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Tuesday, 13 May 2014

Peruvian-Nikkei Cuisine Comes to London!


Name: Lima Restaurant

Where: Lima (Peruvian)31 Rathbone Place, Fitzrovia, London W1T 1JH
                 Maido (Nikkei) - Calle San Martín, 399 (esq. calle Colón), Miraflores, Lima, Perú

Cost: Set lunches and the pre-theatre menus in Lima (London), available on weekdays, cost £20 for 2 courses, or £23 for 3 courses, plus £4 for a glass of red or white wine. From the à la carte menu, starters cost from £9 to £14, mains from £20 to £29, and desserts are all priced at £8.50.

About: Lima opened in 2012, the third restaurant of Peruvian chef Virgilio Martinez, whose Central Restaurant in Miraflores, Lima I visited recently (to be reviewed soon).  After a degree in law, Martinez studied at Le Cordon Bleu in London, and trained at restaurants in New York and Catalonia, and was executive chef at Astrid y Gastón in Lima before opening Central in 2010. Central quickly hit the San Pelligrino's 50 Best Restaurants in the World list, and in the latest 2014 list is ranked number 15.


That's quite a pedigree, and so perhaps it is not surprising that within months of opening, the menu devised by Martinez and delivered by Robert Ortiz at Lima was awarded a Michelin star. The menu at Central focussed on authenticity, local ingredients and seasonality, and this is also the philosophy at Lima, where a number of dishes developed at Central are also featured.  Most of the produce at Lima is from the UK, but it is supplemented by a range of native products from Peru's hugely diverse landscape.

Virgilio Martinez & Pia at Lima, London

This special event was to introduce Peruvian-Nikkei cooking to London. Nikkei is the cooking of the Japanese diaspora, adapting the produce these migrants found in their adopted countries to traditional Japanese culinary techniques, creating their interpretation of Japanese dishes with a local twist. This cuisine is very dear to me because as a Japanese-Brazilian, it is what I ate growing up in São Paulo, cook at my home in England and occasionally serve as part of my Japanese Supper Club menu in Islington.

Nikkei Chef Mitsuharu Tsumura at Lima, London

Nikkei cooking can be found wherever there is a Japanese migrant community; these communities are significant in Brazil, where the largest Japanese community can be found outside of Japan, and also Peru, home to the 2nd largest community.


It is in Lima that arguably this style of cooking has reached its highest expression, pioneered by Nobu Matsuhisa and his colleague Toshiro Konishi, followed by the next generation of outstanding Nikkei chefs like Mitsuharu Tsumura (known as Micha). Micha's Maido Restaurant (Latin America's 11th Best Restaurant 2013)  in Lima is another wonderful spot I visited on my recent trip to Peru which will be reviewed shortly. Micha has written an entire book on Nikkei cooking published last year "Nikkei es Peru" and is undoubtedly an authority on the subject.

Nikkei Chef Mitsuharu Tsumura at London Lima

I met and interviewed Toshiro Konishi and Micha while I was in Lima, and so was very excited to see Peruvian Nikkei cooking featured in London, and to have the opportunity to see him and Virgilio once more on home ground, as well as Virgilio’s partner and head chef Pia.

Arturio Gaston of Astrid & Gaston (pictured left)

What We Ate: The menu was structured with Pia, Vergilio and Micha’s dishes to show a wide range of Peruvian native ingredients, as well as Nikkei techniques and flavours by Micha.
  
To kick off proceedings, a platter of appetisers was served, which included Micha’s octopus with botija olive tofu and black quinoa, porcon mushroom with squid and wakame, and a steamed bun with fish chicharron (deep-fried battered fish) and zarza (or salsa) criolla made from onion, lime and coriander.


Pía cooked langoustine and huarango tree, a native tree from the desert in South Peru and whose sap tastes sweet like maple syrup, while Virgilio presented a dish called 'corn diversity', one of his creations at Central with four types of Peruvian corn including choclo (soft white fresh corn) and chulpi (dried and crunchy), presenting myriad flavour and texture contrasts.


We were then presented two takes on Peru’s national dish, ceviche.  Micha’s version was one of the most beautiful interpretations I have encountered, served in a striking purple sea urchin shell, combining rock fish and clams, sea urchin, tobiko eggs and yuyo (an Andean cooking herb), and topped with tempura(ed) samphire.


Virgilio's ceviche was also outstanding, with scallops, chia seeds and tumbo (a Peruvian passion fruit). This was refreshing and zingy, with delicious acidity.


