Great British Menu Archives - York on a Fork https://yorkonafork.com/tag/great-british-menu/ The best food, drink and lifestyle in York Sun, 19 Jan 2025 15:53:44 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 https://yorkonafork.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/cropped-yoaf_favicon-32x32.png Great British Menu Archives - York on a Fork https://yorkonafork.com/tag/great-british-menu/ 32 32 Kerala Canteen https://yorkonafork.com/2025/01/19/kerala-canteen/ Sun, 19 Jan 2025 15:53:42 +0000 https://yorkonafork.com/?p=25103 It’s been a little while since I was tempted enough by anywhere to make the journey to Leeds but when I heard Bobby Geetha had a new opening to take a look at, it didn’t take me long to start looking for a slot in my diary. With appearances on Great British Menu and Masterchef:…

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It’s been a little while since I was tempted enough by anywhere to make the journey to Leeds but when I heard Bobby Geetha had a new opening to take a look at, it didn’t take me long to start looking for a slot in my diary. With appearances on Great British Menu and Masterchef: Professionals to his name as well as the successful stewardship of Fleur, also in Leeds, there’s plenty to recommend Bobby’s food – along with which, he’s a thoroughly nice chap. While I enjoyed eating at Fleur, it leant heavily toward the Instagram market and the flourishes that involves, not that there was anything wrong with the food though. Bobby’s new venture, Kerala Canteen Leeds, feels markedly more personal. Located a short walk out of the very centre of the city, Kerala Canteen Leeds is just by the Northern Ballet, a short distance from the bus station where it’s easily spotted thanks to the foliage covered frontage which frames pictures of some of the dishes one might expect to find inside.

Descending the stairs into the dining area, one finds the space just as inviting as the exterior would suggest and is cosily rather than claustrophobically subterranean, with liberal application of floral decoration and a mixture of seating styles. Coming onto the menu is where things get really appealing as it draws heavily on Bobby’s Keralan heritage to deliver small plates rooted in Indian traditions that are hearty, comforting and quite remarkable value. It’s initially a touch tricky to get a handle on how many of the dishes to order as one might assume the pricing means they’re fancied up, tiny versions of the promised dish. Bobby promised that this wasn’t the case though so we set about the document and picked seven likely suspects to make up an indulgent meal. Dishes arrive as and when they are ready, further underscoring the casual nature of the occasion, so we relaxed into our Kingfisher and Chai to await the first arrival, which turned out to be mini-poppadoms and chutneys that were the perfect morsel to pick at and came in a broader variety than the usual curry-house standards and with richly spiced dips.

The next tranche of dishes to arrive were spiced calamari, fried chicken, beef and bone marrow curry and chicken kothu porotta. This selection was quickly augmented by basmati rice and a broccoli dosa which had the combined impact of making our table look and smell remarkably appetising. The beef and bone marrow curry was deeply rich with a generous spicing (for my puny tolerance anyway) and a healthy pop of ginger all of which made it a happy vessel for the rice to carry. Calamari was tender with a crispy curry-leaf infused batter and samphire garnish for a minor twist, curry mayo adding another hit of flavour while the Trivandrum fried chicken lived up to the lofty expectations Bobby set for it, by turns crispy on initial bite before yielding softly and dropping a whole bunch of flavour off. Comfortably some of the best fried chicken I’ve eaten and pushed even further upwards in my estimations by the accompanying fried garlic yoghurt. The other chicken dish used layers of flaky bread for a textural point of difference and was again well judged and satisfying which just left the dosa which could have taken a more generous helping of broccoli but did its job in good spirits. Had I been able to restrain myself with mains more effectively I would have tucked into jaggery-accented sticky toffee pudding or cardamom dusted chocolate brownie, both of which seem like reason for a return visit.

The cost attracted by all this food was only £42, which makes Kerala Canteen Leeds a pretty eye-catching bargain for a quality meal for two in attractive surrounds. With drinks at a sensible price too it’s easy to see this as a regular fixture in the social calendar of Leeds residents with hugely tempting balance of quality and value to be had. Bobby is a thoroughly nice chap but sadly that’s not enough to guarantee success in a crowded market going through turbulent times. On the evidence of this trip though, he can rely on the food and atmosphere as much as his personality to win through.

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A Great British Menu meal brought to life https://yorkonafork.com/2017/09/01/great-british-menu-brought-to-life/ Fri, 01 Sep 2017 18:45:00 +0000 http://178.62.50.194/reviews/great-british-menu-brought-to-life/ An evening with food from Josh Overington, Tommy Banks and Danny Parker at House of Tides.

