During my last three stays in
London, I stayed at the Great Northern Hotel, in Kings's Cross. The hotel has two dining establishments: Plum + Spilt Milk on the first floor, and GNH Bar a bar on the ground floor. They are radically different. I've
previously reviewed room service dinner and dessert from the restaurant, a mixed bag.
Plum + Spilt Milk is a full service restaurant, a real breakfast/brunch destination for some. It is fairly elegant and formal. GNH Bar on the other hand, is loud and rowdy, even at 8am. The two locations serve the same menu for breakfast, but the atmosphere is entirely different. Later in the day, the venues evolve to serve different crowds and offer entirely different cuisine.
Service at the restaurant was good albeit a bit slow, but in the bar, it was rather awful. It took forever to receive my drinks, even after other tables who ordered long after me had theirs. My server split my drinking bringing it to me. The table next to me received the wrong food. It was really a mess down there, so, after one day, I decided to stick with the restaurant, even though I felt a bit bad often dressed in gym clothes in such a nice place, but there was a manager there overseeing things, and even when they ran slow, he was on top of it.
Prices are a bit high for
breakfast, particularly in the bar setting, I can't imagine paying these prices for breakfast, no matter how good it is. If you are Starwood Platinum, or book a room package with breakfast however, it is an incredible deal, you are not restricted in any way with what you order - you can select hot beverage, a fresh juice, an entree, and extra pastry for the road ... really, far more generous than I've ever seen elsewhere. I also ordered room service a few times, choosing not to dine in.
As for the food? Well, it was a mixed bag. There were a few dishes that neither my dining companion nor I liked, but, I think we picked poorly in those cases, opting for things we don't generally like anyway. There were some that were quite tasty and all were actually plated really nicely. The croissants and other pasteries were fairly impressive, particularly for a restaurant, not a bakery. I appreciated that they let me modify a few dishes and order sides that don't really exist. If I had stayed a few more days, I would have gotten increasingly obnoxious, as I have ideas for exactly what other modifications I'd try to make next. I obviously visited out of convenience, but, if you are in the Kings Cross area, it is a solid choice on its own.
Setting
I visited both Plum + Split Milk and GNH Bar for breakfast. Even at casual breakfast, midweek, they were quite different experiences. Most hotel guests opt for the full restaurant, but it was nice to change it up a few times and visit the more casual space, even if quality of experience was lower.
Plum + Spilt Milk
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Interior. |
The decor at Plum + Spilt Milk is fairly upscale, with leather furnishing, lots of wood, and interesting pendant light fixtures hanging from the ceiling at assorted intervals around the room. The fixtures showed the exposed filament, which, I learned from eavesdropping on the table next to me that these are called "Edison Bulbs".
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Place Setting. |
Place settings are formal, with cloth napkins in napkin rings (that are removed as soon as you take your napkin out). Menus are brought over after you sit down.
The kitchen is interestingly not located adjacent to the restaurant, nor the bar. I have no idea where it is, but, food is prepared elsewhere on another floor, and then shows up in the back of the restaurant on a dumbwaiter. I enjoyed watching this process.
GNH Bar
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Bar Tables. |
The bar area on the other hand has menus on the table when you arrive (including full bar menu, at breakfast!), in red binders. Tables are not set with silverware, but it are instead brought out haphazardly after you order, hopefully before the food arrives.
However, the result was fairly impressive. It did not have any ice in it, but, it was chilled, and served in a very pretty glass, garnished with coffee beans and topped with froth. After my order, my server came to ask if I wanted milk and sweetener in it (which they do not do with hot coffee, that is always served on the side). I asked for sweetener only, and I believe it was shaken in.
It was nearly the same result, served again in a elegant cocktail glass, chilled rather than iced, with a nice froth on top that I'm not sure how they achieved. No coffee bean garnish this time.
Next, apple.
It seemed canned, completely unremarkable.
The Food
Menu
My visits have spanned multiple years, and the menu has evolved during this time, but always includes a mix of "Hearty" British breakfasts, "Healthy" options, and of course, "Sweet" choices.
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Menu 2016. |
Over my course of 3 visits, I sample a large portion of the menu, from all categories.
The menu from 2016:
HEARTY
East Coast Kipper / Parsley butter £9.75
Macsween's Haggis £10.00
Fried duck's egg £10.00
Full English Breakfast: eggs - any style, sausage, bacon, tomato, black pudding, mushroom, white/granary. £17.
