Ukiyo Bar at the beginning of what turned out to be a full-house for Raw Foods
It’s wonderful what a few fresh wild flowers can do to a room. We arrived at Ukiyo Bar on Exchequer Street last Sunday night around 7pm, ready for a raw food extravaganza. The room had been set up with long communal tables, with vases of wild flowers lit up by candlelight. It was like walking into a country peasant communal feast and immediately gave the night the relaxed, friendly feel that was to follow until we left, full of food and good health, a good five hours later.
We were in Ukiyo for our second Tasting Menu, and the fourth that has been held in Ukiyo since the beginning of the year. We had enjoyed the Taboo Tasting Menu hosted by ECCAFD. Tonight was to be an entirely different type of night – a night, in fact, on the complete opposite spectrum of the food chain. Instead of potentially offensive foods such as Foie Gras and Lamb’s Brains, we were to be treated to an entirely guilt free Raw Food night. Kind to the environment, kind to your belly.
Beautiful!
Nut Cheese Roll wrapped in various olives and sundried tomatoes, with cayenne, cumin, basil and spucy pine nuts and tomato vinaigrette served with garlic chips, purple basil, micro greens and dragon crackers
This was a spectacular dish. Apart from the process of the cheese making, which was fascinating in itself, the tomatoes’ ripeness took this dish up on to another level of tastiness.
While perusing the menu, a few of us at our communal dining table were questioning what Garlic Chips might be and were only slightly disappointed that we weren’t served raw potatoes with some kind of aioli cream. Instead, the crispy slivers of garlic were much more enjoyable.
The nut roll, which you may be able to tell from the close-up, was a special type of ‘cheese’ which is made by creating Rejuvelac from the water released by sprouted wheatberries. This liquid (the Rejuvelac) is then used to ferment cashew nuts, which after about five days, produces the nutty cheesy stuff.
Although it had a mildly cheesy taste, its texture was (naturally enough!) closer to tofu than anything dairy like. No matter, for it was very good indeed, most especially combined with the outer layer of sundried tomatoes and kalamata olives. Yum.
This whole dish was really intense. The zinginess of the sundried tomato and olive nut cheese combined with the perfectlly ripe tomatoes threw up a surprisingly tangy dish which was an absolute pleasure for the taste buds.
This was paired with an Archidamo ‘Il Meridione’ Primitivo ’05.
Foraged Chiffoned Sweet Cicely Leaves with Wild Foraged and Grown Berries Jostaberries, Red Currant, White Currants, Black Currants and Wild Plums topped with a Wild Water Mint and raw Cacao Nib Cashew Nut Ice Cream drizzled with a deep and dark Raw Chocolate Sauce
This was to be the beginning of our desserts. The foraged berries and leaves were found in the wilds of Co Meath. The textures of these three little ‘ice-creams’ were curiouser and curiouser.
From the left, we started off with the berry sorbet. Very straightforward, a beautiful colour and beautiful tangy taste.
I believe the other two ‘ice-creams’ were the Raw Cacao Cashew nut ice cream, which were both rather curious. We were expecting a smooth, creamy texture but instead we were surprised by a coconutty texture, lots of little bits in the mix. They both tasted slightly odd – probably because of a lack of the usual unhealthy stuff that you find in desserts – but not odd in an unpleasant way, just kind of… peculiar.
The chocolate sauce accompanying this was kick ass. A few of the punters in the full restaurant demanding more, so delicious was this raw chocolate sauce. It’s unlike any other kind of sauce, being pure chocolate and almond butter, but instead of being over-powering complimented the three berry and cacao balls.
You can see the wild foraged and grown berries, like the jostaberries, blueberries and red currants sprinkled around the plate, as well as the simply delicious Sweet Cicely Leaves, which looks kind of like a flattened Cyprus Tree. We were encouraged to pop the Cicely Leaf into our mouths and enjoy the sweet, aniseedy flavour that came with them.
My favourite part of this dessert was the Sweet Cicely Leaf. Although I enjoyed the Berry Sorbet, I wasn’t entirely sure about the texture of the other two and, perhaps because I’m not really much of a dessert girl, I didn’t like this as much as the previous courses. Still, the chocolate sauce, the Berry Sorbet and the Sweet Cicely Leaves ensured that it was still quite a delightful experience.
