the grove


robert
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
booked for my partners birthday for a special night. window seats were great (february).
we got the experience we desired. the food had the most elements but still maintained the correct balance. the waiter was new from france and on request repeated the specials in french much too the birthday girls delight.
met its rep.
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hanna
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
the grove is an absolutely amazing restaurant, it's incomparable. the meals are simply genius and the staff are incredible, i highly recommend it!
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ray
3
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
after having dined at the likes of merideths, spqr, depot, fine dining etc i was really looking forward to dining at the established and well renowned the grove which had a michelin chef and had won several metro restaurant awards.

when we arrived, and the restaurant was all but empty, we were seated at what i considered to be the worst table with the worst lighting. when i commented on this to the maitre de (who also turned out to be the owner michael dearth) he dismissed this and tried to justify it by saying we had been seated in the most romantic spot. after being moved i couldn't but notice that the "romantic spot" remained empty for the duration of our meal.

for our meal tonight we ordered the degustation menu, a bottle of red and two glasses on white. with an end price of $380 we were expecting exceptional food and service.

unfortunately, we left disappointed.

the seven course degustation was good, but not exceptional and not comparable to other fine dining experiences i had had previously.

the deserts were great, as was the espresso that accompanied, and i have to commend the patisserie chef.

both the fish and and venison were very good, but not amazing, and the other 2 courses were not memorable.

whilst the food was generally quite good, i didn't think it was fantastic, and personally i go to fine dining restaurants to be blown away by the gastronomy, not to simply think it was pretty good.

i had two issues with the service:

1. after spending $80 on a bottle of wine we had to ask for our glasses to be topped up. it may seem minor but when you're at a fine dining restaurant this should not happen.

2. the waitress said our next course was veal ... when she checked she confirmed it was venison. again, maybe a simple over sight, but not one that should be expected to happen.

when we left i commented to the maitre de / owner / michael dearth that i thought the food didn't meet my expectations and was a bit "average" he lost his temper and had a go at me.

all up i thought the food and whole dining experience was about a 7/10 ... so well below what i would expect from a bill of $380
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alice
4
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
i have wanted to try this restaurant for years and finally got the chance a couple of weeks ago. this is fine-dining at one of the finest.

we had the tasting menu and every course was a delight. a particular highlight was the pork belly. crispy skin but melts in your mouth. i'm salivating just thinking about it.

the atmophere was pretty stuffy as can be expected, and the service is what you'd expect from such an establishment. you get what you pay for. and unfortunately for me that means special occasions only.
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debbie
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
fantastic service, from the moment we entered the restaurant and right thru our dining experience. very knowledgeable staff, fantastic wine matches to the chefs special 5 course. exquisite food as usual. my friend was a first time diner and was totally blown away by everything.
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petra
4
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
i have always wanted to dine at the grove and i finally did. we had the 5 course degustation, made up of salmon, rabbit terrine, duck, venison and dessert. the food was good, but most of the courses weren't really to my liking. i found they all had very sweet elements to them and i personally don't like my savoury dishes tasting sweet. my favourite of the savoury dishes was probably the venison which came with a variety of unusual and cool mushrooms. it was a hearty dish and despite the size was very filling. the dessert was divine - a rich chocolate mousse with fruit and delicious sauces, a great way to finish. the service was very good but just a wee bit pretentious for my liking. it was very over the top, with our waiter thanking us for every little thing - like she would pour us more wine or water and then thank us...it was a bit much. in saying that, i'm glad i went but at nearly $90 for just the base food, and the constant attempts to upsell, i probably won't be going back.
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nicholas
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
ya know, i think the grove could teach a lot of other restaurants a thing or two about how to greet people at the door, make them feel welcome and how to offer great service and tremendous food. it's pretty damn exemplary when it comes to high end dining.

i have a hunch that if this were nyc you'd pay $500 just to have your name on a waiting list for a table and then you'd pay $1000 for a dish. i mean, you wouldn't eat here every day (it's about $100-150 a head doing it nicely) but for the special occasion or as a treat it's approaching flawless.

the grove it tucked away next to the church, next to some sushi place and it's long and it's thin. it's understated, doesn't shout about itself, nothing is gaudy, it's quiet, subdued, classy. you could take your girlfriend's parents here and they'd think you were a quite a catch. 

i briefly mentioned the service before. they've been trained really really well. compliments to whoever is maitre d' because these guys are pros. they're attentive, discrete, friendly, warm, knowledgeable, will pass on requests and messages to the kitchen, will follow things up and do what they can to ensure your evening is memorable and your enjoyment absolute.

the tablecloth is spotless, the cutlery is spotless and reassuringly heavy, the old wooden floor gleams with a dull sheen of use. the lighting is low enough to be intimate but bright enough to not trip over the handbag left on the floor. it's... just right.

man, the food. ben bayly is a wizard and his chef, mike, is like the apprentice. the unusual combinations shouldn't work, they should run away from each other like timid kids but crawfish and rabbit ravioli? goddam, that's delightful. velvety, smooth, just the right amount of weight and chew to feel substantial, yet light and fine enough to still feel refined and sumptuous. there's never enough of these things on the plate. 

