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I’m writing this from the west coast of Scotland. It seems slightly heretical
to be writing about restaurants from up here. There is a fatwa against menus
in these parts. It’s unquestionably the worst country in Europe to eat out
in — or the worst country that didn’t once have a communist dictator.
It’s not the jokey things like deep-fried Mars bars, which actually aren’t
that bad (though deep-fried Magnums are truly repellent).
It’s the horrible, dingy, dreech litany of lumpy tinned soup in a mug and
filled rolls that are like eating Travelodge pillows studded with gravel and
stuffed with autopsy slurry. And it’s also the knowledge that this place is
hotching with some of the best raw ingredients in the world, yet finding a
scallop or a lobster or even a fresh herring on a menu is like trying to go
dogging in Riyadh.
En route, I stopped at a Little Chef. Granted, Little Chefs aren’t just
Scottish. But it was the sight of Scots couples eating stinky detritus with
concentrated gusto, as if just having someone else do the washing-up was
worth the outing, that was so depressing. Outside the central belt and half
a dozen heritage hotels, food is a sickly disaster for the Scots. They die
younger than anyone else, not just because of the cholesterol, but because,
in the end, they can’t face another dinner.
But Scottish food can wait. Because, through the miracle of the human brain,
which can be in two places at once, I am even now spinning back to Covent
Garden and West Street, where, half a dozen doors down from the Ivy,
L’Atelier de Joël Robuchon is the most eagerly awaited opening of the year.
Joël Robuchon is a man who has held six Michelin stars simultaneously in a
brace of three-star restaurants. He’s probably the most universally
respected chef cooking at the moment and, uncharacteristically for a chef,
and a Frenchman, he’s famously modest and charming. This is a satellite of
the highly successful Paris restaurant that has been a desperately needed
plate of good news for the city, which has seen a devastating decline in
public eating and culinary confidence. But London isn’t Paris. We don’t lack
culinary confidence. There has been a vertiginous ascent in public eating,
and Robuchon doesn’t come with the same deific respect. Customers expect
different things here.
L’Atelier has a concept, of course. There are two dining rooms: a traditional
one upstairs and the studio, which has been such a revelation in Paris, on
the ground floor. It serves modern, though classically prepared, food — but
in a Japanese manner. Small, beautifully intense dishes.
We took Michael Gambon for lunch on the first day it was open. You can book a
table up to 12.30 — after that, it’s first come, first served. You could see
this either as egalitarian fairness, compared with the Masonic, cliquish
booking policy of most London restaurants, or as an insufferable annoyance.
And if you’re French, you can probably see it as both things simultaneously.
The room is attractive in that contemporary conservative way that seems to
be looking both forward and back, like a cross-eyed designer. It has a long
bar and a wall of fleshy plants. There is ergonomically pleasing cutlery and
you sit on high stools.
Having a concept means that you have to have a more intimate relationship with
your waiter than you might have wished for, but there’s plenty that needs
explaining in a Clouseau-ish accent. Essentially, there are two menus, one
that serves food and another that serves smaller food, which more or less
allows you to eat less of more, except that it means a lot of awkward
sharing of tiddly plates and swapping sucked spoons. This might have been my
fault for being greedy. The waiter puffed out his cheeks, waggled his head,
stared at his book and muttered that anything was possible.
We ordered pretty much everything. The quality and dexterity of the dishes
varied quite a lot. The Iberian ham with toasted tomato bread would be
perfectly ordinary in a tapas bar, but the fresh mackerel on a thin tart
with parmesan shavings and olives was a miraculously beautiful confection of
wafer-thin fish pithiviers. It was such a brilliantly executed combination
of tastes that it immediately became one of the best dishes in London. As
did a pig’s trotter on parmesan toast and a divine mini hamburger made with
beef and foie gras.
The burger, though, was indicative of the catering precipice the Atelier
balances on. This attempt at oriental delicacy was constantly in danger of
becoming a selection of canapés. There was a moment when I felt like the
father of the bride, testing the catering for a wedding reception. But then
the inventiveness and balanced flavours and textures in something like the
sautéed squid with baby artichoke, chorizo and tomato water danced off the
plate like a naked choir singing kyries.
Chef Robuchon came over to our table to say bonjour. He brought a
translator. “I af non Eengleesh.” And I af non Frog. He pointed at Gambon
and said: “I think I recognise you. Perhaps in a cinema?” Michael smiled and
said: “Perhaps. I play gangsters. You know — guns, gangsters.” Joel looked
blank. The translation came back: “He is a bum bandit.” “Ah,” the maestro
smiled in a liberal, inclusive way. “This is England, of course. It’s only
to be expected.”
The Blonde ordered a whiting fried in breadcrumbs from the main menu. It had
been boned from an incision along the spine, so it was like a demi fillet.
Whiting is a wonderfully delicate fish that has to be as fresh as a cornea
transplant. This one, simple, with lemon herb butter, immaculately
couture-coated in breadcrumbs, was as perfect as a whiting could ever dream
of being. It was the apotheosis of this shyly passed-over little fish.
Puddings are not to be skipped; they’re better than you’ll find anywhere else.
The bill for four of us, without wine, was more than £200. It’s not cheap.
The miniature burger is £15, the calamari £10, the ham £9.
As ever, I asked if the 12.5% service charge was given directly to the staff.
It isn’t. It’s used to make up wages. This is so sadly, meanly depressing.
In France, the bill includes everything. The staff are properly paid by the
management. Here we have a great chef bringing French food to London, but
not his fraternal and decent French wages. It’s cheap, and it taints the
generosity of the food. But then, it’s also classically French.
So, do go, but don’t pay the service charge. Leave cash instead. I’m knocking
off a star for giving me a triste taste in the mouth.
L’ATELIER DE JOEL ROBUCHON
13-15 West Street, WC2; 020 7010 8600
Lunch, Mon-Sun, noon-3pm; dinner, 5.30pm-midnight (Sun 10.30pm)
5 stars La perfection
4 stars Encore!
3 stars Très bien
2 stars Comme ci, comme ça
1 star Non, merci
Book a table at L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon

AA Gill is a features writer and restaurant critic for The Sunday Times and he writes regular travel pieces for The Sunday Times Magazine, for which he has won two Glenfiddich Awards
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