Anyway, that’s what Chef Corrin told me after the meal. He said it worried him a bit how hands-off Gareth has been. He doesn’t have to worry though, as he’s built a great menu of kick-ass flavours and memorable dishes. He and the team looked after their guests really well in a tiny dining room painted dramatically black but with strong task lighting to give a great atmosphere. The eight diners sit at two tables, so be prepared to say hi to your neighbours (it would feel weird not to).
So what about these dishes? It’s a tasting menu of eight-or-so courses. I had two candidates for best dish. Barbecued pork jowl with jalapeno sauce was a really single-minded powerhouse of a dish. Two slices of sturdy white jowl, full of flavour and smoke, doused in a sticky hot jalapeno sauce and coated in toasted sesame seeds. Grrrrr! My other option was the quail curry. The char-grilled piece of breast was absolutely perfect, still juicy and slightly pink but with crisped black skin. The curry sauce added a dramatically bright red punch of warming spices. Breaded drumsticks very delicious too. I really can’t pick between these two dishes, loved them both to bits.Of course, the lamb was also splendid, with tangy onions and a bright fermented(?) mint sauce that did remind me of Ynyshir. Going back to the start, the first dish was a chawanmushi topped with generous slices of smoked eel. I’ve had just this combination before, but here they lifted it with a hot broth of the eel bones, and the warmth brought a completely new and huggable dimension to the smokey eel that we usually eat cold. There was a luscious piece of lobster too, very delicately cooked, with a champagne foam and a courgette puree (that being perhaps the only mis-step of the whole meal; a dish that was all richness and no texture).
There was a really bright celery sorbet palette cleanser between the surf dishes and the turf dishes. Then at the end a trio of tasty desserts. The best was perhaps the single strawberry enhanced with strawberry sauce and a miso ice cream. The next was a dish of orange, olive and coffee blobs, but it ate surprisingly well and was a great combination of flavours. Finally an attractive velvety white chocolate shell around a sourdough ice cream around a blob of sticky-salty caramel, good flavours but the caramel very solid.This was certainly the most exciting menu I’ve eaten this year, and at £100 each before drinks it’s good value for the skill and invention on show. As Gwen is also a wine bar, they have loads of wines by the glass and so the sommelier can provide a pairing by chatting it through with you. I liked that. I’d recommend a special trip to Gwen and I’ll definitely come back myself!
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