The Jewish Chronicle

Proper kosher nosh is out there for the eating

- BY MARCUS DYSCH

I HAVE read a lot in the JC in the last few weeks about the supposedly dire state of kosher restaurant dining in London.

First, Jenni Frazer wrote about the difficulty a non-Jewish friend had encountere­d in finding somewhere sophistica­ted for an observant friend to eat out.

Then, JC editor Stephen Pollard bemoaned the fact that the West End “hasn’t had a single upmarket kosher restaurant” since Six-13 closed.

Maybe I have a different interpreta­tion of “sophistica­ted” and “upmarket, because, as far as I can see, London really should not complain about the provision of kosher eateries for those who want them.

I came to this view even before a remarkable experience last week at Delicatess­en, the new posh place in Hampstead, but more of that later.

I would be the first to criticise the generally dire state of the mid-market kosher restaurant­s in North-West London. Watching people doublepark and schlep along Brent Street, Shenley Road, Golders Green Road or Edgware High Street is not conducive to an enjoyable night out or a big birthday celebratio­n.

The complete lack of imaginatio­n in most of the menus at a variety of locations is soul-destroying. What passes for “customer service” in most kosher joints is not worthy of the name.

But there are, if you look carefully and are prepared to pay (and if you’re going out for a kosher meaty dinner you have clearly already decided you’re willing to cough up the cash), perfectly good dinners can be had in very nice restaurant­s.

Ok, Aviv might not be the classiest looking venue, but its value for money and mixed grill have made it a staple of Dysch family celebratio­ns for nearly 15 years. The Kitchen is a popular recent addition; Met Su Yan (Edgware, not Golders) is noisy but not offensive, and Kaifeng is always a respectabl­e option.

That brings us to Delicatess­en. The second we walked in I knew this was no ordinary kosher restaurant. The clientele were smartly dressed, beautiful (the men and women), evidently wealthy. That the queue for tables continued to reach the door until gone 9pm suggested the owners must be on to something.

I am no Giles Coren or Jay Rayner, but I know a good meal when I’ve scoffed one and this was superb.

Describing itself as “modern, Middle Eastern cuisine”, Delicatess­en’s menu was largely unintellig­ible to an Ashkenazi son of the north of England, but thankfully Sephardi Mrs Dysch was on hand to translate.

Where else could you get a Turkish lahmajun meat pizza; Old Jaffa lamb kebabs with tahini, sehug, and chermula (whatever that is); or beef dafina with ox cheek? Ox cheek, noch — not exactly vienna, egg and chips is it?

It’s a pricey affair, but again, if you don’t eat treif meat and you want something smarter than a take-away pizza, you know where you stand.

The staff were smart, intelligen­t and attentive — our British-Israeli assistant Tom could not have been more helpful and was, bar none, the best waiter I have ever encountere­d in a kosher restaurant in this country. Ok, it’s a hell

I’m no Giles Coren but I know a good meal when I scoffed one’

of a noisy place and some of the tables looked a little too crammed for comfort, but what do you expect when you shove four dozen Jews into a diner?

All in all, it was a pleasure and there are few Jewish experience­s in NorthWest London these days that could be described as such, let’s be honest.

And let me tell you something else — if your main argument is that London is short of decent kosher places, you don’t know you’re born. Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, and Birmingham can

barely scrape a non-home-made main course together between them.

Manchester has a few passable impression­s for decent kosher restaurant­s, but none would pass the Frazer/ Pollard “upmarket” test.

Variety and new options are always welcome, but let’s not overlook the improvemen­ts in kosher dining.

This first ran on the new www.thejc.com comment blog. A selection of pieces from the blog will appear in the paper.

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