Megabites: Wildfire

Gourmet-Pizza-wildfire

Now part of the Maxims group, Wildfire in Soho East has been revamped ahead of a hopefully warm sunny summer. The open fronted outlet looks across the harbour and has a nice relaxed feel to it with a loft-style interior. A revised menu features a range of Napoletana-inspired pizzas with a fluffy crust, superfood healthy salads, pastas, steaks… There’s a semi-buffet lunch with 5 entrée options from HK$128 up, Monday through Saturday. On Sunday and public holidays a $128 and up brunch which includes includes oven-baked frittatas runs from 11am till 2:30pm. They also offer delivery.
Wildfire Soho East: G/F, 45 Tai Hong Street, Lei King Wan, Sai Wan Ho. Tel: 2261 2999

wildfire-Wine-Dinner-march

Wildfire in Causeway Bay is launching a monthly four course wine pairing dinner starting on the 23 March. The $428 four course menu features a Cold Cut Platter – mortadella, salami, parma ham and smoked duck breast – paired with Domain Road Pinot Noir 2009 from Central Otago, New Zealand; Mini Calzone of smoked ham, spinach, mushrooms, mozzarella paired with Clyder Park Pinot Noir 2007 from Victoria, Australia; USDA Black Angus Ribs with black truffle mashed potato and gravy paired with Torlesse Waipara Pinot Noir 2012 from Waipara, New Zealand. Dessert is a Sticky Banana Cake with vanilla ice-cream. The wine pairings and food are ok and the menu offers wine novices a relatively inexpensive way to learn how different wines can compliment a dish. A representative of the distributor will be available to answer questions about the wine.

Wildfire Causeway Bay: 59-65 Paterson Street, Causeway Bay

Megabites: Goût de / Good France – 21 March

good france logo

After a successful first event in 2015 the Alain Ducasse inspired Goût de France / Good France returns to tease and tantalise tastebuds globally. Organized by the French government with the intent to showcase the French way of life, regional produce, and France as a tourist destination. From Bangladesh to Fiji, Syria to Lettonia over 1,000 chefs on 5 continents are creating a menu to celebrate French gastronomy and joie de vivre on the 21 March.

Locally 22 restaurants are participating at a wide range of price points, with some menu offerings only available on the 21 March, while others are on offer all week. Some of the menu’s are online at www.goodfrance.com – although sadly the French government no longer seem to recognise Hong Kong as we’re lumped in with China.

Restaurant Akrame
G/F, 9B Ship Street, Wanchai
Tel: 2528 5068 http://akrame.com.hk/

Bibo
163 Hollywood Road, Sheung Wan
Tel: 2956 3188 www.bibo.hk

Brasserie on the Eighth
Pacific Place, 88 Queensway, Hong Kong
Tel: 2822 8803 http://www.conraddining.com/en/brasserie.html

Caprice
Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, 8 Finance Street, Central
Tel: 3196 8860 http://www.fourseasons.com/hongkong/dining/restaurants/caprice/#

La Cabane Wine Bistro
62, Hollywood Road, Central
Tel: 2776 6070 http://lacabane.hk/

Chez Raymond de Paris
G/f, 183D, Po Tung Road, Sai Kung, N.T.
Tel: 6484 1400 www.chezraymonddeparis.com

Cococabana
Shek O Beach Bldg., Shek O
Tel: 2812 1826 http://toptables.com.hk/coco/

Epure
Shop 403, Level 4, Ocean Centre, Harbour City,Tsim Sha Tsui
Tel: 3185 8338 www.epure.hk

Fleur de Sel
Shop 2J, Po Foo Building, Foo Ming Street, Causeway Bay
Tel: 2805 6678 http://frenchcrepes.com.hk/fleur-de-sel/

Jules Bistro
King-Inn Mansion, 13-15 Yik Yam Street, Happy Valley
Tel: 2838 1115www.bistrojules.com

