Friday 24 January 2014

ooh là là

Third time a charm. I think that's what the saying is. Certainly the third French dinner at Three Bags Full was full of all that is charming.

Having been to the first dégustation in November and loved it, I was excited to see what the January offering would be. I was not disappointed.

Fabien and Nico describe their food as simple. Initially, I raised my eyebrows (perhaps, or hopefully, in a Parisian sort of way) at this description, as their talent with flavour and the execution of the food is exceptional. However, while these are not dishes we might whip up at home and eat on the couch while watching the tennis, they do celebrate simple, clean flavours and the chefs have not over-complicated their dishes with an over-indulgent list of fancy ingredients.

Considerate presentation creates a feeling of an event and Fabien and Nico do this well, with a variety of canvases for their thoughtfully composed food: a cricket bat, a stone, a bingo card to name a few.

Primed with a superb apéritif of rosé pamplemousse: beautifully refreshing sourness of grapefruit syrup with the playfulness of a summery rosé behind it, I was ready for the appetisers, three tiny morsels of exquisite flavour.

George V Cake, named for the Parisian hotel off  the Champs-Elysées they both worked in before coming to Melbourne, was a savoury cake of rocket, gruyère and field mushroom. Similar to a frittata, it was warm and nutty with light, buttery flavours and a delicate texture.

Guimauve is French for marshmallow and parmesan guimauve was a savoury rendition made from vegetable stock infused with parmesan and a natural gelatine sourced from seaweed, coated in a dehydrated olive and almond meal crumb. Exquisitely light with a salty crunch.

Lightly cooked cured salmon rolled in a red shiso leaf (an Asian herb from the mint family) served with mango dressing and perched on a small rock was light and fresh.

An amuse-bouche was next.  Chilled soup made from cantaloupe and lemon myrtle, an Australian native herb similar to lemon mint, topped with a capsicum and espelette (south western French spice) mousse and garnished with a chorizo brunoise, which for those not well-versed in their French cooking vocabulary, refers to the way the chorizo was cut, that is, into tiny flavoursome sprinkles. Fruity and spicy and salty, the mousse was the most smooth and velvety mousse I have ever tasted and provided the perfect contrast to the almost earthiness of the sweet, but not too sweet, cantaloupe.

The entrée was tempura-battered yellow fin tuna jauntily set on a bed of courgette, olives and confit tomatoes and dressed with escabèche, a French pickling marinade with a slightly aniseed flavour. This work of art was accompanied by a tomato sorbet. The harmony of crunchy and rich and frozen and tangy was beautiful.

The main course, or plat de résistance for those who like to be Frenchy about it, was perfectly roasted veal rump on the most incredible eggplant, parmesan and sparkling white wine purée, served with a shaved fennel and mizuna salad.

To finish, lemon curd and basil ravioli with strawberries pan-fried in pineau de Charente with fresh peaches and a strawberry and peach sauce poured over the top at the table. A buttery sable Breton biscuit hidden amongst the fruit, it was like eating summer. Playful. Tart. Fruity sunshine.

My hosts for the evening were warm and welcoming. Nico and Fabien brought many of the dishes to the tables to explain what was in them and the ideas behind them. And they did it in a completely relaxed way as though they hadn't just been creating magic in the kitchen only seconds before.

When a mouthful of food transports you somewhere else, as in, out of your body and into a whole other realm, it is a very good thing. I spent most of the meal floating somewhere above the table with a ridiculous grin. 























 

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