Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pork. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 June 2015

The Kitchens

A number of Manchester's best street food sellers have recently been given the opportunity to occupy a permanent location within Manchester's Spinningfields area. 6 restaurants are going head-to-head against each other, 7 days a week, to be given the chance to open their restaurant on a permanent basis in the same location, The Kitchens.


The Kitchens
Most of them will continue to travel around and showcase their food elsewhere but, with some having had difficulty recently in selling from their normal locations, it provides a great opportunity to settle down somewhere for at least 12 months. 

The 6 food vendors are:
  1. Mumma Schnitzel - fried chicken 
  2. Bangers and Bacon - pork based meals
  3. Hip Hop Chip Shop - fish and chips like no other
  4. Chaat Cart - Indian Street food
  5. Wholesome and Raw - Fruit and veg in more ways than you can imagine
  6. Yakumama - Latin American Street Food
We've reviewed some of these in the past and so most reviews here will be kept quite short, but with some of them going missing for a few months now we were keen to check them out again. 

So with Thursday evening being the opening night, the Meat Memoirs headed straight there after work to check it out. 

Set right beside the canal in Spinningfields, 3 restaurants occupy each side of the open Irwell Square, in the middle they are constructing decking and seating areas for those busier times. As it was opening night, the party atmosphere was in full swing, with a DJ playing and all the food sellers queued up. 

With Bangers and Bacon the most fresh the meat memory, having reviewed them quite recently after attending one of their chefs tables, (READ THE REVIEW HERE), we headed their first to see what they'd brought to the Kitchens. 

Bangers and Bacon seemed to have the most extensive menu of all the sellers, with a large selection of plates to choose from, each containing pork in one way or another. 


Bangers and Bacon Menu
Bangers and Bacon breakfast menu
Without much description on the menu, we opted for the Pig Mac. Unsure if we were going to receive some sort of pork based version of a Big Mac or Macaroni cheese containing pork we awaited the result patiently. The wait wasn't long before I was handed a tub of large pasta covered in cheese and mixed with huge chunks of gammon. 


Bangers and Bacon Pig Mac (£5.00)
Large chunks of pork mixed with thick cheesy pasta topped with
Bangers and Bacon own pork cracking type prawn cracker

The cheese certainly wasn't the main ingredient as can sometimes be the case with macaroni cheese. There was just enough to soften the pasta and create a smooth creamy sauce. The thick cut chunks of gammon/bacon could be found throughout the tub and tasted excellent.  A simple dish from the Bangers and Bacon team but excellent none the less. 

Bangers and Bacon are situated between the Hip Hop Chip Shop stall and Mumma Schnitzel stall. So it it made sense to try these next. 

Both Mumma Schnitzel and the Hip Hop Chip Shop have featured in the Meat Memoirs before from a previous visit to Guerrilla Eats (READ THE REVIEW HERE). 

Mumma Schnitzel used to attend the food festivals around Manchester and operated out of a van in the Spinningfields area during the week. However, they haven't been seen for some time and so their presence here was great to see. 


Mumma Schnitzel

Their menu still consists of breaded fried chicken portions used to create simple burgers topped with their own made sauces, and they're still creating fried halloumi options of a similar nature to go with the chicken. 


Mumma Schnitzel Menu
We opted for their simplest chicken schnitzel burger which contains a fried chicken potion, with salad and Mumma Schnitzels own mayo and sweet chilli sauce. 


Mumma Schnitzel - Chicken, Mayo & Sweet Chilli (£5.00)

Biting into these burgers still reveals one of the most moist chicken portions I've ever eaten. The light fried coating adds a crispy texture to compliment the moist chicken inside. 

Mumma Schintzel's sweet chilli sauce adds a firey hit and tastes incredible, while their own made mayo counters it with a cooling taste. The burger is contained within a soft brioche bun and finished with fresh salad. 


Then it was on to the Hip Hop Chip Shop. 


Hip Hop Chip Shop

Again, we've featured them before in the Meat Memoirs from Guerrilla Eats previously but we enjoyed their fish and chips so wanted to try them again. We chose the "Meat Junkie" box from their menu. 


Hip Hop Chip Shop Menu
The triple fried chips are still as crispy and delicious as previously, while their crispy battered onion rings were done in their glorious batter. 
I personally didn't sample the battered sausage as another member of the party ate this so I can't comment on this part of the box. 


Hip Hop Chip Shop - Meat Junkie (£7.00)
Hip Hop Chip shop seem to be another that tasted exactly as the meat memory remembered and they should be another strong name within the Kitchens. 

On the other side of the square, the remaining three restaurants can be found. Running out of time before our train we only had chance to try one more and so opted for Chaat Cart. 


Chaat Cart
Chaat Cart Full Menu
Unfortunately their full menu wasn't yet available on opening night but their most popular dishes were available. We opted to try the Puri Chaat. 


Chaat Cart Prawn Crackers

While we waited for this to be prepared, Chaat Cart had a wok filled with brightly coloured prawn crackers to snack on. These were crispy, fresh and flavourful! 

Puri Chaat (£4.50)
These turned out to be crispy parcels filled with cream, tomatos, onion and pomegranate seeds. These fresh flavour filled parcels would have made a great dessert after a spicy Indian meal.

I wish we'd opted for more of a main meal to really try what Chaat Cart has to offer. These parcels were fresh and tasty though, but when I return I shall sample more of their menu. 


The ones we didn't get to try:
Yakumama
Wholesome and Raw Main Menu


Wholesome and Raw Sushi Menu 

Conclusion


Unfortunately we'd run out of time to try the finial two restaurants in Yakumama and Wholesome and Raw. 

However, The Kitchens is set to be around for 12 months and with some of our favourite food vendors now available 7 days a week you can guarantee we'll be back to try the remaining restaurants as well as sample more of the menu from the others. 

The Kitchens should be a huge success. Set within the highly popular Spinningfields area it will appeal to early morning business folk, then again for lunch, and then draw in people frequenting the local bars in the evening. Despite it being set to the quiet end of Sprinningfields, the previous Spinningfield regulars and Manchester best known street food should attract a steady crowd. 

I for one will be back there before long to finish this review....

@_TheKitchens

http://thekitchensleftbank.com/

Kitchens Facebook page

Saturday, 23 May 2015

Bangers & Bacon chefs table

For a while now I've been keen to try Bangers and Bacon food! I've seen them at numerous events and always missed trying their food. Having told them this numerous times, they said I should attend one of their chefs tables at Guerrilla Eats. 

Bangers and Bacon have been a resident every week at the latest series of Guerrilla Eats events. Although Gurrilla Eats is free entry and pay for food at each of the vendors, advanced tickets should be bought for a place at the Bangers and Bacon chefs table as they sell out! Luckily we had our place booked for the 6pm sitting this Saturday and we were keen to discover for ourselves why these events are selling out. 

Guerrilla Eats has relocated to Sudehill just by the bus station for its latest run of events and arriving around 6pm on a sunny Saturday meant it was fairly quiet on arrival. We grabbed a drink at the well stocked bar and headed upstairs in the redundant wholesalers building which has been cleverly used to host Guerrilla Eats food events. 

Guerrilla Eats

Umbrellas and lights to decorate the redundant wholesale building

At the top of the stairs, Bangers and Bacon occupy a large area out of the way of the music with 3 large tables, enough to seat around 30 people. At the far end is their kitchen area. Open to the viewing of the dining audience, allowing them to see how the menu is put together from start to finish. 

Bangers and Bacon Chefs Table


Arriving early we had free choice of seats so sat right up against the kitchen and immediately got talking to the Bangers and Bacon team. 

Simple decorations to create a friendly, sociable setting within the first floor

Open kitchen for diners to view

The team aim to bring a different menu each week. Every week they develop 5 courses, with every course containing pork, from starter to dessert.

Having no idea of the menu before hand left me grabbing the first 1 I saw to see what pork filled creations would be in store tonight. 

The menu explained the dishes perfectly while leaving your imagination open to try dream what the flavours will taste like as each course arrives. 

Chefs Table - Week 11 Menu

As the tables filled up and the first course was almost ready, Richard introduced himself to the diners with a warm welcome, introduced the rest of the kitchen staff/chefs and set the evening going. He explained that although the menu is as they planned, there are occasions when the menus change slightly.  

First course; Pig Pickle and Pate
This first course consist of a Wellington, made with their award winning sausage meat, would be combined with bacon jam. On the side would be some bacon pate and homemade chutney. 

