New Moon is nothing if not an international advertisement for the hungry virtues of virginity and young people can’t get enough of it
The Twilight Saga: New Moon
Theatre
A smart, prickly and rewarding view of sexual and emotional confusion
Cock
Restaurants
Kitchen W8 is a bargain for this area, if such sophistication is what you crave
Kitchen W8
Too long and drawn out but very entertaining with excellent special effects
This is a peculiar play and does not work for me. Some of it is very funny but there are real flaws
Alex has a strong powerful voice and was faultless, she is far better now than she was on the X-Factor
London,




Description: "Gastronomic finesse, but without a fine-dining price-tag", has made a smash foodie hit of this "spectacular" Soho yearling, where "unfussy" (but "intriguing") dishes are complemented by "exceptional-quality" wines (available by the carafe); the setting, though, strikes some reporters as rather "cramped" or "canteen-like".
Food:
Service:
Ambience:
Phone: 020 7734 4545
Website: http://www.arbutusrestaurant.co.uk
Open: Mon - Sat 12pm - 2:30 & 5pm - 10:30pm
Sun 12:30pm - 3.30 & 5:30pm - 9:30pm
Dress code: None
Good for: Good food, Ambience.
Payment options: All major cards except Diners
Waiting game: Service at Arbutus is both attentive and friendly
Forty quid for a proper lunch for two is about as low as it goes for anything worth eating. You can easily overshoot this mark at Wagamama, say, or Pizza Express, two of the obvious venues for decent refuelling.
Yet, at the moment, you can enjoy a set menu of three courses at £15.50, plus a glass each of good wine, at one of the best restaurants in town, Arbutus - and still get out of the door for precisely that. It's an astonishing deal, given how good a meal this Michelin-starred place delivers within these constraints. For though the ingredients are economical, the cooking remains top-notch.
There are only two choices for each course, quite proper to the bistro ethic (anyway, variety is overrated). To start, there might be an unusual cut of sliced meat. This week there was warm sliced lamb breast with pecorino cheese - thin, tasty curls of meat, beautifully dressed with a parsley sauce and an endive salad, radishes and watercress.
Winter vegetable soup with Baux de Provence olive oil contained potatoes, carrots, kale, lentils, leeks, some cubes of creamy white cheese as well as the aromatic oil - and was wonderfully good and restorative. Each vegetable had retained its own different texture, having been carefully assembled and not stewed into a uniform sludge, as happens in lazier kitchens.
For mains, there's fish or meat. Cornish pollack and smoked eel risotto sounds a strange combination but works a treat. The creamy, yielding grains of the risotto were intensely flavoured with small pieces of the one expensive ingredient, the eel.
Everything's pollack these days and it's never been a species to make the heart leap - you tend to eat it wishing it was cod, although perhaps grateful it's not coley - but this big, perfectly judged chunk made it seem for once a highly worthwhile fish.
Caillettes - shyly glossed as "old-fashioned meatballs" - came simply with carrots and potato purée. But both the vegetables were terrific, the carrots having absorbed the buttery cooking water to become intensely flavoured.
Caillettes are a speciality of southeast France, traditionally made when pigs are slaughtered. These contained rough-chopped heart, liver, lung and spleen, as well as shoulder, combined with a green vegetable (here, cabbage), wrapped in crepine (veiny, white caul fat), and browned in the oven.
Perhaps the nearest equivalent in English is faggot. They were just extraordinarily savoury: wonderfully musky and meaty without being too overtly offal-based.
To finish, there's cheese or a pudding. A fine slice of Morbier came with nicely arranged bread and dressed leaves of Little Gem.
The Floating Island here is perfect: fluffy egg whites in a surprisingly geometrical shape, topped with pink praline, sitting in a superbly light, vanilla custard.
It's impossible to imagine this old French classic better done. It makes an ideal end to a meal that feels well-balanced and properly thought through in every way: both tasting good and in thoroughly good taste.
The front room, it must be said, is pretty noisy - better to be seated at the back. But service is friendly and attentive and there's no sense of being a second-class customer if you don't splash out. Tap water is offered first, and quantities of great bread.
The excellent wine list offers 250ml carafes of every bottle, beginning with a Côtes de Gascogne white or a juicy Vin de Pays du Gard Syrah-Grenache at £4.25.
Confine yourself to one of these, resist wandering off into the carte - and you've got as good a restaurant bargain as I know.
Details are correct at the time of publication - please check with venue before booking.
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