Sunday, 14 November 2010

MasterChef Live: The stand that was in the top 1.


Take the fun of trying a new culinary item, multiply it until it fills a large hall, then add a MasterChef show.   I found there was too much going on to actually concentrate on the live show, but in my quest for the hits, misses and maybes among the stands I could live with that.

My top find of the day wasn’t actually edible (or otherwise imbibable) but scores a perfect 10/10.  Used to using cheap, bendy, cutting-at-bizarrely-unintended-angle type knives, I was keen to try out some knives that worked.  Kin Knives (http://www.kinknives.com) had a stand, with their knives on display and a chance to put them through their paces.  The geek streak in me had a dim recollection from chemistry levels about the use of carbon steel for sharp blades, so after a brief similarly geeky chat with the stall holder about laminated steels vs carbon steel vs other tech specs that I have forgotten,  I tried out their carbon steel vegetable knife.
The knife felt amazingly well balanced in my hand, and I forced myself to stay objective to assess how well it cut.  Having got half a tomato skin side up on a chopping board, I gave the edge of the blade the merest suggestion of pressure, and with none of the slippage or resistance usually experienced cutting tomatoes with a non-serrated knife, the blade whispered through the flesh of the tomato, and a small way into the chopping board too.  Effortlessly perfect.   If I can make a knive perform like that, I can only imagine what someone properly trained in knifemanship could do- dreams of silk scarves being thrown into the air and severed mid-flight with a flick of the wrist…
 In the interests of fairness, I also tried out some ceramic knives.  They were good, exceptional even,  but compared to the Kin knife they were like Ikea’s shoddiest.
Oh I was tempted to invest in that knife, and a beautiful stone on which to sharpen it.  The thought of the practicalities of temporary accommodation intervened, but make no mistake, I have found my dream knife.


Saturday, 6 November 2010

G and D Ice Cream cafe Oxford.

Good coffee is always welcome.  Good coffee served in an independent café which bills itself as an Ice Cream Café has me salivating at the world of coffee break opportunities.

I have The Geek God to thank for introducing me to G & D's Ice Cream Café- The Geek God has similar priorities to me when it comes to food and drink so I knew it was going to be good.

The Geek God also tipped me off to the fact that they make Stout flavour ice cream.  Naturally this set my curiosity meter to 'high'- would this work? would it be good? if the stout flavours included coffee, would it be a match made in heaven with an Americano? or would I be disappointed and wish I had gone for chocolate ice cream and an overall mocha taste theme?

The first sensation was unsurprisingly a hit of icy smoothness, followed by a definite hoppy tang, with underlying bitterness, and a pervasive creaminess (again unsurprisingly).  I was impressed, the combination of ice cream and stout worked very well even if it did lack the predicted coffee flavours.  That was amply made up for by my coffee which was obviously made from freshly ground beans and served at my perfect strength. Taking a sip of coffee before the ice cream also left heat in my mouth to help melt the ice cream...mmmm.

I'm also left wondering whether a grown-up ice cream float would work, replacing the lemonade with stout.  I will try this out in miniature on some willing friends and report back!

So 9/10 for G&D's, with their excellent food and drinks complemented by a relaxed yet buzzing atmosphere, complete with the scattering of self-consciously cool/studious people you'd expect in Oxford: essay crises via Jack Wills.

This is the website for G&D's:
http://gdcafe.com/FrontPage/frontPage.htm

About Me

Passionate about all that is good in eating and drinking...and lots more besides, maybe one day I'll expand on this theme.