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Sunday, 8 December 2013

The Front Room Cafe (N4 3AD)

158 Tollington Park, London N4 3AD
@FrontRoomCafe_

It’s rare that I leave a café, post-cake, in a bad mood. So rare, in fact, that I don’t recall it ever happening to me before. Sure, there are times when I’ve departed feeling disappointed, sometimes even saddened. But never quite as disgruntled and annoyed as I felt following my visit to The Front Room.

I had high hopes for The Front Room. It has a lovely double fronted black painted façade in a very popular area just off Stroud Green Road. The interior is crammed with character, featuring exposed brickwork, mounted stag heads and an assortment of curiosities lining the walls.


It is extremely popular and there was a steady stream of customers during our visit, and a line-up outside the door. The dining space feels a bit squashy (some would say intimate), with big antique tables taking up quite a lot of floor space but once you’re seated it’s OK.


Their cake selection is small, as I think the focus is more on cooked meals (big fry ups and the like). I opted for my fail-safe go-to of carrot cake, which is a staple in pretty much every café I’ve ever been to. It is the default cake of choice when all other options (such as coffee and walnut) aren’t appealing.

On the plus side, the cake was delicious with a hint of ginger that gave it an unusual yet appealing flavour. 

On the negative side it was a little too fresh-out-the-fridge and a tad cold. The tea was fine. Ben ate plain toast (boring, I know); he said it was “nice”. The coffee, however, was a disappointment: “Given that they use Allpress beans it should have been better” was his opinion.

So far not so bad. What exactly, therefore, are my gripes with The Front Room to have induced my bad mood?

First, the time it took to have our table cleared of the previous occupant’s detritus. We waited, waited, waited, and waited some more. The dinosaurs came and went by the time someone cleared and then cleaned the table. An eternity passed before the damn table dried, since it was left with a thick soapy residue and we had nothing to dry it with.

Secondly, the grubby sauce bottles and salt/pepper shakers that unfortunately remained on our table after it was “cleared”. I’m not generally a prude in this respect (I will eat a piece of chocolate well after 10 seconds of it falling on the floor), but it was grotty and I’d have preferred not to have them on the table while eating.

 

Third, the time it took for us to be served. Fish had grown legs and taken to land before we received menus. And then we waited, and waited, and waited some more before our order was taken.

Two tables of customers arrived after us and were served before us, but still we had no service. Fish had evolved into monkeys and the monkeys had evolved into Neanderthal man by the time we were served… after Ben desperately flagged down a waitress and begged her to take our order.

To say nothing of how long it took for our order to arrive and then for us to get the bill at the end of our meal. Ben’s freshly buttered hot toast came out at the exact time our parking meter ticket expired, so he had to run out and get another ticket.

We gave up (im)patiently waiting for the bill (since our second parking ticket was due to expire in about 1 minute), and decided to pay at the counter instead. By the time we exited I felt like I’d been in there for aeons.

And finally, I could not believe the number of staff they had working… I counted no less than seven!! All frantically running around like headless chickens.

From sitting down to ordering was around 25 minutes, then a further 20 minutes to get our food... no wonder people are queuing out the door!

I fully appreciate that some people like to take their time when eating out, but to wait 45 minutes for toast, a slice of cake, a mug of tea and an espresso really takes the cake. And not in a nice way either.

CakeMyDayLondon Rating

Saturday, 7 December 2013

Café Cou Cou (CB10 1EW)

17 George St, Saffron Walden CB10 1EW 

Café Cou Cou is located in the heart of the pretty market town of Saffron Walden. 

They make an assortment of tasty treats on site: cakes, brownies, biscuits, shortbreads as well as a range of bread and scones. The café footprint is tiny, with a small downstairs eating area and another little space upstairs. It’s very sweet and cosy.

The most disappointing aspect of our visit? Seeing the Starbucks up the road crammed full of customers. What is wrong with people that they’d rather choose to dine at a generic bland American chain that serves up cr@p to the masses rather than support a local business that serves homemade products baked on the premises?! Starbucks be damned.

