Food worth flying for

A list of the best food I’ve eaten recently from around the globe

food worth flying for
A selection of dishes at Fatt Pundit, London (JW Howard)

Somewhat by accident, I’ve become a professional glutton. The sort of person who’ll traipse for an hour in the wrong direction, just to try the breakfast burrito a friend of a friend’s chef boyfriend won’t shut up about. By some miracle, I get to write about it.

I’m often asked about the best thing I’ve eaten recently, and where. It’s hard to quantify the exact chemical makeup of the perfect meal, but I know this to be true: it’s the company that makes a place stick. A treasured friend or a spanking new one, a cheeky…

Somewhat by accident, I’ve become a professional glutton. The sort of person who’ll traipse for an hour in the wrong direction, just to try the breakfast burrito a friend of a friend’s chef boyfriend won’t shut up about. By some miracle, I get to write about it.

I’m often asked about the best thing I’ve eaten recently, and where. It’s hard to quantify the exact chemical makeup of the perfect meal, but I know this to be true: it’s the company that makes a place stick. A treasured friend or a spanking new one, a cheeky flirt in a fresh city. I like a busy open kitchen, lighting low enough to hide my eye bags, quietly great service and maybe a bit of hip hop on a crackly record player. These are the places I flew to try, and would again. Choose your company wisely.

Hakkahan, Dublin, Ireland

Hakkahan’s literal translation means “man from Hakka,” a nod to the region in China the owners hail from. The menu is small by Chinese restaurant standards, and you’d better like Sichuan. Stoneybatter has fast become the coolest place to live in Dublin, and Hakkahan is the neighborhood joint foodies will point you to. Start with Tsingtao beers, end with a baby Guinness in the snug at Walsh’s traditional pub across the road.

Order this: Dai Zi (scallop dumplings), sesame prawn sourdough toast, basil duck and La Zi Ji — chicken, Sichuan peppers, dry chilies, ginger, garlic and scallions. 

Read the menu: Hakkahan.ie

Bring along: The friend who will eat anything.

Spicy stew pig offal with green peas

Rocco, Lisbon, Portugal

Lisbon has no shortage of incredible places to eat, a mix of super affordable local cozinhas and glitzy new spots pulling the crowds. Rocco falls into the latter category, opening to some fanfare in fall 2021. Décor is emphatically opulent — rich fabrics and shiny fixtures making a grand backdrop for rich Neapolitan dishes. Local DJs hype up the bar’s atmosphere on weekends but truly, go for the food. Thick tomato sauces, silky brown crab soup and risottos pair perfectly with under-sung Portuguese wines.

Order this: Vitello Tonnato, Aubergine alla Parmigiana and the show-stopping Lobster Linguine. Made for Instagram, but keep your phone in your pocket and soak up the atmosphere.

Read the menu: Rocco.pt

Bring along: The friend who packed heels to climb Lisbon’s seven hills.

Linguine de Lavagante

La Colombe, Cape Town, South Africa

Winding up through Silvermist wine estate to La Colombe’s Constantia flagship, the setting is immediately special. The polished dining room looks out onto an undulating vineyard, though there are plenty of distractions back inside. Contemporary French-meets-Asian fine-dining is painstakingly planned out, but remains fresh, modern and always fun. It’s easy to see how this place made the World’s 50 Best Restaurant List in 2022. Chef James Gaag surprises and delights with treasures, trinkets and treats.

Order this: Emphatically recommended for a special occasion by most Capetonians, we went for the Chef’s menu, arriving very hungry. Highlights include crayfish and langoustine raviolo with coconut, coriander and black forest ham, tuna “La Colombe,” and tableside snow cones, made to order. Food as theater, in all the best ways.

Read the menu: Lacolombe.restaurant

Bring along: Someone to celebrate.

Sweet potato bread at La Colombe, Constantia

Frenchie, Verbier, Switzerland

Chef Gregory Marchand’s menu is unapologetically French. Think incredibly posh mountain food in a hip, fireside lounge. Veal Cordon Bleu, Assiette valaisanne… all that good, heavy stuff you can justify stuffing yourself with after a day’s skiing… plus some vegetables! Praise be!  

