Ledoyen - grapefruit
Home About Me Food Blog Food Rating System Foodie Links Contact Me 3 Star Restaurant Guide     RSS Feed
  3 Star Guide
  3 Star Map
  Gallery
  Top Restaurants
  Food Trivia
  Chef Interviews
  London
  London Map
  UK
  France
  USA
  Italy
  Germany
  Japan
  Spain
  Belgium
  Holland
  Australia
  Sweden
  Switzerland
  Denmark
  Austria
  China
  Dubai
  India
  Singapore
  Ireland
  Portugal
  Wines
  Hotels
  Newsletter
  Complete Map

 Restaurant Review - The Devonshire

   
Food Type British
Food rating 0/10 (More information)
Address 126 Devonshire Road
Chiswick
London
W4 2IJ
England
Phone Number 020 7592 7962
Nearest Tube Turnham Green
Price £62 (What I paid per head)
Average Price £49 (Average price per head for meal and house wine )
Location Map Link
Website Website
Last Visited April 2008
 
 
 
   
My Review  
Printer   Printer Friendly Version

************************************************

                                 R I P

************************************************

In June 2010 a fire caused the Devonshire to close.  However, the pub had struggled finanically due to its poor location, and hasnow closed.  It provided decent food at prices that were a little high for what was delivered. The following notes are for historical interest only.

This pub, tucked away at the quiet end of a residential street, was previously a disappointing gastropub. It has had only a slight makeover in terms of decor, but a serious upgrade in the kitchen. It is Gordon Ramsay’s third London gastropub (after the Narrow and the Warrington). The room is simple and sparsely decorated, with dark wood panelling and wooden floor. The menu has just over half a dozen choices for each course and is firmly in British territory e.g. a home-made pork pie, Cumberland bangers with onion gravy and champ, sardines on toast. Starters are £4.50 - £7, main courses £10 - £14.50, with vegetables £3 extra at a piece and desserts £4 - £4.50. There is a very respectable wine list, with carefully chosen growers like Rioja Alta, and plenty of options in the £20 - £30 range, though little under £20 a bottle.

Service was extremely good, friendly and capable. The chef, Chris Arkadieff, is not well known in London, but previously cooked in Australia and won an Ansett "Best Apprentice Chef of the Year " award there. The bread used here is from Marcus Miller in Battersea, so the bread you are eating here is essentially the same as at Gordona Ramsay at Royal Hospital Road. I began with Dorset mackerel, simply grilled and served with a neatly presented potato salad with well-dressed salad leaves and correctly cooked potatoes; this dish was simple but very well executed (4/10). It was better than soused autumn vegetable salad, which had perfectly pleasant leaves but pickled carrots and beans etc which for me did not work as a concept - why take perfectly good seasonal vegetables and then pickle them? (1/10).

A special of the day was duck breast, cooked pink and served with some cooking juices, honey-glazed parsnip, watercress salad and, on the side, pleasant red cabbage (which would be even better if enlivened with a little wine vinegar) and very capable thin chips, nicely seasoned. The duck was 4/10 level. A caramelised red onion and Beenleigh blue cheese tart had pleasant pastry and a green salad, topped with a poached egg (3/10).

Desserts were classics: lemon posset is a simple dish but can easily be messed up; here it was very nicely made, the posset creamy and texture with pleasing acidity, served with shortbread biscuits (5/10). Bramley apple and blackberry crumble had crunchy crumble and filling that had plenty of fruit flavour, topped with good vanilla ice cream (4/10). Coffee was also pleasant (3/10). Overall this is a very good gastropub, delivering simple food well. Extras mean the bill mounts up; we had three courses, a mid-priced (£34) wine, glasses of dessert wine but no pre-dinner drinks, and it was £62 each, which is not outrageous but no bargain either. However this is about the only thing to really criticise.

Urban Spoon Link The Devonshire on Urbanspoon
   
 Public Comments
Leave a comment 

There are no Comments
©AndyHayler.com
 
 
Website by Computersols