Micha’s selection of nigiri-zushi came next - scallops with an emulsion of maca, cushuro and chalaca - featuring some uniquely Peruvian ingredients, like cushuro  (aka Andean caviar), a freshwater alga that grows only above 3000 metres. Rich in protein, it looks rather like the spherified chlorophyll beloved of molecular gastronomy, but is a naturally occurring foodstuff. Maca is another native of the high Andes, grown for its nutritious and allegedly healthgiving root - some even joke that maca is the Peruvian natural Viagra!

Silverside fish, with nori and leche de tigre emulsion was another Nikkei nigiri-zushi. Leche de tigre (tiger's milk) is a typically Peruvian sauce used in ceviches and tiraditos, which in its purest form is simply the juices of the lime and fish marinade.


The last nirigiri sushi featured very tender skirt beef with ponzu dressing (Japanese citrus dressing) topped with a fried quail egg. This was deliciously flavoursome, and visually quite stunning.

The main courses, titled 'Diversity' included a wagyu short rib nitsuke with potato cream and purple corn from Micha. Nitsuke refers to the Japanese technique of simmering fish or meat traditionally in a mixture of soy sauce, mirin, sugar and sake. The short rib was yieldingly tender and delicious, and served with an intense and glossy reduction. Purple corn is ubiquitous in Peru, and is used to make the hugely popular chicha morada (a purple corn soft drink).


Virgilio’s main course was a dish of avocado, Andean pseudocereals and tomato tree. Grown between 2000 and 4000 metres, Andean pseudocereals including quinoa and amaranth, are noted for their high anti-oxidant content, and worked a treat in this dish, imparting a nuttiness and crispy texture to the creamy avocado, making a fabulous dish.


To wrap up our Nikkei lunch, we were served two desserts - Micha’s ice cream of bahuaja nut (native to south-eastern Peru, and similar to Brazil nut), with crispy bahuaja nut and mango while Virgilio served 'Hoja de Coca' Jungle, or coca leaf jungle – both were creative, using intriguing and unusual Peruvian ingredients that were a delight to discover in this part of the world.


What We Drank: Lima serves probably the best Pisco sours this side of the Atlantic, and we enjoyed a couple of those as aperitifs. We also drank some fine Clos des Andes 2007 by Bodega Poesia, from Mendoza in Argentina.


Likes: Sophisticated Peruvian-Nikkei cooking, with some truly unusual and delicious native ingredients from the Amazon and the high Andes. The sea-urchin ceviche was truly outstanding and for me the highlight of the meal.

Dislikes: None.

Verdict: Lima is a wonderful restaurant, fronted by Virgilio Martinez, one of the most talented young chefs in the world.  I cannot think of a better place to introduce Peruvian-Nikkei cooking to the UK and to discover on our very doorstep why there is such excitement about Peruvian cooking throughout the world right now. Highly recommended.

Nikkei Chef Mitsuharu Tsumura and Hosting Chef Virgilio Martinez at Lima, London

Thursday, 8 May 2014

French Glamour & Sticky Rice – A Weekend in Paris


Words & Photography by Greg Klerkx and Luiz Hara

Paris is a city of many charms. The food, the views, the history, the culture: all sublime and justly famous. Paris is also a city with manifold ways to part you from your hard-earned cash, and when it comes to lodging, the City of Light is equally famous for hotels that are cramped, overheated, noisy of infrastructure and thin of wall, and often blindingly overpriced…a summary experience that can leave the gentle traveller feeling as if he or she had been expertly mugged, albeit with Parisian panache.


This can be true even for higher-end Paris hotels, in the €300+ per night range, and in which one might reasonably expect clean sheets, hot water, and walls that don’t resound with the dissonant symphony of creaking pipes. Top-end luxury hotels can invariably cure such malaise, of course, and in Paris one can easily spend €1,000 or more per night. But if you haven’t the resources of minor royalty or a globetrotting celebrity, yet demand more than a shoebox to sleep in and stale croissants for petit dejeuner, there is Hotel La Tremoille.


Situated on a quiet street in the 8th arrondissement, Hotel La Tremoille radiates charm, luxury and elegance. Its location is classic Paris: a credit-card’s throw from mega-bling shopping on Avenue George V, close to the Champs Elysses and Avenue Montaigne, and within eyeshot of the Arc de Triomphe and Eiffel Tower. A dreamy walk along the Seine starts a mere five minutes’ stroll from the hotel’s front door.