Metropolitain
G/F 46 High Street, Sai Ying Pun
Tel: 6271 6102 www.french-creations.com/metropolitain

Otto Restaurant & Bar
16-17/F, L’hart, 487-489 Lockhart Road, Causeway Bay
Tel: 2893 8617 www.facebook.com/OttoRestaurantAndBar

Petrus
Island Shangri-La, Pacific Place, Supreme Court Road, Central
Tel: 2820 8590 www.shangri-la.com/hongkong/islandshangrila/dining/restaurants/restaurant-petrus/

Pierre
5 Connaught Road, Central
Tel: 2825 4001 www.mandarinoriental.com/hongkong/fine-dining/pierre

Privé
Rua dos Viscondes de Paco de Arcos, Macau
Tel: +853 8861 7241 www.sofitelmacau.com/en/prive

Rive and the Deck
310 Gloucester Road, Causeway Bay
Tel: 2839 3327 www.parklane.com.hk/riva-and-the-deck

La Saison by Jacques Barnachon
2/F, The Cameron, 33 Cameron Road, Tsimshatsui, Kowloon
Tel: 2789 8000 www.lasaisonbyjb.com

Serge et Le Phoque
G/F, Shop B2, 3 Wanchai Road, Wanchai
Tel: 5465 2000 www.facebook.com/Serge-et-le-phoque

Spoon by Alain Ducasse
InterContinental Hong Kong, 18 Salisbury Road, Kowloon
Tel: 2313 2256
https://hongkong-ic.intercontinental.com/dining/spoon.php

Stan Café
Shop 505, 5/F, Camel Road, Stanley
Tel: 2324 9008 www.stancafe.hk

La Table de Patrick
6/F Cheung Hing Commercial Building, 37-43 Cochrane Street, Central
Tel: 2541 1401 www.chezpatrick.hk

Le bistro Winebeast
G/F & 1/F Tai Yip Building, 141 Thomson Road, Wanchai
Tel: 2782 6689 www.wine-beast.com/le-bistro

Taste Festival FAIL!

taste-festival-hk-fail

For those thinking of attending Taste at the Central Harbourfront, then sadly I suggest you think again if you haven’t already bought a ticket. Especially if you’re imagining something like last year’s enjoyable and diverse Wine & Dine Festival.

At Taste there are just 12 restaurants: Aberdeen Street Social, Amber, Arcane (Sunday), Bibo, Café Gray Deluxe, Chino (Thursday & Friday), Duddell’s, Serge et Le Phoque, The Ocean, Tin Lung Heen, Tosca, Yardbird and Ronin and visiting UK restaurant Duck & Waffle (Saturday). The organisers IMG are hoping to attract 3,000 people per four hour session. If you are keen to try all 12 outlets then you’ll be hoping to get served every 20 minutes as will the other 250+ customers at each booth. Even the most efficient McDonalds in Hong Kong would be struggling to serve 750 people every hour for four hours straight; and they’re a restaurant specifically designed to serve fast food. The 12 outlets at Taste are restaurants used to serving 100 or so people in an evening, with care taken in the cooking and presentation of the food. And with rents for a booth at over $20,000, the dishes aren’t cheap ranging from $50 to $380 for mini-portions on a paper plate…

Each restaurant is offering 3 dishes and one signature dish, as the organisers IMG didn’t ask the participants to prepare any dishes for the media to taste it’s impossible for bc to comment on the individual offerings. On the opening night an outlet ran out of its signature dish within just over an hour having prepared less than 30 portions. Others ran out of their ‘main’ dishes before 8pm. One outlet spoke of preparing 300 of each main dish per session – so only 1 in 10 of IMG’s projected session visitors might be able to taste it…

Arrive early and expect to queue and queue… Even the Event Director Simon Wilson thinks you’ll only be able to taste dishes from 5 or 6 outlets per 4 hour session. Thursday was the first night, and the weather meant only a couple of hundred visitors yet there were long lines all around. Service at all the restaurants was friendly but disorganised with ordering and food arrival taking several minutes per customer. Late in any session I expect the food choices to be extremely limited if non-existent.

