To Upper Bloem restaurant on Main Road Green Point, opposite the Cape Town Stadium, for lunch on Saturday. They were offering a Restaurant Week special and we wanted to return after our last visit, which was for the launch of the De Wetshof Limestone Hill Chardonnay in August
We were quite early at 12.15 so they were not busy, but it did liven up later on
There is an open kitchen where
you can see Chef Andre Hill and his team preparing the food. He is the co-owner
with Henry Vigar of La Mouette. If you are wondering about the name, Chef Andre
grew up in Upper Bloem road in the Bo Kaap. To quote from their website:
"Offering a selection of small plates comprising seasonal fare, Upper
Bloem’s terroir approach extends beyond simply using local produce. It
creatively refers to the uniqueness of Cape Town and draws inspiration from the
port city’s mix of cultures and the influence that the confluence of people has
had on local cuisine. Diners can expect to see modern techniques being applied
to old favourites; a fine dining experience in a relaxed setting and a
delectable journey of sharing plates reminiscent of the feeling of ‘home’"
The special Restaurant Week menu
John ordered a 450ml Striped Horse Lager from the Craft Beer list at R45
John ordered a 450ml Striped Horse Lager from the Craft Beer list at R45
He says the beers on the list are all good
Lynne had a pichet of Protea
Pinot Grigio at R50
The wine list is small and not inexpensive; there is the
option of wines 'by the glass' served in a pichet
We think they need to add a
dry rosé to the list, the food calls loudly for it
Chef Henri Vigar is famous for his
small croquettes and these continue the delight
(they were substituted for the
Cape Malay onions on the menu). Boerenkaas cheese sauce,
melting in the middle
of crisp deep fried bitterballen with a spicy mayonnaise
The next plate was tiny morsels
of deep fried battered hake with just pickled cucumber,
sweet potato crisps
and tiny pancakes
The plating is enticing and
fresh. This was an unctuous ostrich carpaccio, furled rather than flat,
generous in portion, in flavour and in texture, topped with crisp onion flakes,
with roasted ostrich mayonnaise, leaves and radish slices
Lynne’s Carpaccio came with
shimeji mushrooms which added a lot to the dish,
both in flavour and in texture
A Salomi is a South African
snack consisting of curry-filled roti flat bread
Chef had changed this to a
battered and deep fried beetroot leaf.
The flavour of the potato and courgette
curry is so familiar to locals
and it is served with a mint yogurt raita. It
was however quite small and fragile
and impossible to pick up and roll, so we
used knives and forks
Very enjoyable
They very kindly brought John a substitute dish as the next dish had mushrooms in it
It was a Braised Cauliflower biriani with pistachio nuts and pomegranate aruls
Smoked Duck ham with sliced
beetroot, salad leaves, onion, fresh coriander and dressing;
"Ouma's onder
die Kombers" (Grandma is under the blankets) on grilled baby gem lettuce
And
not a mushroom in sight?!
A conundrum. Wonderful triple
cooked and divinely crisp potatoes. But then drowned
in a flavourful sauce
which makes them soggy. Could this not come separately? Please
The sauce was
flavoured with Muizenberg sour figs (Mesembryanthemum edule)
and was
accompanied by burnt chard leaves, crème fraiche and a Bhadji crumb
Dessert was described as frozen
naartjie (clementine) topped with deep fried curry leaves
They were indeed
frozen quite solid and had the texture of fine polenta
They were rolled in
dried and powdered naartjie skin. Interesting
Chef Andre still busy plating
and preparing for service in the kitchen
We thoroughly enjoyed our meal; the
different and familiar textures and flavours do delight,
captivate and
sometimes puzzle, but it is an adventure that we recommend
From the menu
Our bill for lunch
© John & Lynne Ford, Adamastor & Bacchus 2018