superfood - the foodie website

Welcome to Richard Leader's food and cooking blog
- and welcome to our new look.
This site is about what I cook and eat - that's all there is to it!

Please feel free to email me, leave a comment or join the mailing list.

PermaPost:

A-Z of English Food - feel free to contribute!
Updated: 08/01/08

The Full Kitchen Bookshelf
Updated: 28/12/07

ukfoodbloggers

Where you might find me lurking: Food Blogs

Some of my favourite UK-based food blogs:

And some from further afield:

Latest Book Reviews

Morimoto: The New Art of Japanese Cooking - a review

Morimoto - the new art of japanese cooking reviewed. "Beautiful, sublime, informative but utterly bonkers"

The Full Kitchen Bookshelf

I'm trying to compile my full list of cook books - it's going to take a while I think! Here are some to be getting on with...

The Food of Spain and Portugal - a review

A stunning overview of the 21 regions of Iberia highlighting the different gastronomic variations in each - written with style and a clear love of the landscape, people and food of the area

Nobody Does It Better: A Review

Nobody Does It Better: Why French Home Cooking Is Still The Best In The World - on the evidence of this passionate and entertaining book, French home cooking is still in pretty fine fettle.

Most Popular Tags

                                       

The Foodie Blogroll

Click to Join the Foodie Blogroll

Click here to join

We got a mention in The Guardian - check out their A-Z of unusual ingredients part 2.

Mailing List

Join the email list to be updated automatically when new articles are posted.
Note: You can remain anonymous - but even if you choose not to be, we will NEVER use your email address to send unsolicited mail and we will NEVER pass your email address to a third party.

Calendar

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930

What I'm saying on Twitter (rubbish usually)

Wagamama? Nothanksmama

posted Wednesday, 5 October 2005
Last night I went to see Paco de Lucia at the Barbican. He was magical. He made me want to eat little toasted sandwiches with chorizo and garlic, salted roasted almonds and patatas bravas, washed down with a glass of Rioja. Instead, I met-up with Spud beforehand and we had a quick meal in Wagamama.

This was my first visit to a Wagamama, and I wasn't really expecting much. But I was still very disappointed.

Wagamama is a chain of Japanese noodle restaurants. You sit at benches alongside other diners (even when the restaurant is three quarters empty) and they bring out your orders as they are cooked rather than together - this is seen as a novelty, when in fact it's a sign that the kitchen is poorly organised, IMHO.
I ordered 'eb chilli men', described on their menu as "stir-fried prawns, green peppers and carrots in a chilli sauce made from fresh
chillies, ginger, garlic, onion, lemongrass and red pepper. served with ramen
noodles".
In reality, this was three inch-square pieces of pepper, six or eight undercooked prawns (better, I guess, than overcooked), a bunch of slices of raw carrot in a sauce made-up entirely of... what? Tomatoes - not seeded, not peeled, just crushed. At least, they looked like tomatoes and tasted of nothing to me. There was a hint of chilli (powder at a guess) and some grated ginger which had been hanging around for ages, judging by its fibrous nature. And some tough (grated?) lemongrass. All of this served on a massive portion of overcooked, tasteless noodles.

Spud wasn't feeling too hungry, so had a couple of side dishes. The yasi gyoza (vegetable dumplings) that arrived (instead of the chicken version as ordered...) were unpleasant. The vegetables (billed as cabbage, carrot, water chestnut, onion, celery and chinese leaf) were milled and squashed into a homogenous grey paste flecked with green. I didn't taste, but they looked revolting.
The yasai yakatori (chargrilled vegetable skewers) that arrived were raw and coated in a sickly brown sauce. Maybe they were raw because we had sent back the chicken version that arrived by mistake (a theme is developing).
We also had tori kare age - marinated, deep-fried chicken - that was bizarrely hard and chewy.

All round, this was one of the most desperate meals out I've had. There were no redeeming points. The service was inept, the food consistently awful. According to their website, Wagamama celebrate consistency in everything they do. Well, if that's their standard, I won't be going back.

I'm sure there are hundreds of noodle bars you could choose from that beat this place hands-down - there are two in Streatham alone that do (Slurp and Oishi).


Technorati Tags: |

tags:    

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit




1. Megan left...
Tuesday, 1 November 2005 6:36 am :: http://www.absolutesmoothies.blogspot.co

Hi Richard,

I live in Sydney, and we recently had a Wagamama open here. It won't surprise you to know that the reviewers made all the same comments that you have. The novelty of food arriving out of order is far outweighted by the desire to get your starters first. Having a disorganised kitchen as your unique selling proposition leaves me scratching my head.

And to top it off, there's much better value noodle places around that bring your food in the order you'd like it.


2. Sara left...
Thursday, 5 January 2006 7:54 am

Wow, I adore Wagamamas. The food is bought out because as soon as it gets sent to each part of the kitchen, it is cooked, then taken straight out so you get it fresh. Wagamamas means something like spoilt child, so your sposed to eat it when you get it, most of the people who go there are really funloving relaxed sort of people who like that kinda laid-back atmosphere, its nothing to do with bad organisation of kitchen, heck, dont go there if you want all your food to be bought out altogether but cold! Ive only ever had good experiences eating there, and if they make a mistake they compensate over here :D Plus, the staff are really cool :)


Mailing List

Sign-up to receive emails whenever this site is updated with new posts. Your privacy is respected and guaranteed.