GetStuffed FoodDrinkRestaurants

Bia mine tonight A bit of Irish, a bit of French, a bit of Spanish and a good dose of local Scottish. Carine Seitz visits a new restaurant that’s proof of the dynamic influences at work in Edinburgh’s dining scene

> RECENT OPENINGS The best of the new restaurant, café and bar openings in Glasgow and Edinburgh, reviewed in every issue by The List’s team of independent reviewers

Glasgow

CLARK & SONS 14 Busby Road, Clarkston Toll, Southside, 0141 638 3911, www.clark-and-sons.com, £9.95 (set lunch)/ £17 (dinner) Some ideas are so good you wonder why they took so long. Opening a sophisticated but affordable bar and restaurant in Clarkston is one and it’s a gap just filled by Citation proprietor Ryan Barrie. Clark & Sons occupies a vast and comfy open plan area containing a bar, a restaurant and a function room and serving everything from breakfast eggs to rib eye steaks. Dishes are well presented and very tasty and before 7pm, the set menu a tenner for two courses even includes a glass of wine. See? How come it took so long?

THE DRAKE 1 Lynedoch Street, West End, 0141 332 7363, £14 (lunch/dinner) The appearance of another cultured bar in the Charing Cross area of the city gives hope to a stretch challenged by the rise of Argyle Street/Finnieston. For now it’s laid-back appeal of the bare-brick, leather and bare wood bar in a semi-sub-terranean slot on the corner of Woodlands Road that’s been gathering local cudos, with a beer garden, decent drinks and grown- up bar menu featuring the likes of homemade terrines and cottage pie. Soon to come is a more ambitious restaurant area (open Thu–Sat evenings) on the floor above the pub, serving mostly blackboard specials.

Edinburgh

CHOP CHOP 76 Commercial Street, Leith, 0131 553 1818, www.chop-chop.co.uk, £12 (lunch) / £20 (dinner) With a hugely successful restaurant, a wholesale operation and TV appearances with Gordon Ramsay under her belt, Jian Wang’s Chop Chop is already a success story. It stands to reason that expansion was on the cards, and a new Leith branch is now in place to meet that expectation. The menu is vast, so those unfamiliar with Chop Chop can choose an unlimited

R oisin and Matthias Llorente, the husband and wife team behind Bia Bistrot, have quite a culinary pedigree, having between them notched up time in the kitchens of Irish star chefs Niall McKenna and Derry Clarke, as well as a bloke called Gordon Ramsay. Their ethos of fresh- seasonal-local-sustainable-homemade may sound predictable, but done as well as this it’s clear they’re not just paying lip service to a gastronomic trend. Expect to see high calibre suppliers on the menu, with game from Braehead, seafood from Eddie’s in nearby Marchmont and an impressive wine list selected from Villeneuve.

A starter of roast beef bone marrow is served bubbling hot in the bone, while Gressingham duck liver melts in the mouth and having one of the lead chefs bring the food to the table is a nice touch. For mains, a tasty rump of lamb is served with well-seasoned layered

10 THE LIST 9–23 Sep 2010

potatoes and spiced aubergine, and coley fillet comes with a generous amount of samphire grass. Desserts continue the good impressions: gooey chocolate cake is deeply cocoa flavoured, with grilled peach soup a lighter option. An excellent beginning for this new kid on the block long may it continue. + Sound provenance and skilled cooking Crampons and climbing ropes out for a visit to the toilets

BIA BISTROT

19 Colinton Road, Southside, Edinburgh,

0131 452 8453, www.biabistrot.co.uk, Tue–Sat noon–3pm, 5pm–10pm; Sun

11.30am–4pm. Closed Mon. Ave. price two- course meal: £9 (set lunch) / £30 (dinner)