Hotel La Tremoille was built in 1883 as a private residence and converted to a hotel in 1923. Architecture buffs will immediately note the hotel’s distinctive Haussmann façade: wrought iron balconies, elaborate cornice work, and almost hypnotic lines of symmetry. Both the hotel and the street are named for Louis II de La Tremoille, a Chevalier in the French army during the Renaissance. In the 1960s, Hotel La Tremoille was a semi-famous jazz hangout, documented in Paris Match as a meeting place for Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington.


The hotel re-opened in June 2002 following a €24 million investment and 18 month’s renovation, during which its interior was modernised so that it retains a regal elegance yet feels pleasantly chic, in which sweeping palatial staircases meld gracefully with original Art Deco quirks. The result is a ‘palace’ style hotel where a jacket is very much optional, and where service is efficient yet relaxed.


We stayed in a rather beautiful corner room on the fourth floor that was remarkably spacious, having not one, or even two, but three floor to ceiling French windows along its street-facing wall. Even with the windows open at night the room was luxuriously quiet, the darkness rich and lulling behind ultra-thick curtains. We didn’t hear a peep from any other guests or service staff, and slept the sort of refreshing deep sleep that’s hard to find in a city centre.


Every box on our luxury checklist got a resounding tick: the muted colour scheme of plums and browns; the delectably comfortable king-size bed; the plush armchairs; the marble bathroom with rainforest shower; the frequently changed linens and towels; and the delicious box of fresh macaroons left on our coffee table alongside a note of welcome.


We enjoyed a drink in the bar on our first night, sinking into deep leather sofas in front of a crackling wood fire and sipping pink champagne and a rather potent house cocktail. By night the bar is velvety as a nightclub, but by day it offers privacy and comfort for business meetings.


Breakfast at La Tremoille is served in the ground-floor restaurant, which extends seamlessly from the bar in the shape of an ‘L’. A fulsome buffet included fresh pastries and breads, sliced and stewed fruits, pressed juices, and yogurts displayed in an ice-bowl. For those with healthy morning appetites there were cold meats and cheeses and a selection of hot foods: eggs, bacon and flavourful mushrooms. Fresh coffee and tea were made to order.



Hotel La Tremoille is a terrific example of understated Parisian luxury: no comfort was neglected, and no request was too much for the friendly staff. The hotel is also close to many top restaurants and bistrots catering to every taste and price range.

The hotel’s rack rate for a standard double room including continental breakfast starts at €596, including taxes and service charge. However, the hotel participates in numerous Web-based promotions and we have found promotional rates for Hotel La Tremoille as low as €330, so do check online for the best rates.

For more information, visit Hotel La Tremoille's website here.

Hotel La Tremoille
14 rue de la Trémoille
75008 Paris
Tel. : +33 (0)1 56 52 14 00
reservation@hotel-tremoille.com

Lao Lane Xang Restaurant
102 Avenue d'Ivry, Paris

The Lao Lane Xang restaurant in the far southeast of Paris, just inside the Peripherique in the 13th Arrondissement's Asian quarter, offers a range of cooking from Laos, as well as Vietnam and Thailand. The owners are Laotian, and the restaurant is, to the best of my knowledge, the only one of its kind in Europe.


The cuisine of Laos is often confused with that of the northeastern Thailand, known as Isaan. That part of Thailand was once Laotian, and to this day there are some dishes common to both countries such as laap, made from raw fish or meat and chopped herbs. Laos’ cuisine has also been influenced by the French colonists, with baguettes and coffee featured on most menus. These and many other factors make Laotian food really interesting and varied.


One translation of the word Laos is 'sticky rice eaters', and this wonderfully pure product is at the heart of any Laotian meal.


Having spent a wonderful time in Laos (see my posts on Luang Prabang here and here), whenever we are in Paris we head to the Lao Lane Xang restaurant for our fix of Laotian dishes. We started with some delicious Laotian prawn rice pancakes (£5), with an aromatic crispy rice salad which we wrapped up in lettuce and mint leaves (£6.50).


Our main course was crispy duck with red curry, basil and tamarind sauce (£9). The duck was richly tender, and enhanced by the deeply fragrant sauce, complemented by a refreshing green papaya salad (£6.50), and the obligatory Laotian sticky rice (£2.30).


We enjoyed a bottle of spicy, perfumed Hans Schaeffer Gewurztraminer Reserve 2009 from Alsace, which was a real steal at only £15.



Few would think of going Laotian when in Paris, but if you have been lucky enough to visit Laos and try the cuisine, a trip to Lao Lane Xang in Paris will undoubtedly bring back some very fond memories. Highly recommended.

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