| Tom Cannavan's wine-pages.com |
Glasgow and West of Scotland |
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The Buttery, 652 Argyle Street, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 221 8188
City Café, City Inn, Finnieston Quay, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 240 1002
Rococo, 202 West George St, Glasgow. Phone 0141 221 5004
Smiths, 109 Candleriggs, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 552 6539
Lux, 1051 Great Western Rd, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 576 7576
Northstar, 108 Queen Margaret Dr, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 946 5365
La Parmigiana, 447 Great Western Rd, Glasgow. Phone 0141 334 0686
The 150-year-old Buttery is one of the city's most famous restaurants, but the review has been removed since it changed hands recently. We will include it again as soon as we've been.
Michael Caines at ABode, 129 Bath St, Glasgow. Phone 0141 221 6789
Michael Caines, 2* Michelin chef at the Gidleigh Park hotel, is also executive chef behind the restaurants of a new chain of boutique hotels under the same ownership, called 'ABode'. There are branches in Exeter, Canterbury and
Glasgow. The dining room is a contemporary space of subtley-shaded greys and creams, one end of which is dominated by a large glass cube: the walk-in wine cellar. The menu features a half
dozen choices for each course, with starters around £12.00, Mains around £18.00 and puddings at £7.00, plus a tasting menu priced £55.00. Showing the dichotomy of running a fine dining restaurant in the centre of Glasgow, the
two course lunch is priced at a bargain basement £12.50. I was genuinely excited by the prospect of dinner here, as Glasgow has been underperforming recently in terms of genuinely high-quality dining options. Things got off
to a fine start when the restaurant manager turned out to be Elinor Donnely, who ran the dining room at the Summer Isles hotel so efficiently. In fact, she is now married to head chef Martin Donnely, and has imbued the front of house staff with an attentive but relaxed discipline.
My first course dish red mullet was sensational: crisply fried on the skin side, and accompanied by two slicks of creamy sauce: one of aniseedy fennel, and one of deliciously smoked aubergine. Main course portions are fairly small,
but are beautifully balanced and satisfying. My fillet of cod flaked into almost translucent chunks, and a bed of braised baby leeks was full of flavour. I have to say that pudding was a triumph too: a rhubarb
soufflé with a jug of rhubarb sauce to pour into the freshly cracked crust, and a scoop of delicate rhubarb ice-cream. The 100-bin wine list offers
a decent choice, and mark-ups are reasonable: we drank a half of St Véran from Deux Roches at £16.75, and a bottle of Dujac's sensational 2001 Morey-St Denis at £65.00. Coffee comes with irrisistable petit fours, and they
even rustled up some fresh mint tea for some of my party. What a nice meal this was, and what a welcome addition to the very top of Glasgow's dining scene. (2008)
Around £100 for dinner, lunch is a bargain £12.50 for two courses
Chardon D'Or 176 West Regent Street. G2 4RL. Phone 0141 248 3801
(VF) On our first visit to Glasgow in 11 years we eagerly anticipated our dining experience at Le Chardon D'Or. This restaurant has had a minimalist look with wooden flooring and simple beige furnishings in what could
have been an 18th century old merchant's house in Glasgow. The room was full of business suited diners when we arrived for dinner. The staff were efficient but not over friendly - unusual for Glasgow, indeed
they seemed particularly anxious to ensure we ate and left as quickly as possible - we dawdled instead. Faced with a choice of a 6 course Celebration Menu at £45, or a La Carte, we opted for the latter. My first course
choice of glazed smoked haddock with a lightly poached egg in a herb white wine cream, was OK if uninspiring: the fish was rather overcooked for my taste. My partner's tartlet of leek and mozzarella cheese with
sun blushed tomato and white truffle dressing, on the other hand, hit the spot, with delicate flavours and textures. The grilled seabass with roast parsnips, shallot confit and wild mushrooms was a rather insipid
and lightly seasoned dish. The roast fillet of Scotch beef with a gratin of creamed spinach and mushroom was again lacking in flavour.
Walnut mousse with honeycomb ice cream was enjoyed more than the selection of British and French Cheeses, all of which were cold and hard, served straight from the refrigerator. This is not what I
expected from a reputedly excellent restaurant.
The wine list had some well chosen and reasonably priced wines. We enjoyed a Leasingham Bin 7 Riesling, a FWW 2003 Gruner Veltliner and a 2003 Lowe family Zinfandel.
