Lucky Lupitas Extravaganza

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date of extravaganza: Saturday 16 Feb 2013

I’ve written about Lucky Lupitas before. It’s the tiny Mexican restaurant which sits next to Flinders Medical Centre. It takes no reservations and, on a Saturday, you can expect to start queuing for a table at 5pm (doors open at 5:30pm).

With one toddler, queuing doesn’t really work and while we’ve eaten in just the once, we’ve had take away a few times. That’s because we’re lucky and live nearby. However, we have friends, many of whom also have toddlers, who don’t live so close … so about a year ago (I kid you not!) we hatched the plan for a Lucky Lupitas extravaganza.

The guys at Lucky Lupitas were happy to help out: we could place our order a week in advance and collect before queuing started. This worked perfectly for us, because toddlers eat their dinner early!

As always, the tricky part was not ordering the food but corralling the troops. As soon as you get numbers, work out an order and a per head price, someone always has a change of heart. So there was a bit of last minute stuffing around with the order and I’d really like to thank Lucky Lupitas for bearing with me on that one.

And then the day arrived!

It was a (very) hot day so the lads had to use their muscles to shift the outdoor furniture under the tree (our patio has an old Alsynite roof and, while it’s great for keeping the rain off, my goodness it can’t half get hot and sticky under there in summer!). To maximise the amount of protein in our order (read – beef ribs) everyone brought along something to share, so we had plenty of salads, extra rice, corn chips, salsa and guacamole. One friend, who is Argentinian, brought along Brazilian pão de queijo (cheese bread) to share too. A couple of us headed off to collect the order while those left at home rustled up cutlery and paper plates. When we came back everything was spread over the table and everyone dived in. Our order was mostly Lucky Lupitas famous slow cooked smoked beef ribs (they are amazing – the meat just falls off the bone and they are huge), along with quesadillas, tacos and empanadas. Lucky Lupitas threw in a pile of their own corn chips (apparently excellent but I missed out on those somehow!). Quite a few sides came along with our order so there was extra rice, coleslaw, guacamole and salsa! Everyone raved about the ribs and given the hot day and the extras everyone brought along we probably could have just eaten ribs alone. However, I really like Lucky Lupitas quesadillas and the beef tacos were excellent, with a good spicy hit.

Naturally, we had way too much food but it did mean that everyone who wanted to got leftovers to take home and we still had some very generous leftovers in our fridge!

While the food at Lucky Lupitas is fantastic, this experience is also a lesson in customer service. There is no way that twelve adults and five children could have rocked up to Lucky Lupitas expecting to be fed. If you’ve been there, you’ll be able to imagine what kind of chaos would ensue! But thanks to the team’s flexibility (and hard work) we were able to have a fantastic, and very kid friendly, early dinner.

¡Provecho!

Seacliff Beach Hotel

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slightly anaemic salt and pepper squid

date of visit: Sunday 9 February 2013

I know we’ve visited the Seacliff Beach Hotel before – but that was way back in 2010 so I think our latest visit merits a few words.

This time we were booked in for Sunday lunch: a booking for 5 plus a highchair. When we arrived, there was someone at the bar and we were seated quickly. No high chair (sigh) but that did arrive quickly and we were soon set up and ready to go.

The menu at the Seacliff is one of those very standardised pub menus and you’ll find carbon copies (or near enough) of it at various pub venues around the country. There’s nothing to challenge you here and even the pricing is comfortable with most dishes (bar the steaks) under $20. In our group, we had fish and chips, salt and pepper squid (that was me), the chicken and bacon burger, and a bruschetta.

The salt and pepper squid was unexciting. It was tender, but flavour wise there was not a lot going on at all. The batter was reasonably light and it wasn’t soggy or oily. The squid was served atop some chips, a couple of very sad looking wilted salad leaves, and with a portion of coleslaw on the side. The coleslaw was ok – totally inoffensive, and totally too much of it. I wonder if any of those bowls of coleslaw return to the kitchen empty …

Of particular note were the chips, which were awful. They were thin, long chips, soggy, nowhere near golden enough – I’m guessing they were a great example of especially cheap frozen bulk chips. There is just no excuse for them being on a plate.

Service wise, things were a little uneven. At one point I went to the bar and it was unattended and the little group of patrons that assembled over time waited quite a while for someone to show up. But our food came out quickly and correctly. There was one guy wandering around who was great and should give all the other staff instruction in customer service. When he saw us settling our toddler into the highchair he came over, unprompted, to let us know where the baby change facilities were, and when he saw our group leaving he made a point of saying good bye and thanking us. These are two tiny things but they make you feel like someone is actually interested in you having a good time.

