Ledoyen - spaghetti
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 - Croque Gascon

   
Food Type French
Food rating 0/10 (More information)
Address Westfield Shopping Centre
Ariel Way
London
W12 7GE
England
Price £18 a head with a glass of wine (What I paid per head)
Average Price £15 (Average price per head for meal and house wine )
Value For Money 0 (Value for money = Food Rating out of 10 / Average Price * 100)
Location Map Link
Website Website
Last Visited April 2009
 
 
 
   
My Review  
Printer   Printer Friendly Version

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

                                     R I P

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

This outlet closed in late 2009.  The other food outlets at Westfield seem generally to be prospering, so it was a shame to see this fold; I confess that on my couple of visits there I was almost the only person eating.  Presumably when shoppers think "fast food" they don't think "duck burger".  The notes that follow are of historical interest only.

The vast Westfield shopping development has no shortage of eating places, but the only one with any foodie heritage is Croque Gascon, owned by Pascal Aussignac and Vincent Labeyrie, who set up Club Gascon and Le Cercle. This is a fast food outlet (or “a new concept we call quick food” as the gushing public relations has it) rather than a restaurant, situated in the “Balcony” area of the Westfield Complex. 

It would certainly be a little unkind to call this a food court, as there are fairly smart tables and proper cutlery, and you can have a glass of wine. You pick up your food from a counter on a tray, but the plates and trays are whisked away from your table very efficiently. Indeed in the few seconds it took to walk from my table a few yards to the counter to pick up my food and back, a security guard had already spotted my coat unattended and was already contemplating how to blow it up by the time I returned. Westfield could not be accused of being light on staff.

The open kitchen serves up food in the style of the south west of France, though I imagine your average Toulouse resident has never seen anything quite like this. I sampled a duck burger with Bearne bacon (£8), made with good minced duck enlivened with sweet onions and a little chilli and tomato relish in a bun (a version with foie gras is available for £14). This was actually very tasty, the chilli giving a nice bite to the dish (2/10). Fries (£2.50) with this could have been crisper, but at least were properly salted (2/10). 

Less good was a cassoulade (£7.50), whose pieces of duck confit and haricot beans were tender but otherwise lacked much flavour: rather than a rich, thick stock with sausages there was little to taste other than tomato and a hint of pork, while the dish was under-seasoned, which was odd given the robust seasoning in the other dishes tried (just about 1/10). 

There are a few glasses of wine from the south west of France available (£4-£6 a glass). A cut above normal fast food.

   
 Public Comments
Leave a comment 

There are no Comments
©AndyHayler.com
 
 
Website by Computersols