Lima – cuisine from the land of Paddington Bear

Peruvian handicrafts on the front desk at Lima

Celebrity-backed rain forests, imaginative handicrafts, stunningly diverse ecosystems, beaches to longhaul for and the land where the sticky bear originated – all this we already know about Peru.  But, until Saturday night, I had been unaware of its delicious, unusual and alternative cuisine.  And the cocktails, at Lima 31 Rathbone Place, W1, were another story altogether.

lined up maracuya cocktails

Named after his fashionable capital city, the restaurant is the first London venture from Virgilio Martinez and brilliantly showcases the globally influenced Peruvian food.  I couldn’t wait to drag my slightly-doubting-thomas friends along for the ride.

Of course, they had read the reviews and checked out the menu online.  Perhaps the wrong side of alternative was the feedback.  Smugly I knew we were in for a treat.

colourful artichokes in green lime

sea bass starter at Lima

The restaurant’s hostess was initially unsure where she should seat us.  Our table wasn’t quite ready so, taking a pew at one of the tables at the front of the restaurant, we focused on the cocktail menu while she juggled non-departing diners. As a pisco-virgin, I was fascinated by this colourless, grape brandy and then the long list of concoctions and, quite frankly, needed some advice.  Our hostess pointed me in the direction of the Pia (vanilla infused pisco, banana, egg yolk, cacao, frangelico and cream £8).  Unusual and exotic, I was immediately transported to the Peruvian mountains along with those funny-looking alpacas.

Needing a little more local advice, we wondered how many starters we should order.  As these are more ‘sharing plates’ than starters, our hostess suggested that six choices would suit four hungry mouths.  And when they arrived, our table looked as vibrantly colourful as a traditional Peruvian weaving loom.  Artichokes with green lime and fava beans (£8), sea bass with potato puree and avocado (£7) and braised octopus with organic white quinoa (£10) graced our table for mere moments before being shared and devoured.

His lamb main at Lima restaurant, W1

His main was the most admired.  Braised lamb shoulder in coriander and more pisco juice with black quinoa and white grape (£22) was more artistically presented than most of the Frieze Art Fair, visited earlier that week.

Back to the cocktails.  Those who weren’t driving and couldn’t think of any reason not to sample as much of the menu as possible agreed between them that the Maracuya (one of pisco sours £7.50) was the way to go (literally).  (And it most interestingly seems to result no hangover at all – if you know why, please do let me know!)

I will try not to bore you.  But seeing as dessert was, once again, a true delight  – both in vision and taste – it’s absolutely unavoidable.  Cacao porcelana with mango and blue potato chips (£8) and dulce de leche ice cream (£6) – again, shared.

Eating at Lima is a culinary experience; these traditional Peruvanian dishes have been given an innovative twist and are pretty inspiring. Although prices are pretty high, the fabulous treat that the food and cocktails offer helps to justify this.  One of my doubting-thomas friends booked a table for a business lunch the following week.  He was bowled over.  I think you would be too.

 www.limalondon.com

 

 

 

 

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McQ London Flagship: shopping isn’t just for buying

Mini adores seeing her godmother and often begs me to organise lunch for the 3 of us.  The brutal truth is that her godmother is infinitely more elegant and chic than I am – making her much more exciting Mayfair-lunch-fodder.  But, once we had consumed enough sushi to keep any Japanese tourist happy, I decided that we ‘needed’ to visit the recently opened McQ flagship boutique on Dover Street.

Louis Vuitton shopping experience in Selfridges

I find luxury concept stores fascinating.  Last February we visited the Hermès store in Paris, last week I admired the Louis Vuitton shopping experience in Selfridges and today I wasn’t disappointed by Sarah Burton’s McQ creation.

Mini Tulle Dress

large digital table at McQ

The three-storey new home for the men’s and women’s new collections is housed in a Georgian townhouse.  But don’t be foul by its traditional exterior; as you enter you are greeted by a large white digital dining table, like an oversized ipad on legs.  From here you can project catwalk images and video onto a screen on the wall.  Weirdly cool and fabulously interactive.