Overall, I was disappointed with this restaurant. Maybe my expectations were too high, but I would be unlikely to return. (2006)
Three courses, a la carte plus coffee and service came to about £115 (allowing for 1 bottle of wine). Open Monday to Sunday for lunch, Tuesday to Saturday for dinner.
This moderately-priced restaurant offers good food, with one of the most beautiful settings in Glasgow. The City Inn is somewhat off the
beaten track, about a mile from the city centre, on the banks of the river Clyde. It is surrounded by Glasgow's most
jaw-dropping modern architecture, including the titanium-clad Science Centre and Norman Foster's armadillo-like concert hall. Remnants of a great ship-building past also abound,
like the massive fixed crane, and twin rotundas of a disused Victorian tunnel system. The Café always
feels very Californian to me, both in its clean, minimalist decor, and in its food that has a lightness of touch. Chef Richard Lyth is not afraid of decisive
flavours and a nod to fusion cuisine. My starter consisted of discs of goat's cheese, crusted with parmesan and towered with little rounds of toast on a chile-dressed orange salad.
For a main course I had crisp-skinned fillets of sea bream, which came with a piquant warm sald of balsamic roasted tomatoes and asparagus. These flavours
were cushioned by a delicate cauliflower puré. Dessert was a bit uninspring after such punchy flavours, and the wine list ranks only as 'pretty good', with choices in
the £12 - £30 range, and several by the glass options. (2007)
About £45 for lunch, £65 for dinner. Open 7 days.
Gamba, 225a West George St, Glasgow. Phone 0141 572 0899
Gamba has had the same owner/chef/manager combination since it opened its casual, basement dining room in 1998.
The focus remains on all things aquatic, featuring dishes that major on quality ingredients in imaginative combinations, with accents borrowed from oriental cuisine. I started with
sashimi of ultra-fresh salmon, swordfish and scallops with traditional soy dipping sauce, pickled ginger and eye-watering wasabi. I chose the daily "special" main course: seared turbot in
a seafood, herb and cream stew. An abundance of mussels and small langoustines supported a healthy portion of well-cooked fish. A side dish of potatoes, carrots and asparagus was
delicious, but probably unecessary unless catering for a typically hungry Glaswegian clientèle. Our waitress recommended the banana and coconut cheesecake for pudding: desserts
at Gamba are no afterthought, and this was delicious, with a gloopy hot maple syrup sauce. Made to order coffee is served with Scottish tablet. The staff at Gamba are young,
knowledgeable and friendly, and the casual but smart dining room is one of the best in the city. The wine list is moderately marked up too: we drank a gorgeously mature, off-dry
Grüner Veltliner Smaragd from Freie Weingärtner Wachau; a bargain at only £22.95. (2003)
£90 for dinner, cheaper lunch and pre-theatre. Closed Sunday.
A Glasgow institution amongst the arty set. Furnished with the extraordinary tables and chairs of Tim Steadman and magical stained glass of my friend John Clark. This cool
and airy Café has brilliant coffee, home baked scones and tea-breads, a terrific range of snacks and sandwiches and, in the evenings, a selection of interesting and exciting dishes -
an eclectic mix: pacific-rim meets Paris bistro meets traditional Scotland. The short but very well chosen wine list always has something to delight. One of my favourite casual places for a
coffee, a drink, or an early/late meal. (2008)
£30 for lunch, £50 for dinner. Open 7 days 'till late.
The Giffnock Ivy, 219 Fenwick Rd, Glasgow. Tel: 0141 620 1003
Glasgow's south side is a microcosm of the entire city, where sleek new designer apartments rub shoulders with council estates and million-pound mansions. Whilst there are plenty of good,
honest eatieries south of the river Clyde, the truth is that in terms of haute-cuisine it is a bit of a desert. In the suburb of Giffnock, the Ivy has been plying its trade for a few years, but a new regime has been at the
helm since April 2008, with two highly-qualified chefs in the shape of Stuart Howie (ex-Turnberry hotel) and Derek Blair (ex-Nick Nairn). The dining room is a cosy but stylish, contemporary space, with a dark, polished wood
floor, deep Burgundy fabrics and wall of exposed stone. The tables and seating are comfortable, with quality glass and silverware. As I arrived for a 7:30 reservation the dining room was crammed, but I soon
realised that a cut-price pre-theatre deal had pulled in the crowds and the Thursday night got a lot quieter after 8:00pm. The a la carte menu is ambitious and adventurous, offering six or seven dishes at each course.