Having watched all these being created I couldn't wait to try them! 

Course 1 in preperation

As the little slates of Wellington were brought to the tables they were accompanied by crackers in the centre of the table. 

Richard explained to the diners that this course brought the first change to the menu. The Wellington had been replaced with more of a sausage infused swirl. 

Wellington Swirl with bacon Pate

Crackers to accompany the starter

The first bite of cracker with the swirl and chutney brought a fantastic taste! I'm a bit of a sausage snob and like to think I recognise good sausage meat when I try it. It was immediately obvious why the sausage meat was award winning! I could have eaten an unlimited number of these swirls! 

Richard later explained that they do make full sausages with this meat, and can be found under their sausage retailer name of Bobby's Bangers, so I'll have my eye out for these as soon as I can!! 

The chutney accompanied the swirl and sausage meat perfectly. The bacon pate was smooth and had a perfect bacon hit! 

If every course was to taste like this, we were in for a treat!! 

Second course; It's Pho Simple
The second course was a traditional Pho (traditional Vietnamese noodle soup) infused with Asian flavours and filled with cured, sticky, charred pork. 

Pho, noodle soup topped with pork cracker

The generous pork slices within this soup were well cooked and just as described on the menu. They had a slight sticky texture to them but were well cured to give a fantastic taste. The pork flavours were transferred into the noodles and the soup meaning I enjoyed every last drop. 

Each Pho portion had been topped with a very lightly fried crackling type piece. Asking Richard what exactly these were, he explained that they were a type of pork flavoured prawn cracker. I'd describe them as a cross between a prawn cracking and pork scratchings. 

Third course; Oriental Spicy Swine
Chinese steamed buns, kimchee slaw and wasabi mayo. 

Chinese steamed buns with wasabi sauce and slaw

Perhaps the course I was most apprehensive about from the menu description, not being the biggest fan of wasabi. However combining the steamed parcel with a little of the wasabi made for a great little hit following the pasta filled pork flavours. 

The side portion of fresh slaw cleansed the pallet well if the wasabi was too much. 

We'd been able to watch each parcel lovingly prepared by hand as we'd sat right next to the pasta preparation area. Inside each parcel was a great little portion of seasoned minced pork. 

Preparation of the steamed parcels



Fourth course; "Hungary" Like a Pig
Ravioli of Paprikash, warm Italian salad, and basil emulsion

A couple of soft parcels of freshly made pasta ravioli filled with minced pork, seasoned with onions, sided with a tomato salad and drizzled with a basin sauce. 

Pork filled, freshly made ravioli parcels with Italian Salad and Basil Emulsion

I think the staff had underestimated the preparation time for the ravioli and so this course was perhaps a little rushed. The parcels were a little undercooked, however the minced pork inside each ravioli packet tasted great. 

Minced pork filled Ravioli
The combination of the tomato salad and basin sauce worked very well to create a fresh flavour with the ravioli. 

This course took a while longer than all the other to be served and so I wondered if it had been a little rushed in the cooking of the ravioli. Perhaps a little more patience in the cooking and serving it a little later may have perfected it. 

Fifth Course; Bloody, Bitter & Bacon
Bitter chocolate, blood, orange pot, with bacon thins

A bitter, dark chocolate orange mousse, with pigs blood. This mouse was served with a cookie which should have contained bacon pieces. Here came the second change to the menu for the evening as it would seem the bacon pieces were omitted from the side biscuit. 

Cream topped, blood, chocolate and orange mousse accompanied by a biscuit. 



Everyone seemed a little apprehensive about this course when they were told that the chocolate mousse contained pigs blood. I dug in undeterred and instantly enjoyed the thick, rich chocolate flavour. The orange was an obvious follow on flavour while the pigs blood gave the mousse a thicker consistency. I couldn't find it at all in the taste. I think the dark chocolate and orange flavours may have overpowered any pigs blood taste, but it was obvious in the consistency. It made the mousse very thick and what I could only describe as a slight gritty texture. This doesn't give it much credit in the description, but I promise it was a delightful end to a fantastic meal!

Bacon infused biscuit

The pots were only small but with the rich chocolate it was just enough. As the chocolate got overpowering, the biscuit would help to take the edge off. 


Conclusion

After a long wait I was glad I'd finally been able to attend one of Bangers and Bacon's chefs tables. 

The Bangers and Bacon team are extremely friendly and their pork inspired menus are incredible. To make so many dishes, all containing pork, and to be able to create different dishes week after week, all of which taste so great is no easy achievement. It also intrigues me to return as each week would be different! 

Due to this weeks menu I think a lot more preparation was required for some of the courses as they usually have, and so I think this created my only criticism. The fourth course of ravioli could perhaps have done with a little more prep before the event and a little more cooking at the event. But then I suppose this would take away the spectacle of creating each dish live in front of the dining audience. 

Overall myself and the group I was with, thoroughly enjoyed ourselves! If you like your pork tastes and you're in the search of something different then I highly recommend Bangers and Bacon. If you're into your sausages then keep your eye out for Bobby's bangers! If their sausages taste like the swirls from the first course, you'll be in for a treat with these well seasoned pork sausages! 

Bangers and Bacon are also set to open a restaurant as part of "The Kitchens" in Spinningfields some time around mid June! Expect them to feature in the memoirs again when we check out the restaurants there. 

In the mean time, you can book a place at the chefs tables at Guerrilla Eats here:
http://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/bangers-and-bacon-chefs-table-guerrilla-eats-week-12-tickets-16306774000?aff=eac2

@bangersandbacon

Bangers and Bacon Facebook Page

http://bangersandbacon.co.uk/


Meat Rating: 9/10

Money for meat: Paid in Full

Monday, 2 February 2015

Red's True Barbecue

A late Sunday night and Monday off called for a top quality meat intake. Red's True Barbecue was the restaurant of choice. Having visited a couple of times before it's often required a long wait on arrival as it's always busy. So we hoped a mid-Monday afternoon may be a different story. 

Luckily we were correct as even our reasonably sized group were seated straight away without a booking. 

Red's True Barbecue continues to open in new locations and can now be found in Headingley, Leeds, Nottingham and of course Manchester. 


Red's True Barbecue
The Manchester restaurant can be found right on the corner of Albert Square. It's therefore surrounded by other popular bars and restaurants, so Red's were obviously confident of their product by selecting this location. They were right to do so though as Red's is almost always full, meaning you can have a couple of hours to wait for a table sometimes. 

Over the door on the corner of the building is the neon sign of "Red's True Barbecue," and on the walls within the porch are hands praying for meat. 


Pray for meat
As soon as you walk in the door, before noticing anything else, the smell of barbecue will hit you! I'm not sure if they vent the extract fans from the kitchen over the door or something but the smoky, barbecue smell is fantastic. I can't remember any restaurant where the smell has such a positive effect as this. 

As the waitress leads you to your table she'll likely lead you past the open kitchen where you can see the barbecuing in progress. Chefs pulling apart racks of ribs which have been cooked and smoked for hours, while another will be mopping other meats with barbecue sauce. 

The rest of the restaurant is a mix of brushed steels, colourful neon signs and church like symbols. Under the kitchen partition logs are stacked for the grills and smokers. 


Fuel for the fires and the open kitchens
"The Good Book"
"I believe"

The bar is a colourful display covered in chicken wire. 


Bar
As we sat at our table the waiter left us with the "good book" (menu) to look over. You may need some time to make your choice in Red's as the menu is very extensive (You can read their "good book" HERE). 


"The Good Book"
The Ten Commandments

If you decide before the rest of your party then it gives you chance to try the 5 different barbecue sauces in the middle of the table. 

  1. Triple 6 hot sauce - from 5 types of chilli
  2. South Carolina BBQ - a mustard based sauce with spicy kick
  3. North Carolina BBQ - a vinegar based sauce
  4. Judas Ketchup - their own made tomato like BBQ sauce
  5. Kansas City BBQ - a sweet & smokey barbecue sauce
Barbecue Sauces

As the names of the sauces suggest, their barbecue is based on some of the most famous barbecue towns in the USA. This is why almost every American style barbecue item can be found on the menu, from pulled pork, barbecue ribs of various varieties, burgers, chicken, you consider it barbecue and it's probably on the menu. 

You can sample quite a lot of the menu with their wide selection of starters. Ribs tasters, burnt ends, BBQ chicken wings etc. Or there are other great American favourites such as macaroni and cheese. 

On this visit I decided to try their "swine fries." Sweet potato fries, topped with pulled pork, cheese, sour cream, onions, jalapeƱos, and salsa. 

Having not tried these before I was apprehensive about having fries as a starter, but I wasn't having fries as a side with my main so figured why not. The fries were excellent, nice and crispy but I had to dig to find them. They were lost under mounds of sour cream, and huge chunks of pulled pork! 


Swine Fries - £6.95

The pulled pork was easy to pull apart and combined with the fries, salsa and sour cream tasted incredible. Toppings you'd normally find on nachos were even better on sweet potato fries! 

Then it was on to the mains. 

Red's True Barbecue burger creations are famous for including extra barbecue in the form of steak, or replacing the traditional bread buns with doughnuts or waffles. 

My partner ordered their "Sleepy James," a southern fried chicken breast, topped with bacon, lettuce, burger cheese, and ranch dressing all between a couple of waffles. 


The Sleepy James - £14.40
As you can imagine they also offer pulled pork sandwiches, steaks of all varieties, barbecue sandwiches, brisket etc. 

The Meat Memoirs were here for some proper barbecue on this particular day and needed to try their ribs. In previous visits there had always been one of the 3 types of ribs sold out. Luckily as it was quieter this time they were all in stock so I jumped at the chance to try them all. 

Red's offer up 3 types of barbecue ribs. You can try a small sample of their pork ribs as a starter but we wanted a proper portion. There's the choice of Kansas City wet style pork ribs, Memphis dry rub pork ribs, and huge beef long beef ribs. To try them all, they offer a "bucket o' bones," and seen as they were all available on this visit I opted to try take that down alone. 

All the mains in Red's True Barbecue are offered with either 2 "humble" sides (e.g, fries, onion rings etc.) or 1 "divine" side, such as mac & cheese, grilled cheese on toast, bbq beans, bbq corn on the cob, or sweet potato fries. 

To side my bucket of ribs I choose the grilled cheese on toast. 

Grilled Cheese on Toast side - £2.95 or included with a main
Not long after the starters had been cleared the mains arrived. The bucket of ribs didn't look too overwhelming to begin with. A combination of small racks of ribs could be seen from the top of the bucket which didn't look too much to finish. I therefore took a bite of the side of grilled cheese on toast first. Huge, doorstop thick sized slices of fresh bread were topped with a thick layer of melted cheddar and finished with garlic and herb butter. For simple cheese on toast these were very good. I figured I best make a start on the ribs though before I got full! 




Taking off the first small rack of ribs the meat was full of smoke flavour! 

The barbecue flavours are some of the best I've tasted. 

After the first little rack I pulled out a bone sticking vertically up one side of the bucket. It was then I realised how much I'd underestimated the challenge of finishing this bucket alone. This beef rib was one of the biggest ribs I'd ever seen. The rest of my party agreed! Taking this down was challenge enough. 

Bucket o' Bones - £23.95









Beef Long - the largest rib I've ever eaten
Throughout the bucket of ribs the barbecue flavours were outstanding. The meat was a little dry though and the ribs were perhaps a little overdone for my personal liking. The selection of barbecue sauces in the middle of the table helped to soften some of the drier ribs but I'd have preferred some of the ribs to be cooked a little less. 

The bucket of bones could easily have served 2 people, if not 3! I managed to complete it alone though, but feel sorry to say I have to take the grilled cheese side home (I finished it later, I'm not one for letting food go to waste!).

Conclusion


Red's True Barbecue brings a larger American menu to Manchester than anywhere else I'm yet to discover. The traditional tastes are fantastic and all the senses are involved when you eat at Red's. The small is better than any restaurant I've yet visited and the barbecue methods are brought through from the states to the tastes.

The portion sizes are very generous, even if you opt for a more traditional sized meal unlike me who ate what was probably a meal for 2 or 3 people! 

My criticism is that the ribs were too dry, and the barbecued exteriors too tough. The great selection of barbecue sauces helped alleviate this issue a bit but it couldn't over power some of the charcoaled edges. 

I did finish the ribs though which I wouldn't have done had they been that bad. Had they been a little softer and more moist they'd have been perfect! 


Red's True Barbecue Facebook 


Meat Rating: 7/10

Money for Meat: Paid in Full