Ramen – Asian Street Food, Cork [Restaurant Review]
Sally McKenna reviews a thoroughly modern restaurant
Sally McKenna reviews a thoroughly modern restaurant
John McKenna visited Renvyle House
Renvyle House Hotel has entered a second century of service with two of the great masters of Irish hospitality – Ronnie and Tim – guiding the helm.
In 2013, Renvyle House Hotel celebrated 130 years as an hotel. Consider, for a moment, what Ireland was like in 1883. Consider what Ireland was like when W.B. Yeats spent his honeymoon here, or when Black’s Guide noted, in 1912, that a week’s residence in Renvyle cost £3, in a fine house that was “most homely and comfortable”.
Sally McKenna reports on Food Experiences of Asylum Seekers in Direct Provision, The Irish Immigrant Support Centre
Digital publishing from McKennas’ Guides continues apace. We have just launched version 1.1 of our 100 Best Restaurants in Ireland 2014. Those of you who purchased it can download the new version free from the App Store. We have fixed a number of issues that bugged us in version 1, particularly the Facebook links, which now link directly to the establishment's page on Facebook, and the same on Twitter. We’ve also optimised the images to reduce the size of the app, and we’ve been able to correct some minor text isses and contact details.
What inspired you to make beer?
I'm been lucky enough to make some great friends, a lot of those
friendships would have been formed or cemented while enjoying a beer
or two. I have always liked "messing" or experimenting and started
making beer at home, playing around with different ingredients and
flavours. For me, nothing beats having a beer with friends and I like
to think that other people can now enjoy my beer whilst relaxing with
their friends and their own special moments.
Sarah Roarty is one of those astonishingly dynamic women whom you are going to be hearing a great deal about. Her first step into the public sphere is the brilliant N17 beer, and she has an oatmeal stout on the way. But it is Ms Roarty's holistic approach to beer making that is particularly noteworthy, as she plans to grow shiitake mushrooms and make dog biscuits from the more than 90% of spent produce left behind in brewing. Watch this woman! And watch this introduction to a singular brewer and beer sommelier.
It amazes me how so many hostelries can make a shambles of a sandwich, or bungle a burger, or destroy a fry.
Thankfully this is never the case in the Shells Seaside Café, in Strandhill, just outside Sligo. Arrive to Shells on a Saturday or Sunday at any time of the year and you may have to queue for a table in this busy destination cafe: it’s worth the wait, however, for the exceptionally good food.
Our search for the #bestsandwichinireland takes us to Galway, where the Pork Bahn-mi made by Paul and Frank is spoken of in hushed tones in foodie circles as being the #bestsandwichingalway. We went along to their "road truck that doesn't move" in the characterful, quintessentially Galway, traditional yet innovative Bierhaus, Henry Street, in Galway city.
Just when you think that there is nothing more to be said or written about the cooking of the Middle East, because Claudia and, latterly, Yotam and Sami, aided by Diana Henry, have so definitively made that turf their own, along comes a book that shows you that the riches of Middle Eastern cooking may indeed be depthless.
“Persiana”, by Sabrina Ghayour, is that book.
Here's a fact that might surprise you: Galway used to be a rubbish city for eating.
Seriously. There was a time, and that time was not so long ago, when Galway was a city to be avoided if you wanted to eat well. The benchmark destination for the city wasn't in the city itself: if you wanted food as art, as passion, as creativity, then you got in the car and drove out to Drimcong House, way out past Moycullen, to eat the food of the late, great Gerry Galvin.
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