Some very good date and walnut bread arrived at the table, followed by a little amuse of salmon rillettes which were lemony, garlicky and delicious. I kicked off my dinner with pan-fried foie gras, with a grape and
shallot chutney and Sauternes jelly. This dish was not entrely successful, with the foie-gras oddly firm on the outside and cool in the middle. Whatever the reason, texture and flavour were both lacking. Things looked up smartly with the arrival of my tournados of cod, wrapped in Parma ham and served on a bed of mash infused with
spring onion. A little pea velouté sauce was creamy and fresh, and the dish was playfully topped off with a sliver of rarebit that added richness and tang. For dessert, a competent vanilla panacotta was sparked
into life by a sweet but sharp rhubarb compote. The wine list is moderate, with house wines beginning at just £12.95, and some interesting fine wine bits and pieces for those prepared to trade up, like
Jadot Corton-Charlemagne at £95 and Lafite 1978 a potential bargain at £250. Excellent coffee and petit-fours rounded things off, in a meal that demonstrated this kitchen can deliver and
is serious about offering a viable alternative to the city centre. Just a little more consistency is needed - and might tempt those early-birds out after dark. (2008)
Around £75 for two all in. Open Tuesday to Saturday lunch and dinner, Sunday all day.
Malmaison, 278 West George St, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 221 6401
Part of a very smart, stylish hotel constructed from an old church in the city centre, the dining room has an intimate feel with low lighting and most tables in little booths. The menu is quite traditional
brasserie fare, with plenty of salads, fish and steaks. I ate a pre-theatre meal most recently, starting with a salad of tangerine and fig with toasted pine nuts and a vivid lemon vinaigrette adding texture and flavour. To follow I had a slightly underflavoured saffron-infused risotto, that was well cooked
if a little too dense and a touch dry. For dessert, a Bailey's cheescake had a very good texture and flavour, with a dark chocolate topping and rich, buttery base. Espresso was of excellent quality and came with a little pot of
chocolate mousse, which was a nice touch. The wine list is pretty good, topping out with some good clarets, Burgundies and New World wines around the £100 mark. With pleasant surroundings and good food the Malmaison
is not a bad choice for somewhere that's open 7 days a week. (2005)
Pre-theatre at £12.95 per head, otherwise around £70 for dinner for two with house wine. Open 7 days.
No. 78 St Vincent St, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 248 7878
No. 78 makes a welcome escape from the chaos of the crowded Glasgow shopping streets for a good, sit-down lunch.
The converted bank building is airy thanks to lofty ceilings and plenty of slow-revolving fans. The ambience is friendly and grown-up, the decor is swish brasserrie, with polished
wood, velvet and brass, and the food is pretty good. The set menu has 3 or 4 choices at each course. I chose a venison and chicken-liver paté
that came soused in honey and mustard dressing along with a basket of good olive bread. My main course of a breast of guinea fowl stuffed with a skirlie mousse was
perfectly cooked. The wine list is one side of A4, with four by-the-glass selections. It has nothing outstanding, but prices are reasonable. No. 78 is not a
gourmet destination, but offers a reliable city-centre option for good food at honest prices (2006)
Around £40 for lunch, £70 for dinner. Open 7 days.
Red Onion, 27 West Campbell St, G2 4SQ. Tel: 0141 221 6000
John Quigley is the chef/patron behind this casual, trendy restaurant in the city centre. Quigley is a bit of a 'celebrity chef', as after a career in the kitchen's of London's west end, he travelled the world as a private chef to
rock stars including Bryan Adams, Tina Turner and The Bee Gees. Having settled back in his native Glasgow, Red Onion is open every day for lunch and dinner. It is a large, chic dining room with exposed
stone walls and polished wooden floors. Food is contemporary and pretty much globe-trotting as you might expect. A baked goat's cheese crotin was nicely soft on the inside, served doused in a dressing of toasted
almond and balsamic vinaigrette. The French-influenced braised shin of beef was very nicely cooked, falling apart under the threat of a fork, and served with champ potatoes and a rich red wine jus. Pudding was a good
effort too, a lemon tart that had been glazed and brâlléed on top, served with poached apricots and Greek yoghurt laced with honey. Red Onion is not pitched at fans of refined Michelin-starred cuisine,
but a more casual, laid back crowd that nevertheless appreciate good food and smart surroundings. Modest prices extend to the well-chosen wine list, with house wines at just £12.95. (2007)
Dinner around £25 for three courses. Open every day for lunch and dinner.
