Wednesday, July 02, 2014

Eating Indian at The Roti, Sea Point

We love to eat good Indian food and when a new place opened up in Sea Point, we headed straight there. Sadly, it was Valentine’s Day and they were totally full, always a good sign. We finally got there recently and wanted to tell you about it. Roti is on Regent Road, opposite the Sea Point Post Office. It was an estate agent's premises and has now been converted into a fairly large and airy restaurant. They do cater for large tour buses, but the food is good and they serve authentic Indian food, not Cape Malay or Durban curries.
The entrance, with security
Plainly but tastefully decorated. 
Poppadoms come free with two dips when you sit down. Our bill for 5 dishes and 2 steamed rice came to only R400 before service. We took our own wine and were not charged corkage
We sat at the back nearer the kitchen, as it was a very cold evening. The restaurant was almost empty when we arrived at 7.30 but soon filled up. Service was polite, but a little slow as a large celebratory Indian group arrived. Perhaps a good place for an early supper.
John chose a lamb Rogan Josh – he always orders this when first visiting, as he wants to see how well they prepare it. This was a good one. Lynne originally fancied having an aubergine curry, but the one they serve is a puree rather than pieces of Aubergine. So she had a Prawn Malvani, one of their specials, which was cooked medium hot for her, even though it is normally a 3 chilli dish. It tasted authentic with a good thick sauce, but the prawns were very small and sparse for the R130 charged. We had this with a small bowl of steamed rice
Our vegetarian friends had an Aloo Mint Tikki (potato and pea fritters) as a starter, the Aubergine curry and a Dhingri Dolma (mushrooms and paneer) with steamed rice. Ronnie goes there often for lunch and is working his way through the fish and vegetarian menu.
We had not intended to have dessert, but they had cooked a huge quantity of cardamom rice pudding for the wedding party and they very kindly gave us each a bowl of it. Not to everyone’s taste, John still has bad memories of boarding school rice pudding but the rest of us enjoyed it very much. Not too sweet, creamy and beautifully fragrant from the cardamom spice
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014

Lunch at Ocean Jewels, Woodstock

If you love fresh fish, you will know how lamentably difficult it can be to find in this huge seaside city. And if you care about sustainable resources, you will want to buy and eat only green rated SASSI fish. Julie Carter sells her fish in the market at the Biscuit Mill on Saturdays, where she also cooks up some great seafood delights. But you don’t have to wait till Saturday, because Julie has a shop, Ocean Jewels in The Woodstock Exchange on Albert Road, where you can buy fish to take home and also enjoy a great lunch, as we did this week. Julie’s father and husband are also local fishermen, so you know the fish is fresh
There are lots of trendy shops and businesses in this building. Parking is a small challenge
Ocean Jewels, on the ground floor of the Woodstock Exchange. For warmer weather, Julie has some outside benches. And some decorative seagulls
As many people in the area eat here regularly, Julie has quite a varied selection on the menus and she does change them often. This is one
Julie Carter, proprietor of Ocean Jewels, behind the order counter
Another chalk board menu. There are Banting options. Sweet potato chips instead of the usual wedges
The fresh fish price list and the SASSI board
Julie invited us to lunch and then produced some lovely food. One look at those crispy wedges and Banting was forgotten. This was John’s choice of the fresh angelfish with calamari combo – R50. It came with avocado slices, a spicy tartar sauce and a wedge of lemon. There are other condiments on the table
Lynne’s choice was the Salmon and Calamari combo – R70
A taster of the smoked snoek samoosas; the lightest samoosas we have had in many years, with great flavour. They are not huge parcels of doughy pastry - R5 each
The light and bright restaurant. They do not have a licence, so you could take your own wine. They sell other non alcoholic beverages, but each table has a jug of water, with slices of lemon, and glasses
This is the Angelfish taco, served with a good salad - R50
The Tuna and Calamari Combo with a salad – R60
People are very happy to share tables. We were happy to share with Linda Harding of Squashed Tomato media consultancy, whom we know, and she was having lunch with a friend, Leila Badsha, who was introducing her to Ocean Jewels
Julie with two of her staff
and the others who help to make the magic. We will definitely be back
We left with a large piece of beautiful fresh salmon
The centre is full of interesting artworks
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2014