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2015-12-16
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I've been really stupid. Hong Kong is rightfully known as one of the foodie meccas globally, with more restaurants than any person could ever visit in a lifetime. A place with many Michelin Starred establishments, Top 100 tables and Tatler Top 20 restaurants, so many in fact that you could eat yourself poor by trying to visit them all! And I've been doing just that, trying to visit and write about as many of the best restaurants in this giant of a city as possible and grumbling about the cost. A
There's another way. Lunches!
Hong Kong's finest restaurants have been serving set menu lunches for a long time, a fact that I've recently clued into (yeah, I know, stupid) and taken advantage of.
We booked in to Seasons by Oliver Ezra for a Saturday lunch recently. It felt a little strange getting dressed up to hit a fancy Michelin Starred restaurant for lunch, but as we made our way to Causeway Bay's swanky Lee Gardens 2 shopping centre, it all started to make perfect sense.
Seasons is culinary wiz Oliver Ezra's first foray into his own restaurant. French born Ezra is better know as the former head chef of Three Star L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon's Hong Kong restaurant. Tutored by legends of the culinary world Joel Robuchon and Pierre Gagnaire, Chef Ezra has food in his blood. With a grandfather who was a chef to the last Tzar of Russia, there was never any doubt that Ezra would follow in his grandfather's footsteps and was one named in the best 22 young chefs in France by Gault Millau in 2007.
We were given the set lunch menu, which was impressive enough with four courses available and each course with at least four options. Prices were fixed at HKD $318 for three courses, $398 for four courses or $478 for five courses and, being lunch, we opted for the best valued four course option. For those looking for a longer lunch, there was still the option of the Oliver's eight course tasting menu at the regular price.
While we waited for our first course to arrive, a basket of warm and slightly toasted bread was presented with a lovely hit of soft salted butter. While I spread an unhealthy amount of butter on my bread, the girl was getting a recommendation from the insightful sommelier about which wines to match with her meal selection - a task that both seemed to enjoy!
ways with French beans, pickled red onions and a creamy tuna sauce. A head of lettuce had been carefully crafted to stand upright with beautiful looking pieces of seared tuna sitting atop and drizzled with a vinaigrette. There was a wonderful meaty texture to the tuna, which was fresh and perfectly cooked, which worked well with the light lettuce and creamy sauce. One minor issue was a brown splotch on part of the lettuce head, which probably should have been removed, but was easily avoided while devouring.
We did enjoy sitting at the bar surrounding the kitchen, it enabled us to watch the huge team of chefs hard at work preparing our lunch. Service was superb, with the well drilled team of wait staff delivering on the expectations of a Michelin starred restaurant, but were also down to earth and friendly.
When all is said and done, did I really notice a difference in the quality of the food without head Chef Oliver Ezra orchestrating the meal? Hard to tell. The food was superb but there was one tiny little error with SC's starter in that her lettuce head had a dark brown smudge on the side. Would an eagle eyed head chef such as Oliver Ezra picked that up?
Probably, because that's what makes a multiple Michelin Starred chef tick.
@FoodMeUpScotty
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