Reykjavík Grapevine - 04.06.2010, Blaðsíða 29

Reykjavík Grapevine - 04.06.2010, Blaðsíða 29
 EAT ANd dRINK: 3 X RECIPES 1 MATARGATIð A quarterly little food mag that you can pick up free around the city, it’s chocked full of recipes and cooking ideas and fun little additions that you need in your kitchen right now! 2 COOL CUISINE The newest offering from Icelandic cookbook shining star Nanna Rögnvalsdóttir, Cool Cuisine will have you whipping up traditional fare like a real, live Icelander. 3 ICECOOK A pretty basic blog that is an anything but basic consortium of Icelandic food and food culture. Interested in salting your own meat? Icecook will tell you how! Fancy some homemade flatbrauð? Icecook’s got the recipe for you! (icecook.blogspot.com) 3 X ICE COFFEE 1 HRESSÓ Served in a brandy snifter, flavoured with chocolate or caramel and topped with whipped cream and espresso beans, Hressó’s ice coffee is a refreshingly indulgent summertime treat. Austurstræti 20 2 TE OG KAFFI The ice coffee at Te og Kaffi upstairs in Eymundsson are more like frappucinos than just straight up ice coffee. They’re whipped and creamy and delicious. Buy a magazine and an ice coffee and hit the patio. Austurstræti 18 3 KAFFITÁR Walking down Laugavegur/Bankastræti/ Austurstræti on these hot summer days (hey, heat is relative) almost screams for a cold caffeinated beverage. The ice coffee at Kaffitár is a straight up creamy, flavoured ice-cold cup’o’joe. Nice. Bankastræti 8 3 X CAKE 1 SANDHOLT It’s no secret that Sandholt is a pretty fabulous bakery—but they’ve got a chocolate lava cake that will knock your socks off. It actually tastes like rich dark chocolate, and maintains its natural bitterness and melts in the centre and ohmygawd. Laugavegur 36 2 GRæNN KOSTUR Next time you swing by Grænn kostur for some delicious vegetarian fare make sure to save space for dessert—they’ve got some cakes that are so moist and delicious and it’s easy to imagine that they’re not so bad for you since it’s kinda a healthy restaurant. Skólavörðustígur 8b 3 IKEA Alright, so people don’t exactly think IKEA when they have a hankering for cake, but the next time you’re shopping for some reasonably priced Swedish house wares check out the shockingly sweet and spicy carrot cake in their cafeteria. No assembly required… oh, that’s lame. Kauptúni 4 Slightly off the beaten path, or at least off the path that I tend to beat, at the corner of Vitastígur and Bergþórugata (not near anything resembling a light house, as its grammatical root would imply) is local burger joint/watering hole Vitabar, a greasy-spoon that is out of the way enough to go for a possibly frowned-upon midday drink but not so far that you wouldn’t haul your cookies there for one of their infamous ‘forget-me-not’ burgers. Sitting in the decidedly no-frills, wood- panelled little bar, it didn’t take much time for my date and me to decide what to order. He didn’t even have to open the menu before ordering up a forget-me-not blue cheese burger (800 ISK) and, forcing myself not to order the same thing (it was very difficult), I opted for the bacon cheeseburger (850 ISK). Both are served with a side of fries. As one would expect from the Grapevine-declared best blue cheese burger in Reykjavík of 2009, the forget- me-not burger my date devoured was sweaty and sloppy and covered in enough blue-cheese and garlic to taint his breath for a week. My bacon cheeseburger was really no comparison to my date’s dish (but nothing in the burger world really can compare, to be fair) but if I were comparing it to anything but the famed gleym-mér-ey I’d rightly declare ‘goddamn this is a good burger!’ It really is! Just as sweaty, just as juicy, just as drool inducing. Topped with a hearty slice of bacon and melty, gooey cheese, this thing may not be the king of burgers, but it sure could wear the prince’s crown. The fries accompanying both burgers were a little on the soggy side, though, and didn’t do either of the burgers any real justice. The Guiding Light CATHARINE FULTON JULIA STAPLES 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 Vitabar Bergþórugötu 21 What we think: Vitastígur is the place for burgers Flavour: Sweaty, greasy, good Ambiance: Dive bar Service: Friendly

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