Sunday, 27 December 2015

Sin Vida

I truly thought M&A was dying with the closure of Flaming Olive and the disappearing crowds from Papa Jacks, Mighty Mighty and the almost always empty Nikuya--apparently not as this new place was game enough to open on the back of the closed down Italian restaurant.

We were on our way there to try Gorditas when the skeleton (very unanatomically correct) and gaudily dressed caught our eye, oh hard to miss the mass of graffiti-- they really are playing on the sugar skulls theme.

Don't set your hopes too high-- this place isn't Mamasita's in Melbourne nor do I think it's trying to be. This isn't fine dining by any standards--think westernised mexican food with menus full of tacos, nachos etc all the typical stuff.

We thought we'd be adventurous and go outside the usual tacos and nacho cliches. Maybe we should have stuck with those as seafood marina cooked in tomato sauce (yes thats all that Zarzuela de Mariscos is was not impressive with the tinned tomato taste and half the mussels scrawny or unopened.
Zazuela de Marscos--seafood marinara with tinned tomato
 So you can't go wrong with steak right? Only if its the chewy and full of sinew--you got no hope, even if you add a fried egg on top. What's with the halved roma tomatoes in this place? It really was just half a tomato...
Sin Vida Steao--Steak and Eggs --with Mexican mystery sauce
 To be fair the corn (even with its very messy tail) was tasty and chicken wings had enough spice. And yes definitely order the sangria to wash things down. Don't rely on the Calavera (beef bone soup) for that--- it's just concentrated beef stock.
Elote--Char grilled corn 

Chicken Wings

White Sangria
So what's the verdict for Sin Vida? I wish it well, but the food itself isn't going to help it survive. 

Sin Vida Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato 

Thursday, 10 December 2015

Restaurant II

So we finally made it here. Over the past 10 years Brisbane's dining scene has come a long way with increased interest and competition. Business is not as easy as it used to be with many supposed 'fine dining' institutions from years past succumbing to increased competition, a more discerning market, economic pressure and bowing eventually out of the dining scene altogether. Some, suffer a lot worse being relegated to the ranks of 'it used to be good'.

Yet--for those who've stayed, it may well just prove that they deserve to be there--Darwinian evolution of the restaurant scene I suppose. So where does Restaurant II fit?

Menu changing seasonally is a good start. Contemporary, elegant decoration --tick. Service? Well I guess the waitstaff do have lives outside of the restaurant --they're not all sommeliers and don't rely on the wine advice--or lack there of.

Between us hubby and I could sample most of the dishes so we decided to give the degustation a miss. The combination of the dishes on the degustation menu were not dishes that we would order off the a-la carte. And personal peeve of hubby's is when the degustation menu is just all the a-lacarte combined--what's the point? the man asks.

Presentation is tight with all the dishes from the complementary canape (forgot what it was) down to the dessert. Timeliness was not a strong point with many tables (especially those eating degust) waiting well past 30minutes between some courses.

My entree of the Mooloolaba tuna showcased the beauty of all the ingredients in harmony but unfortunately the sinew in the tuna was just difficult to saw through.
Mooloolaba tuna with watermelon
Hubby's pork belly with the layers visible looked enticing and lived up to the presentation in taste--exactly what you'd expect--porky poorness.


Pork Belly entree 
The mains showed generous portions and a 'it is what it is' approach. When my lobster arrived there was a collective 'wow' and delight that yes it is genuinely, no messing about, undisguised lobster. Texture of the flesh was not what I expected-- seemed to be a lot more 'frayed? with a processed food texture' rather than firm and sweet meat expected. In a nutshell--croquets are croquets -- not a fan and should be reserved for a food court. Hubby's duck was cooked wonderfully but in the end he commented 'this is just duck with orange'--yes dear it is, but the meat was cooked nicely.

Duck 

Lobster with Jamon croquettes 
Dessert menu had a few proven crowd pleasers-- fondant, creme brûlée..Meal ended on a high with familiar desserts executed perfectly. Oozy chocolate fondant anyone? Banana had a rich dark caramelised top. Bacon ice cream with creme brûlée?sure , especially when accompanied with a piece of salty crispy bacon. 
Proof in the pudding--oozing chocolate fondant

Free standing creme brulee with bacon ice cream



It's not surprising Restaurant II has managed to stay in the business through the years. Ingredients, reputation, past achievement all helps but the key ingredient to success remains to continuously improve and refine--I for one, hope Restaurant II continues to do that (especially more of the refine).

Restaurant Two Menu, Reviews, Photos, Location and Info - Zomato