Eggs
-Benedict, Florentine £10.00
-Royale £14.00
Smoked Haddock Kedgeree £12.0
Scrambled Eggs / Severn & Wye smoked salmon, granary £14.00
Grilled Smoked Bacon & Fried Egg in an artisan roll £8.00
HEALTHY
Porridge / Berry compote / Maple syrup £7.00.
Fresh Fruit Salad / Lemongrass syrup £8.00
Crushed Avocado / Tomato & chilli on granary toast. £11.50
Quinoa & Pumpkin Seed Granola / Low-fat yogurt, apple & golden raisins. £8.50.
Buckwheat crepes / Coconut yogurt, mango, & agave. £9.75.
Morning Sundae / Low-fat natural nogurt, strawberries, passion fruit, muesli. £8.50
SWEET
Pastries: Croissant | pain au chocolat | pain au raisin £3.50
Cereal Bar / Fruit, nuts, & seeds. 4.
Brioche Eggy Bread / Bananas, pecans, salted caramel sauce £8.50
Toast :White | granary, preserves £4.50
Breakfast Muffins: Banana & peanut butter / blueberry & linseed. 4.
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Menu 2017, |
The next year, there were some changes, but the classics stayed the same. Most were just evolutions of prior dishes, a few things added, and more sourcing details or prep methods listed out (e.g. "Cackleberry Farm eggs" not just "eggs", "slow roast tomato" not just "tomato"). Prices remained the same.
The menu, in full:
HEARTY
East Coast Kipper / Parsley butter £9.75Macsween's Haggis £10.00
Full English Breakfast: Cackleberry Farm eggs - any style, Paddock Farm sausage, smoked free range bacon, slow roast tomato, Stornoway black pudding, baked mushroom, white/granary toast. £17.
Eggs
-Benedict, Florentine £10.00
-Royale £14.00
-Smoked Haddock Kedgeree £12.0
-Scrambled Eggs / Severn & Wye smoked salmon, granary £14.00
Grilled Smoked Bacon & Fried Egg in an artisan roll £8.00
IRISH POTATO CAKES , grilled smoked bacon and fried eggs 12
HEALTHY
Vegetarian Full English: Cackleberry Farm eggs – any style, baked Portabello mushroom, slow roast
Porridge / Berry compote / Maple syrup £7.00.
Fresh Fruit Salad / Lemongrass syrup £8.00
Crushed Avocado / on thick granary toast, slow roast tomatoes, poached egg & pesto. £11.50
Braised Smokey Butter Beans / two poached eggs & pumpkin seeds 12
Wheat Free Almond Pancakes / Blueberries, raspberries & honey 12
Coconut & Cardamom Quinoa Porridge / Mango, passion fruit and peanuts 10
SWEET
Porridge /Berry compote | Maple syrup £7.00
Pastries: Croissant | pain au chocolat | pain au raisin £3.50
Granola: Greek yoghurt & strawberries £8.00
Brioche Eggy Bread / Bananas, pecans, salted caramel sauce £8.50
Toast :White | granary, preserves £4.50
SIDES
Two Cackleberry Farm Eggs 3.50
Baked Portabello Mushroom £2.50
Stornoway Black Pudding £3.00
Grilled Smoked Bacon £3.00
Paddock Farm Sausage £3.00
Slow Roast Tomato £2.50
Crushed Avocado & Chilli £2.50
Baked Beans £2.50
Irish Potato Cakes £3.50
Hearty
The hearty category was the least interesting to me, mostly egg dishes, but, more British than your standard scrambled eggs and toast, including East Coast Kipper, Haggis, Haddock Kedgeree, a Full English Breakfast, and more. Since I'm not an egg eater, I didn't order anything from this area, but my companion did, and whenever I dined with him, of course I tried things.
2016
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Eggs Benedict. £10. (2016). |
As you know, I don't really like eggs, but, I always *want* to like eggs. Our server said that the eggs benedict was her favorite, like, the best thing she's ever eaten, so, one day, when dining with my companion, we decided to get it. I figured that if I didn't like it, he might, and this way I'd at least satisfy my curiosity.
Well, I didn't like it.
The english muffin was a large size, fluffy, fresh enough muffin, but it tasted vaguely sourdough to me, and it didn't seem toasted. It was kinda spongy. I didn't like the muffin.