the flavours are pronounced, rich and deep, verdant and lush, never overpowering or imbalanced, but applied with a deft touch that's uncanny. i'm a big fan and a convert.

another thing i like to point out: you can order just a steak and a beer and still be treated like a gentleman. i know some places, you sit down, order something stereotypically blue collar like a slab of beef and a glass of beer and they think you came in by mistake, or are here because you're filming a candid camera tv show. not here though, here they have the class and decency to treat everyone with respect and dignity. nice going.

this is truly a gem in auckland's food scene.
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aniva
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
my boyfriend brought me here for one of our anniversaries.

we had the 3 courses. i've never cared much for butter but i swear if all butter tasted like the one at the grove id be an addict. it tasted amazing. i don't even know how to describe it.

i enjoyed each course. everything on the plate complimented each other in each course.

the waiter was very attentive and thorough with informing us about each course. i also appreciated that the waiter asked if we have any dietary restrictions even though we did not.
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rory
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
this is fine dining at its best.

superb, attentive. knowledgeable waiters.

we had the 7-course degustation. this also comes with some extra surprises at the beginning and a palate cleanser near the end.

be prepared for the long haul. ours took over 4 hours but totally worth it.

each dish was immaculately presented and explained and all questions were welcome.

standouts for us were the cucumber vegetable dish (grilled over japanese charcoal), the risotto and the lobster.

excellent wine selection by the glass.

fine dining costs - the grove is not cheap but we thought it good value for the service and the food.

in common with many auckland restaurants, there are a lot of hard surfaces which makes it difficult to hear when the place is full.

as someone who doesn't eat salt, i found the fish and rabbit somewhat salty.

but overall, if you are looking for a really good evening or maybe a special occasion, you won't go wrong here.

we left a large tip - the staff totally deserved it.
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epicurious
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
i've dined at the grove 3 times in the past 6 years. each time was there was a different head chef. never the less, there was an amazing consistency in style and experience. i always order the degustation menu. it is a journey of dishes that delighted the senses. the atmosphere feels like a michelin star restaurant...simply elegent. the wine list is always outstanding as one of the owners is a sommelier. the service has always been good as well. the backers of grove must be congratulated for supporting the industry development. several of the head chefs that have come from the grove - i.e. meredith, sid, benjamin bayly - have gone on to well-recognised careers of their own.
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bryan
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
superb sophisticated degustation of 7 courses highlighting fresh seasonal nz produce. can’t fault the food. wine matching comes in two options; regular (nz winery dominant) or premium that introduces boutique international wineries. the atmosphere is romantic / intimate and tables are nicely spaced (*during covid restrictions so must be). staff are attentive but not invasive and finished my dinner with a birthday card signed by all staff on the night and a rich choc lamington with a candle - thanks!
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emilia
5
2 yıl önce
wyndham street
i am amazed! from the moment you enter the restaurant until you leave, you feel welcome and well taken care of. the food, while worried me by the unusual ingredients, were beautiful. i had never tasted such unique food in my life. the price point is insane i must say, we paid almost $800 for the two of us but were well fed for the rest of the night. the 7 course was definitely too much food for me but i didn't want it to go to waste!
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caro
4
3 yıl önce
wyndham street
consumed the full set menu (sadly can only upload 10 pics). it was an very fun journey and i definitely enjoyed the novelty in terms of presentation (the truffle shaped truffles at the end were very memorable). the careful utilisation of local ingredients felt special. the cook of the fish was perfect. a lot of the flavours were fun - carrot in cold dessert is uncommon. the setting was a lot more casual than expected in terms of atmosphere and we were seated at a rather uncomfortable table meaning that we were not in the main dining area but more of a wide hallway which meant a lot of thoroughfare.
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earnestaster
4
3 yıl önce
wyndham street
i was going to type “in this post-covid world” but then realized wryly that we here in new zealand have managed to achieve this luxury while the rest of the world still sizzles in the coronavirus apocalypse. more than two months of no community transmission had passed when we received tidings that grove restaurant in auckland c.b.d was going to host a special truffle dinner of five courses complete with cocktail pairing for nzd 320. restaurants throughout the country have seen a resurgence in clientele after a bankruptcy-threatening lockdown and grove seemed confident to up its already high ante with this rarefied experience. attending such an event and writing about it, in the current zeitgeist, would seem a very marie antoinette thing to do for a patron and i accept all such criticism. the world moves on. here’s the experience.

four long tables were dedicated for this monday night event, with the ‘shared table’ set-up accommodating at least three dozen diners. seating was pre-allocated by the restaurant randomly and i knew none of my co-diners beforehand but proceeded to have very nice confabs with them, my neighbors including a fashionista and a lawyer. owner michael dearth stood beside a palm plant and gave a little intro to the evening, filling us in on grove’s journey. he remarked how much the tomatoes here have improved since he first came to new zealand from the united states of america, while my co-diner later told me that when he’d visited the u.s , the tomatoes there were no great shakes either.

