Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.02.2010, Side 23

Reykjavík Grapevine - 05.02.2010, Side 23
Food & Drink | Venue finder 3 Frakkar Baldursgata 14 | F9 Aktu Taktu Skúlugata 15 | K8 Alibaba Veltusund 3b | E3 American Style Tryggvagata 26 | E5 Argentína Steak- house Barónstígur | I8 Austurlanda- hraðlestin Hverfisgata 64A | H7 Á Næstu Grösum Laugavegur 20B | G7 B5 Bankastræti 5 | F6 Bakkus Tryggvagata 22 | D3 Basil & Lime Klapparstíg 38 | G7 Babalú Skólavörðustígur 22A | G8 Balthazar Hafnarstræti 1-3 | D6/E6 Bæjarins Beztu Tryggvagata | E6 Brons Pósthússtræti 9 | E6 Café Cultura Hverfisgata 18 | G6 Café Loki Lokastígur 28 | G9 Café Paris Austurstræti 14 | E6 Café Roma Rauðarárstígur 8 | J9 Domo Þingholtsstræti 5 | F7 Einar Ben Veltusundi | E6 Eldsmiðjan Bragagata 38A | G9 Fiskmarkaðurinn Aðalstræti 12 | D6 Geysir Bar/Bistro Aðalstræti 2 | D6 Garðurinn Klappastigur 37 | G7 Glætan book café Laugavegur 19 | F5 Grái Kötturinn Hverfisgata 16A | G7 Grillhúsið Tryggvagata 20 | E5/ E6 Habibi Hafnarstræti 20 | D5 Hamborgarabúlla Tómasar (“Bullan”) Geirsgata 1 | D5 Hlölla Bátar Ingólfstorg | D6 Hornið Hafnarstræti 15 | E6 Hótel Holt Bergstaðarstræti 37 | F7 Humarshúsið Ammtmanstígur 1 | E7 Hressó Austurstræti 20 | E6 Icelandic Fish & Chips Tryggvagata 8 | E5 Indian Mango Frakkastígur 12 | G6 Jómfrúin Lækjargata 4 | E6 Kaffi Hljómalind Laugavegur 21 | G7 Kaffitár Bankastræti 8 | F6 Kaffivagninn Grandagarður 10 | D1 Kebabhúsið Austurstræti 2 | E6 Kofi Tómasar Frænda Laugavegur 2 | F7 Krua Thai Tryggvagata 14 | D5 La Primavera Austurstræti 9 | E6 Lystin Laugavegur 73 | H7 Mokka Skólavörðustígur 3A | F7 Nonnabiti Hafnarstræti 9 | E6 O Sushi Lækjargata 2A | E6 Pisa Lækjargötu 6b | E6 Pizza King Hafnarstræti 18 | E6 Pizza Pronto Vallarstræti 4 | D6 Pizzaverksmiðjan Lækjargötu 8 | E6 Prikið Bankastræti 12 | F6 Ráðhúskaffi | D7 Tjarnargata 11 Santa Maria Laugavegur 22A, | F7 Segafredo Lækjatorg | E6 Serrano Hringbraut 12 | I3 Shalimar Austurstræti 4 | E3 Silfur Pósthússtræti 11 | E6 Sjávarkjallarinn Aðalstræti 2 | D6 Sólon Bankastræti 7a | F6 Sushibarinn Laugavegur 2 | F7 Svarta Kaffi Laugavegur 54 | H8 Sægreifinn Verbuð 8, Geirsgata | D5 Tapas Vesturgata 3B | D5 Thorvaldsen Austurstræti 8 | E6 Tíu Dropar Laugavegur 27 | G7 Tívolí Laugavegur 3 | F7 Vegamót Vegamótastígur 4 | G7 Við Tjörnina Templarasund 3 | E7 Vitabar Bergþórugata 21 | H9 EAT And dRInK: 3 x SANDWICHES 1 SANDHOLT Laying eyes upon the fresh baguette sandwiches and selection of wraps in the glass display is like taking in the offerings of a quaint Parisian patisserie. The sandwiches are delicious, too, especially when enjoyed in Sandholt’s cosy eating area. Laugavegur 36 2 TE OG KAFFI This chain boasts a selection of focacce that are tasty on their own but get amped up a notch after spending a couple of minutes in the sandwich press. The star of the show is the grilled chicken, sun-dried tomato and mozzarella variety, with bonus sun-dried tomatoes baked into the bread. Austurstræti 18 (in Eymundsson) 3 SuBWAY Sizeable, fast, filling, stuffed only with the stuff you’re craving. It’s far from gourmet, but sometimes that’s just how a sandwich should be. Austurstræti 3 3 x AMERICAN BREAKFAST 1 GRÁI KöTTuRINN The Truck is the very embodiment of the all-American breakfast – larger than life and gluttonous to the extreme. Grái Kötturinn does the dish right, with fluffy pancakes, eggs done the way you like’em, bacon, toast and home fries stacked high, and served with complimentary coffee. If you wake up dying of hunger, you know where to go. Hverfisgata 16a 2 PRIKIð Not to be outdone, Prikið’s got a Truck of its own – bacon, eggs, pancakes, potatoes, toast – to stop hunger in its tracks. For those of the British persuasion, the Station Wagon has your hankering for baked beans covered. Bankastræti 12 3 HRESSÓ While the big-breakfast item on Hressó’s menu is called “English Breakfast” it’s the size that counts where American breakfasts are concerned and this is big enough to get the job done. Bacon, eggs, toast, satisfaction. Austurstræti 20 3 x STuFF YOu CAN’T GET AT BÓNuS 1 MAI THAI If you’re looking for a clean break from gaudy yellow wrappers, pink pigs and Euro Shopper, and your diet could use a flavour infusion, look no further than Mai Thai. Chilli paste? Check. A selection of fish sauces? You got it. Fun labels with jovial, smiling Buddha’s on them? Of course! Laugavegur 116 2 NÓATúN Nóatún has got you covered on that all too familiar occasion when you find yourself desperately in need of artichokes and canned mussels, or one of the many other “specialty” items not stocked in the ubiquitous grocery chains. Hringbraut 121 3 OSTABúðIN Cheese and meat aren’t meant to be vacuum packed. Ostabúðin gets that. It’s nice to see cheeses on offer other than goudas of varying fat content and the odd havarti, and it’s even nicer to see it smack dab in the middle of 101. Skólavörðustígur 8 I know we Icelanders tend to think of Muslims as the people who only came here to steal our Westman Islands and custody- battled children, though it’s not like our ancestors didn't do their share of kidnapping. Anyway, now it's time to put our kidnapping sacks to good use and plunder each other's culinary traditions (I'm sorry Algeria, I guess you pulled the rotten shark straw). Let North Africa light up our malnourished souls