The ham, not my choice, I would have gone for florentine, but, since this was mostly not for me, I had him choose, was ok. Not really breakfast style ham as I'm used to, more like slices of Easter ham, but it did have a nice flavor to it.
The eggs were perfectly poached, and the yolks were intensely orange. Why are eggs not like this in the US? If I liked eggs, I would have loved the eggs aspect of this.
And finally, the hollandaise, which our server raved about. There was, as you can see, a lot of it. And it was very, very thick. And it was way too lemon-y for my taste.
So, good eggs, decent ham if you like that style of ham, but really not good muffin or hollandaise. My fellow diner didn't like this either, and neither of us finished our halves (besides the eggs).
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Macsween's Haggis / Fried Ducks Egg. £10. (2016). |
On our very final morning in London, we decided to be crazy, and order the haggis. Neither my companion nor I had had haggis before, and, we figured if we were ever going to go for it, why not here?
Well, it looked nice. And the pea shoots (?) as garnish were crisp and fresh. The fried duck egg was also good, I loved the huge, rich yolk. They really do know how to do eggs perfectly, making me wish I liked eggs more. How did they make it a perfect circle anyway?
But the haggis. Shutter. I took one bite, and that was it. It was very ... funky. Lots of flavor, and not exactly good flavor. So strong. My dining companion however had a far more extreme reaction. He visibly struggled to swallow his single bite. He was very proud that he managed to swallow it. He looked over at it, as it sat there, repulsed. "I really want that to go away", he said.
So, haggis fail. I have no idea if this was bad haggis, or, if haggis really is just this bad. I assume the later. At least we tried it, and, the egg was good!
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Grilled Smoked Bacon & Fried Egg in an artisan roll. 8€. (2016), |
The only Hearty item that really caught my eye was the fried egg and smoked bacon sandwich, which my companion had one morning on our first trip, and said he really enjoyed. I kept meaning to order it myself, but, alas, there were too many other options that trumped it.
So, on our second visit, when he said he was ordering that dish again, I joined him to try a bite, even though I had breakfast 3 hours earlier (breakfast hours are from 7am-11am, and we were on very different schedules!) The staff laughed at me, and offered a different table, so I could get a fresh perspective.
This was really mediocre, and he agreed that it was not good like last time.
The roll was soft and fluffy, and well toasted, but it wasn't buttered. The egg was a fried egg, and it was fine, but not the style I like (I'm always an over-medium girl, I don't like the runny white and yolk). The bacon was thick, flabby style British bacon, but grilled nicely so it was fairly crispy.
The sandwich was unseasoned, but, the bacon provided the salty level. Pepper was available on the table.
Overall, I guess if you like this style of bacon, and this style of fried egg, it was fine, but definitely not my sort of thing.
2017
This section of the menu was the least changed from year to year. Every item that was previously part of the menu still remains, but one dish was added (an Irish potato cake main dish).
Since I'm not really an egg eater, it took me a while to want to order something from here.
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Eggs Florentine. £10. (Muffin on the side) |
But one morning, I opted for eggs florentine.
I was dining post-bootcamp, and I think my body wanted something with protein and greens. I ordered it for room service, so I had the english muffin on the side so it wouldn't get soggy. I also ordered butter on the side, so I could just have a delicious buttered muffin if I didn't like the eggs. And a side of mango. And candied nuts. Because, I was hungry after my workout!
Anyway, the eggs florentine.
Two eggs, decently poached. Not watery whites, decently runny center. Brilliant yellow yolks, again, much brighter than we have in the US. But still just eggs, and not particularly exciting to me.
I think because I had the english muffin on the side they gave me an even more generous portion of spinach than normal. There is no way they would have piled all this on a muffin, right? The spinach was fine, just steamed, totally unseasoned. Luckily I had salt and pepper.
The hollandaise was ... ok. Thicker, more lemon-y than I wanted. Yet somehow I found myself using it all.
In the end, the pile of spinach with hollandaise and proper seasoning once I added it was quite satisfying. Clearly what I was craving, and not my normal breakfast order at all.
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Eggs Florentine: English Muffin. |
The english muffin was pretty lackluster.
Just a toasted english muffin. Large size. Fluffy-ish I guess. Not particularly interesting though.
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Grilled Smoked Bacon & Fried Egg in an artisan roll. £8. |
Except, since I don't like the English style of bacon, I got this no bacon. "Bacon roll, no bacon?" Yup.
