Tag Archives: Heston Blumenthal

Review Of The Dinner Reviews

Hot Dinners
Almost a perfect score for ‘Dinner’ from critics. Looks like Heston’s won this round.
Blumenthal’s first London restaurant has 140 covers, serving lunch, dinner and afternoon tea. Ashley Palmer-Watts who’s been at the Fat Duck for nine years is head chef. Promised by Blumenthal to be an “upmarket bistro” featuring “historic British-influenced dishes” there will also be the chance to book private dining rooms to enjoy your own feast in the style of Heston’s Channel 4 shows.
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Cooper Brown: Dinner with Bercow

The Independent
News just in: meat free might make slightly poorly or perhaps that’s just the mead
It’s showtime – the Hollywood A-lister is coming round tonight and I’m still hung over from an amazing night out with Sally Bercow – the new Tory pin-up. She sure is an amazing gal. She likes shorter men – her husband, the Speaker of the House of Commons, is even shorter than the Coop. She is clearly a woman of exceptional taste as well as beauty. I took her to the new Heston Blumenthal restaurant – Dinner – as I know the PR woman and jumped the six month waiting list. Best thing we had was the ‘meat fruit’ and getting her to admit that she quite fancied George Osborne. Personally, I think he looks like some pasty-faced health hazard, but power is the ultimate aphrodisiac, unlike meat fruit, which seems to me to be the ultimate diarrhetic
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Starter for ten: interview with Heston Blumenthal

Square Meal
Ever wondered what makes Heston Blumenthal tick? Square Meal caught up with the chef of the moment and subjected him to a burst of quick-fire questioning.
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Dinner, London, Restaurant review

The Telegraph, Matthew Norman
Men and meat fruit. Haven’t seen an hysteria like this since I brought cake into an office filled with women on January diets
If the biggest box-office draw in the business was racked by first-night nerves on Monday evening, he made a fine stab at masking it. One minute posing happily for a photo with the neighbouring table, the next squatting beside ours to deliver passionate, rapid-fire discourses about the provenance of his intriguingly historical menu, Heston Blumenthal appeared to be relishing his West End debut. Small wonder. It has taken a long time for the lieber Meister of snail porridge to bring his act to town, but Dinner – a sibling to the Fat Duck and the Hind’s Head in Bray – is more than worth the wait. In fact, darlings, it’s a theatrical tour de force.
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Cheese and Biscuits

Dinner by Heston Blumenthal, Knightsbridge
Obviously this review needs no introduction and yet I’m feeling the need to write one and include the words “meat fruit”
If there existed a movie that all your best friends loved, had received rave reviews from every movie critic on the planet, and had smashed all box-office records, would you be interested in seeing it? The answer seems obvious – of course you would, even out of sheer curiosity, and although there would be a risk your inflated expectations didn’t quite match up to the reality, you wouldn’t blame anyone but yourself, you’d probably still have a good time, and anyway what do you have to lose?
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Meet the Heston Blumenthal of Beer

Sabotage Times
The darks arts of beer brewery turn out to be quite the art form, a million miles away from hillbilly moonshine with the added bonus of not making you go blind. One day I will be asked: what did you do in the recession daddy – Get on your bike – Sell the Big Issue – Spend all day on the Guardian’s Comment is Free section- No, I shall answer, I brewed my own beer – even though past history shows that while I’m rather good at consuming and writing about the stuff, I’m not so good at producing Cuvee Tierney-Jones. Previous efforts at home brewing have resulted in a) brown ale that was so rubbish I used it to wash my Aladdin Sane feather cut with b) bitter so insipid that the dog turned its nose up at a bowl of it though my brother enjoyed a glass or two. But then in those days his idea of the perfect pint was Castlemaine XXX or a can of Fosters. Finally there was the cack-handed attempt at a barley wine so solid that I could have worn it as a coat.
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