Friday, September 23, 2011

Khao Sarn Thai restaurant@Brixton, London (review)

This year was the year of Brixton's avalanche-like gentrification. The ruNice restaurants and even a barber shop for white peeps have sprouted all over like mushrooms after rain. I reckon we have a few years to relish the bliss of the BoBo (bourgeois-bohemien) limbo before the 'yuppie suits' cotton on this and make this a new Chelsea, Clapham. The once grimy and forlorn Brixton Market is now teeming with 20 and 30-somethings hanging out in organic bakeries, ethnic restaurants and sunlit terraces.

One of such cool hangouts is Khao Sarn. Having lived 6 years in Bangkok, I'm very wary of Thai restaurants outside Thailand. Now this one I can recommend. If this was French outfit, it would be a brasserie: it churns out classic (some may say "same ole") Thai dishes consistent quality at reasonable prices.

We had a correctly cooked and served, with lime and green onions, phad Thai (somewhat on the smallish side) and the Isarn staple: grilled chicken leg with sticky rice and somtam (papaya salad).




Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Pumpkin soup recipe

or those of you who don't want life to be simple, or just hate pre-processed canned supermarket food, or perhaps your gums have just been operated on here a pumpkin soup recipe.
  1. Peel a pumpkin and cut into half-an-inch slices.
  2. Sprinkle with olive oil and bake in the oven at 160 degrees until soft.
  3. In the meantime, peel, slice and caramelise an onion in a pan with a tad of olive oil. Season with a pinch of curry powder if you feel that way inclined. (You can skip the onion altogether if it's too much trouble!)
  4. Leave the pumpkin and onion to cool a bit, then purée in a kitchen processor.
  5. Move to a pan, add cream, sea salt and bring to a gentle simmer.
  6. Remove from fire and add either cinnamon or nutmeg.
  7. Serve garnished with croutons, freshly ground black pepper, fresh sage and crushed walnuts.

Feijão do Luis@Brixton london review

Feijão do Luis@BrixtonWhere used to be a permanently empty Nigerian caff a new Brazilian joint is plying a busy trade on top of a Brazilian butcher shop. I bought from them some linguica de porco (pork sausage) quite a while ago and it turned out very flavourful, if a tad salty.

But for the restaurant I was waiting for Floyd to come to London, knowing how much he loves all things Brazilian.
  • Coração de Galinha - chicken hearts stewed tender
  • Feijoada Completa - smokey and clearly home-made (the menu claims it takes 24 hours to cook, it does taste like that, smooth and silky)
  • Picanha Grelhada - the piece of beef cut called "butcher's cut",
The interior may be very caffish but what matters is that the food tastes like made just for you.

Feijão do Luis
Brazilian Point
Market Row Brixton
London SW9 8LD

Sunday, September 11, 2011

The easiest pasta recipe ever: la ricetta della pasta più facile

The
This recipe comes from my Milano friend Luisa. Molto grazie, la principessa mia!
  1. Boil pasta to your prefered degree of doneness.
  2. Toast sliced garlic in olive oil and pour over the pasta.
  3. Optional: garnish with chopped parsley, grated hard cheese (parmiggiano or extra mature cheddar), freshly ground black pepper and smoked sprats.