sketch lecture room


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4
4.3
no
5
2 yıl önce
conduit street
a visit to sketch is certainly an interesting and rather ott experience. i felt rather like a kid with a golden ticket to willy wonka's chocolate factory. as you enter the building you have the parlour on your right, where you can order an indulgent breakfast, afternoon tea, comfortfoodand cocktails. the rather low key parlour is in stark contrast to pierre gagnaire's michelin stared restaurant in the lecture room. the name of the restaurant does not really conjure up what is revealed after you are escorted up the exotically lit staircase. the doors are dramatically thrown open and you find yourself in a jewel box like room, decorated with a red, orange, blue and gold palette.

the first hurdle is the champagne trolley, something i am not a fan off. if i want a glass i prefer to check the menu first to make sure i know what i am getting, so we just stuck to tap water while we made our menu selection. despite the hefty prices you can still go down the less expensive route by ordering from the gourmet rapide menu. however as we wanted to get the full experience on our first visit we opted for the regular tasting menu (it is expensive, but as you will see from this post - you do get a lot for your money) and asked the sommelier to recommend a bottle of wine that would suit the whole menu. he selected a reasonably priced bottle of irouleguy, xuri d'ansa 2004 that was drinkable both on its own and as an accompaniment to the food.

next came the bread, served with some rather spectacular tasting seaweed butter. then the feast began. we had a wonderful array of beautifully presented dishes served by sketches very efficient staff. ironically though the presentation and service did eclipse thefooda bit. thefoodwas very good, don't get me wrong. the foie gras terrine with mackerel bouillon and clams was an excellent start. the marinated stone bass, peas, spring cabbage, mint and smoked lardons was quite lovely, nice flavour combinations and textures. the huge king scallop served with nettle cream, haddock, watercress salad, seaweed butter and rhubarb was fabulous, and the other dishes were enjoyable too. they just didn't quite meet our expectations, which were perhaps a little too high, due to the rather excessive hype that sketch gets. this was a tasting menu that definitely filled you up though, we were getting full even before we started on the grand dessert which consists of no less than five desserts and a selection of petit fours. however sometimes less is more and i think i would have preferred just a couple of spectacular desserts, rather than five ok ones. that said, it was still discernibly better than a lot of michelin starred restaurants out there, and as such i would have no qualms about recommending the sketch experience.
0
yash
5
6 yıl önce
conduit street
the staff is very polite and friendly. the ambience and the decor is beautiful. thefoodis simply outstanding. the service is quick. i was satisfied as a customer and a big time foodie.
0
neha
4
6 yıl önce
conduit street
i should mention that on the day of my visit, the uber-chef pierre gagnaire happened to be in the kitchen and i feel that thefoodcould not have been better.

everything was really top notch, especially the vegetables scented like a hermes perfume. coated in a light foie gras sauce; it was just devine.

dishes come with many different elements and thefoodis altogether very very complicated- but yet delicious.

service is really good- just as you would expect from this place.

it is mayfair, so prices are very very high. value for money is not as good gauthier in soho but if you rich- this is the place to go.
0
isabelle
5
6 yıl önce
conduit street
i had a wonderful experience in this restaurant.

the service is perfect, waiters pay a lot of attention to details and serves maximum two tables per person.

the atmosphere is exceptional. the hall is very large, with a dome in the middle. only few tables, giving the opportunity to have privacy during the dinner.

i had the duck and my friend took the lamb. they offered some starters.
if the service was impeccable, thefoodwas not less.