in the coming months, after everyone has lost their jobs and become The Road-style cannibals roaming Ísafjörður looking for tender toddlers. It’s a common misconception that religion is the main divide between Scandinavia and the Middle East, but we can skip and hop over that puddle in the next 10 years as the coming generation embraces consumer culture and starts doodling deities left and right. No, the real problem is going to be the cuisine. We like our cinnamon on sweet rice puddings—they like it in lamb stews. This savoury vs. sweet divide is not to be tolerated any longer. It's stranger how a culinary culture coming from the sandy equator has pioneered the use of the perfect winter spices (cinnamon, cloves, cardamoms) and the Christmas pudding essentials (dried apricots, figs, dates, raisins), even the perfect precursor to a heavy winter meal (gargantuan amounts of black afghan). And yet snowy winters are hardly the scourge of the Berber countries and Christmas is just a Thursday. Berber food is based on core food items that are readily available in Iceland: lamb, root vegetables and grain. The only thing missing is the assortment of spices (saffron, coriander, cumin, cardamoms, etc.), nuts, dried fruit and couscous. Here's where it gets really sweet. According to Icelandic customs law, tea, coffee, spices, most cereals/grain, nuts can be brought into the country without much limitation. So the trick is to stock up when you go somewhere that has a good Arabic neighbourhood or genuinely cheap (I'm looking at you Bónus—you drunken swine) supermarkets that sell in bulk. A kilo bag of almonds will never be cheap, but it will be a fraction of what it costs in Iceland and will last you a while. This oversupply of lamb is due to ridiculous subsidies, I know. But the fish is running out too, so we’ll need to embrace a cuisine that incorporates these two main protein sources along with root vegetables and preserved, easy-to import side items (a nation that pickles its lemons should become our immediate allies). Young people in Iceland seem to have an undying love affair with Italian cuisine. I get it, pizza is good, pasta is good, pesto is great. The problem is that Italian cuisine has three rules: 1. Quality ingredients 2. Quality ingredients 3. Mama Mia! And you won't find those ingredients growing or grazing in Iceland's arid landscape. The reason Italian cuisine works so well is because it's in Italy. Hell, Iceland can't even get the tomato right, what hope is there then? Pasta takes ten minutes to cook— couscous is essentially ready in a third of that time. Couscous also has approx. three times the calorie count, three times the protein and three times the fibre. Restaurant Saffran has already started a methadone program for weaning the basil addicts out there with their amalgam of Arabic and Italian food (although someone needs to slap them for that tahini-less muck they dare call Hummus), and people are losing their tiny Viking minds over it. Iceland is ready to go cold turkey. A good first step for home cooking would be harira, since it’s basically an Icelandic meat soup with some fancy spices. Then you can move on to tagine, which is mostly onion, carrot and lamb. Chermoula is the perfect marinade for baked fish. And although Ghee (clarified butter) is more likely to be found further south near Egypt, it would fit Icelandic cuisine well. Olive oil is expensive, boiled butter that can store forever at room temperature is a much better fit for Iceland (also healthier). There are probably few places Icelanders would think they have less in common with than North Africa, so for all your xenophobic bastards out there: Hah! I told you immigration would pay off in the long run! Now go find someone with dark hair and a funny accent and ask him how to make tabouleh. If he answers "che cosa?" then you know he's Italian and feed him to the roving cannibal gangs of Ísafjörður immediately! - RAGNAR EGILSSON Why North Africa Is Our New Culinary Friend Sti ck wit h u s fo r s ush i GRAPEVINE FOOD REVIEW KEY 0 God-awful Awful Passable. Much room for improvement Good, but not great. Really rather good Extraordinary The food is rated in three categories: Fast food: Pizza, pylsa and kebab, food on the go (0-2000 ISK) Mid-range: Everyday eateries, sit-in. (mains 2000-4000 ISK) Fine dining: Fancy, expensive-type food. (3-course dinners 6000 and up) To best judge the restaurant experience, the Grapevine conducts its reviews anony- mously. The sole exception is the payment method: When the bill arrives, the reviewer presents a written statement, previously signed by the restaurant management, allowing the reviewer and one companion a meal on the house for review purposes. Using this approach, we aim to best preserve the reviewer’s objectivity (and the restaurants’ consistency), within the humble means of a free newspaper. The Grapevine does not favour foie gras over fast food. Restaurants are reviewed for what they are; both burger and beluga can be extraordinary in their own right. In all evaluations, the food is key: Does it taste good? Is it properly prepared? Are the ingredients fresh and of high quality? Secondary considerations include setting, service and value for money. All opinions expressed are the critic’s own. SP

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