The egg was just a fried egg. Basic, ok preparation, although the white near the yolk was a bit runny.
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Artisan Roll: inside. |
The roll was great though. It was soft and fluffy, really soft, and toasted and buttered inside.
I discovered this on my last day and lamented this fact. I would have gladly been using it as a base for my own custom sandwiches ... like, stuffed with spinach and hollandaise! Or just slathered in Nutella.
Healthy
The healthy section of a breakfast menu is where I basically never focus, but, the healthy options at Plum + Spilt Milk actually sounded good, as words like "sundae" and "crepes" appear here. It is also what Plum + Spilt Milk seems to pride itself on, and separate itself from other restaurants by.
It also is clearly where they like to innovate, as it changed significantly between the years.
2016
Given that both my visits in 2016 to London took place near the end of 2-3 weeks on the road, mostly staying in hotels with decadent breakfast buffets, this was actually a good thing. A girl can only eat
donuts, bread pudding, and uh, cheesecake for breakfast for so long. This section also included all your basic healthy breakfast items like porridge, fruit salad, and granola.
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Breakfast Sundae. £8.50. (2016). |
"Low-fat natural yoghurt, strawberries, passion fruit, muesli."
The first morning, I was feeling healthy, and needed a detox after my week in Munich. So, I opted for something from the healthy section. I knew the sundae was yogurt and muesli, but, it also said "sundae", so, I had my hopes up that I could trick myself into liking it.
It didn't work.
The presentation was lovely, in a parfait glass, served with a tall spoon. The parfait, er, sundae was layered with yogurt, muesli, fresh strawberries, and passion fruit goo. On top was a sprinkle of pumpkin seeds and sunflower seeds. I liked the crunch from the seeds on top, and the strawberries were fine, but, I really didn't care for anything else.
The yogurt was just tart, kinda thin, generic, non-fat, boring yogurt. Not thick, rich creamy Greek yogurt. And the muesli was soggy and honestly a bit off putting to eat. The passionfruit was likely not fresh, just, sweet kinda tart goo.
I really didn't like this, and tried to give it to my companion, who also didn't want it. Failure at being healthy.
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Crushed Avocado. £11.50. (2016). |
"Tomato & chilli on granary toast."
Somehow, my companion had never heard of the whole "avocado toast" craze, so, out of novelty, he ordered the "crushed avocado". I clearly couldn't really partake in it due to my avocado allergy.
He wasn't impressed. "This would be better without the avocado", he said. "Then it would just be bruschetta".
The toast base wasn't warm, although it was toasted. A hearty granary bread, thick slice. He didn't like the toast.
The avocado was mashed and seasoned and spread evenly on top. He said the avocado on its own was fine.
The tomatoes on top were the best part, and I did try those. Fresh, ripe, flavorful mixed tomatoes, plus a little red pepper and green onion.
It was a pretty dish, and he was glad to try it, but, he said it is likely his first, and last, avocado toast.
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Porridge / Berry compote / Maple syrup. 7. (2016). |
Sometimes ... I really like porridge. I need to be in a certain mood, but, every once in a while, I get really, really into porridge. Not oatmeal made with water, but, real, legit porridge, with lots of milk or cream, and well cooked grains.
I was offered several options on the side: maple syrup, berry compote, honey, or fruit. I asked for fruit and maple syrup, but I seemed to have received the compote. Oh well.
The porridge was ... ok. It was thick, made with milk, and the oats weren't too mushy. But, it was really just oatmeal, no other interesting grains in there, no seasoning.
The compote wasn't great, just some little berries in sweet sauce. The maple syrup was, well, maple syrup, good to mix in and sweeten it.
Overall, this was what it was. Simple porridge, no more, no less, and too boring for me. He liked it though, as he is a regular oatmeal eater.
On our second trip to London, my companion opted for the porridge again, as he wasn't feeling well. This time, he didn't like it.
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Fresh Fruit Salad / Lemongrass Syrup. £8. (2016). |
The final morning, after my companion's rave review of the butter, I decided to kick it up a notch and get a croissant ... with butter. To balance out my ridiculous butter pastry + extra butter, I decided to have the fruit salad.