it is a pricy restaurant, but it is worth trying it.
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don
5
6 yıl önce
conduit street
classy dining room. very formal service but generally helpful. excellent variety on menu.foodtasty well seasoned and filling. very well sourced ingredients. overall a very good experience.
0
uma
4
7 yıl önce
conduit street
beautifully dining room.  formal and excellent service particularly from the sommelier.foodwas very good but sometimes over elaborate but always tasty. a great experience naturally very expensive. .
0
j
5
8 yıl önce
conduit street
i've been to the sketch lecture room & library a few times and must say it's the best fine dining experience in london. the location is great, you feel like being a guest in alice's wonderland. impeccable service and the most creativefoodon the planet. it's pretty much the only place where a vegetarian tasting menu can really blow me away. i will definitely keep coming back!
0
foodhunter
5
8 yıl önce
conduit street
this a place is a must go! the different rooms, each uniquely themed, are extraordinary. the bathrooms are an experience of their own. thefoodis full of flavour, texture and surprise. the wine list is equally exciting. waiters are dressed super stylishly bringing the contemporary to the forefront. the silver cloches placed on yourfoodbrings the fine dining.
0
bang
5
8 yıl önce
conduit street
absolutely lovely place! great service andfoodevery time. pricey but worth it if only to bask in the ambience. try their burrata salad as it is one of the best. no need to have a reservation either.
0
ann
3
8 yıl önce
conduit street
i must confess that part of the reason i keep going back to sketch is for the ambience and....great loos! i've had cocktails and afternoon tea here a few times. the service that last time i visited was pretty appalling. it was a work evening and we were working our way through the cakes and drinks we'd ordered but the waitress at hand was in an almighty rush to hurry us up. that said, thefood( savouries, cakes) and drinks have always been great. plus, they burn diptyque candles during the winter which makes it smell amazing. so more points for the atmosphere rather than service.
0
sam
5
9 yıl önce
conduit street
blown away!
this restaurant is incredible. thefoodis as good as it looks. langoustine 5 ways was amazing. the service was impeccable and on our way out we we honoured enough to meet pierre gagnaire. we had lunch from the a la carte menu but were due to be at the theatre at 2:30 so had to sacrifice ordering dessert, but it's an excuse to return and we're already arranging our next visit! don't know why i haven't been here before today! a must visit restaurant.
0
andrea
5
9 yıl önce
conduit street
sketch..

for first i have to say that is one of my favourite places in london where to get a drink with friends or even pre-party. 
after tried the gallery, that i liked, i really wanted to try the lecture room. 

i went for lunch cause i thought that the price was very good for the quality/quantity offoodserved. 

the lunch was divided in 5 acts: 
- canapes/amuse-bouche 
- starters
- main courses
- desserts
- petit fours and coffee 

first thing that comes at your eyes is the design of the dining room. 
very fancy and unique. 

very kind and professional staff like a proper 2* michelin restaurant. 
at the begin of the lunch they come with a trolley with 12 different bottles of amazing champagne which you can choose one from to start with. 

than arrive the canapés or amuse-bouche(if we have to define it precisely)
composed by a multiple amount of small tastings.. 
the best? the cracker with foie gras, chocolate and plum jam. just beautiful. 
as well very creative the squid ink meringue dipped into rosemary olive oil. 

very interesting i have to say. 

then is the turn of the starters. 
again 4/5 kind of different starters.. all interesting flavours. 
from the beans with corn ice cream, to the watercress puree with anchovies and almonds. 

2 different kind of main courses. 

multiple desserts. 
now.. i love desserts. so i'm very picky as well if they are not well done. 

but here i was really satisfied by their execution and presentation. 
impressive the final slush. 

and.... the coffee was good. not easy point to get in most of the london's restaurants ;) 

to summarise. 

a great 2* michelin restaurant. and i will come back soon for the dinner! 
4/5! well done pierre gagnaire!
0
steph
9 yıl önce
conduit street
... sketch is truly one of a kind, with 5 restaurants and bars inside, all interlinked to one another, its a foodie’s world . a venue perfect for food, drinks and entertainment, its definitely a destination i would highly recommend visiting. ( your wallet might be emptied out by the time you leave mayfair though…) its quirkyfoodstyle in its tasting menu is highlighted below...
0
gete
5
9 yıl önce
conduit street
this is one of my favorite places in london. it is very trendy and i love the environment. the glade is my favourite room because the décor is absolutely stunning; with painted tress on walls, beautiful wooden chairs and long silk curtains.

thefoodisn’t anything special and overpriced for the portions you get. there are much better restaurants you can eat at around. but this is the perfect place for drinks or afternoon tea.

the cocktails are phenomenal and i definitely recommend them. i always get the scones and tea here because it’s my absolute favourite. the cream that it comes with is delicious and i would suggest coming here around 12.30-1 pm as the scones are freshly made.

i would definitely recommend going to sketch because it has a lovely relaxing environment, the service is excellent and the whole interior and décor of the place is modern and aesthetically pleasing to the eye.
0
andy
4
9 yıl önce
conduit street
the building that houses sketch is home to several venues: a gourmet restaurant (the lecture room and library), a more casual downstairs restaurant, a tearoom and cocktail bar. the upstairs lecture room and library has opulent décor, with thick carpet and well-spaced tables with high quality white linen. there are several menu options: a six course tasting menu was priced at £95, and from the a la carte starters ranged from £33 to £42 and main courses £47 to £55, desserts £13 to £25. sketch is owned by restaurateur mourad mazouz and iconic parisian chef pierre gagnaire, who pops in on occasion but of course is not behind the stoves cooking dinner too often. the new head chef is romain chapel, who took over from jean denis lebras in 2012. romain is the son of legendary chef alain chapel, whose eponymous mionnay restaurant held three stars for many years, though sadly that establishment closed last year. romain chapel has worked in some very serious kitchens, including stints with olivier roellinger at maisons de bricourt and marc haeberlin at auberge de l’ill, returning in 2010 to his father’s restaurant, and becoming head chef before it closed in february 2012.