speaking of spherical comely things, the most beautiful and magnificent looking bread i’ve ever encountered were presented to us that night – fantastic glistening orbs. as large as an ostrich egg but much more glamorous-looking, they arrived straddling a nest of hay. crisply collapsing to reveal a satiny soft interior, these were gloriously dispatched down chuffed gullets with truffle butter.

truffle treats, delivering a little hit of flowing crunchy truffle flavour, arrived in creative formats – encased in a lacy crisp pastry-ball, on a savoury fudge-cake, atop a petite char siu bun, and a black sphere itself amidst black rocks – a truffle impersonator hiding a molten current of the said ingredient. with all due respect to the farmers and grove’s assiduous cooks, this was true dog-to-table cuisine, all the truffles found by one dog ‘cassie’, the hero of tewnion truffiere farm in yaldhurst, canterbury.

the first full-scale offering was a beaut of umami, masterminded by chef ryan moore who heads the restaurant from the last two years. waiters shaved a shower of truffles which fell beside delicious jerusalem artichoke chips and a large disc of the same vegetable’s delectably creamy puree. you sliced through the confetti-‘n’-cake only to trigger a luxurious ooze of egg yolk. ‘twas a sensuous mix that would have vaulted into the empyrean had the truffle aroma been headier.

there was no such truffle shower rained on the seafood course but it did not need any. slices of the star ingredient had been neatly tucked into the dish body, which quietly erupted with the bold smoky umami of bbq cabbage and enoki mushrooms. the child who scoffs down these dark vegetables will be a healthy one although her or his head may done in by the smouldering aura issuing from them. this turf totally outclassed the surf of snapper which was excellently cooked but had little flavour ( will the city’s fine-dining joints please be more innovative with fish selections after decades of playing it safe ? )

they did not skimp on the cocktails, mixologized by frankie walker of black pineapple co. by the time of the last and sixth cocktail – a gentle giant built on cognac and muscatel cordial, with a pineapple finely etched on to a large ice cube – i was ready to pass out. forget your usual negronis, manhattans and screwdrivers – the drinks here were new versions built from calvados brandy, ratafia liquor and angostura 7 year rum as respective bases for the complex swirls. my favourite was a resonantly rounded sweet tart red-bodied seducer that fused sherry and vodka with other contrasts like manuka honey, verjuice, chardonnay and rhubarb.

choreography by waitstaff played a crucial role in the flow of the evening. they distributed the several small-eats patiently, assiduously grated the truffles for all the plates, and were very obliging when i requested holding the moment for photographs. there is a very enlightening article by tejal rao in the new york times recently of how the various usually un-named movers and shakers behind a restaurant’s machinery should not be forgotten in service of the chef auteur theory. some readers wrote back they couldn’t care less about this name roll-call but i feel that if you can write ‘ elderberry, truffle, nasturtium ‘ in the dish description, why not write ‘ ana , vasanthan, muhammad ‘ in the credits list ?

the duck main course was a marvel of paradoxes. it requires some cutting through, and the meat made its heft felt inside the mouth, but after only a few rounds of chewing, it evanesced ! this luxuriously smooth duck was predictably paired with an impressively rendered little stack of beetroot and its puree ( grove has a long history of pairing game with sweet accompaniments, going back to 2014 when chef ben bayly was here). not much of a difference was made to this dish by the truffles but with marquee meat this good, you can get away with almost anything.

have you ever had truffle grated on top of your dessert ? we had it on our pre-dessert, which sported a sorbet and honeycomb wafer that were supposed to channel peated islay whiskey along with honey, lemon and ginger. you could detect whispers of all flavours and you could polish it off so easily, but their syntax was a little muddled and the punchline got lost in the subtlety.

truffle ice-cream inveigled as the main dessert, its sharp yet creamy notes taking you into willy wonka territory betwixt piquant and pudding. there were shards, wafers and pears parked all over but the core competency shone through as an ice-cream i had never tasted before.

was the $ 320 charge worth it ? yes. the truffles might not have blown us away from st.patrick’s square to perigord with their aroma and flavour but the variety of preparations they were presented in was indubitably impressive, the theater of dedicated waitstaff delivering this rare luxury ingredient was all the more entertaining, the cozy sophisticated setting a very convivial one where one could meet aucklanders from different walks of life, superb cuisine executed from quality ingredients, and half a dozen delicious cocktails which had me knocked out by the end – all made this a meal to remember. grove consolidates its position as one of auckland’s top fine-dining restaurants, with its dedicated team of professionals guided by chef ryan moore, and owners michael and anette dearth. more such events would only heighten the profile of this excellent willowy grove in the thickets of auckland downtown. - upnworld
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lee
5
4 yıl önce
wyndham street
an excellent restaurant. absolutely sets the standard for what it means to provide a dining experience that makes you utter 'fine dining' in your head but more importantly in your tummy. the full course selection, simply superb - and the waiters could not have made us feel anymore welcomed and satisfied.
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