Of course, fruit salad is a dangerous thing for me, as I'm deathly allergic to watermelon, and moderately allergic to all melon. When does fruit salad not have melon? So I asked what was in the fruit salad. My server explained that it was assorted berries, and, yup, watermelon. I said nevermind, as I was allergic and she offered that they could make one without melons and put something else in instead. I kinda assumed it was made in advance, so, this was a lovely offer.
Instead of melon, they included pineapple, decent sized chunks. About half the dish was pineapple, which I guess makes sense since the berries are likely the expensive part. The pineapple was fine, juicy, but, I'm not particularly excited by pineapple.
The berries, a mix of raspberries, blueberries, blackberries, and strawberries, were good. Fresh, decently flavorful.
The entire mix was drizzled with a bit of lemongrass syrup to kick up the sweetness a touch, and garnished with a thin some shreds of mint?
Overall, a fresh vibrant fruit salad, and it was really nice to have some fruit alongside my heavier items. I sorta wished I had discovered this sooner, as it would have been nice to combine with the crepes.
So, note for future order: crepes, no coconut yogurt, add berries! (which, I did, 3 weeks later).
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Buckwheat Crêpes. £9.75. (2016). |
"Coconut yoghurt, mango & agave."
On my second morning, I stayed in the healthy section, opting for the crêpes. Yup, crêpes were under the healthy section, not the sweets section. I was a bit skeptical, particularly given the "sundae", but, I love mango, so I went for it (and of course, ordered a pastry on the side, just in case ...)
I was pleasantly surprised! The crêpes were really quite good. Two thin crêpes, well prepared, a bit crispy on the edges, but otherwise moist and light. I liked the buckwheat flavor.
I didn't like the coconut yoghurt, which I kinda expected. I've tried a number of coconut yogurts in the US, as in, yogurt made with coconut milk rather than dairy, and I have always found the consistency and texture to be a bit nasty. I like coconut, but, something about coconut milk yogurt just doesn't do it for me. I was hoping this would be regular yogurt with coconut in it, but, one taste and I knew it was coconut milk yogurt. The coconut yogurt is certainly what placed this on the healthy section of the menu, and you know me, I would have wanted whipped cream or whipped crème fraîche or something, but actually no creamy component was necessary. I scraped it off, and avoided a little bit of the top layer, and still really enjoyed my dish.
The final element was cubes of mango, in mango goo. I'm kinda guessing that this was just not fresh mango, and it was in a goo sorta like when you get cherry pie filling in a can. Or, I can give them the benefit of the doubt, and assume it was fresh mango, coated in a mango coulis? Anyway, the mango wasn't bad, given the extra coating, it was nice and sweet, and the cubes were juicy. The scattering of fresh herbs did seem a bit out of place.
Oh, and the crêpes were drizzled with agave, which made them sweet and moist, replacing my need for maple syrup or anything else.
So, overall I was very satisfied with my breakfast. I don't eat a lot of crêpes, but, these were good, and really reminded me more of a lighter version of pancakes than anything else, particularly with the agave drizzle. I'd get it again, but, ask to have the coconut yogurt left off. With the mango and agave, they can stand on their own just fine, but obviously, if you like coconut yogurt, it would enhance it.
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Buckwheat Crêpes - No Coconut Yogurt. £9.75. (2016). |
A few days later, after trying out a bunch more dishes, I went back to the crêpes, but I refined my order. No coconut yogurt, and, sausage on the side, which I planned to dunk in the agave and create a sweet and savory element.
The crêpes were a disappointment this time though. They arrived cold. Ok, maybe lukewarm, but definitely, definitely not hot or even warm. Cold crêpes just really aren't appealing. They were also undercooked slightly, kinda raw and a strange texture. No crispy edges. Not well executed.
There was also very little agave on the plate this time to add the touch of sweetness I wanted. Yes, the mango sauce was sweet, but it was a different kind of sweet. I pondering asking for some more agave, or maple syrup, but given how cold the crêpes were to start, that seemed like a bad idea.
I did again like the mango, and I think I had more of it this time, and I also enjoyed the mango sauce. I was glad I left off the yogurt. But, the cold crêpes ... no.
Really, I wanted some whipped cream, and maybe some other fruit?
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Buckwheat Crepes, No Coconut Yogurt, Add Whipped Cream, Bowl of Berries. (2016). |
On my next visit in September, I decided to ask for exactly what I wanted, and see what happened. So I asked for the crepes, but without the coconut yogurt. I was offered regular yogurt instead. I sheepishly suggested whipped cream, not an item on the menu in any dish. They really do try to have healthier takes on breakfast, but I know the restaurant serves regular desserts that must include whipped cream, but, uh, it was 8am. The manager, who took my order, had no idea if they could do this, but said he'd try.
