stew, €12) is tip-top and the blisteringly fresh seafood nesting on ice – fat mussels and candy-sweet razor clams – sublime. So grab a frothy caña (draught beer, €1.50), dive into a bowl of almejas a la manzanilla (clams in sherry sauce, €12) and make like a madrileño.
• Calle Doctor Castelo 22, +34 915 740 015, restaurantelacastela.com . Open daily noon-4.30pm, then 7.30pm-12.30am, closed Sun eves
Sanlúcar
Down a little dark street in the depths of bar-drenched barrio La Latina, Sanlúcar is a gaudy, jaunty, out-of-nowhere slice of southern Spain. A spirited crowd of boho regulars pile in for cold beers and hearty, southern stables, fuelled by frisky flamenco and surrounded by outrageous folkloric decor: bullfighting gear, brightly coloured football scarves and close-ups of desolate Virgins. Get a few tortillas de camarones (prawn fritters, €2), a sharp bowl of salmorejo (cold, garlicky tomato soup, €4.50) and a grilled slab of presa ibérica (one of the juiciest cuts from Spain’s hallowed Iberian pig, €9). Seafood freaks should venture the briny ortiguillas – deep fried sea anemones (€9).
• Calle de San Isidro Labrador 14, +34 913 540 052, latabernasanlucar.com . Open Tues-Sat 1pm-5pm, 8.30pm-midnight, Sun 1pm-5pm
Casa Toni
Amid the sea of tourist-trap tapas bars and “Irish pubs” around Madrid’s main Puerta del Sol square, Casa Toni is a rough-and-ready touchstone for real food, keen prices (everything’s under €10) and a warm welcome. Day and night, a motley crew of hungry regulars – from young lads lining their stomachs to sixtysomethings grabbing a bite after the opera – huddle at rough-hewn tables, digging into grilled garlicky mushrooms, eggplant drizzled with honey and the best beer-battered baby cuttlefish I’ve tasted. Those itching to experience some classic Madrid nose-to-tail cuisine should try the creamy mollejas (lamb sweetbreads) and – careful here – a crispy zarajo (fried lamb guts wound around a vine).
• Calle de la Cruz 14, +34 915 322 580, casa-toni.es . Open daily noon-4.30pm, 7pm till late
Source: The Guardian
Casa Gonzalez
Were Woody Allen to set one of his romantic European whimsies in Madrid, Casa Gonzalez – with its picture-perfect yesteryear facade, smartly tiled interior and moreish hoard of conserves, cheese and charcuterie – would be a shoo-in for the romantic Spanish bar scene. What’s more, the good-humoured and well-moustached owner Paco (whose grandfather founded the place in 1931) keeps a knockout cellar at this wine bar-slash-deli. Nab a table near the big bay window, load it with jamón ibérico de bellota (acorn-fed Iberian ham, €10.10), cured manchego cheese (€6), and a spicy bottle of red and watch the light fade over the cobblestones outside – a most cinematic start to any tapas crawl.
• Calle León 12, +34 914 295 618, casagonzalez.es . Open everyday, Mon-Thur 9.30am-midnight, Fri and Sat 9.30am-1am, Sun 11am-6pm
TriCiclo
The buzz from the blogosphere was deafening last year when TriCiclo opened in the capital’s leafy literary quarter. Young chefs Javier Goya, Javier Mayor and David Alfonso were doing something that felt very new in Madrid: serving inspired, internationally-inflected tapas in a pompous-free bar environment. Their seasonal menus include diverse ingredients like cod glands, pig ears, Kaffir lime leaves and kumquats (not in the same dish, thankfully) and most plates are available in small tapa sizes, meaning you can taste a little of everything. Reservations for the white and woody dining room are essential, but – and this is a Madrid truism – there’s always space at the bar.
• Calle Santa María, 28, +34 910 244 798, eltriciclo.es . Open Mon-Sat 1.30pm-4pm, 8pm-12.30am
La Venencia
Time grinds to a meditative standstill in this dimmed, tobacco-stained cavern, where the only tipple is dry sherry from a barrel (from €1.70 a glass) and the only tapas are sliced-to-order cured meats, fish and cheese (try the mojama – salt-cured tuna: a mouthful of ocean for €2.30). By day, sherry-soaked locals ruminate over copitas of Amontillado, but at night it regularly ignites into a raucous knees-up (cheap and stronger than wine, sherry creeps up on the unwary). Be on notice that the proprietors run a strict ship: photography is forbidden, as is tipping, and please don’t bother Lola, the slightly senile black cat curled up down the back.
• Calle de Echegaray 7, +34 914 297 313, no website. Open daily 12.30pm-3.30pm, 7.30pm onwards
El Tempranillo
Friday night, 10pm – dinnertime in Madrid and the cheek-by-jowl tapas bars along Calle Cava Baja are heaving. Escape the tyranny of choice within the boisterous brick walls of tumbledown El Tempranillo, a culinary rock that does – alongside more elaborate dishes – a top-notch selection of pinchos (slices of baguette topped with everything from foie with roast apple to cuttlefish with caramelised onions, from €2.80-€5.50). “Solo vinos españoles” – only Spanish wines – is scrawled in a defiant hand atop the excellent wine list, and the vino is stockpiled in a gloriously ramshackle wall-to-wall wine rack. There are only a few tables, so go early if you’d like to sit.
