The Scotsman

Montrose, Edinburgh

- Gaby Soutar @gsoutar

Where?

1 Montrose Terrace, Edinburgh (0131-605 0088, www. montrosere­staurant.co)

Montrose House at Abbeyhill is the opposite of a Tardis. The white late-19thcentur­y building, originally an inn, but also at different times a cafe, yoga studio and pub, looks huge from the street, but is relatively titchy inside.

Now the Radford family, owners of Edinburgh’s Michelin-starred Timberyard, and their head chef, James Murray, have taken it over and opened Montrose.

At last, it feels as if the landmark building’s full potential has been realised. There’s a wine bar downstairs, offering small plates, and a neat three-course menu, or, head up the winding staircase to their 15-cover fine-dining area. The two spaces are pretty distinct.

As our server and sommelier said, they’ll be playing rock music on the ground level, so there’s a happening feel. While the smarter candle-lit first-floor space, with bare brick walls and linen curtains fixed shut with dolly pegs, has white noise, birdsong and Brian Eno-ish muzak coming out of a single speaker.

The room is filled with the smell of holy wood, palo santo, which is supposed to reduce stress. Basically, it’s like being in a culinary spa. If the chef, Moray Lamb, came out and offered me a shoulder massage, I’d say yes please.

The tasting menu is four courses (£65), including lots of additional snacks and sweets. Choose matching wines for an additional £50 or soft drinks for £30. The ‘snacks’ are first.

Our pair of ‘smoked eel and radish flatbread’ consisted of tiny puffy saucers of chewy and buttery carb, with two slices of fish and finely chopped peppery radish on top, while the duo of Dexter beef croquettes were hearty, with a dot of tangy walnut ketchup on their hemisphere­s.

Snack number three was hipflask-sized seeded wholemeal rolls, along with a ramekin of pure white whipped sesame and another of pickled cucumber. What a start, and not a crumb was spilled on the pristine cream linen tablecloth­s.

We started with a fishy course, which Lamb delivered. This was a take on prawn cocktail, with two langoustin­es, a piece of celeriac and a lush pink celeriac sauce. In lieu of Tabasco was a green Szuechaun oil, which provided a lovely gentle tingle, like Tiger Balm on the tongue. It was knife-licking stuff.

Same for the next course. Each of us had a fillet of silky cod, with caramelise­d Roscoff onion, and a thick vin jaune sauce studded with shrimp. Fish isn’t often teamed with nuts, but this came with a hazelnut praline, and I enjoyed the textural contrast.

Our final savoury course was the venison. It was excellentl­y feral, thanks in part to a piece of black peppery game sausage, along with the pink Bbq-ish meat, and beetroot chunks. I’m not sure what the dandelion leaf stems were there for, but maybe they have some therapeuti­c quality that we don’t know about.

There was another forage-y flavour, when it came to the chocolate tart. It had an earthy and astringent taste, which prevented the Madagascan­chocolate-topped option from being too sweet. This isosceles slice was decorated with shreds of Armagnacso­aked prune, and came with a salty sweet soil, and vanilla ice-cream.

If that’s not sugary enough, the meal concludes with a pair of chocolate rum truffles – big enough to leave impression­s of your incisors in their creamy middles. That’s as well as brown butter financiers with a brightly tangy sea buckthorn curd.

We’d rattled through all this food, and three drinks – an ice-cold house martini (£11) with bergamot; a mezcal negroni (£11) and a glass of 2022 Poivre d’âne cinsault ( just £6) – in under 90 minutes. Others might prefer a different pace, but I’m not good with delayed gratificat­ion.

It was still light outside, as we left our dreamy portal and were decanted onto Montrose Terrace via the already bustling wine bar.

Even if the chef had offered me a massage, I probably couldn’t have loved this place more.

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 ?? ?? The restaurant upstairs at Montrose, Edinburgh, main; the langoustin­e starter, above; chocolate tart, below
The restaurant upstairs at Montrose, Edinburgh, main; the langoustin­e starter, above; chocolate tart, below
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