I also asked for a bowl of berries, again, not on the menu in any way. There is a fruit salad, but it has other fruits, and comes with a drizzle on it.
Let's just say I was thrilled when my order arrived. Right on top, a huge pile of really fantastic, clearly freshly whipped, likely by hand, cream. Oh yes. And, a big bowl of ridiculously ripe looking berries (blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries) on the side.
The crepes were nearly a success. They were a bit lukewarm, and didn't really have the crispy edges I was hoping for, but otherwise, were fine. The amount of agave drizzled on top was perfect, plenty of sweetness, but not too much.
I again liked the mango + mango goo, particularly when mixed with the whipped cream.
Now, speaking of that whipped cream. It was fantastic. I really think someone just whipped this by hand for me, as it certainly isn't part of the breakfast menu in any way. It was rich, creamy, and just insanely delicious. I also appreciated that they gave me a ton of it. I didn't need it all for the crepes, but, I dunked my berries in it, and truly loved my meal. I'm so happy they let me make up my own meal.
So, next time? I think I'd leave out the crepes, and just get a fantastic bowl of berries and whipped cream!
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Quinoa & Pumpkin Seed Granola (sub berries for apple). 8.50€. (2016). |
"Low-fat yoghurt, apple & golden raisins." ... sub berries for apple.
Granola is something I have strong opinions on (level of crunch, size of chunks, sweetness, etc). I tend to want granola to be large chunks, with fun mix ins, sweet, and, used as finger food rather than something with milk or yogurt. I also never generally want to order it for breakfast. I'm pretty sure I've never ordered granola at a restaurant before.
But, on my second visit to London, I had tried nearly the entire menu at Plum + Spilt Milk, and I had been traveling for nearly 2.5 weeks, and the urge to get something healthy, and try something new, finally hit me. I'll admit, I also did my research and saw a photo of it online, and knew that it wasn't traditional granola. And, uh, I still had half a giant, sweet praluline from Pralus in Paris waiting in my room for me (seriously,
BEST THING EVER), so, I somewhat expected to just eat a little of this to make myself feel healthy, and then go feast on my praluline.
I ended up loving it, and, even though the portion was very large, I somehow managed to finish it. That praluline would have to wait.
Continuing my trend of modifying dishes, I did ask to sub berries in place of apple, because the berries at Plum + Spilt Milk are just so good, and, I don't like apples. The berries were sprinkled on top, along with pumpkin seeds and golden raisins. I received 2 each of the blackberries, strawberries, and raspberries, and 5 blueberries. I was hoping for more berries, but I appreciated the flexibility in modifying dishes. The berry mix was wonderful, just like when I ordered the berries on the side. I'm really struck by how good the berries are at Plum + Spilt Milk, particularly for an item not actually featured on the menu anywhere. I loved the crunch from the pumpkin seeds on top, and made a mental note to remove the raisins next time. They added a bit of chew, but, I don't really care for raisins.
The yogurt was the element I was most worried about. Low-fat yogurt? I never really like low-fat yogurt. I want creamy, thick yogurt. None of this low-fat stuff. But ... it actually was fine. Sure, not rich, thick, awesome full fat yogurt, but it was creamy, it wasn't too tart, and it added another element to the dish.
Overall, well, this was awesome. It had many elements of a successful dessert for me, was perfectly satisfying, and yet, healthy. A bit sweet, crunchy, creamy, and fairly addicting. Everything in balance. I'm sad it took so long for me to discover it.
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Granola Close Up. |
The "granola" was the definition of crunchy. It was certainly not traditional granola. The base did have some oats, but was mostly crunchy quinoa. Here you can see a close up of the granola, with the vibrant red, black, and white quinoa, plus a scattering of golden raisins and oats. There were big chunks and plenty that wasn't chunked. I loved the mix of textures, and even the flavor.
The granola seemed to be coated in a little bit of sweet, sticky syrup, which I can only imagine was agave given the fact that the other dishes all use agave and it didn't have the distinct flavor of honey or maple syrup. It added just the hint of sweetness that I was worried wouldn't exist in this dish.
