Meson Don Felipe, The Cut

1 07 2012

A colleague recently described the area around Waterloo to me as a ‘culinary desert’, and aside from the ubiquitous tourist-filled chains of the South Bank, googling doesn’t reveal many options for a dinner with friends; so Meson Don Felipe it was, which is homed on that intriguing little street between Southwark and Waterloo stations where the Theatres Vic (Old and Young) live.

The trouble is that my chef-ing family have spoiled tapas for me. Whilst this restaurant is heavy on the authenticity (right down to the cramped tables, 70s decor, foreboding frontage and guitarist perched on a balcony), even tapas when I worked in Madrid couldn’t live up to the homemade super-thick tortilla, gambas sizzling with garlic or chicken livers glistening in sherry and cream that are issued from the B family kitchen. The menu at Meson Don Felipe had a tough act to follow, which it did variously well from its extremely large menu.

The entirely Spanish staff seemed to know about gluten and happily checked dishes for me, although I was issued the general guidance “nothing fried or with a sauce” which is either lazy waitering or bad cooking. I see no need for flour in patatas bravas- so points off on that front, as well as for the lack of carbs available to me. There is at least a very good wine selection, so one carafe down with that menu guidance I ended up ordering a confusing assortment of vegetable dishes, which actually worked out in my favour. The espinacas and broad beans were freshly cooked and tasty, if simple. I always delight in the way that all vegetable dishes in Spain seem to involve either meat or nuts! Comparatively the fried and breadcrumbed alternatives my friends were eating looked lacklustre, and less than fresh. I also ordered manchego which was tangy, if a little sweaty and with gelatinous grainy quince paste. Like I said, authentic.

We had to ask for water three times, although the Orujo (Spanish fire water) arrived very quickly- which was probably why at the time I didn’t frown at the bill as the alcohol gently singed my insides, but it clocked in at a pricey £40 a head. I put that down to the area – there’s no competition around. To continue the metaphor- this was more of a rioja-induced mirage than an oasis in the culinary desert of Waterloo.

Service: 5/10
Food: 6/10
Glutenfreeability: 4/10





Cotto, Westminster Bridge Road

30 05 2012

Following a recommendation on twitter is a risky business, but I am a social media guru by day and blogger by night, and after a quiet day at work was in search of adventure. Besides which, the Gluten Eating Husband was getting the train to Waterloo so trying out nearby Cotto seemed like a good excuse for a date.

I was a little dubious- Cotto has a bit of a tired frontage, is on a slightly dingy road next to Lambeth North station (no, me neither) and had a small litany of staff waiting outside.

Home made bread

I needn’t have worried. Yes, they were quiet (sunshine is always bad for the restaurant business) but we were met by an extraordinarily friendly ‘buena sierra’ from the many Italian speaking staff including the coeliac owner who set about fussing over which one of us was gluten free and bringing lovely fresh bread (home made ciabatta for me, the normal stuff for GEH) and the tastiest olives I think I have ever had.

The decor leaves a little to be desired, but my goodness I’ve never seen such a big gluten free menu – with all but a few dishes with GF options. The focus is standard home style Italian fare including starters, pizzas, pastas (even fresh ones) and risottos just for me! The only downside is the price difference between the GF and normal column- but I already think £4 for bread mix is normal, so barely noticed.

Masses of GF options on the menu!

We shared a light savoury bresaola with nicely textured tangy mozzarella to start. Promising stuff- this took me right back to our weekend in Napoli. A little while later my excitement at having the first gnocchi since diagnosis paid off- the portion was huge, but the little dumplings were perfect. Clearly home made, satisfyingly al dente & slightly chewy covered in a nice tangy tomato sauce, more creamy melting mozzarella and deliciously fresh-smelling black pepper.

GEH kindly ordered GF rigatoni for me to try (I’ve only seen GF penne before) and this was also perfectly cooked and nicely textured. Unkindly he had picked a caper sauce (ick!) so I’ll spare you my judgement on that!

Gluten free gnocchi with melting mozarella

The portions were so big we’ve brought the rest home, and I’ll have to visit again to test out the home made tiramisu or pizza. All in all, worth the detour, good to meet another friendly coeliac, and the first perfect score I’ve given on glutenfreeability!

Glutenfreeability 10 – so nice to order in confidence!
Food 9
Service 9 – very friendly, but so many staff!

http://www.italiancotto.co.uk/








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 820 other followers

%d bloggers like this: