Restaurant at The Dolder Grand
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 - Goldfish

   
Food Type Chinese
Food rating 2/10 (More information)
Address 82 Hampstead High Street
Hampstead
London
NW3 1RE
England
Phone Number 020 7794 6666
Nearest Tube Hampstead
Price £45 (What I paid per head)
Average Price £40 (Average price per head for meal and house wine )
Value For Money 5 (Value for money = Food Rating out of 10 / Average Price * 100)
Location Map Link
Last Visited May 2008
 
 
 
   
My Review  
Printer   Printer Friendly Version

A short walk down from Hampstead tube in a parade of shops, Goldfish is a warren of little rooms, busily decorated with an eclectic mix of oriental wooden screens, water features, models of famous parts of China and, yes, goldfish. These are swimming around in a large Chinoiserie pot near the entrance. The low ceiling, painted black, adds to the cramped feel, as do the rather small wooden chairs with cream upholstery. Walls are painted assorted colours, and in the room that we were in there was a central strip of wallpaper with a goldfish pattern. There was an attractive central flower display in our room. 

Tables have white linen tablecloths and napkins, and a single candle in a large glass jar. The restaurant can seat 70 in its various little rooms, and this evening it was full to capacity, with a line of people outside the door waiting for tables to become free. The clientele is mostly local, and this being Hampstead that means prosperous (no doubt a few crooks and nannies were tucked away in the restaurant's nooks and crannies). The menu is lengthy with a lot of seafood dishes in particular. Chef Kevin Chow is from Malaysia but worked at the Four Seasons hotel in Singapore. 

A steamer of dim sum had a generous eight prawn and four vegetarian dumplings inside it. The prawns were reasonably tender, as were the vegetables, and this was capable dim sum, though by no means as delicate as, say, Yauatcha. Soft shell crab salad was nicely made, almost a Thai style salad with green mango as well as lambs lettuce leaves, chilli, coriander and tomato; the dressing was nicely spicy and the soft shell crab itself fried properly (2/10).

Steamed sea bass was farmed and cooked properly, but the fish really lacked taste, and the ginger and spring onions that accompanied the fish were unable to distract from its blandness (1/10). Spicy prawns were cooked fine but were bizarrely cooked with their shells on. Shelling a raw prawn is a fiddly process, so how exactly a diner is supposed to try shelling a hot prawn is beyond me. The spicy sauce with the prawns was fine but this was really hard to eat (1/10). Vermicelli noodles had good texture, with a little hint of curry about them and with some well-cooked (shelled) prawns (2/10). 

“Green fry” rice had coriander, ginger, green chilli and yuzu juice fried with the rice, and this was fine (2/10). Finally some seasonal oriental vegetables were scarcely ordinary (ordinary broccoli instead of Chinese broccoli, carrot, asparagus, snow peas) but were pleasant, stir-fried with some soy (1/10). Service was harried on this busy night but it was friendly. This is certainly a cut above a normal neighbourhood Chinese, though a step or two down in standard from my benchmark Royal China.

Hardens Review Link View Review
Urban Spoon Link Goldfish on Urbanspoon
   
 Public Comments
Leave a comment 


26/01/2009 - alan fowle (uk)
Go to this restaurant at least once a month. Always have crispy duck- very good- and generally szechuan prawns which is very spicy indeed my wife usually has the scallops where at least 6 is the standard portion here with scallions in a ginger infused sauce. My prawns are plump and without shell very satisfying to the bite. We leave here invariably feeling as though we have enjoyed our meal its not haute cuisine and the room is not as attractive as it could be with the lighting not exactly seductive - however worth more than 2/10 overall We have a flat in Hampstead which we use to make excursions to the best restaurants in London it says something that we come here often.
©AndyHayler.com
 
 
Website by Computersols