Le Riad

date of visit:  Thurs 19 May 2011

At the suggestion (or should that be request?) of a friend a small group of us headed to Le Riad, the only city centre Moroccan restaurant in Adelaide. It’s a tiny, unobtrusive restaurant that sits on Pulteney Street, next to the Earl of Aberdeen and Pondok Bali.

I like Moroccan food (just as I liked Morocco – any country where bakers cycle around with their fresh bread which you can buy and then they invite you to come and see their bakery rates highly for me) but don’t have a lot of experience eating it in restaurants, so I was interested to see how things panned out.

Our reservation was for very early (6pm) on a Thursday night – totally unnecessary as we were alone in the restaurant for the entire meal, although a very large party did arrive just as we were leaving. The restaurant is decorated with carpets and wall hangings which not only add ambience but I suspect are absolutely essential for sound absorption in such a small venue. The Moroccan music playing was mostly unobtrusive, so Le Riad definitely gets a thumbs up for noise management! It is quite a dim restaurant which can be irritating if you like (or want) to see your food in detail.

The service was probably the big let down. I know I’m difficult to please when it comes to service but our waitress just wasn’t switched on enough. For example, we ordered the selection of dips to start and the dips were placed on the table without any explanation of what was what. OK – we could figure out the hummous and the goat’s cheese dip but did rather struggle with the others. And when we ordered more bread (from someone other than our waitress) she came out into the restaurant with it and seemed surprised and confused about where the bread should go. Of course, not providing quite enough bread with a selection of dips is a criticism in itself. It never pays to be less than generous with things like bread – especially not when bread is such a staple in Moroccan cuisine.

These grumbles aside, the dips were tasty and things augured well for our main courses. Around the table we had a tagines, couscous and different types of kebab so we did a reasonable job of covering the menu. The portion sizes are quite generous although, with the kebabs in particular, there is plenty of padding with salad. I ordered the kefta kebab which came as three patties on a plate with rice and salad. It all tasted good (not exceptional) but the dish was really salad, with the kefta and rice.

After finishing with mint tea, the bottom line came to $35 per person (including a tip). This did include a few alcoholic drinks. I suspect that this is where my problem lies: it’s just a tad too expensive for what it is. The selection of dips alone was $24 – that’s just too much for something that’s so cheap and easy to produce. The various kebabs all hover around the $20 mark and the rest of the dishes are somewhere between $20 and $25. This means that if you’re a keen cook who can be bothered to produce this type of food at home you’ll be left feeling a little short changed. Personally – that’s exactly how I feel which means I doubt I’ll be rushing back.

Of course, if you’re looking for a casual meal out which is a change of pace, then Le Riad is definitely an option worth considering.

Le Riad
314B Pulteney Street
Adelaide SA 5000
phone: 08 8223 6111

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Baked Chocolate Mousse

chocolate mousse cake

Yet another outing for James Martin’s Desserts*. This time it was his recipe for baked chocolate mousse, which he bigs up as “one of the best in the book”.

Given such a billing I’m not sure why I haven’t made it before … maybe it’s because the recipe looked as though it involved a few too many bowls, or looks like it might be a bit complicated. Well, the first is true, but getting from start to finish is both easy (well, easy if you’re reasonably handy in the kitchen – I wouldn’t try this as your first ever baking exercise) and quick.

Preheat your oven to 180°C and grease and base line a 20cm spring form tin.

Bowl number 1: melt 300g dark chocolate with 150g of unsalted butter. Be brave and use the microwave!

Bowl number 2: whisk 6 egg yolks with 2 tbsp of caster sugar. Martin specifies for 30 seconds but I’m sure I didn’t have a timer on when I did this! Just think briefly! Also I used my KitchenAid for this step because it’s a good, big bowl … perfect for later in the recipe. Stir in the butter and chocolate and mix well.

Bowl number 3: beat 6 egg whites to soft peaks and then whisk in 50g of caster sugar and continue beating until the mixture is very stiff (I used the whisk attachment on my stab mixer). As is always the case when doing this kind of thing, ensure the bowl is clean (grease free is very important) and dry before you start.