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It goes without saying that I’m a complete sucker for TV cookery shows. I’ll take a look at pretty much anything from Man vs Food to Barefoot Contessa along with the primetime suspects such as Masterchef and Saturday Kitchen. Amongst all that, Great British Menu offers the chance to see some of the best chefs in the country really take the opportunity to show off and out do one another, making it tricky to get into the featured chef’s restaurants on occasion.

This year’s GBM chefs for the North East were York’s very own Josh Overington from Le Cochon Aveugle, Tommy Banks from the Black Swan at Oldstead and House of Tides head chef Danny Parker, all three of them putting on a stunning series of dishes. Tommy may have been the most successful of the trio on the show, but they all performed fantastically, making it a desperately close run contest.

Gougeres

When I heard that the three chefs were teaming up to put on a Great British Menu meal at each of their respective restaurants involving all of them cooking and showcasing some of those dishes, it was the decision of a moment to brace my credit card for the impact should I be lucky enough to get a table. I was indeed that lucky, so augmented that £100-a-head hit for the meal with an airbnb and train tickets to make ready for a trip north.

We arrived into Newcastle with the company of a couple of good friends, equally excited for the evening of course, and a list of pubs and food venues to check out. One of those was the Crown Posada just around the corner from HoT that was a perfect venue to compare notes for our expectations of the Great British Menu meal before taking the short stroll to our table.

Oyster

We took our table, saying hi to Vicky from ‘Cochon who was on wine duty, and looked in awe at the 12 courses ahead of us as the first of them appeared. A cream cheese, onion and truffle Gougere was lighter than probable for a baked choux pastry and a perfect balance of flavours that might have threatened to overwhelm one another in lesser hands.

The plate of snacks that came up next delivered three delicate mouthfuls featuring cod’s roe, smoked eel, pork, truffle, carrot, fennel pollen and squid ink as a precursor to oyster. The three of us agreed that even as food obsessives, oysters really weren’t for us (despite years of trying) and looked jealously at the pregnant Mrs YoaF tucking into her lobster-based alternative. Regardless of one’s oyster opinions, the snacks were absolutely without fault.

Before we got into the serious business of dishes attributed to individual chefs, we enjoyed some bread and butter, the cultured butter sailing delightfully close to turning to cheese. Josh took first go at the headlining dishes with his strawberry and nasturtium dish that contrasted warm strawberry with cold nasturtium ice cream on a toasted crunchy bed reminiscent of granola. This first ‘event’ dish set the bar at a daunting level for the rest of the meal, giving Danny Parker’s “Salad 22” a challenge to compare against.

Salad 22 elements

To nobody’s great surprise that was a challenge met comfortably. The idea of a salad using 22 different elements, mixing technique and ingredient, sounds uncomfortably ambitious, but we were utterly won over. The judgement shown in getting that many elements to work together no matter how your dim-witted diner shovels it into their mouth is immense, and the skill shown in selecting a wine that enhanced each, slightly varying, mouthful equally worthy of praise.

Salad 22

Next up to show his mettle, Tommy Banks sent out his turbot with strawberry and cream. Arguably less surprising than that labyrinth of a salad, but not showing any drop in the standard, the turbot was cooked to perfection to form the centrepiece of a delicate, fresh dish.

Turbot

I suspect there’s only so much hyperbole of mine you’re interested in so, with regard to the next up, Danny was back to send out a meat course of Gloucester old spot pork with pineapple and onion that was absolutely beyond reproach. A wonderful combination of texture, flavour and presentation that continued the theme of dishes bowing to their delicate balance of tastes.

Pork

With sweet courses all that remained we welcomed, figuratively, Josh and Tommy back to our table wild herb panna cotta and “Hay time”. These rounded out a superlative series of dishes that reflected the quality of the three chefs whose standing has improved as a result of their GBM involvement. The evening was a resounding success that the whole table enjoyed without any significant criticism. With the bar set so high at every turn, my only request for next time would be a stronger hay note in Tommy’s hay dish.

Panna cotta

In the broader context, these are three outstanding chefs hugely deserving of the plaudits thrown their way for representing our region. However, in the context of three chefs trying to outdo one another over the course of an evening, the overriding sense is one of collaboration and cohesion. If you have the opportunity to get to the subsequent events at the Black Swan or ‘Cochon then don’t hesitate to take the chance.

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