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Wild game flocks to menus in London

- By BILL KNOTT

GAME, one of the most traditiona­l British delicacies of the season, is finding its way onto some of London’s most enticing Indian, Thai, Nordic, and Italian menus.

The “Glorious Twelfth” – or August 12 – marked the beginning of the grouse season, giving a much-needed boost to the UK’S rural economy after two lean years of poor weather and pandemic restrictio­ns. Grouse shooting alone supports more than 2,500 jobs nationwide and is worth £100 million (RM517 million) annually to the economy.

Grouse and other wild game – lean, healthy, and flavoursom­e – is also a boon for the nation’s chefs. More restaurant­s are offering it on menus, and in less traditiona­lly British ways. Its affinity with spice is key.

Kutir, chef Rohit Ghai’s flagship restaurant, offers a whole tasting menu of Indian-spiced game. “The strong flavours of game lend themselves perfectly to spices,” he says. “Game is always lean, so marinating in yogurt and spice and cooking it on a slow heat keeps it tender and juicy.”

Mark Dobbie, co-founder of Som Saa, looks to the dense forests of the mountains in northern Thailand for inspiratio­n. “The big, bold flavour, fragrant herbs, and umami-rich seasonings work really well with British game,” he says.

Brits haven’t been the only ones with a taste for the hunt.

“Wild game was historical­ly an important part of Rajasthani cuisine,” says Vivek Singh, chef and proprietor of the Cinnamon Club. “When the Rajput, Rajasthan’s ‘warrior’ caste, didn’t have anyone to fight, they would go hunting instead. It is a way of life that doesn’t exist in India anymore. It’s a privilege to preserve some of these recipes.”

Meanwhile, Aquavit London, in St James’s Market, offers a distinctly Nordic take on wild game, while chef and restaurate­ur Jacob Kenedy draws on both his Italian and his American Deep South heritage to inform his menus at Bocca di Lupo and Plaquemine Lock, braising ven

ison in a wine-rich ragu at the former, for example, and blackening spiced mallard in a searing hot pan at the latter.

Here are a handful of London’s most exciting restaurant­s in which to go wild:

Kutir

Many Indian restaurant menus stay the same year-round, but not Kutir’s. “I like to keep my chefs motivated and interested,” Ghai says. “Game season is great for that: You never quite know what will turn up in the kitchen.” The fivecourse Hunter’s Expedition menu (RM336 a head) at his intimate Chelsea town house features Chettinad-spiced mallard with curry leaf and coconut as well as venison slow-cooked with fresh chiles and fennel. Look out, too, for Ghai’s tandoor-roasted grouse, pepped up-in a nod to the grouse’s origins-with a dram of smoky malt Scotch.

Som Saa

September’s menu at the buzzy, industrial-chic Som Saa in Spitalfiel­ds offers a banana-leafgrille­d curry of mallard with longleaf coriander as well as a classic northern laab (a warm, meaty salad) made with venison and fresh spices. Later in the season, expect fiery, brothy jungle curries, perhaps with pheasant, and salads of mallard with sour leaves and ancient chile jam. About £80 (RM413) for two, excluding drinks.

Bocca di Lupo

Kenedy’s hugely popular Soho Italian restaurant (book well in advance) delights in celebratin­g the seasons, and none more so than the game season. Recipes come from the Veneto, Lombardy, and Tuscany regions: Right now, there’s grouse, lavishly stuffed with butter and herbs, then grilled with a thick slice of guanciale over the crown. Later in the season, look out for hare marinated and slow-cooked in red wine as a ragu for pappardell­e. Kenedy says his philosophy is “to try to cook game as Italians would if they lived

here.” About £90 (RM465) for two, excluding drinks.

Plaquemine Lock

The menu at Kenedy’s lively, laidback canal-side pub and restaurant in Islington pays homage to his Louisiana ancestors, and Southernst­yle game is now on the menu. The Regent’s Canal isn’t the bayou, so there is no alligator, but you’ll find grouse and pheasant breasts that have been buttermilk-brined, coated in Cajun spices, deep-fried, and dressed with pineapple, tarragon, and jalapeño. Hunter’s jambalaya-made Cajun-style, with no tomato, in a wide cast-iron pot-features rabbit and a miscellany of game, and partridge is pot-roasted with chestnuts and served with grits.

The Cinnamon Club

Singh was an early champion of game at this airy former library, which is still lined with books and has proven a favorite with Westminste­r politicos. Grouse has just landed on his menu-the breast marinated, then cooked in the tandoor, the leg meat minced and wrapped in a parcel of roomali roti (“handkerchi­ef bread”), served with peppery charred corn and creamy black lentils. Roast partridge follows in September, marinated in ginger, garlic, and amchur (green mango powder) and crusted with crushed peanuts. Finally, October brings pheasant, marinated in fresh herbs, flash-roasted in the tandoor and served with khichri (spiced rice and lentils).

Aquavit London

The handsome, high-ceilinged London outpost of the Midtown Manhattan original, Aquavit London has a September menu offering head chef Jonas Karlsson’s Nordic-inspired roast Yorkshire grouse with a grouse liver parfait, buttered cabbage, and licorice jus. Venison aficionado­s, meanwhile, should book for one of three sixcourse “A Savour of Scandinavi­a” dinners (£95 (RM491), details and bookings via the website) before Christmas, at which the pièce de résistance will be roe deer from the Scottish Highlands paired with chocolate and beetroot. – Bloomberg

 ?? ?? pictured here is a dish of grouse wing on a plate. Game meat is healthy, lean and packed with flavour. —afp relaxnews
pictured here is a dish of grouse wing on a plate. Game meat is healthy, lean and packed with flavour. —afp relaxnews
 ?? ?? a dish of Cornish pollock with venison n’duja. Game meat, like venison, is finding its way to the menus of some of London’s top restaurant­s. — bloomberg
a dish of Cornish pollock with venison n’duja. Game meat, like venison, is finding its way to the menus of some of London’s top restaurant­s. — bloomberg
 ?? ?? Grouse (pictured here) shooting is worth rm517 million annually to the british economy. — reuters
Grouse (pictured here) shooting is worth rm517 million annually to the british economy. — reuters

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