Gently fold the egg whites into the chocolate mix. Don’t do it all at once: take generous spoonfuls of the egg white, fold it in well and repeat.

Once well combined, pour into the prepared cake tin and bake for ~ 20 minutes. The top should be set but it will still be a bit wobbly and yes, it will collapse. That’s OK, it’s not a normal cake!

Allow to cool before serving but DON’T put this in the fridge (it will go rock solid which is not the look you’re after).

At the very moment of serving, you can lightly dust the cake with icing sugar (if you do this too early the cake will just absorb the icing sugar and you’ll have to start dusting again). Serve with whipped (or thick) cream and, if you can bothered, raspberry coulis.

We had this at our family Easter lunch and not only was it demolished but I was also asked for the recipe several times. Aside from the washing up, this is easy, tasty and, as an added bonus, happens to be gluten free!

*Also available from Amazon UK, Amazon US and internationally from The Book Depository.

Andre’s Cucina and Polenta Bar

date of visit: Friday 6 May 2011

It might seem odd for a food blogger, but I have very little interest in Masterchef Australia. I loved the original UK version: the shouting, the food, and of course, Gregg Wallace and John Torode. But I find the Australian offering too personality focussed – it feels like a popularity contest while being unbelievably condescending to both participants and viewers.

However, Adelaide is home to Andre Ursini, former Masterchef contestant and now chef proprietor of Andre’s Cucina and Polenta Bar on Frome Street. And I guess that Masterchef was the catalyst for the restaurant so things aren’t all bad.

We first ate at Andre’s late last year and thoroughly enjoyed the experience. While I love Italian food and would happily eat spaghetti, chilli, oil and garlic every day of the year Andy is a little more picky and prefers Italian that goes beyond the tedium of bad spaghetti carbonara … oh, wait, that applies to me too! Andre’s suits us perfectly because it serves up interesting Italian food – something all too rare in a city awash with casual Italian restaurants.

The main food feature of the restaurant is the polenta. This is proper, soft, slow cooked polenta – nothing like the instant polenta the average punter (me, at least) cooks at home. There are a few staples on the menu as well as a special. The way the menu works is a bit different as the printed menu contains entrées and polenta staples, while the main courses are listed as specials on a chalk board. For a main course, you order a polenta dish and then one or two additional mains (assuming two people). This is not a place to go with people who are fussy eaters who won’t want to share. The whole premise of the restaurant is based around sharing.

Both times we’ve visited we’ve started with bagna cauda: the garlicky, oily, hot anchovy dip served with plenty of crudités. This is perfectly porportioned for two – and it’s very beautiful. On Friday night the dip came in a tiny copper saucepan, perched on the edge of a board decorated with the vegetables.

For mains we ordered two specials: polenta with duck ragu and Suffolk lamb cutlets with peas and Gorgonzola. Lamb is outrageously expensive in Australia at the moment (a few weeks back I asked the butcher for lamb backstrap which came in at $50-55 a kilo!) so the lamb option was not the cheapest choice but it was delicious. The gorgonzola sauce was set off by finely sliced (and hot!) chillis which was excellent and certainly something I’ll keep in mind. The polenta was also lovely: sloppy, soupy, with the duck ragu stirred through it. To be honest, I’d be perfectly happy to eat just that and not bother with anything else.

We were going to wrap up with just coffees but a last minute decision saw us order the mokacino panettone with vanilla icecream and chocolate ganache. Thank goodness we decided to share because it was a massive wedge of panettone. As with everything else – it was delicious. The cake was laced with some sort of chocolatey or mocha like cream, the icecream was sprinkled with pistachio nuts and there was just enough chocolate ganache.

Our final bill was $123 which included the food, a glass of wine, a few Morettis and a couple of coffees. Perhaps not the cheapest Italian but definitely one of the cheaper good Italian options.

The food at Andre’s is beautifully presented and perfectly proportioned. It’s also incredibly tasty. The one drawback is that the restaurant is busy and, consequently, quite crowded and noisy – but neither the food nor the affable, efficient service appears to suffer. On a Friday or Saturday night you definitely need to book.

Andre’s Cucina & Polenta Bar
94 Frome Street
Adelaide SA 5000
phone : 08 8224 0004

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