Showing posts with label fine dining Doha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fine dining Doha. Show all posts
Traditional Asian cuisine or to be specific Japanese cuisine, washoku, usually consisting of rice, soup and vegetables and featuring a variety of mostly mild and delicate flavors, has become well known throughout the world. Recently, washoku – a way of cooking, presenting and eating traditional Japanese cuisine – was inducted into UNESCO‘s Cultural Heritage list.

1. Bread and Japanese bakeries
In Japan, as is the case with most Asian countries, rice is the staple grain. Rice has played an important role in socio-economic history of the Japan, and, up until the modern era, was even used for taxation purposes instead of a manufactured currency. Following the Meiji Restoration, the Japanese diet became increasingly westernized. Bread grew in popularity, and now occupies an important and flourishing role in Japan’s food culture. A visit to any of Japan’s numerous bakeries will reveal a great variety of well-crafted products: everything from delicious sweets and French-style baguettes to shrimp rolls and pigs-in-a-blanket.using rice as a base in recipes. In addition to regular bread, some bakeries make rice bread, a special type of bread using rice flour, in hopes of increasing consumption of domestically grown rice.
2. Ice cream, with a Japanese twist
Ice cream probably isn’t the first thing to come to mind when someone mentions Japanese food. Yet, Japan is home to some truly unique flavors of this summertime favourite — the kinds of things you won’t find on US ice cream maker Baskin Robbins‘ famous list of 31 flavors. Among the more popular Japanese flavors are maccha (green tea), sakura (cherry blossom), satsumaimo (sweet potato), goma (black sesame seed) and yuzu (a type of citrus fruit with a flavor similar to mandarin orange mixed with lemon).
Less common are exotic flavors [ja] that you wouldn't find anywhere else but in Japan, based on local specialties. These include basashi (horse-meat sashimi), eel, and wasabi (Japanese horseradish). Such varieties can be found in particular souvenir shops in locations where the ingredients are local specialities.
3. Gekikara ramen and other spicy foods 
Japanese food has a reputation for being mild, and some might even go so far as to call it bland. However, anyone willing to make that generalization has obviously never experienced a bowl of gekikara ramen, a version of the ubiquitous noodle dish flavored with potent spices. Those brave enough to try a bowl should expect to sweat a bit! And while Japanese curry is typically sweeter and less fiery than its Indian counterpart, some curry shops will allow you to select your level of spiciness, the higher of which will definitely pack some heat.
4. Raw egg
One of the hallmarks of Japanese food is the abundance of fresh ingredients that are quite often used raw. The best known example of this is the raw seafood used in sushi, but several other raw foods figure prominently in Japanese cooking.
Raw egg, for example, can be found in many dishes, typically served on top of rice, or as a dip for noodles. This presents, arguably, one of the greatest difficulties Americans face when sampling the array of  Japanese food. American children are taught from a very early age to regard eggs with extreme caution. In the interest of preventing food-borne illnesses, Americans learn to always wash their hands after handling raw egg, to be careful not to cross-contaminate other foods with raw egg, to always store eggs in the refrigerator, and certainly never to eat eggs raw. This can be quite a shock for American visitors to Japan, who will find eggs stored on grocery shelves at room temperature, and eggs served entirely uncooked in a number of restaurant dishes.
That said, if properly handled, raw egg – sourced from clean, healthy chickens – is perfectly safe for human consumption. And everyone should try the humorously named oyakodon (mother and child bowl), which consists of cooked chicken and reduced onion served over rice with raw egg on top, at least once.
5. Okonomiyaki and common cuisine
Japan is a destination for foodies and gastronomes the world over, seeking the subtle and sublime qualities of Japan’s high-end dishes. This has led to a somewhat skewed perception of Japanese cuisine, as  common Japanese dishes – the cheap and delicious meals enjoyed daily by average people – are sorely underrepresented abroad.
A great example of this is okonomiyaki. Many varieties and regional variations ofokonomiyaki exist; in fact, the name itself means “cooked how you like it.” The basic formula, however, includes different vegetables (often: cabbage, carrot and/or onion) and meats (often: squid, pork, shrimp and/or beef), diced and mixed into a pancake-like batter, cooked on a flat-top grill and garnished according to personal preference (often with a type of barbecue sauce, mayonnaise, edible seaweed and/or dried bonito flakes).
Bars and restaurants that serve okonomiyaki usually have a great social atmosphere, given that okonomiyaki can be cut into pieces with a metal spatula and shared with friends or family. Actually, many places allow groups of patrons to make their own okonomiyaki by ordering ingredients and using a griddle built right into the tables. This do-it-yourself style is not uncommon to other forms of Japanese common cuisine, including the ever-popular takoyaki (octopus balls).
6. Whiskey!