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Quinoa & Pumpkin Seed Granola (sub berries for apple). 8.50€. (2016). |
I liked the granola so much that I got it again a few days later, and again subbed the berries for apple. I forgot to ask to leave the golden raisins out, but I was pleased when I saw that they weren't scattered on top with the pumpkin seeds.
This time I got slightly more berries ... 3 raspberries and strawberries instead of 2! I again loved the fruit.
The granola this time was different though. While the raisins weren't on top, they were in the granola mix, making them much harder to avoid, and, making the granola more chewy rather than crunchy. I loved the crunch before.
And ... the yogurt seemed thinner, more tart, more like, well, non-fat yogurt.
This was a mixed success, perhaps I went into it with too high of expectations?
My new crazy idea for an order: granola, berries (as in, lots of them), and, uh, whipped cream.
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Custom Creation: Berries, Granola, Whipped Cream. (2016). |
I decided to create my amazing idea. I ordered this as "a bowl of berries with whipped cream" and "a side of granola" to try to make it less complicated. I could combine the elements as I wished. Maybe I should have said, "I'll have the granola, sub berries for the apple and raisins, sub whipped cream for the yogurt?" It seemed easier this way.
It wasn't. What I got was ... a small bowl of berries with a side of cream (not whipped cream), and a small bowl of muesli (not granola). Uh, oops? Several corrections later, I received all the elements, and was able to make my ideal meal.
It lived up to exactly what I had in mind. Fresh, delicious fruit. Fluffy, rich whipped cream. Crunchy granola. Certainly a hassle to order something so ridiculously off-menu, but I was quite pleased with the result.
2017
In 2017, my life on the road was even more extreme - never home for more than 8 days in a row for the final 4 months of the year. I again had some breakfast buffet exhaustion, and honed in on some healthy options.
My staples from this section however were gone. No more crepes (not that they were that successful anyway). but in their place was pancakes. No more granola, but a different version was moved to the "Sweet" section. New additions included a Vegetarian full English breakfast, a butter beans and poached eggs entree, and a new porridge.
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Coconut & Cardamom Quinoa Porridge. £10. |
"Mango, passion fruit and peanuts."
This was a beautiful dish. Who knew you could make porridge look so good?
It was also a fascinating dish, full of interesting ingredients and textures. The only problem? I didn't like the porridge itself.
The porridge was ... mushy quinoa with I think coconut milk? It wasn't creamy, it was bitter, and, well, I just didn't like it at all. It was also cardamom flavored, as expected, which I knew I wouldn't like.
The toppings though were great. Slices of mango, just like I enjoyed from the crepes before. Sweet passion fruit, that was a bit too fake tasting, but mixed in well. Some herbs that added an interesting savory twist.
But the best part? The peanuts! They weren't just peanuts. They were coated in ... something. Candied. And really quite tasty. I think they'd 'make a great bar snack.
But this dish? Not a success for me. At all.
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Fresh Fruit Salad / Lemongrass Syrup. £8. |
The standard fruit salad comes with chunks of pineapple and melon, strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, and blackberries.
Since I'm allergic to melon, I always order without. This one was for Ojan, but I include here for illustrative purposes.
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Fresh Fruit Salad (no melons) / Lemongrass Syrup. £8. (2017). |
The next year, the fruit mix was the same, and I ordered without melons due to my allergy.
The fruit was all fine, fresh enough, and the lemongrass syrup helped sweeten it and add a touch of interest. A decent healthy item.
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Fresh Fruit Salad (no melons). £8. (2017). |
The next day I ordered the fruit, I ordered it with no melons. It came with melons. I sent it back.
When it was replaced, I had basically a bowl of pineapple and raspberries. No blackberries this time. Only 3 small segments of strawberry. Only 3 blueberries.
And no lemongrass syrup. Which it turns out, is a key component. The fruit was sour. Bitter even. Really not very good. My dining companion took a single berry at one point and made such a face. I wish I had a camera to capture his look of surprise at how bitter it was.
I also tried to order whipped cream to put on top as I had the year before, which my server had no problem with. The original melon-filled bowl came without the cream on the side, and I reminded her about it. She said no problem. But when this came, again, no whipped cream. She scurried off to get it. A while later she came back saying they ran out. I was offered plain cream instead. I guess whatever chef who was willing to make it for me the previous times just wasn't there anymore, and no one wanted to deal with my request. Which is fine, but, I waited about 30 minutes for it.