Saffron Walden's market square
But back to Cou Cou.

I am generally not a fan of chocolate cake, as it can be too dry and sometimes a bit bland. But I was talked into having a slice of Cou Cou’s enormous chocolate cake our waitress, who said it was their most popular cake. 

I can understand why, given that it was not so much chocolate cake as a double-layered concoction of chocolate mousse, cream and chocolate icing with some thin slices of sponge in between. I’m not saying that’s a bad thing… it was incredibly rich and delicious.

But I think the saying “a minute on the lips, a lifetime on the hips” was coined by the person who ate this cake, because it probably requires no less than two lifetimes to burn off. It was, in fact, so rich that I couldn’t finish it all and had to offload some to Ben (who willingly obliged).

I give you... cakeosaurus
Ben ordered a more modest slice of apple cake which he declared was very good. His coffee was fine (ie: not bad, not amazing).

There’s an empty Blockbuster premises across the road for lease, and I hope Café Cou Cou seriously consider expanding, because the UK certainly doesn’t need another Starbucks. 


CakeMyDayLondon Rating



Monday, 2 December 2013

Sable d’Or (N8 8DT)

43 The Broadway, Crouch End, N8 8DT 

Returning to Crouch End, home of good cafes, we scoured the streets for a suitable place to review that we hadn’t been to before. I was after “serious cake”, and seeing Sable d’Or’s mini cake display I was sold. 


The café is long and narrow, with tables along one side opposite the open kitchen, and then opens into a larger dining area in the back. Unfortunately our table was near the toilet door which people kept leaving open.

I was disappointed that the apricot crumble came unaccompanied (I had a hankering for custard), so I opted for the chocolate orange cake instead. I was not disappointed with this; it was orangey, moist and dense. It was also expensive (£4.10 to eat in)... the price of quality I guess. 
 
Tastes better than it looks in the photo

Ben had brioche, which doesn’t count as cake in my opinion (Ben failed to uphold his end of the cake bargain). But he gave the brioche two thumbs up, saying that it was exactly how it should be, so there you go. Coffee was good (this is a compliment coming from Ben).

Sable d’Or is a very safe bet for a cake venture. It won’t blow your socks off with personality or its décor, but the staff are friendly and polite, and the cake is excellent. 

CakeMyDayLondon Rating





Sunday, 1 December 2013

Café Vintage (N5 2LT)

88 Mountgrove Road London N5 2LT
http://www.cafevintage.co.uk/  

Cafes like this are what reinvigorate London’s high streets. It’s located on an unremarkable street, mid-way between two café hot spots (Stoke Newington Church St and Stroud Green Road). 

The street has potential… plenty of vacant store fronts, a gallery here and there. It’s what the agents like to call “up and coming”. Café Vintage is of the ilk that causes a street to be on the up, not the down.

Again, this was another accidental en-route-to-somewhere-else find. My eyes were immediately drawn to the Tiffany-blue store front and matching wrought iron chairs and tables outside.
 

Drivers be warned… it’s pay parking on Saturdays. While parking is free on Sundays, the exception is match days at Arsenal in which case you’re best bet is to come on foot.

The interior is just as rewarding as the exterior – it’s quirky in a 1930s/1940s grandma’s kitchen sort of way, which is code for saying it’s awesome. I can’t comment on the standard of its vintage offerings; these seemed more part of the theme of the café than a serious business (although the goods are for sale should you be in the mood).

Our visit was well rewarded with cake. I rolled the dice and went with red velvet, as I wasn’t in the mood for typical chocolate and the colour matched my cushions at home. It delivered everything I expect from cake… really big slice, lots of icing, good flavour and texture. It was in fact almost too sweet if such a thing is even possible. 

Cake to match my cushions
Ben had the hazelnut & raisin toast which he couldn’t stop raving about. He said the coffee was good (phew!). We also shared the most enormous pot of tea I have seen to date.

If you are looking to buy a property in the area then you’d better act soon, because if cafes like Vintage keep popping up it will price you out of the market. 


CakeMyDayLondon Rating