The place feels very sterile, there’s no area to sit and congregate and share food stories. There are no tables on the event ‘lawn’ (more like a squishy puddle in the rain) so the few standing only tables inside the booths were crammed and with staff working flat-out to serve food; clearing the tables of piling rubbish was an oft forgotten afterthought.

The restaurants are spaced around the exterior, while the ‘spine’ of Taste features various wine, craft beer and food produce outlets. Drinks are at bar prices and nothing that you can’t find easily around town. Although La Boucherie and Golden Pig are offering some tasty sausages while Eclair! has some interesting savoury eclairs and chocolates.

The lack of restaurant booths is Taste’s main problem. 20 or 30 outlets (there’s no shortage of ‘high end’ outlets locally) would have allowed diners to spend less time queueing and more time tasting – which after all is supposedly the idea behind the event.

This is not IMG’s first Taste event, they have organised many around the world, but Taste HK feels like a rort, designed to fleece it’s visitors of as many dollars as possible… Looking to cash in on the premium names and reputations of outlets with dishes that are expensive for what’s on offer. $280 for a lobster roll eaten standing in a puddle under an umbrella… Maybe it’s different overseas but here it’s definitely an event for those with money to burn. For the rest of us, save your money and go enjoy the dishes as the chef imagined you would eat them, sitting down with time to appreciate all their subtleties and complexities of flavour, texture and taste.

Le Pain Quotidien Opening Party – 9 March, 2016

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Le Pain Quotidien opened worldwide branch number 242 in Wanchai on 9 March, 2016 and celebrated with music, champagne and bread.
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Megabites: BrewDog, Butchers Club, Khana Khazana

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BrewDog
Craft beer brewery BrewDog opens it’s second bar in Asia on the 4 February at 19 Hollywood Road, Central. The bar is the 45th for this fast expanding brewery which only tapped it’s first pint in 2007. BrewDog UK staff Neil and Lucy, in town to supervise the opening, are passionate craft beer advocates and the ethos of producing quality beers has – taste them yourself to see if you agree or not – survived the rapid scaling of volumes over the last eight years.

BrewDog Hong Kong has 14 beers on draft including regulars like their signatures Punk IPA (5.4%), Elvis Juice (6.7%) Jackhammer (7.2%) and experimentals like the delicious AB:19 (13.1%). The beers are served in UK pint, 2/3 pint, half pint and 1/3 pint glasses. A UK pint is 568ml compared to an American ‘pint’ which is 473ml and a Hong Kong ‘pint’ which can be as small as 335-385ml. When asked why the different serving sizes… it’s about keeping the quality of the beer. A customer won’t drink a glass of AB:19 at 13.1% in the same way as they’ll drink a pint of Punk…

There’s a range of food including delicious french dip sandwiches, lamb cheese fondue, jalapeno cheese bread and glazed donuts to be enjoyed with your beer.
BrewDog: 19 Hollywood Road, Central. Tel: 2219 9905 www.facebook.com/BrewDogHK

Fei Jai Burger

Fei Jai Burger
For Chinese New Year The Butchers Club have a new option on their ‘secret menu’ the Fei Jai burger. Stacked inside a classic pineapple bun the ‘Fei Jai’ consists of a five-spice pork belly burger patty with a char siu glaze, seared luncheon meat, a crispy wonton, Chinese cabbage and coriander salad, spring onion mayo and a fried egg.

A veritable feast of Hong Kong flavours the pineapple bun holds together well as a burger bun, for health safety reasons pork has to be cooked longer than beef so the meat comes out a little drier than a traditional beef patty but the fried egg and the mayo lubricate the burger well. Luncheon meat and wontons are not what you’d expect to find in a burger but the crispyness and flavour add well to create a unique and delicious burger.

