- Chefs, sex and Coca-Cola cupcakes
- Warm the winter away
- What's happening!
Food news
Don't chill in... chill out

Heather Parker believes it's every foodie's social and civic duty to support restaurants through the winter.

One of the sadly common sights of winter is an all-dressed-up-and-nowhere-to-go restaurant. Mood lighting, draped tables, kitchen staff busying away, waiters at attention, and just two or three uneasily scattered tables.

My feeling is, if you love food – you probably love eating out. Food is art and creativity, but restaurants are businesses with relatively modest profit margins (yes, really, the overheads are enormous).

Mostly, they have to be open for business six days a week, 52 weeks a year. If we ignore them for three or four months, during winter, because it's cold and/or wet outside, and we don't feel like braving it, they might not make it through to the summer.

So I'm saying that if you like to be able to choose from a wide selection of restaurants, be waited on by confident and experienced staff, and enjoy the creative output of a great kitchen, it's your social and civic duty to support them through the winter.

Me, I'm happy to sacrifice take-outs, make my own packed lunches for work, and limit my cappuccino orders. A meal at a good restaurant at least once a month makes a memory that any number of toasted cheese-and-hams from the corner cafe can’t match.

The really, really good thing about eating out in winter, though, is that restaurants go to great effort to coax us through the doors. I had an amazing meal at Societi Bistro at Cape Town's V&A Waterfront the other day, part of an inspired series from chef Dan Evans.

He's building well-priced menus around specific flavours. You've missed the menu inspired by chilli and Hartenberg (peppers piedmontese with goats cheese, followed by chilli con carne and sour cream, with a dessert of roasted pineapple and chilli ginger ice cream), and the one inspired by chocolate and Diemersfontein (prawns 'Acapulco'; grilled springbok loin with raspberry vinegar and bitter chocolate jus, and Parisian truffle cake).

But you're still in time for menus inspired by Zonnebloem and garlic (until July 10); Durbanville wines and – love this – quinces (July 18 to 24); and a menu inspired by Fleur du Cap and goats cheese the following week.

A bit of winter tongue-wagging

A bit of scandal about the chef, by the way. He's a truly interesting Englishman, lured to South Africa by Kitchen Cowboy Pete Goffe-Wood, who knew Evans from his own days of working in London. Evans came for Cassia, on Nitida wine estate in the Durbanville area. It's a joint venture including Goffe-Wood and chef-cum-conqueror-of-China's-Great-Wall, David Grier.

Evans – whose food at Cassia was reminiscent of the faux-brutal food of London darling Fergus Henderson's St John restaurant – comes with a great CV. Training from Joel Rubichon (France) and Alistair Little (UK), and a series of popular restaurants, including London’s iconic and achingly trendy The Fire Station.

Within what felt like weeks, though, Evans had gone from Cassia. Where? How? No-one's saying, but he was rumoured to have performed a deliciously dramatic offended chef routine that, once the dust had settled, was generally thought to be inconsistent with the set-up at Cassia; a mutually agreed parting of the ways was said to follow. Then he re-emerged at Societi Bistro.

So, I said to the waiter, hoping to get the lowdown: "Just how scary is Dan Evans?"

He looked bemused. Not scary at all, it transpires. "I've never even seen him in a bad mood."

Damn. Don’t you hate it when your drama gets popped?

Heather Parker is the editor of Health24 and Bride magazine. She is one of SA's most respected journalists, and a serious foodie to boot.

story by Heather Parker
image by Frans Goenewald

 
Only the rich can do that.
Only rich people like can afford to go out so much. The cost of living is sky rocketing and you want us to spend thousands on restaurants? - Paul
 
How about the restaurants lure us?
I will no longer support restaurants until they make their prices more reasonable... The other day I ate out, only to pay 12 rand for a 200ml can of coke. I ask you where the R8 mark-up comes in? That's way over 100% profit, I could buy a 2L for the same price - And don't even come in with you pay for the convenience (tips are the for that too)... There was a garage right next door, I could have taken 5 minutes to walk there and get more for my buck. I mean, You buy the can of coke, put it in your fridge and bring it to someone's table... does that warrant the mark-up? Same thing goes for the cost of all other items on the menu... be it drink or food. - P
 
Sunday carveries
Can anyone recommend a good place to have a scrumptious Sunday roast at a reasonable price in the Southern Suburbs. - Janet Adkins
 
Sunday Carvery
The Forrester's Arms (Forries) on Newlands Avenue does a nice Sunday carvery and they have a fireplace. - Sunday Carvery
 
Restaurant specials
Go visit Pakolollo in Hout Bay just before Chapmans Peak drive. They have an amazing winter lunch specials. Every day a different lunch for only R39 and that includes a cooldrink! Ambiance is terrific and the fire place the owner Michael made is a sight to be seen. Service is very friendly and they are very accomodating. - Ellen
 
 
 
Name
Email
Subject
Comment
     
 


copyright Media 24 Ltd. All rights reserved.
terms and conditions | contact FOOD24™ | Advertise on Food24™ | Site Map