It might be considered cheating to include a section on whiskey, quite clearly a beverage, in an article intended to be about Japanese food. But would any article about French cuisine fail to include mention of French wine? Food and alcohol have a long relationship, though Japan’s affection for good whiskey is somewhat surprising, considering that sake usually hogs the cultural spotlight. Nevertheless, Japan’s distilleries produce high-end spirits that continually challenge the supremacy of Scotch, and often take first place in blind tastings and international competitions.
Whiskey bars, serving a variety of import and domestic products, are not uncommon in larger cities. And the whiskey highball (usually whiskey and either ginger ale or soda water served on ice in a highball glass) remains a popular cocktail of choice for both freewheeling Japanese youth and more staid businesspeople. The highball even emerged recently as part of a buzzword employed by Japanese beverage conglomerate Suntory in a marketing campaign: hai-kara, which is a whiskey highball (haiboru) served with fried chicken (karaage).
7. Otsumami, the marriage of alcohol and food
In Japan, alcohol is rarely consumed by itself, but is almost always accompanied by food of some kind. Visitors to Japan may be surprised when they order a drink at a bar or restaurant and are served a complimentary bowl of potato salad or strips of grilled chicken. This is entirely normal, part of the unspoken rule that says alcohol should always be paired with something to snack on. In fact, there is an entire category of snacks made and marketed to accompany alcoholic beverages. These types of foods are known as otsumami, which comes from the verb “tsumu”, which means “to pluck” or “to pinch,” a reference to the fact that they are quite often finger foods.
Japan is a notoriously alcohol-friendly society. Alcohol is abundantly available, to the point of being sold in vending machines in many places, and the consumption of alcohol on a regular basis is culturally accepted. For this reason, otsumami are very popular and sold in countless varieties. Those new to otsumami may want to start with more familiar fare, like mixed nuts or edamame (soy beans), but the more exotic varieties hold their own allure as well, such as squid jerky and whole dehydrated anchovies.
Whatever one’s culinary inclinations or perceptions about what traditional Japanese cuisine is, or ought to be, there is a lot more going on in washoku than just sushi and white rice. Japanese cuisine is big, wonderful, nebulous, and ever-changing. Those willing to explore it are sure to find something spectacular.

Top 5 fine dine restaurants in Doha


Lets look at some of the best of fine dining in Doha



La Mer at The Ritz-Carlton

La Mer is a restaurant you book for the view first, and the food second. That's not to say the food isn't divine, but situated on the 23rd floor of The Ritz-Carlton with its floor to ceiling windows, the vista extends out across the Gulf's coast and onto the city's skyline.

A joint seafood and steak restaurant, La Mer has some chic interior design to go with its contemporary cuisine. The Wagyu beef with foie gras and black truffle, seafood tortellini or the reef and beef - lobster and a 120g strip loin - should leave your stomach as content as your field of vision. For something more intimate, book the private dining room, Le Ciel, or finish your night with drinks in Level 23 - the restaurant's upscale bar.

Hakkasan at the St. Regis

With branches also in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, the Hakkasan group has embedded its roots firmly in the Gulf. Doha's venue at the St. Regis maintains the classic interior styling the chain has become known for, fusing traditional Chinese design with modern aesthetics. Inside may be enticing but Hakkasan's outdoor terrace is not to be sniffed at. A very unique setup in this architectural city, lush greenery borders comfortable seating with open air views.

The Ling-Ling Lounge is what you will require for private parties or work events. As has always been the case though, the food is Hakkasan's crowning glory. Good luck choosing between the black cod with XO sauce, Peking duck with Royal Beluga caviar, Wagyu beef or silver cod with Sha Cha and truffle - to name just a few of our favorites.

Gordon Ramsay at the St. Regis

As if stepping into a Georgian Townhouse in Mayfair, celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay has not only captured the sense of London's poshest district, but he's created a menu that is filled with wonderful British classics. Start with a drink in The Conservatory before walking into the avant-garde restaurant, filled with vivid colours and creative styling; we warn you that romance will inevitably be in the air.



Better still, arrive in style with one of the hotel's Rolls-Royce cars delivering you directly to the restaurant's private lift for a champagne welcome. Pan-roasted wild sea bass with truffle sauce, blue lobster on rock salt or butter truffle guinea fowl are all on the 'standard menu'. Egg yolk ravioli and cold seared langoustines are on the 'menu prestige'

Market by Jean-Georges at the W Doha

Hoarding awards since it opened its doors in 2012, Market is a funky and modern restaurant with a bustling atmosphere. It's cuisine of high-end European and Arabic food with a twist has proven extremely popular ever since Jean-Georges Vongerichten brought his chain of restaurants to the city. The restaurant is designed in several small areas, giving it a more intimate feel than if it was one big open space.



