eatingfood » Ryan Squires http://www.eatingfood.com a blog about the simple delights encountered while eating food. Sun, 05 Jan 2014 04:30:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.8 Esquire – nine courses of heaven http://www.eatingfood.com/esquire-nine-courses-of-heaven/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=esquire-nine-courses-of-heaven http://www.eatingfood.com/esquire-nine-courses-of-heaven/#comments Tue, 16 Oct 2012 06:32:40 +0000 http://www.eatingfood.com/?p=460 Continue reading ]]> We recently dined at Esquire, Brisbane’s restaurant of the year (2012), and are really excited by what this style of restaurant means for our city. This is a leap forward in the Brisbane restaurant scene, somewhere different to anywhere else, somewhere uncompromising that presents the diner with an experience, not just a meal. And word is getting around, the night we went the restaurant was full.

Esquire has a unique approach to the menu. Rather than offer any al a carte options, it simply has degustation—you can choose between the short menu (6–9 courses) or long menu (9–15 courses). Each day the menu changes to use the best produce available so you can never be quite sure what you’re going to be served.

Esquire’s degustation-only menu is not necessarily going to appeal to everyone, there’s something quite adventurous about it—unusual textures and striking flavour combinations that some may find challenging. But those willing foodies should have faith in the talent of chefs Ryan Squires and Ben Devlin, they put forward sublime plates of food.

On the night we dined, we opted for the long menu ($150 per person) and were treated to:

  • Kim chi
  • Air dried beef
  • ‘BBQ’ kettle chips
  • Truffle and ham
  • Scampi nigiri
  • Ike jime coral trout with avocado and perilla
  • Squid with bisque and cauliflower
  • Corned beef with quark and cavalo nero
  • Itchi bai with almond and apple
  • Deckle of beef with yoghurt and parsley
  • Popcorn with chocolate, berries, hazelnut and coconut and cocoa rocks
  • Campari with orange, curds and whey
  • Strawberries, tea and cake

As each dish was brought to the table the produce and processes used to prepare it was explained to us…and the final product was flawless—like art on a plate that tasted absolutely amazing. We thoroughly enjoyed eating at Esquire—each dish served to us seeming better than the last, made up of lots of little elements all complementing one another perfectly.

It was a leisurely dinner, accompanied by beautiful wines chosen for us by the sommelier. You would expect the bill to make your heart skip a beat, but really, for the quality and care taken with the food, wine and service, it was quite reasonable. Something we would happily go back for.

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