Match of the week

Lobster and sweetcorn with Allende Rioja Blanco
I came across this pairing at a dinner to launch the London Restaurant Festival. It was held at Nuno Mendes Loft Project, a permanent East London pop-up - if there is such a thing - where he normally hosts visiting chefs of a similarly experimental bent. Mendes is one of the most talented chefs in London at the moment and normally cooks at nearby Viajante in Bethnal Green which I reviewed here.
It was an immensely complicated dish which, when quickly announced by our server, sounded like lobster, bread porridge, sweetcorn, confit egg yolk and girolles, a combination you'd never think of putting together unless you were mad or Mr Mendes. It also included a touch of chilli and fresh coriander which made it taste like an exotically spicy but rather wonderful brunch dish.
I'm not normally that keen on eggs in the middle of savoury dishes (a hot trend at the moment, it seems) but the yolk had been cooked to the point where it was firm but not hard and added another layer of unctuous richness.
The inspired pairing was an oaked white Rioja - the Allende Blanco 2008 which dealt with all the complex flavours marvellously. It was, I find, a recent Jancis Robinson pick of the week and you can read about it here. As she points out, it strikes a perfect balance between the new crisper Riojas and the more traditional heavily oaked style. Really quite lovely.
You can buy it from slurp.co.uk for £17.45 a bottle.
I ate at the Loft Project as a guest of the London Restaurant Festival and Wines of Rioja.

Chocolate and roasted Oolong tea
The most interesting meal I had last week was undoubtedly at Viajante, an innovative new restaurant in what used to be Bethnal Green town hall. You can see my full review on decanter.com but I just wanted to write a bit more about the pairings.
Chocolate is always a bit of a minefield with wine and I can’t honestly think of one that would have dealt with all the different textures and temperatures of what was a really stellar dessert: a sorbet, a granita a jelly and some dense crumbs of chocolate sponge. But the richly nutty, almost malty Wuyi Dark Rock tea which was served warm rather than hot was wonderfully refreshing, adding flavour without richness or sweetness of its own. It was apparently supplied by Teasmith in nearby Spitalfields market.
The menu offers an accompanying selection of ‘beverage’ rather than wine pairings which resulted in a beer - albeit a vinous Rodenbach Grand Cru - with the starter of beetroot, crisp apple and goats curd. (I actually thought it went better with a couple of the umami-rich ‘amuses’ which included a crostino of romesco [sauce], almonds, olives and dehydrated sherry and a soy milk jelly with smoked aubergine.
A main course of sole coated in roasted yeast with mustard gnocchi and a cauliflower purée was intriguingly matched with a light, lush 2007 Szepsy Furmint which added a contrasting note of gentle sweetness.
This is definitely a place to go to explore - drink as well as food - and to keep an open mind. Nuno Mendes is obviously as interested in what his team pours in your glass as what he puts on the plate - and that’s quite rare for a chef. I’m already looking forward to my next visit.
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