Hundreds of jars filled with spices and aromas are scattered throughout the venue, that, along with the close proximity of tables, helps to create the concept's 'market' feel. The menu is balanced between fine dining and the higher-end of casual, including some fantastic sushi and gourmet options. Be sure to book in advance - like all good markets, this one is busy on a weekend.

Signature by Sanjeev Kapoor at Meliá Doha

With a branch already in Meliá's Dubai hotel, it wasn't a surprise when Meliá Doha opened its own Signature by Sanjeev Kapoor earlier this year. The intimate restaurant, with its white tablecloths and wooden finishings, showcases its 'art on a plate' presentation, fusing food with entertainment. The outdoor terrace offers fantastic views of Doha's West Bay, while the interior has a stylish avant-garde interior.



On the menu, Kapoor's trademark of contemporary dishes with strong traditional influences laden the menu, including the tandoori wasabi lobster, tandoori balchao prawns and Kandhari crab aur jungle scallops. There are also a number of vegetarian dishes on the menu, including a vegetarian kebab and spinach and green pea patties with mascarpone cheese lava




Source-http://edgardaily.com/en/dining/2015/top-5-the-best-restaurants-in-doha-9374

Culture and fine Dine in Doha

The oriental city that never sleeps is now focusing on cultural and gastronomic assets to carry on developing its global attraction.

People who travel regularly to Qatar, and more particularly to Doha know that regardless of the amount of times you visit the city is never the same. Enthused by the 2022 Football World Cup, the tiny Arab state is speeding up its developments. And one key goal is to give its metropolitan city a depth that state of the art skyscrapers might have failed to give Doha.
It all starts with connection. If so far, Doha’s inhabitants’ best friend has been their car, it soon won’t be the case any longer. Tube, but also trains, will soon be running all over the city and beyond its actual limits to give the opportunity to connect places and people. Commuting won’t be limited to car trips anymore but rather to links and timetables.
But there wouldn’t be any point to create those transport systems if there weren’t any targets to hit. And there are plenty of them, the very same ones part of the city’s grand scheme. Culture, culture, culture, that’s all they’re talking about here with a specific predilection for museums and gastronomy.
If the trend was set with the Museum of Islamic Art designed by world renowned Ieoh Ming Pei in 2008, the city has now opened another venue entirely dedicated to contemporary Arabic Modern Art. Opened in 2010, the Mathaf has already gained a strong regional authority, opening its doors to artists from the entire Arab world, from Morocco to Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Jordan.
That authority should soon go beyond its current limits with the opening of 250 artists’ villas right in the heart of Katara, a cultural village committed to world cultures currently under construction. That and the opening in 2014 of the National Museum, designed by French architect Jean Nouvel, as well as the Olympic and Sports Museum scheduled for 2015 should add the last touches of polish to the cultural summit of the 2022 host city.
“The Qataris were nomads; they lived with very little belongings. What I like is these tents, these few objects on the ground, these immense landscapes in which they lived. The challenge is to translate the beauty of their origins,” Jean Nouvel said in a NY Times documentary about the design of the National Museum.
On the gastronomy side, Qatar had already proven a certain taste for exceedingly talented and world-renowned chefs such as Jean Georges Vongerichten and Gordon Ramsay. With the arrival of two more Michelin starred chefs, Guy Savoy and Alain Ducasse, the Arab peninsula confirms its global dream of exceedingly state-of-the-art projects.

Nested on the Pearl in a simple but elegant venue designed by Jean-Michel Wilmotte,Quisine by Guy Savoy offers the chef signature menus (“Prestige” and “Colours, Textures and Savours”) as well as some “local” surprises.
Alain Ducasse opted for the Museum of Islamic Art to set his pans and whisks in a Philippe Starck-signed interior decoration. At Idam, guests can now enjoy a menu forcefully oriented towards local products, which in Doha are hard to find and hard to grow. Local vegetables and raw flowers are part of the impressive menu, which also comprises a superbly revisited Moroccan Harira and the Camel à la Rossini with its lump of pâté de foie gras and potatoes soufflé.
“We work locally with the meat, which is precious here. It’s very, very high end. We hang it in the fridge for three to four weeks and we slow cook it, braise it, for six days to reach the level of tenderness,” Ducasse told Bloomberg.
A blast into the Fine dining in Fine dining in Qatar scenes that locals and visitors won’t forget any time soon, with one exception possible being that those two venues are currently serving their food with no other drinks than water, tea, juices or herbal concoctions.
With the camel, Alain Ducasse suggests a drink called “So Good”, which is a mix of white grape juice, tonic, iced tea and rose syrup.
A recent ban on alcohol on the Pearl has caused a severe drop in sales at restaurants on the man made luxury island. Although some believes it will be squeezed out soon, for now, many expats prefer dining at the hotels of the Doha business district, where alcohol still flows freely.