FOOD & DRINK

NEWS & REVIEWS

GASTRO GAMBITS Twenty years after the ugly and now mostly debased term ‘gastropub’ appeared, Donald Reid observes that a couple of new openings in Edinburgh are showing the way forward for eating well in pubs

W e all love a good pub. Not only are they familiar social spaces but in Scotland we venerate them as stimulating, democratic venues of inexpensive conviviality. When you eat in a pub you eat grub. It’s seen to be elitist undemocratic, even to wish for better food and beer. Consuming dishwater lager and greasy fish and chips proves your common touch.

Yet we can eat very well in bistros, cafés and restaurants. We do it at home. Can pub grub have aspirations beyond the flying-crust steak pie without being dismissed as pretentious? At the beginning of April two of Edinburgh’s top chefs, Tom Kitchin and Dominic Jack, opened a pub or ‘public house with dining’ in Stockbridge. Named The Scran & Scallie in an effort to capture an ethos of down-to-earth food and an attitude friendly to kids, or ‘scallies’ as Kitchin refers to his own, it suggests there’s interest in eating Michelin-moulded (if not, in this environment, Michelin-awarded) food in an informal setting. It’s also the case that, having made their name in top-end restaurants, Kitchin and Jack wanted to prove their own common touch.

In the stipped-back, bare-brick, Perthshire- croft meets Victoriana dining room (it’s hardly a conventional pub) the Scran & Scallie mixes down- the-line classics such as haddock and chips with old Scottish recipes including sheip’s heid broth and highlights from the offal revival along the lines of roasted bone marrow with parsley salad.

Despite the slightly forced sense of informality (the menu lists ‘Yer mains’ and ‘Yer salads’), it’s

clear that high standards of sourcing, preparation and cooking are being brought to the pub or, well, pub-ish setting. Meanwhile, just a month earlier, The Vintage opened its doors. A partnership between one of Scotland’s most progressive craft brewers, Williams Brothers of Alloa, and bar manager Darren Blackburn, the bar/diner of the former Café Fish has been revitalised into an attractive, unpretentious venue in back-street Leith.

Some of Scotland’s finest keg and cask ales are being served, but what’s most remarkable is the bold and enlightened menu that accompanies them. Crispy pig’s ear and baked pear with chicory is served, and there’s an extensive charcuterie grazing menu sourced mainly from British producers including salamis cured with spiced walnut, hot-smoked pig’s cheeks or rich, stew-like jugged rabbit.

The craft beer revolution may well be prompting a response on pub menus for better, more local and more interesting food. From the other direction, Michelin chefs are bringing their skills and values to the table. It looks like pub food is moving from grub to gastro and onto something we’re all a bit more inspired by.

Full reviews of both The Scran & Scallie and The Vintage can be found in the brand-new edition of the List’s annual Eating & Drinking Guide, available as a supplement with this issue or from list.co.uk

34 THE LIST 18 Apr–16 May 2013

SIDE DISHES News to nibble on The jazz era is in full swing in Glasgow. Joining Kelvingrove Café’s 1930s homage (see page 36) is new Hope Street basement bar and club Swing, offering live jazz bands, dancers and DJs. Expect cocktails and canapés and a flavour of of Prohibition times.

A joint venture between Monachyle Mhor hotel and Glasgow’s Delizique sees the opening of

Mhor 84, a budget boutique motel at the Balquhidder turn-off from the A84 north of Calander. It has seven bedrooms, a tearoom, bar, shop and a games room. Blackfriars is the long- awaited replacement for Black Bo’s in Edinburgh’s Old Town, serving impressive snacks in the bar as well as full meals in the restaurant. Meanwhile, Shebeen has relocated from Leith to Morrison Street, with South African themed food high on the agenda.

COOKING WITH CALEDONIAN BREWERY

Caledonian Brewery has teamed up with The Radical Road’s Masterchef, Martin Mitchell, to bring you a tasty recipe made with one of its distinctive beers.

Flying Scotsman Seabass Tempura ½ pint Flying Scotsman 4 oz plain flour 4oz cornflour 1 tsp salt 1 tsp caster sugar 1 tsp sesame oil l ½ tsp bicarbonate of soda Seabass fillet cut into strips

Roughly mix ingredients together (do not completely combine) Dip Seabass strips into the batter and fry in oil at 190 ºC for 3–4 minutes

Serve with Japanese White Udon Noodles poached in fish stock and finely sliced vegetables

Finish with sweet chilli sauce for dipping.