The Herald - The Herald Magazine

Ron’s reviews

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SWADISH BY AJAY KUMAR, 33 INGRAM STREET, GLASGOW, 0141 553 0581

‘I would have liked to have Instagramm­ed the reaction as we picked up menus to choose starters. And saw the prices. Uh, £12, £15, £14, £18, £14, £14 jump out. Just two at £8. For starters? To say Swadish seems to have a big hit for itself is to put it mildly but they have won a restaurant of the year award .... ’ Menu: Lamb nihari biryani, tandoori salmon, poached salmon, Goan monkfish. Ambitious menu with rejig of Indian classics. 4/5

Atmosphere: Slightly awkward up and down seating area in former firestatio­n but pleasant enough. 3/5 Service: Plenty of efficient staff. 4/5 Price: Expect to be hovering around the £20 mark for mains sans sides, and it’s very easy to hit mid teens for starters. Desserts start at £9.50 2/5 Food: Lamb biryani at £22 is worth a trip on its own, the pepper fry satisfying, starters freshly spiced. Some overreachi­ng though so not yet universall­y good. 8/10

21/30

RESTAURANT AT THE BURRELL COLLECTION, POLLOK PARK, GLASGOW

‘Are you thinking the remodellin­g of a global treasure like The Burrell has provided the opportunit­y to do what many other museums have done and open an exciting, possibly even fine dining, independen­t restaurant befitting the surroundin­gs? Think again. It hasn’t. This is run by some giant corporate blandorama entity .... ’ Menu: Gargantuan Tuna Nicoise, Chicken Caesars, flatbreads, burgers – amongst the usual scone and soup o-rama. Nothing cutting edge but perfectly okay. 3/5 Service: Table numbers needed for counter ordering, staff deliver on trays. Impersonal. Kind of works 3/5 Price: Nothing unusual about a Nicoise or Caesar Salad but it is fresh, and served in big portions. 5/5 Atmosphere: The Burrell has a kind of magic and the restaurant has that glass-house view of the park. 4/5 Food: Simple. Big portions. Good value. 6/10

21/30

MOWGLI, 78 ST VINCENT STREET, GLASGOW

‘If you’ve missed the memo, and judging by how busy this place is not many have, Mowgli is not just another chain restaurant getting round to opening up in Glasgow. But a whole new way to eat street food...’ Menu: A lot of effort has gone into thinking up new names for Indian dishes that have been about for aeons. Fenugreek Fries, Yoghurt Chat Bombs and Picnic Curries. 4/5

Service: They are clearly ordered to do the tiresome let-me-explain-themenu in detail chat, but helpful. 4/5 Atmosphere: Good buzz. 4/5 Price: Small dishes always equal pretty big bills. That four prawn curry was £8, yoghurt bombs a fiver, mainish dishes are pretty small but don’t top £9. Rice and rotis extra. 3/5 Food: Mowgli may be a chain, but their skill is in packing flavour into low fat Indian food. You’ll probably remember what you ate. 7/10

22/30

KELP, 114 COWCADDENS ROAD, GLASGOW, 0141 332 4032

‘I get what they’re up to. They’ve fired a few straggly seaweedy things at the high open pipework on that ceiling, plunked a moody picture of langoustin­es on the wall, put up an octopus mural and suddenly it’s a sustainabl­e seafood restaurant. Yet, with its window-hugging booths, glass box vibe and high bar area it has a slightly Sex and the City vibe...’ Menu: Seafood in a small plates style. Interestin­g-sounding combos including chicken fried skate, coley with ham hock, Tobermory trout. 4/5 Service: Perfectly pleasant. 5/5 Atmosphere: Likeable, comfortabl­e, loft-like decor with booths to watch the world go by at the top of the town across from the Piping Centre. 5/5 Price: It’s fish but they don’t go completely mad with the pricing. Small plates from £7 to £12 though, as usual, it mounts up. 3/5

Food: There isn’t a fish restaurant on every corner because it’s very hard to get right, at a price. They get some right but not enough. 5/10

22/30

LA CHOZA, 84 ALBION STREET, GLASGOW, 0141-552-8667

‘I’m perched at a high table at La Choza here scooping so-so guacamole with giant fried plantain chips and Googling: why do these tacos keep falling apart...’

Menu: Proper freshly made, handpresse­d masa-harina tacos are now a thing. Slow beef, marinated pork, white fish fillings and more. 4/5 Atmosphere: They’re proudly not going overboard with the Mexican food cliche decor so it’s cool, spacious, comfortabl­e, but weirdly ends up with a minimalist

Japanesey vibe. 3/5

Price: Seen some grumbling about £7.50 for two meaty tacos and £8.50 for tiger prawns, but the prices are okay for the Merchant City. 3/5 Service: Chirpy and cheery. 4/5 Food: Liked the beef shin flavour, the pork carnitas too, maybe the formulaic side flavouring­s lack punch. Wish the tortillas didn’t collapse. 5/5

19/30

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