Rococo has an opulent, but restrained and classy interior of coffees and creams, with muted, expensive accessorising.
The food is good, though I feel it has dipped in quality somewhat over the past few years. A terrine of salmon,
langoustine and scallops came with a piquant lemon, tomato and chive dressing , the firm-textured terrine sparkily ignited by tangy flavours in the dressing and
subtle dill and herb nuances. A tournedos of very fine fillet of beef
sat on a delicious heap of well-cooked green beans which had been doused in truffle jus. A precisely-constructed potato dauphinoise perhaps needed two or three minutes more in
the oven. After a generous slice of magnificently creamy Dolce Latte served with walnut bread and balsamic onions, very good espresso was
served with petits four. The wine list (presented in a wood-bound volume) has several hundred bins of classy names. Rococo is pitched at an affluent
clientelle, but thankfully where it matters - in the kitchen - it does a solid job. (2006)
£70 for lunch, £100+ for dinner (with a cheaper pre-theatre option).
This small restaurant is serving really good, honest food. I feel I could almost just leave a review at that; "honest" and "food" seem to be such an oxymoron in so many
restaurants these days, where florid and boastful menus full of drizzles of this and towers of that translate into very pedestrian food re-heated by workaday chefs. Smiths is definitely
different: small and intimate, it has the ambience of a neighborhood Paris Bistro, with simple bentwood furniture, soft jazz music and well presented tables with fresh flowers.
The menu is pretty classic French/European and there are many touches that demonstrate this is a cook's restaurant, not an accountants, like a complimentary Kir, homemade
shortbread biscuits with (excellent) coffee and homemade fruit tartlets for dessert. My salad of plump, sweet, roasted plum tomatoes with wild rocket and a mountain of shaved Parmesan was
gorgeous; the warmth of the tomatoes and a balsamic dressing adding lots of comforting depth. My main course chicken Bourguignon was slow braised in its skin, served with
fondant potato and a heap of roasted root vegetables, onions and button mushrooms. As I say, good, honest food, served by
friendly staff in an unfussy atmosphere at reasonable prices. And long may it continue (2005)
£65 for dinner (with a cheaper pre-theatre option).
Glasgow West End
Café Antipasti, 337 Byres Rd, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 337 2737
Also now at 305 Sauchiehall Street in the City centre. Phone: 0141 332 9002. This branch accepts reservations.
This is a cheap eats, noisy, colourful, trendy place in the heart of the University dominated West End of the
city. The lively dining room doesn't accept reservations and small queues form at peak times. Italian fare with a light
Californian influence is the order of the day: not haute cuisine by any means, but good quality. Share some grilled
sourdough bread topped with mozzarela and tomato sugo sauce as a starter, char-grilled chicken breast fettucine with a
cherry tomato, cream and white wine sauce for main course and round off with good, alcoholic tiramisu. Good coffee too. (2008)
£20 for lunch, £35 for dinner. Open early till late every day
Hotel du Vin, One Devonshire Gardens. Phone: 0141 339 2001
This building has had a chequered history, but much of it has been as one of Glasgow's best culinary destinations. It is the site where Gordon Ramsay's 1* Amaryllis burned brightly, but was quickly snuffed out.
Now, it is part of the rapidly expanding Hotel du Vin chain, and a total refurbishment of this row of converted Victorian townhouses has given the bars and dining rooms a very smart, cosy, dark-hued appeal.
The menu under chef Paul Tamburrini is split into two panels, one containing 'simple classics', like grill dishes and comfort puddings, whilst the other offers a much more adventurous selection, with nods to
molecular gastronomy. I opted for the latter on this occasion, and I started with a ballotine of cocoa-dusted foie-gras, wrapped in toasted pistachios and filled with quince jelly. The dish looked fantastic, as
a little tower topped-off with a slice of seared foie, but I found these potentially fascinating flavours to be a little muddied. The quality and cooking was good, but both textures and flavours seemed indistinct. To follow,
red deer came as three perfect little traches of fillet, served with a boudin of guinea fowl, some port glazed mouli (blackened and dramatic) with sautéed prunes and amaretto jellies adding sweetness.
