Not boring everyone with the details, but the evening went off to a sour start before it began, when we discovered the restaurant forgot our special request made at the time of reservation. "Sorry, but it's too late for us to do anything now" was all that we got in response. Really? Is this the Peninsula Hotel or the Peninsula Hostel we were talking to?
It's not that big of a deal really, just that we did expect more from a hotel of such caliber. Anyhow, we arrived at the familiar scene of the grand dining room, with the crystal chandeliers hanging from the ceiling, fancy silverware on the table and all. The menu has already been arranged - it's essentially an abridged version of the Diamond Jubilee Degustation Menu (in celebration of the restaurant's 80th Anniversary), so we didn't spend much time going over the menu. In retrospect, thank God we went for that instead of the full degustation menu - it's already one course too many.
We started with the amuse bouche of slow-cooked salmon with cream foam and some "salmon roe" on top, as this was what's been described by the waiter who brought us the dishes. I don't know about you, but I never had a dark-colored salmon roe before. The foam - tasted like something you get on top of a cappuccino - was completely overpowered by the salmon and caviar - I guess that's why traditional wisdom called for a sour cream in this situation instead. Overall the dish wasn't bad but just a bit too ordinary to be called an "amuse bouche".
Moving along, our first course was poached rock lobster and wasabi mayonnaise on rock lobster jelly. I love the presentation - little quenelles of rich mayo infused with wasabi accompanying a few pieces of sliced lobster meat on a bed of jelly - and that's about it. "No wonder it's called the rock lobster", quipped C as she tried to cut through the lobster meat - it's overcooked and a bit too tough for the knife. No taste whatsoever in the rock lobster jelly which sat beneath the paper-thin piece of lobster meat - it's more convincing if they honestly called it an "agar disc to make the portion looked bigger than it really was".
Second course was duck liver cooked in fig leaves and aged balsamic vinegar. The liver was cooked as a whole wrapped in fig leaves and carved into half by our table side. It's rich and tasty, and worked well with the fig that served on the side. The few drops of balsamic vinegar hardly did anything to the dish but nothing wrong with that combination either. I liked the dish.
Seeing is believing - Sole fillet with sea urchin coulis |
White Truffle Risotto - not bad for a "conscience money" dish |
Roe deer saddle roasted in cocoa bean and juniper berry crust, with glazed Jerusalum artichoke and Brussels sprouts |
The front service of the evening left much to be desired as well. Well they did replace the dish we returned, but that's the least I expected they must do anyway. Most of the time the restaurant appeared to be short-staffed, and often we had to ask for things, not once but multiple times, before getting their attention - be it filling our wine glass or getting more bread during the meal. The only exception was when we asked for the check, it was brought to us in no time - they just couldn't wait to see us out.
A flambéed dessert made 20 minutes too early |
I am sure some of you might think we were a bunch of food snobs nitpicking on the minor issues and making a fuss out of nothing. Well, put it this way, we were not the only table returning dishes to the kitchen and having problems with the service that evening - as we overheard from the next table. With the family of a certain well-known tycoon sitting at that other table, at least we were relieved to know the restaurant weren't being discriminatory with their service - it's just poor across the board regardless of who you are.
The night wasn't a downright disaster in terms of dining experience - unlike the one at Robuchon a few months ago - but it's wrong on a lot of fronts that it became an evening we would rather forget. Well, at least the meal looked good in pictures, as if that brought any comfort to us. Thanks Peninsula and Gaddi's for nothing.
Other pictures on my flickr page: http://www.flickr.com/photos/g4gary/sets/72157637007318364/
…and people wonder why the Peninsula gets no macarons for their restaurants…
ReplyDeleteYou only got half a tongue of sea urchin?! They didn't think you deserved a whole tongue?! I don't think I've ever had half a tongue of sea urchin… at any restaurant, anywhere...
Yeah, they have been inconsistent - sometimes you got a meal that blew you away, and sometimes you got this.
ReplyDeleteWell, in my case, I got one half tongue of sea urchin too many. =)