QUINTESSENTIALLY | Insider | Barolo

CONCIERGE
  • HOME
  • WRITERS
  • TRAVEL
  • FOOD&DRINK
  • CULTURE
  • STYLE
  • CITY GUIDES
  • NEWSLETTERS

Posts Tagged ‘Barolo’

Babbo, Dulci Babbo

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

babbo_main

Mayfair’s chic Albermarle Street has stealthily become one of London’s top dining streets with the likes of Hix at the Albermarle, the ever-popular Chor Bizarre and now the latest addition, the sleek and decidedly swish Babbo, which has joined the ranks of London’s top Italian restaurants, thanks to the superb cooking of Douglas Santi, whose fine pedigree includes a great deal of work within the Alain Ducasse empire in Monaco, New York, Paris and Las Vegas.

This cosmopolitan experience feeds (sic) into the varied and eclectic menu, which is obviously based very much in the heartland of Italian food, but also of the more modern and cosmopolitan style that any top-flight Italian eaterie needs to cater to. Therefore, amidst such perennial favourites as beef carpaccio and an antipasti selection are scallop medallions with delicately flavoured mash, just as the traditionally carnivorous main courses find themselves lightened by the fillet of Chianina beef, which is served with delicious porcini mushrooms. A side order of perfectly cooked spinach allows this to  feel like an altogether lighter experience. Desserts are of the usual hearty Italian variety, in particular an all-too-tempting chocolate semifreddo.

The wine list specialises in medium and high-end options by the bottle (including a fine 2001 Attilio Ghisolfi Barolo), but there are also some more accessible offerings by the glass. Service is accommodating and friendly,  and visitors are guaranteed to feel welcome and valued.

39-40 Albermarle Street, London W1. www.babborestaurant.co.uk

Italian Class and Chic

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Vineria_main

Situated in a discreetly upmarket street a short walk from St John’s Wood and the legendary Abbey Road, Vineria soon announces itself as a seriously classy destination. Part of a small Italian group, this restaurant is their first outside Italy, and can easily stand comparison with anything else in the UK at the moment. It’s not often that you can go to a restaurant and have your expectations massively exceeded, but the quality and intelligence of the cooking here are guaranteed to do so.

The a la carte menu is short, sensibly chosen, and features superbly cooked and well prepared food. You might start off with a perfect aubergine dish with buffalo mozzarella and basil and tomato sauce or sardines stuffed with anchovies and breadcrumbs, and then follow this with a rich, gutsy pasta dish of tagliatelle with wild mushrooms and black truffle shavings – a pasta dish as good as I’ve had anywhere. If you’ve got room, the main courses of medallions of venison with berries sauce and chestnut-stuffed guinea fowl are both splendid, and a dessert of chocolate mousse with lavender sauce would do credit to any Michelin-starred restaurant. (There’s also a popular Sunday brunch, which features such delights as scrambled eggs with black truffles on toasted bread.)

As you’d expect from a restaurant that has as its motto ‘Vinum Et Cetera’ the wine list is suitably lavish, with everything from sensible, decently priced bottles up to some set-piece Barolos and Barbarescos. There’s also the option to take away wine from the on-site shop, which is a haven for Italian aficionados.

The next time you’re thinking about going to an Italian restaurant, think beyond the West End. You will not be disappointed.

1 Blenheim Terrace, London NW8 www.vineria.it

« Back