Cashew Nut Cheese Selection Three different cheeses wrapped in mixed ground peppercorns, fennel flowers, cumin seeds placed on an array of wild foraged and garden grown chenopadicae leaves (Rainbow Chard, Tree Spinach, Fat Hen, Beetroot, Perpetual Spinach, Annual Spinach, Good King Henry) with sprouted wheat and onion flat bread.
This was, for me, the most interesting dish of the evening. It may not have been the tastiest but it was the most intriguing. Again, it was working with the nut cheese process, but the different spices coating each cheese led to a very Arabian style dessert. The cumin and fennel flavours gave it an almost Baklava without the sickeningly gooey sweetness. See the brown blob to the left of the pretty little purple flowers in front of the cheeses? That was a kind of sweet oniony currant sticky chutney which went well with the very dry cheeses.
You can see there was a little blob of honey type substance to the left of the last cheese on the right. This worked alongside the chutney to add a bit of sweetness to the dish, which went extremely well with all the Arabic spices.
We enjoyed a palate cleansing Tour des Gendres Bergerac Rose Malbec ’07.
A selection of Ecstatic Raw Chocolate Delights
Our final course was a plate of four unbelievably rich pieces of chocolate, made from raw cacao. There were two hard, rich pieces of chocolate on the right which had beautifully crunchy nutty middles, while the other two pieces were squishy truffly like balls of wonder.
This was served with a fantastic dessert wine, the lovely Zeni Recioto della Valpolicella ’07
Give this woman a restaurant ASAP!
These special Tasting Menu nights will continue to take place in Ukiyo Bar in the coming months. It’s a pricey enough treat, as it costs €40 for food and €20 for wine per head (if you go for the matched wine tasting too). It’s absolutely worth every penny as both nights I’ve experienced have been unique and thoroughly enjoyable.
So if you have the extra cash in your pocket and are looking for a culinary experience slightly left of centre, keep an eye on Ukiyo Bar’s plans of food activity to come.
Categories: Dinner Tags: Natasha's Living Foods, Raw Foods
August 18, 2009 at 7:12 pm
Wow, the photos are excellent. And I have eaten those berries from Co. Meath. It is wild out there.
You make me want to go. Well done!
August 18, 2009 at 9:26 pm
What a night I must have missed- haven’t got to my own dinner yet so the photos are like some bizarre torture- I’m salivating!…and making a pledge not to miss your next feast Natasha!
August 18, 2009 at 11:14 pm
Thank you for the beautiful pictures and the tantalizing descriptions of the evening’s fare.
I’m sorry I couldn’t be there, but this posting was the next best thing!
August 19, 2009 at 8:49 am
Hi Reilly – aw shucks thanks! It was a delicious night all round.
Hi Finn – glad you liked the pics and hope you got your dinner sorted quick! Natasha’s food was really amazing, I’m looking forward to her next feast myself.
Hi Rob – you’re very welcome, thanks for the kind words and for visiting the blog!
August 19, 2009 at 6:13 pm
oh yes those pictures and descriptions are torturous! I love beautiful food that is healthy and decadent at the same time…
August 19, 2009 at 7:55 pm
What a feast, Aoife! For the eyes as well as the tummy! I think I want it all … in fact, I’m sure of it. This is my kind of meal. Thanks so much for sharing it with us.
August 19, 2009 at 8:04 pm
Wow Tash! I am so proud of you! The photos are great to see all the delicious dishes you described. I’ve just eaten but I was drooling for them.
Well done and as someone said,Give that girl a restaurant and fast!!!
Lots of love
mum x
August 20, 2009 at 5:22 pm
Hi Foodhoe and Diva! Really glad you enjoyed the pics! It was a really spectacular meal for sure.
Hi Susan – thanks for visiting the blog, and yes, your daughter did an amazing job!
September 4, 2009 at 9:30 am
Agh! really wish I’d have been able to make this, it looks amazing. So glad you enjoyed it! Natasha’s food is to die for – I buy a slice of her raw choc cake practically every week and try to make it last as long as I can (take a guess at how successful I am ) – it’s the nicest chocolate I have EVER tasted.
Great pics and descriptions as always Aoife You’re right – Natasha needs a restaurant, stat!
September 8, 2009 at 7:15 pm
Hi Aoife – it’s a shame you couldn’t come, the food really was beautiful. I’ll have to pick up some of her cake at the market asap!