This was entirely successful, with the playful but satisfying array of ingredients retaining their identity, and setting up all sorts of interesting harmonies and adjuncts. For dessert, a passionfruit and malibu
tropical soufflé was light, creamy and delicious, topped with a scoop of coconut ice-cream. A word for sommelier Bruce Wallner, who has put together a formidable list at decent prices, and who is ready and willing to advise and steer customers towards
some of his more esoteric offerings. (2007)
Returning in August 2007, a stange evening with very switched-staff, who did not offer pre-dinner drinks,
didn't top up wines, and disappeared totally for long streches of time. The food was still good, though a dish of lamb loin was unsatisfying: matched, interestingly, with tempura anchovies, it tasted great, but with everything
presented in pound-coin-sized discs it felt a bit like 'finger food' on a plate. A less impressive overall experience (2008)
£140 for two all-in, with a moderate bottle of wine
The dining room of Lux is an airy and calm space within a converted Victorian railway station, with clean, minimalist decor, properly napped tables and
smartly efficient staff. Just as well, as its location is a little off-putting, perched beside a petrol station on a busy main road.
Having once been a regular, my last few visits to Lux had disappointed: the food was OK but no better, the portions were mean, and it was not cheap (the menu comes studded with supplements: £5 for a seared
scallop main course which consisted of four scallops). I had severe reservations about recommending Lux, and the review here from 2004 was lukewarm. Returning in 2008 - thanks mainly to a
5pm.co.uk deal that reduced the a la carte menu by £10 per head - I was pleasantly surprised by better food and very friendly service. The supplements are still there on various dishes, but what I ate impressed. I started with
some fine pigeon on haggis with a sweet onion purée that was very good, the pigeon breast moist and succulent and the purée nicely sweet and sour. My main course of
Loin of pork on black pudding with a sweet raspberry sauce was also good, but I perhaps chose unwisely, as the combinations within the two dishes - pigeon/haggis/weet onion and pork/black pudding/sweet raspberry -
led to basically very
similar texture and flavour combinations. The wine list is pretty average, but does offer some happy hunting, like the fine Rioja Reserva from Finca Val Piedra at £38.00 -
not bad given it retails at £20. It's good to see Lux back on decent form. (2008)
£95 for dinner. Closed Sunday and Monday.
It is easy to miss this tiny, cramped, Bohemian little deli and restaurant tucked in amongst a row of shops in a residential corner of Glasgow's West End. And missing it
would be a great shame! Portugeuse and Mediterranean-sourced ingredients are fashioned into mouthwatering "small plates", larger-than-tapas dishes like a chorizo and saffron risotto,
or patatas bravas, each costing only a few pounds. Excellent coffee (Sical, from Portugal), a wide range of organic soft drinks, and yummy home-made cakes complete a lovely
lunch for less than a tenner a head. Absolutely fabulous. (2005)
Number 16, 16 Byres Rd, Glasgow. Phone 0141 339 2544
A tiny place at the bottom of Glasgow's buzzing Byres Rd, this space has had a chequered, but largely very positive history as a restaurant, not least in its current incarnation. No 16 has been a favourite neighbourhood
choice for years, but when it changed hands a couple of years ago I felt standards slipped, and I downgraded it from a two thumbs up, to one or maybe one and a half. Whatever has happened recently, I've eaten there three times
in the past few months and each meal has been excellent. It still has the same mix and match furniture (take my advice and request a ground floor table with the new and rather smart leather tub chairs when booking) and the same
cramped conditions, but the food is as inventive as it is well cooked. A tasty starter of seared chicken livers came in thick stew of Puy lentils, and was beautifully textured and cooked. My main course was a risotto,
liberally folded with roasted sweet pepper, wild garlic and finished with creme fraiche, and parmesan. It was heartwarming stuff, and delicously creamy. A classic pudding to finish - of the sticky toffee variety - was the real thing,
rich with dates and fruits, and served with home made ice-cream. The wine list has around 20 reds and whites from £12 to
£27 pounds, and all in all, this is one of the nicest casual places in the city at the moment in my opinion. (2008)
£65 for dinner. Closed Sundays.
