And that’s what happened among a small bunch of ardent food fans tonight. In this season of parties it’s the impromptu ones that you remember. There’s a brilliant chocolate and olive oil ganache with a spidery web of chocolate swirled in a circle around it like a dervish. I will dream of this one for weeks to come. Like the prunes in Etto, this is jaw-droppingly simple and good, a silken flan covered in a caramel that’s barely caramel, more sugared butter thickened to the consistency of warm honey. The flan queso (literally cheese flan) gets the gong for most modest description of a dessert his year. A slick of sprout like a cleaner’s mop through the apple-y piggy potato remnants on the plate makes for one of the best mouthfuls I’ve eaten all year. (We are chatting and sharing food by this stage.) There are juicy slices of it with tangy Pink Fir apple sauce and a ratte potato with flower sprouts. I want all the mains but settle for the hake, which is great, but the most memorable elements are the glossy rainbow chard leaves on the top and a tangy clam broth with a fermented black garlic sauce that ties the whole thing together in a way that could only come from repeated iterations of this dish until it was nailed.Īnother option is the Iberico pork presa, a shoulder muscle that Anita explains by pointing to her own shoulder. With each plate we move away from the tapas mouthful to be eaten on the hoof end of things towards a restaurant knife and fork experience. Venison carpaccio on the next plate, a bigger one from the “starter” list, has a serving of surprisingly mild meat, with pickled walnuts and curls of radicchio spines – the perfect bitter fresh crunch to the sweet petals of meat. The only other decoration are some wine shelves, a wine map of Spain and Portugal and a cocktail menu blackboard. The fit-out is simple white walls and an exposed ancient brown brick one where the bricks are held in squares of timber, a wood and masonry detail in a terrace that supposedly includes Dublin’s oldest house, dating from the 1600s. The first great news is that Uno Mas is bigger than Etto. If one of the many ginormous cranes outside fell on the building tonight, a sizeable chunk of the Irish food fraternity would be toast: John and Sandy Wyer of Forest Avenue are celebrating their daughter’s birthday on one side Anita Thoma is talking wedding plans with her fiance on the other young skinny chefs gather around John Wyer in an animated cluster. An autumn opening trickled into a December one. I’ve been risking life and limb on the bike peering into the old Fogo’s (no, me neither) on a grungy corner of Aungier Street for weeks now. In Uno Mas they’re rejoined by chef and business partner Paul McNamara, who has been cooking up a storm in nearby Locks for the past year. It’s from the couple who brought you Etto, a place where critics regularly part with their own cash to set the needle to true north again. We all knew Uno Mas was going to be good. Whatever vibes are at work, there is a rightness that I rarely find in any restaurant, never mind one with just three nights’ service under its smart new belt. So your newly opened restaurant is hosting two food critics and a gaggle of chefs but you manage to look as happy as a clam? Maybe Simon Barrett and Liz Matthews just do good game face, smiles that widen when the pressure gauge goes into the red.
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