the wine list was extensive, with around 700 wines, ranging in price from £18 to £17,000, with an average mark-up of around 3.7 times retail price, high even for mayfair. example wines include jj prum kabinett 2009 at £49 for a wine that you can find in the shops for £22, jermann vintage tunina 2010 at £98 for a wine that retails at £35, and kistler les noisetiers 2007 at £174 compared to a shop price of around £58.

bread was made from scratch in the kitchen, and good white bread slices and even better buckwheat bread, with an excellent crust (17/20). a plate of amuse-bouches comprised: goat cheese parfait and beetroot powder, spinach financier with stilton cream, sea bream sashimi with white melon, cumin crackers with parsnip cream, and little parmesan nibbles, and a bowl of sauerkraut foam. these were technically well made, though the sea bream flavour in this tiny nibble was barely discernible. i quite liked the sauerkraut foam, which was unusual; however the others did not stand out for me (15/20).

a dish called “sea garden” (£42) consisted of a main plate of excellent langoustines, carefully cooked and of evidently high quality. on the side was langoustine bisque with shrimp butter that had good flavour but would have been better warm. the other accompaniments were white crab meat (complete with a small piece of shell) with avocado and citrus gelee, and oysters in a bouillon of ”sorrel and quimper”; incidentally, quimper is not an ingredient but a town in brittany – i am not quite sure why it is highlighted on the menu. the main question to me with this complex plate offood(plates really) is whether the assorted extra elements really added anything to the core of the dish, the langoustines. the bisque made sense, but avocado and crab felt like it belonged as a separate dish, as did the warm oyster. it felt to me that the extra elements were added because having several components is notionally the gagnaire style, rather than because these particular things really went together. if the langoustines had been cooked in a few different ways, for example, then this would have made more sense to me. as it was, it just seemed confused, and the crab shell slip and the cold bisque detracted rather than enhanced from the very nicely cooked langoustines (15/20). by contrast when i ate at pierre gagnaire in paris i tried a dish of langoustines prepared five different ways, and this seemed to me a coherent dish design, as well as being flawlessly executed.

duck (£47) was from challans, and of high quality, served with cumin and cinnamon sauce, red cabbage and blackcurrant marmalade, red onions, prune paste, roasted foie gras and potatoes with coriander. the red cabbage was excellent, having just the right balance of sweet and sour, the blackurrant providing a hint of acidity to balance the richness of the duck, though the potatoes were rather overwhelmed by the considerable quantity of coriander used (17/20). i preferred this dish to the simmental beef dish than i sampled, the beef itself not having quite the depth of flavour that i was expecting, and the dish seemed to me rather too rich with its gorgonzola, rocket and carrot accompaniments (15/20). the savoury dishes at sketch are nothing if not complex, and sometimes, in the words of robert browning, “less is more”. i wonder whether the chef should ask “what can i subtract from this dish” rather than “what can i add”, because for me the cooking would be improved by a more focused approach.

vanilla soufflé (£13) was the dish of the day, the soufflé immaculately cooked with excellent texture and plenty of high quality vanilla flavour coming through (18/20). you can also choose either three (£16) or six (£25) mini-desserts. gianduja chocolate was topped with caramel laced with balsamic vinegar, chocolate sorbet and sharon fruit – this was excellent, the rich chocolate nicely balanced by the acidity of the fruit (17/20). pink grapefruit marmalade with dragon fruit with candied red pepper and pink champagne granita seemed to me a rather confused dish, with too many strong elements fighting for attention (15/20). passion fruit with cream cheese mousse, candied chestnut and shortbread was good, the passion fruit and chestnut nicely in balance, the shortbread texture enjoyable (16/20).

service was really top-notch, the staff very well drilled, the topping up flawless. this is the sort of classy service that very few london restaurants manage to pull off. the bill, with three glasses of wine each, came to £172 a head, even with a £50 off voucher. certainly, if you go the a la carte route, it would be tough to drink wine and leave here with a bill of less than £150 a head, and it would be very easy to spend more than this. this is the fundamental issue with sketch: thefoodis certainly accomplished, but not the very best in london, yet it is as expensive as anywhere. however, the dining room was full on a tuesday lunch in february, so they clearly know their market.
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