The National - News

RARE OPPORTUNIT­Y TO ENJOY DELICIOUS DINING DISCOUNTS AND TRY GASTRO EXPERIENCE

▶ From subsidised dishes and supper clubs to culinary tours and specialise­d set menus, One Carlo Diaz makes a list of recommenda­tions for Dubai Food Festival

-

It’s that time of the year again when Dubai doubles down on its gastronomi­c expertise, allowing the city’s bustling restaurant scene to shine via special menus, celebrity chef masterclas­ses and dining discounts.

Dubai Food Festival, now in its 11th year, is running until May 12.

Dozens of spots participat­e in the annual affair, with intrepid foodies looking forward to Dubai Restaurant Week and Foodie Experience­s.

The former has 65 participat­ing restaurant­s, offering set lunch and dinner menus at discounted rates. Foodie Experience­s, meanwhile, has a diverse line-up of 43 events, from culinary masterclas­ses to four-hands dinners, children’s workshops and more.

Evidently, the month-long festival can be overwhelmi­ng even for the most discerning of diners, so here is our guide to this year’s most delicious entries.

Five to try at Dubai Restaurant Week

Rare

Also in the newcomer department is steakhouse Rare at C2, a licensed restaurant hub at City Walk. The National was the first to dine at the restaurant before it opened to public, and we can attest the meat expertise is par excellent.

For the restaurant’s debut at the festival, there is a lunch (Dh125) and dinner (Dh250) option. Dishes include heirloom tomato and peach salad, Wagyu strip loin with wasabi cream and batter crispies, and whipped burnt cheesecake.

Andaliman

The food festival is a good way to sample new restaurant­s in a rather crowded foodie scene. Indonesian spot Andaliman at the newly-opened The Link at One&Only One Za’abeel is serving a set dinner menu (Dh350) with dishes such as pangsit sayur or Indonesian wantons and classic nasi goreng.

Babushka

Dubai is a melting pot of cuisines, but one of the latest ones to gain popularity in recent months is Eastern European fare. Babushka, located at The Beach, showcases this via its three-course lunch (Dh125) and dinner (Dh150) menus as part of Dubai Restaurant Week. Dishes include pavlova with berry sorbet and custard vanilla cream, potato pancakes with red caviar, buckwheat with stewed beef, and porcini mushrooms and cheese mousse.

Hawkerboi

Popular supper club Hawkerboi opened a restaurant in The Park, Jumeirah Lakes Towers last year. A set dinner menu (Dh250) includes dishes such as chicken skewer with spiced satay and chilli vinegar, roast duck quarter, and mango sticky rice served with a fried paratha. From first-hand experience, a meal there among three friends cost Dh700 for five sharing dishes, making the festival price of Dh250 for three courses for one person a real steal.

Hoe Lee Kow

When The National sampled the Korean restaurant in Dubai Hills, we couldn’t get enough of the tteokbokki, a popular street food in the East Asian country. The restaurant, brainchild of Reif Othman, is serving the dish in its set dinner menu (Dh250) during

Dubai Food Festival. The dish is made with home-made rice cakes, maple beef bacon and Manchego cheese.

It comes with other Korean classics such as Wagyu bulgogi and sweet potato brulee. There’s also a lunch menu for those who want to visit the restaurant earlier in the day.

Foodie Experience­s Food tour in Karama and Deira

The Dubai Food Festival is not all sit down and stay put, either. There are also walking tours where food remains the main event. Karama and Deira, part of old Dubai, are often associated with authentic foodie finds.

This year Palestinia­n chef Haya of Haya’s Kitchen will lead a three-hour food tour interspers­ed with stories of Levantine cuisine. The tour stops in four eateries, sampling classics such as falafel and kunafa. It is scheduled to take place on May 4 and costs Dh195 per person.

Girl and the Goose supper club at Couqley

Perhaps one of best meals I have had in years, the supper

club by Nicaraguan chef Gabriela Chamorro is taking over French restaurant Couqley in Jumeirah Lakes Towers on May 9 and 10. The five-course menu, priced at Dh250 per person, is a multi-sensorial journey through Central America. Diners can expect dishes such as baby corn curry, green pepian ceviche and beef tacos.

Dinner and kitchen tour at 11 Woodfire

The festival is also a good opportunit­y for foodies to glance at the behind-the-scenes action of prominent dining spots, including Michelin-starred restaurant 11 Woodfire in Jumeirah.

After the four-course menu (dish details of which have not been revealed yet), diners will be led to the back of house for an exclusive kitchen tour, getting up close with the restaurant’s pit masters.

There are sessions from May 5 to 12, priced at Dh375 per person.

Eleven Green

As The National’s review noted, the home-grown restaurant offers the “best burgers in Dubai”, which is a tall order by all means.

At the festival, the venue is offering a breakfast spread featuring American diner classics with an all-you-can-eat deal for Dh150.

Dishes include breakfast muffin with Wagyu beef, bacon bits and cheese; chorizo hash with scrambled eggs and a side of smoked labneh.

There are also sweet treats such as classic buttermilk pancakes, sticky pecan buns and cinnamon rolls. Free-flowing coffee and orange juice are also included.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? Eleven Green; Hoe Lee Kow; Chris Whiteoak / The National ?? Clockwise from above, Burger joint Eleven Green is offering a breakfast spread; Tteokbokki served in a bowl of silky smooth sauce; and Hawkerboi in JLT
Eleven Green; Hoe Lee Kow; Chris Whiteoak / The National Clockwise from above, Burger joint Eleven Green is offering a breakfast spread; Tteokbokki served in a bowl of silky smooth sauce; and Hawkerboi in JLT
 ?? Rare ?? Rare is offering striploin with wasabi and batter crispies
Rare Rare is offering striploin with wasabi and batter crispies

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates