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2016-01-17
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While there is little dispute that Hong Kong is one of the world's great food cities, for a westerner in an Asian city there are a couple of locations that seem to capture my attention most. It's no surprise that Wan Chai and Soho/Central are the locals where I dine out most often, after all those two hot spots have the highest concentration of French restaurants in all of the land.Renowned French chef Akrame Benalla, who'd secured his second Michelin star in only his second year of operating Ak
Renowned French chef Akrame Benalla, who'd secured his second Michelin star in only his second year of operating Akrame in Paris, picked Wan Chai as his location for Akrame Hong Kong. That Chef Akrame had earned two stars at such a young age was not so surprising, after all, he learned his trade from culinary legends Ferran Adria and Pierre Gagnaire. What was surprising was that the young chef decided that Hong Kong would be the location of his second French fine diner.
Located in trendy Ship Street, the facade of Akrame is unobtrusive and understated and, unlike many of the flashier dining establishments along Ship Street, would be quite easy to walk by if you weren't specifically looking for it. We'd made our booking quite late on a Saturday morning, more just hoping that we'd score a seat than actually thinking we'd get in. As it turned out, we secured the last two seats in what turned out to be a busy Saturday night.
Chef Akrame takes an interesting approach to he menu, which he attributes to more of a collection than a set menu. In fact, when selecting our choice of tasting menus for the evening, we were just left with the option of four or six courses and a note that the courses will include 'vegetable, seafood, fish, meat cheese and dessert'. With a philosophy towards building a meal around seasonal produce and a menu that changed ever two weeks, it was clear that each course would be a surprise.
Our meal started with a trio of amuse bouche which included pommes dauphines with whole grain mustard topped with smoked beef, a squid ink cracker with a small square of mackerel and a sesame cracker with avocado. The flavours of each of the small bites were delicate and combined well. It was interesting presentation, we were given a skewer to help eat the piping hot potato puff, which was very thoughtful. However, the sesame cracker with avocado foam was quite difficult to eat. The round cracker was sitting atop the foam, so you had to use the cracker to scoop up the avocado and it became quite messy.
It's clear that Chef Akrame is the head chef of the Hong Kong Akrame, even in absentia, as I have not been able to find out any details about the local head chef. It's an interesting approach for a chef who has clearly stated that he prefers to work our of his Paris restaurant 'because this is my baby'. Preferring to spend time in France and developing concepts and training chefs to work in his outlets, it's a model that I'm not 100% convinced about. If Chef Akrame is to build a global empire, which seems to be in his thinking, then it will be a great idea to build the reputation of his local head chefs as well.
We enjoyed our Akrame meal, which was admittedly quite different from your traditional and often rich and sauce heavy French meals. Chef Akrame seems to take a slightly lighter touch to his meals, which in some respects reminds of northern European styles. From a value viewpoint, the tasting menu is quite reasonably priced. Akrame is well worth checking out.
@FoodMeUpScotty
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