I’m still thinking about the painstakingly cooked “Chicken from Gruyère,” stuffed with Swiss Sbrinz cheese and yuzu kosho, a cult Japanese spice blend. A thick walnut paste is smoothed under the skin, then bone marrow jus is drizzled all over. Experimental cocktails follow in the bar upstairs, and upscale disco Farm Club is next door. Expect a hangover.

Order this: Oignon tart tartin, while you wait (a worthwhile) forty-five minutes for that chicken to brown off.

Read the menu: Experimentalchalet.com

Bring along: Someone who loves to eat late and linger.

Chalet Experimental Verbier (Patrick Locqueneux)

Pars Pralinen, Berlin, Germany

The first places I recommend to anyone heading to Berlin are Mogg (for French onion soup and Reuben sandwiches) and Wen Cheng for possibly the world’s best Biang Biang noodles. The line snakes around the block for good reason. Join it.

Pars Pralinen is more experiential. For when you’ve got time on your hands and the temperature’s dipped below freezing. It confused me at first; I was unclear whether it was a chocolate shop or a restaurant. Turns out it’s a stylish mix of both. Kristiane Kegelmann blends design and craftsmanship to cultivate unexpected sensory experiences through dainty, ever-changing six-course menus and handcrafted, geometrical pralines. Flavors range from wild dill blossom to the small buds of a currant bush.

Order this: Leave with a few pralines for friends: Tamari and Quince, or the full Bavarian Hazelnut.

Read the menu: Parspralinen.com

Bring along: Adventurous types who’ll be up for a kebab afterwards.

Pujan Shakupa

Fatt Pundit, London, England

My new favorite spot for an accidentally boozy Sunday lunch back home (Covent Garden branch only). Supremely sweet and friendly staff serve up bright cocktails with momos (steamed dumplings), lollipop chicken and burnt ginger rice. Influences come from Bhutan, Nepal, Tibet and parts of India; originating from Kolkata, this unique cuisine was invented when the Hakka community migrated to India from the Chinese province of Canton, bringing with them their culinary treasures. 

Order this: Crackling spinach with sweet yogurt, date and plum sauce and pomegranate. Popcorn cauliflower, Bombay chilli prawns, crunchy soft shell crab and rabbit wontons.

Read the menu: Fattpundit.co.uk

Bring along: Sunday funday fans.

Baby potatoes coated in a tamarind and black salt spice mix at Fatt Pundit (JW Howard)

Izakaya, Amsterdam, the Netherlands

A place to “be seen,” though the same can’t always be said for its neighborhood, De Pijp. High-quality Japanese dishes are taken to new levels with robust South American heat. Try salmon, yellow tail and sea bass sashimi, then meat and fish skillfully fired up in the Hibachi fire bowl or on the Robata grill. Sit at the bar if you can, watching the barmen whip up lychee cocktails to the tune of a live DJ. Endeavor not to arrive late via push bike, wearing trainers.

Order this: Sweetcorn tempura, spicy hamachi and shiso uramaki. Followed by Japanese wagyu.

Read the menu: Izakaya-restaurant.com

Bring along: The local who knows where to go afterwards (and where to avoid at all costs).

Izakaya sushi

Marble, Johannesburg, South Africa

Something of a celebrity chef, David Higgs lives to share his passion for fire cooking (and cycling, if you follow his Instagram). It’s all about the meat. He sparks up South African fare with a grand wood-fired grill imported from Michigan. You can feel his love of the job in each dish, with great care taken to select the best cuts from the right places. Veggies are far from short-changed with the likes of charred dukka broccoli, red pepper béarnaise, mushroom and edamame beans or woodfired pumpkin and harissa with cumin hummus. 

In the middle of food hub Rosebank, savvy guests book for early evening to catch the blazing sunset.

Order this: Silent Valley Wagyu sirloin or a prime rib of Chalmar beef. Perhaps a Super Salad on the side.

Read the menu: Marble.restaurant

Bring along: A meat lover, so you can share.

Game, green mango atcha, carrots and poppadoms

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