• Calle Cava Baja 38, +34 913 641 532, no website. Open daily 1pm-4pm, Tues-Sun 8pm-midnight
Bodegas Ricla
To the untrained eye, this shabby bodega might seem a culinary long shot but ageing, hole-in-the-wall Ricla – with its tin bar, swollen wine vats and lazy ceiling fan – is a homespun treasure trove of fine food and drink. Founded in 1867, it is family-run, with puckish brothers Emilio and Jose Antonio behind the bar while mum Ana tirelessly shuttles her homemade fare from the Lilliputian kitchen. Locals heave in for tiny tumblers of vermouth on tap, razor-sharp boquerones en vinagre (pickled anchovies, €2.80) and Ana’s spectacular callos a la madrileña (even the most apprehensive palates will surrender to her smoky take on Madrid’s infamous tripe stew, €5.90).
• Calle de los Cuchilleros 6, +34 913 652 069, no website. Open Mon, Wed-Sun 1pm-4pm, Mon, Wed, Thur 7pm onwards, Fri-Sat 7.30pm onwards, closed Sun eve and Tues
La Casa del Abuelo
The tangy smack of freshly fried garlic draws you through the door of this striking dark wood and marble tavern, still run by the family that founded it in 1906. The must-try gambas al ajillo (€9.90) is a palate-searing blend of plump Mediterranean prawns, fresh parsley, dried chillies and indecent wads of garlic, whipped-up before your eyes by gabby, old-boy waiters who’ve been doing this dish for decades. Pair it with the house red (a sweet tempranillo that plays perfectly off the garlic) while scanning the photo wall of famous former diners, infamous matadors and the sepia-stained faces of long-gone Abuelo bartenders.
• Calle de la Victoria 12, +34 910 000 133, lacasadelabuelo.es . Open daily, Sun-Thur noon-midnight, Fri-Sat noon-1am
Celso y Manolo
Recently opened Celso y Manolo is a lovingly nostalgic nod to Madrid taverns of old, housed in the retro surroundings of a former family-run tasca. The original 1950s marble bar remains, the lights have been dimmed – a moody antidote to this cities’ penchant for bright bars – and the homely menu zeroes in on regional ingredients: grilled organic Cantabrian lamb chops (€8), Catalonian red shrimp (€12.50), or a salad of sweet Huesca tomatoes the size of babies’ heads (€8). Its version of Madrid’s original street food, the much-maligned bocadillo de calamares, is a winner thanks to lashings of lemon-infused alioli (€4.50), and there are some lovely Madrid wines by the glass.
• Calle Libertad 1, +34 915 318 079, celsoymanolo.es . Open daily 1pm-5pm, 8pm-midnight
La Castela
On the moneyed east bank of the central Retiro Park, La Castela fiercely guards the traditions of a true Madrid barrio bar: lightening-fast waiters, a generous (and here, elaborate) free tapa with each drink and a loud, loyal local clientele. However it’s the food – simple with a soupçon of sophistication – that makes this unassuming taproom truly sing. Their unctuous rabo de toro (bull tail stew, €12) is tip-top and the blisteringly fresh seafood nesting on ice – fat mussels and candy-sweet razor clams – sublime. So grab a frothy caña (draught beer, €1.50), dive into a bowl of almejas a la manzanilla (clams in sherry sauce, €12) and make like a madrileño.
• Calle Doctor Castelo 22, +34 915 740 015, restaurantelacastela.com . Open daily noon-4.30pm, then 7.30pm-12.30am, closed Sun eves
Sanlúcar
Down a little dark street in the depths of bar-drenched barrio La Latina, Sanlúcar is a gaudy, jaunty, out-of-nowhere slice of southern Spain. A spirited crowd of boho regulars pile in for cold beers and hearty, southern stables, fuelled by frisky flamenco and surrounded by outrageous folkloric decor: bullfighting gear, brightly coloured football scarves and close-ups of desolate Virgins. Get a few tortillas de camarones (prawn fritters, €2), a sharp bowl of salmorejo (cold, garlicky tomato soup, €4.50) and a grilled slab of presa ibérica (one of the juiciest cuts from Spain’s hallowed Iberian pig, €9). Seafood freaks should venture the briny ortiguillas – deep fried sea anemones (€9).
• Calle de San Isidro Labrador 14, +34 913 540 052, latabernasanlucar.com . Open Tues-Sat 1pm-5pm, 8.30pm-midnight, Sun 1pm-5pm
Casa Toni
Amid the sea of tourist-trap tapas bars and “Irish pubs” around Madrid’s main Puerta del Sol square, Casa Toni is a rough-and-ready touchstone for real food, keen prices (everything’s under €10) and a warm welcome. Day and night, a motley crew of hungry regulars – from young lads lining their stomachs to sixtysomethings grabbing a bite after the opera – huddle at rough-hewn tables, digging into grilled garlicky mushrooms, eggplant drizzled with honey and the best beer-battered baby cuttlefish I’ve tasted. Those itching to experience some classic Madrid nose-to-tail cuisine should try the creamy mollejas (lamb sweetbreads) and – careful here – a crispy zarajo (fried lamb guts wound around a vine).
• Calle de la Cruz 14, +34 915 322 580, casa-toni.es . Open daily noon-4.30pm, 7pm till late
Source: The Guardian
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)









