McQ boots in the Dover St Flagship

We left Mini playing with the A/W collection images and checked out the boots, dresses, bags, jackets, coats within this alternative shopping environment.  While the walls are glossy and white and the concrete steps brutal, the interior is softened by the red velvet upholstery – allowing this diffusion brand to be a good deal more affordable, and therefore accessible, than its mother line.

Visit McQ Flagship at 14, Dover St W1

 

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Just how commercial is Frieze Art Fair?

A rainy Regents Park saw the first (public) day of Frieze’s 10th London fair.  Although recognised as the city’s most influential contemporary art fair, there is always a strong international element to the event, both in the focus of the exhibits as well as the purchasing wallets.

And it seems that Amanda Sharp and Matthew Slotover, co-directors of Frieze, felt that exporting their concept to NYC wasn’t enough of a challenge for 2012.  So, they have launched Frieze Masters, a simultaneous fair on the other side of the park.

I wondered how much of this staged cultural entertainment is about making contemporary (or less contemporary )art accessible or whether the long queue snaking outside in the pouring rain was full of bulging wallets?

Inquisitive enough not to be put off by the rain, I grabbed my brolly and headed out for Regents Park to find out.

a Thomas Bayrle entrance to 2012 Frieze Art Fair

Any visitor to this year’s fair cannot fail to acknowledge the German artist, Thomas Bayrle. He has been singled out by Frieze as their 2012 artist and his work lines the entrance tunnel into the exhibition.  I was curious to know more about his rather unique, slightly oppressive patterned masterpieces and discovered, unsurprising, that his art is a direct result of his years spent working in a textile factory.

Georg Baselitz’s, Stilleben Still

Georg Baselitz’s, Stilleben Still, next caught my eye.  Another German artist in his 70s but one who, unusually, paints his subjects upside down.  Retailing at a mere £528, I was pleased to note the large canvas’ commercial as well as dramatic appeal.

 

I dug deep into the fair to find something less hung and more ironic.  And I found Hasson Sharif’s Jelly Fish.

Hasson Sharif’s Jelly Fish

Colourful yes, original certainly – but worth EUR 35 million?  I was told it had just been sold to an undisclosed buyer.

 

The next challenge I set myself was to find some useful art.  ie art which doubles up as something useful.   This GET/GIVE bookshelf won my award but, priced at EUR 32,0oo it suddenly became an awful lot less handy.

the GET/GIVE bookshelf

 

Winning all prizes for ‘not useful and not really art at all’ was the stone shattering glass exhibit.

 

is this art? @FriezeLondon

All in all, and casting aside my personal art challenges, the fair was not a disappointment.   It was full of unusual, creative pieces which certainly thought-provoked.  Now, you can’t put a price on that.

Frieze Art Fair: 11–14 October 2012 in Regent’s Park, London

 

 

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tea for two at the Athenaeum Hotel

tea for 2 at The Athenaeum Hotel

Once upon a time, Bestie and I hardly had to make any effort to catch up.  Now, with kids, husbands and a North/South London divide, we miss out on our regular life downloads.  So when I was offered an afternoon tea at The Athenaeum Hotel, 116 Piccadilly, I knew who I might be able to tempt out of her corporate world.

our tea choice at The Athenaeum

With heavy rain on a grey Monday, the excitement of sipping a glass of Rose Petal Champagne while nibbling on traditionally English cucumber and cream cheese, egg mayonnaise and smoked salmon finger sandwiches was enough of a treat.  But the setting, so calm and sumptuous, together with the thrill of choosing our teas were tipping us right over the edge.

the cake trolley

more sandwiches, Girls?

 

 

Green tea for me and a smokey Lapsang for her.  Freshly baked scones and toasted crumpets followed.  I promised I wouldn’t mention that Bestie couldn’t keep her hands off the homemade jam and Devonshire clotted cream.  And then the cake trolley….

Unfortunately our delightful scoffing hindered our catch up.  We merely scratched the surface of work, my godson and a recent back operation.  But, of course, the lavish, sophisticated tea more than made up for it.

The Athenaeum Evergreen Tea for two cost £35 per head.

 

 

 

 

 

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