The Fei Jai burger ($88) is available until the 10th February at all three The Butchers Club Burgers outlets – Wanchai, Central and K11 in TST. www.thebutchers.club

KK-CNY-2016

Eat What You Want, Pay What You Want
Khana Khazana’s unique Chinese New Year “Eat What You Want, Pay What You Want” buffet promotion returns for the seventh year. Every Monday evening in February from 6-10pm the Wanchai Indian Vegetarian restaurant dinner buffet allows customers to pay what they want for the buffet via an empty red packet included with the bill. Drinks are not included and must be paid for in full. The buffet includes dishes like sprout bean salad, boondi raita, meduwada, pakoda, hariyali kebab, paneer butter masala, jeera aloo, dal punjabi, sevian kheer and roti’s and naan are served at the table.
Khana Khazana: 1/F, Dannies House, 20 Luard Road, Wanchai. Tel: 81081070 www.khanakhazana.com.hk

Morino Yose Soju Launch @ Torihana – 2 February, 2016

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Morino Yose Soju’s Hong Kong launch @ Torihana in Wanchai – where the smooth flavour went well with Torihana signature fried chicken.
Click on any photo to see the full gallery.

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Osteria Felice Grand Opening – 28 January, 2016

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Osteria Felice celebrated it’s grand opening with a party on the 28 January, 2016. Executive Chef Brian Moore and his hard working team served up a selection of Osteria’s menu and some delicious cocktails to keep guests fed and watered.
Click on any photo for the full gallery.

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Megabites: Sai Wan Ho Tortillas and Roti

Many of Hong Kong’s commuter towns are soulless towers filled with thousands of people living on a concrete platform or a-top a shopping mall. Carefully regulated and controlled they’re not places that allow HongKongers entrepreneurial spirit and hard work to thrive. To find that you’ve got to look for the older buildings. In Sai Wan Ho for example one such building close to the MTR is Tai On Building (57-58 Shau Kei Wan Road) whose ground floor is a warren of shops and businesses including many small restaurants and food stands. Two among these are Sek Ho Di and ·蜜思手抓餅 – both open around midday.

sai-wan-ho-tortila-shop

Sek Ho Di, located at shop A63A has been open for almost a year and serves up tasty savoury and sweet tortillas Hong Kong style. The savoury options are char sui and mozzarella in BBQ sauce ($20) and chicken and mozzarella in hot sauce ($20) while those looking for a sweet tortilla can enjoy green tea and mozzarella ($16) or citrus paste and mozzarella ($16). The 12inch tortillas are filling and flavourful – although the char siu would be better with a bit more meat – and make a perfect lunch, snack or meal. The lemon and mozzarella is a tasty not too sweet dessert perfect after a bowl of rice or noodles.

sai-wan-ho-tortila-open

·蜜思手抓餅 located at shop A3-A7 offers a massive range of stuffed roti. Take care when ordering as the owner speaks no English, although there is an English menu. They have two types of roti plain and taro, you’ll need to ask for taro when you order otherwise you’ll be served a regular. Fillings on offer run the full gamut from egg to duck to tuna to tinned mushrooms.

egg-waffle-cooking2

I ordered a sausage, mushroom and bacon roti ($22) but as the owner cracked an egg onto a roti that already contained a slice of cheese I realised he hadn’t understood the bilingual menu. However the stand is small enough that you can point to the fillings you want. Egg and cheese instead of mushroom was fine and the resulting roti was hot, delicious and full of flavour. As you can see from the photo they don’t stint on the fillings. The taro adds a different texture and flavour to the roti, it’s not any ‘better’ than a plain roti but visually it looks awesome. Surprisingly and perhaps disappointingly there are no sweet options – maybe because there’s a lovely egg waffle stand next door – but a taro red bean roti or a plain roti with condensed milk and peanut butter would be delicious…

egg-waffle-combos

Neither shop is perhaps good enough to warrant a special visit to Sai Wan Ho but if you’re in the area both are well worth checking out, as are the other food stands that fill the building.