Of course it was cheap – you can eat for under $20 a head and we used our Entertainment Book voucher for a further 25% off.

I don’t know about you but I’d rather eat somewhere with good chips …

Seacliff Beach Hotel on Urbanspoon

Stanley Bridge Tavern

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date of visit: Sunday 27 January 2013

So there we were, in the Adelaide Hills, in the middle of Crush, deciding that we needed a proper sit down meal. As it was getting late, we decided that we should stop off at the first place we came across, providing it didn’t look ridiculously busy.

That ‘first place’ was the Stanley Bridge Tavern in Verdun. We’d been there once previously, in between a wedding (in the Hills) and a reception (in the city) but on that occasion we’d just dropped in for a drink. If I recall correctly, some people in our group may have ordered a sharing platter or some chips. They may not.

As the car park was quiet and an A-frame promised us an all day menu, we pulled in and soon found ourselves battling a high chair (why is there not a standard way of operating them?!). You enter the pub through the front bar, which has a lovely cosy feel, and head through to the dining room, which is a bit more utilitarian in flavour. It’s a large dining room, and there is also an outdoor dining area and a cider garden area. The staff were all very young but all very helpful and friendly. You don’t find slick, polished service but it’s definitely competent. We were asked at least twice how we were enjoying our food – better than not being asked at all!

I had only a very brief look over the wine list (being the designated driver and all) but it seemed reasonably interesting with a few departures from the South Australian standards. One of the first things I spotted was an Alsatian Riesling, which is always a good start as far as I’m concerned. I didn’t look too closely at the prices, but I have subsequently heard complaints that the by the glass selection is a little pricey. However, on the day we were there, on offer were two by the glass specials at $5 each.

The menu is trying hard to be more interesting than standard from-the-freezer-to-the-fryer pub fare. It features food which sounds familiar and comfortable, without limiting itself to schnitzel with four different toppings. I chose the lamb special: roast lamb rump, Moroccan style, with a chickpea salad. Andy opted for the à la carte Cajun chicken breast with coleslaw and chips.

We had a little wait for our food which didn’t bother me (and didn’t bother the toddler, as we had packed all manner of snacks for Crush!) but, given that the restaurant wasn’t busy (a massive table had arrived just after we did, but they hadn’t ordered) I do wonder how the Stanley Bridge would cope at full capacity.

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When our dishes did arrive, the first thing I noted was that my lamb could most generously be described as rare. Now that doesn’t bother me at all but it’s not the way I’d expect lamb to be served and I suspect that the majority of punters would, quite reasonably, send it back. Having a bit of a dig around my plate, Andy and I decided that what must have happened was that the lamb had come out, been carved, and been a lot rarer than expected. It looked like the slices had been put back in a pan, with just one side receiving a bit further cooking. Whether this because someone forgot, or ran out of time, or didn’t want to make it look like a mistake had been made … I don’t know. Speculation aside, I enjoyed the lamb. The chickpea salad was really only OK. It was drowned in a sickly, Balsamicky, overly sweet dressing, and showed little imagination.

Andy’s Cajun chicken breast made a much better impression. It was perfectly cooked, so it was still lovely and moist. The chips and coleslaw looked to have been made in house (no straight from the freezer chunky chips here – they were proper big fat wedges of potato, with skin still on!) and Andy said the topping (think Jalapeños, sour cream and so on) worked well.

So while the Stanley Bridge might have slightly missed the mark with my lamb, it does definitely get points for putting in the effort to be creative. At the moment it’s sitting, to my mind slightly uncomfortably, somewhere between gastro pub and standard pub. It needs to pick its niche and focus on that a bit more, with an eye to producing, consistently, the best possible food.

Where I really struggled with our lunch was that the bill hit $60. Two main courses and one beer. That’s quite a lot really.

I’ve subsequently talked to someone who was at the pub on the Monday of the long weekend. She had ordered the sharing platter and been really disappointed.

While I would go back to the Stanley Bridge Tavern, it probably wouldn’t be my first choice of Adelaide Hills pub dining. I suspect the menu needs paring down: fewer dishes, sent out at a higher quality more consistently, would at least justify the current prices.

Stanley Bridge Hotel on Urbanspoon