Thursday, 26 February 2015

Don Giovanni Borg

If you ever find yourself travelling overland between Mainland Europe and Denmark you will either cross the bridge or take the ferry in Germany. The ferry is shorter and more expensive. Most people don't realise that the port of Puttgarden is actually on an Island called Fehmarn, which is linked to the mainland by a bridge. Roughly half way between the bridge and the port, to the East of the E47 is the small town of Burg (Auf Fehmarn). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fehmarn.
After a long drive we decided to stay as close to the Ferry as possible for the night before setting off earlyish the next day for the last 600 km of our journey. The town greeted us with an incredible display of Xmas lights and a 'kerstmarkt' still in business, though clearly it was just mates hanging out at the end of a day of fun.
Most of the stalls were out of food or had closed for the night but the mulled wine and the beer were as always in Germany seemingly unabating. But it was December and cold so when we had shared the one sausage that was left at the stall we had chosen and drunk 2 cold beers we looked for our companions who had adjourned inside.

I had hoped that they would be in the Greek restaurant recommended by the hotel and also nearest to the marktet. We found them further along in an Italian. We walked into the restaurant, saw them, headed towards them and began to move to a larger table. The waiter came through and offered us a menu. We said "thank you" as the other three practically yelled
"No!" We looked at them and said that we respectively wanted pizza and pasta as half a sausage was not going to keep us going til the breakfast buffet.

What followed was a masterpiece of salesmanship with a basis in a product of the highest quality that needs to be shared. Disappointment with my companions made me  determined to repay the impeccable hosting with a massive review for the BEST alio olio I have had out in YEARS! Absolutely delicious.

Great service - the waiter could sell sand to a Bedouin! He sold us an amazing anti pasti for 5 in which every single thing was exquisite and scrumptious.

We ordered a salami pizza - which someone who 'wasn't hungry' scoffed quickly without offering any one else a taste! He threw a mini wobbly because there was no oregano (with an American accent). The waiter came with a small bowl of fresh super aromatic herb. When that had been added 'his majesty' said it was  the best pizza he'd had in more years than he could remember.
The rucola pizza that was piquant and still tasty the next night! (don'tknow why they call it rucola when the main ingrdiend is ham) And of course my alio olio.
The wine was pretty good (though I'm not over keen on Chianti).

Then came a tiramisu for 5! - I rarely do desserts and had definitely over eaten to finish my pasta - but it was it was ordered and eaten by a dement who claimed to have a gluten allergy, shared by someone who
'couldn't eat a thing' but clearly felt obligated to support idiocy! It lasted less than 5 minutes and looked like a fairy tale come true!



I had ordered a glass of house red wine, which came in a small carafe of about 1/4 litre, very passable. We also ordered a bottle of Chianti classico, 2 large beers, 2 small beers and one specialist beer.

The whole thing was ridiculously cheap, worth much much more than we paid!

It seems quite incredible to me but their rating on google is 2.2.  - 19 reviews mostly 1 star. It may have gone up slightly thanks to my addition.

Having 'read' some of the reviews (they're in German) I get the idea their delivery service sucks



Don Giovanni  Am Markt 28 23769 Burg auf Fehmarn

Saturday, 6 December 2014

Café Route Hackney

Great location, beautiful building, cool interior design. Lots of light, 2 glass walls, great hanging heaps of dried stuff along the bar. The staff were relatively friendly have definitely been treated worse.
I thought the place was a massive potential health hazard, food poisoning hovering at the edge of perception. As you come in the door all the salads are laid out, uncovered directly in the doorway. This means that every passing draught coats the salads as well as the coughs and splutters and general conversational comments of every individual who enters – YUK!
The meat looked great but I didn't have any and I didn't touch the salad they eventually brought having lied about the ingredients – more on that later.
The food is served on wooden platters - see first sentence previous paragraph – You can't put wood in the dish washer. Do they separate the meat boards from the salad boards? How do they clean them and what with? Where and how are they stored?
Service?
Well the waiters are all very pretty, great eye candy and on the surface very friendly, smiley, helpful. But I found the service all in all dire.
I asked if they had any salads that didn’t contain dairy, fruit or vinegar. I was told that the ‘Tabbouleh with cannelini beans’ fitted the criteria. She lied.
First we ordered drinks and then decided that we wanted something to eat. My companion had ordered tea and said she would like her tea after the food. It got to the point where we felt obligated to take the tea after they asked four times if we were ‘ready for it now?’. I did not like any of the food we ordered and the three people who asked my companion how she was finding the food studiously avoided asking me the same question.
They also made no enquiry when I asked (and had to ask twice) for them to take the (full bowl of) soup away. Just to rub in the shitty service when we asked for the bill the young woman ignored us and went to have a conversation for about 15 minutes with the spunky waiter who had just come on duty. When we reminded her she was more irritated (‘Oh yes, I forgot’) than apologetic.
Food
Actually the tabbouleh looked pretty good it had the right parsley to couscous ratio - very rare. However there were about three cannelini beans in my portion and to add insult to injury effing oodles of pomegranate in fact there was as much pink in the salad as green - YAK!
The soup on offer (the only other vegetarian dish with no dairy, fruit or vinegar) was carrot and coriander. The soup was way too salty in my opinion and there was no coriander in the soup itself only a garnish of fresh floating on top which pretty much disappeared in terms of flavour when stirred in.
The wine was OK and it looked like a cool place to hang.