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Grenville's Reviews

Grenville C. Over 60, Male, United Kingdom

Member since July 2005

Reviews written: 2 (2 voted helpful)

Hasn’t rated any restaurants this year.

Hasn't posted in the forum yet

La Poule au Pot (231 Ebury Street, London, SW1W 8UT)

Editor's pick

Over the years this restaurant has pretty much become my neighbourhood caff, going there it is a bit like putting on an old jacket, it is always as expected and somewhat reassuring in a turbulent world. Like many I have been going to the Poule au Pot since the days that it was located in Walton Sreet. and I suspect that many feel the same way.

The secret of the menu is not to order from it – except for the eponymous poule au pot and the steak and frites, which seem to be hand carved – but rather to listen to the day's specials which are extensive and occasionally unexpected, these daily specials tend also to be chea;per than the dishes on the printed menu.

They have a custom of serving house wine by the two litre bottle and charging for the amount drunk, they are quite fair about this. the house wine is perfectly good and suits the food well.

The managers are very efficient, always welcoming and ever helpful, the waiting staff, who seem to change quite a lot are interesting, they tend to be young and French and often they have real Gallic ‘attitude’. I quite like this as it is a change from the London norm and makes one feel as if you might just be in France not Pimlico.

Once I took some American friends there and that particular evening the waiters were charming for some reason, never having experienced this before and I was truly concerned. One of my guests suggested that perhaps the food had gone off or the chef had walked out or something, but everything turned out fine, fortunately it was a one-off.

This is a restaurant that you have to work at. After three visits most people are hooked for life and many consider it to be the most romantic restaurant in town. The decor is wonderful, it was until quite recent times that New Yorkers were paying huge sums to interior designers in order to capture a similar feel in their urban lofts.

i fully accept that the whole thing will not be to everyone's taste,, in fact I hesitated before writing this as it is now taking a day… More

November 2008

Overall:10
Food and Drink:7
Service:10
Atmosphere:10
Value for Money:10
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Skylon Restaurant (Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London, London, SE1 8XX)

Having been badly let down by Bel Canto who could not find enough opera singers in order to open and it being my wife's birthday i managed to get a last minute table at Skylon. Luck favouring a birthday-girl, we got a suddenly vacant front row table overlooking the embankment and over the Thames, The view was breathtakingly beautiful and must be the most romantic of any restaurant in London.
The restaurant itself is at one end of a vast open-plan room the other bit of the room being the brasserie section. We had table cloths the brasserie didn't. The noise level was tremendous, never experienced anything like it.
The first noticable thing was the utter charm of the staff, never in Britain have I been served by such people and for one moment I thought that they had all been trained by the Chedi Hotel in Muscat, totally amazing.
The starters were perfectly good, the main courses were turbot which was delicious and only ruined by being served with bacon and boiled broccoli. The other main was duck leg and breast which was good but was served with what appeared to be a creamy rice pudding with a weird taste – why?

Suddenly the people on the next table saw a mouse running across the floor heading towards another table, there was a lot of screaming by the women and laughter by the men. The very suave maitre d' at once came over and apologised.

Next came dessert which was a honey thing with iced cream, also we ordered crepes with raspberry sauce, it was perfecly good, cooked in front of us but in truth was pedestrian in taste, somehow it lacked any ‘bottom’ taste whatsoever.
When asked how i enjoyed the desserts I told the waiter that they were pretty much rubbish, at first he thought I was joking.

The wine list has lots by the glass and it is to their credit that when you order a 175ml glass of wine for £8 the same wine appears later in the list at £32.

The staff get the tips here, not the management who are on salaries.

All in all a mixed experience but the staff, the view… More

November 2008

Overall:6
Food and Drink:5
Service:10
Atmosphere:3
Value for Money:5
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