La Parmigiana is a real institution. An upmarket, but very typical Italian family restaurant, it has been around since the 70's, and is one of those places were the staff never
changes, and everything works with a comfortable, well-oiled precision. The menu is short and has lots of staples which
never change, like lobster ravioli in a tomato cream sauce, chargrilled scallops, or medallions of venison with a porcini mushroom and Italian sausage ragu. Other seasonal items come and go, but
all cooked with great skill and presented in an honest, understated fashion. This is quality Italian cuisine with a nod towards the best Scottish ingredients. There is a short, but
quite serious wine list. It is exclusively Italian, presented by region, from house wines up to Sassicaia and Tignanello. The regular "wines of the month" are always interesting.
We drank Silvio Jermann's delightful Pinot Bianco at £21. La Parmigiana is a bit old-fashioned, but is none the worse for that. (2006)
£70 for dinner, cheaper lunch and pre-theatre
This is the casual, cheaper option in
the same complex as "Lux", reviewed above. Stazione's menu is fairly brief: a mix of mediterranean influenced dishes. A complimentary kir was served before dinner
which is a nice touch. I had seared salmon on a pesto risotto cake. The salmon was well cooked, the risotto cake nonsense - why spoil the lovely flavour and texture of risotto
by frying it to a crisp? The "potatoes Stazione" I ordered as a side dish were sauteed in olive oil
with red onions, then doused in a balsamic vinegar dressing. My partner's penne carbonara was pronounced so-so. I asked our waitress for advice on pudding and she raved about
the crème brûlée. She was right. Crème brûlée is a simple dish but more often than not it's done really badly. This had beautifully thin, cream-textured custard with lots of vanilla seeds
and a wafer-like topping. Wine list is globe-trotting with around a dozen whites and reds. Mark-ups are on the high side. (2004).
£50 for dinner. Open 7 days.
The Ubiquitous Chip, 12 Ashton Lane, Glasgow. Phone: 0141 334 5007
"The Chip" is a venerable linchpin of the Glasgow fine dining scene. At the helm for 30 years, owner Ronnie Clydesdale
may be the father of modern Scottish cuisine, but there is still plenty to like about this operation. The Chip offers a very attractive package of food, wine and atmosphere.
The verdant conservatory courtyard is still my favourite of its many dining spaces, and a great place to enjoy their terrific value Sunday lunch. An appetising little cup of cullen skink (a
creamy soup, laden with chunks of smoked fish) sets the tone for a Scottish-flavoured but eclectic menu. My
starter - new season carrots braised with cardamom and wrapped in spinach, served on a creamy juniper sauce - was inventive and superbly executed. The loin of
herbed free-range pork was served with crunchy wok-fried pak choi, and dessert was a comforting and calorific pavlova crammed with fresh Scottish raspberries. The Chip suffers from a bit of
inconsistency, and not all of the eclectic partnerships work, but with its unique atmosphere, comprehensive wine list extensive collection of single malts, it deserves its following. (2008)
£60 for lunch, £90 for dinner. Open 7 days.
Ayrshire
Braidwood's, by Dalry, Ayrshire. Phone: 01294 833 544 Map
A recent makeover has given one of my favourite British restaurants a glamorous new look, but Keith and Nicola Braidwood are doing exactly what they do best; serving up some of Scotland's
greatest cooking in a relaxed, welcoming atmosphere. Braidwoods gained a Michelin star in 2000, and were simultaneously the
AA's "Best Restaurant in Scotland". Their informal restaurant is in a converted farm cottage which nestles in the lush Ayrshire country side. They use the best
seasonal local produce and traditional techniques to create really superb food. A typical meal might include a brilliant lobster ravioli in a rich, herb infused, shellfish jus,
a beautiful, palate-cleansing terrine of citrus fruits, melt-in-the-mouth roast loin of red deer on a bed of caramelised shallots and finally, a trio of raspberry desserts: three jewel-like little
miniatures of perfection. The wine list has been evolving over recent years and is now one of Scotland's most interesting, including a very well chosen selection of half bottles and a
selection of mature Bordeaux and Burgundy at reasonable mark-ups. There is always a very warm welcome and touches such
as home made chocolates with coffee add even more to the experience. I'll declare an interest here as the Braidwoods and I present special food and wine dinners together, but make no mistake: this is a gem of a place that displays remarkably
high and consistent quality. It has become the standard by which I measure all Scottish restaurants. (2008)
£60 for lunch, £100 for dinner. Open Tuesday dinner to Sunday lunch.
Another extremely fine seafood restaurant, this one spectacularly sited right on the working harbour of this West Coast town. Gulls
wheel over-head and a charming back-drop is formed by the fishing boats that to-and-fro constantly. The restaurant itself is
a converted pumping station, with a vast, vaulted ceiling. Bare stone walls are almost entirely taken up with a collection of yacht-building and Americas Cup memorabilia.
The menu is seasonal, reflecting the best of the current catch. Choices are restricted to 4 or 5 per course, very heavily biased
towards fish and seafood. I had a plump, soft, ravioli of lobster, bound with salmon mousse, and served in a seafood sauce. For my
main course I opted for char-grilled tuna on a bed of noodles with a sauce nero (cuttle-fish ink sauce). The tuna was a little
over-cooked (I like it pink) but it was tasty. My partner's pan-fried brill was pronounced excellent. A dish of market vegetables was
included. Puddings and cheeses are pretty good too, though maybe not McCallum's real forte. The wine list is short, sound but not
exciting. In all, a restaurant that is strong when it keeps things simple - and has a great situation. (2005)
£45 for lunch, £65 for dinner. Closed Sunday dinner and Monday.
Argyle
Port Appin: Airds Hotel, Argyle. Phone: 01631 730236 Map
The Allan family raised their small luxury hotel to international fame, and since they sold up, new owners Shaun and Jenny McKivragan have continued the good work with 3 AA rosettes for the restaurant and a
Hotel Chef of the Year award for Paul Burns in the kitchen. Airds sits facing the ruggedly beautiful Loch Linnhe with views from its delightful gardens to a little lighthouse and the
slate-blue Morven hills beyond. The picture-postcard setting and simple whitewashed exterior belie the luxury within. Public rooms are traditional
with plump sofas, books, games, the tick of grandfather clocks and a multitude of cosy corners to take tea or sip an after-dinner malt. Rooms were already extremely comfortable (this is a Relais & Châteaux property)
but there has been a substanial programme of upgrading to bring 21st century chic, with limestoned 'spa' bathrooms, falt-screen TVs, wi-fi, et al. The restaurant is excellent, with an innate understanding of balance and
classical techniques, married to very definite flavours and emphasis on the finest Scottish
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ingredients. My starter of seared breast of squab pigeon in a pastry shell, doused in wild mushrooms and with a lobe of seared foie-gras on top, was typical
of two dinners studded with highlights. A main course of baked halibut with a crab crust, came with a pungent but never over-powering herb mash. Desserts included a beautiful pistachio and
chocolate soufflé, served with a jug of chocolate sauce to pour into the freshly cracked crust. Coffee and petit-fours are taken back in the cosseting tranquility of one of the lounges.
Airds is a very grown-up sort of place, and whilst the welcome could not be warmer or more charming, it has a hushed atmosphere that some might describe as
rather formal. I'd disagree: formality is often a state of mind, and a weekend break at Airds is one of the most relaxing and |
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Kirroughtree House, near Newton Stewart. Phone: 01671 402141
This handsome private country house dates from 1719. Robert Burns was once a frequent house guest and recited poetry from the staircase to fellow guests in the oak-panelled lounge. A hotel since the
1950's, this is an absolute retreat from the stresses of modern life. It is a very grown-up hotel, with a rather mature clientelle by and large where the emphasis is on
relaxation. There is a croquet lawn and tennis court (both teaming with red squirrels, rabbits and grouse rather than people on my visits) and cosy lounges stuffed with
books and games. Rooms are fantastically comfortable and huge, and filled with light from large bay windows that afford stunning
views of the Galloway countryside. The evening menu and wine list is placed in your room each afternoon, so you can do a little forward planning. The food is sophisticated and
good. Little appetisers and amuse-bouche are included, then recently a boned quail stuffed with foie-gras on a bed of garlic creamed potato, followed by an excellent fillet steak with
thick-cut chips and sautéed vegetables. A fine pear tart with cinnamon ice-cream led on to petit-fours taken in the lounge with coffee. The wine list is very good, with some rare and well-priced gems like
Leoville-Poyferré 1961 or d'Yquem 1979, both leaving change from £150 if you are feeling rich. It may be too middle-aged and qiuet for some, but attention to detail makes Kirroughtree special,
with good food a bonus. (2005)
Dinner, bed and breakfast from £80 - £100 per person per night.