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Fresh Fruit Salad (no melons, add mango) £8. |
The next day I asked to have mango added in place of the melons, since I regularly liked the mango. This one came out more balanced in terms of the fruit, but also seemed to be lacking the lemongrass syrup.
The pineapple turned out to be my favorite though, everything else was a bit too tart/sour.
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Fresh Fruit Salad & Candied Peanuts. |
I went for the fruit salad - melon + mango the next day, with, uh, a side of candied peanuts. No blackberries again, only 2 raspberries, and a scattering of strawberry and blueberry. The fruit was mostly sour again.
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Wheat Free Almond Pancakes | Blueberries, raspberries & honey | . £12.00. |
Pancakes, a new edition for 2017. And much like the buckwheat crepes from before, these were
gluten-free .
They were awful. I don't know how to sugar coat this one.
Rock hard. Burnt on the bottom, very dark on top. Crazy crispy.
I liked the healthy spin on pancakes, in concept, and the berries and almonds were fine, but these were actually so bad that I called my server over, and asked if they should be really crispy and hard. She told me no, said these were here favorite dish, and quickly said she'd bring a new batch. I didn't really have time to wait for another order of pancakes, so went for the quicker option of yogurt and granola instead.
I really hope this isn't what these are normally like.
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Honey & Maple Syrup (on the side), |
The pancakes normally come with just honey, but I asked for maple syrup (and butter) too, so I could dress them as I pleased.
The honey was honey, the syrup was syrup, the butter delicious as always. But these things couldn't save those pancakes.
Luckily, my server asked if I wanted to keep the syrups for my granola, which was a great idea.
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Crushed Avocado on Thick Granary. £11.50. |
"Toast, slow roast tomatoes, poached egg & pesto."
The avocado toast evolved.
The delicious fresh tomatoes that we loved were replaced by halves of roasted tomatoes, the same ones included with the full English breakfast, or as a side. They were .... slow roast tomatoes.
This dish is supposed to include an egg, but, we opted to have it left off.
I loved the thicker slices of toast though, much better than the thin slices served normally.
Sweet
And, the final area of the menu, where I generally choose to focus: sweets!
Interestingly, this section contained no classics like waffles or pancakes. All the baked goods were listed here (croissants, chocolate croissants, pain au raisin, muffins), house made cereal bars, toast, and "eggy bread" (aka, french toast). I'm not really sure why toast was listed here, and, really, this category seemed more like "carbs" than "sweet".
2016
I know I said I was opting for healthy foods, but of course I tried the sweets too.
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Brioche Eggy Bread. £8.50. |
"Bananas, pecans, salted-caramel sauce."
I was eyeing the "Brioche Eggy Bread", er, French Toast, from the first day I scoped out Plum + Spilt milk.
It was ... only ok.
A thick slice of brioche, orangeish in color from the generous egg soak. It wasn't too eggy though (I hate it when French Toast has too much extra egg on the outside). I think they really did pre-soak, so, a point for that It was moist and that aspect of it was good. It was a bit overcooked though, the crusts were pretty burnt, as was one side.
The caramel was really good, the perfect consistency, very sweet.
The pecans didn't seem toasted, and were just sprinkled on. They were good for crunch, and went well with the caramel, but, a bit boring.
The bananas were the biggest disappointment. They were just ... bananas. Not bruleed, just, slices of fresh banana. The slices were also too thick.
Overall, this wasn't great. Execution was just off. The toast was burnt, the pecans untoasted, the bananas boring. It was also too sweet, with nothing to counterbalance the sweetness of the caramel. Some whipped crème fraîche perhaps?
Of course, I finished it with no problem (sans the bananas), but, I certainly wouldn't get it again. Unless ... I left off the bananas, and probably the caramel, brought my own maple syrup, and asked to put berries on it?
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Banana & Peanut Butter Muffin. £4. |
One morning, I opted to get a muffin togo, as I didn't have time for a full breakfast. I went for the banana and peanut butter.
It was pretty disappointing. Like the french toast, it seemed overcooked, the top a bit burnt, too crispy. It wasn't moist inside. The peanut butter flavor was quite strong however. It had a few chunks of banana, not many. I didn't finish it.
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Blueberry & Linseed Muffin. £4. (June) |
My companion went for the blueberry muffin. It too was overcooked, the top too crispy and a bit burnt tasting. It was a healthy muffin, so, a bit strange to have in the "sweets" section, with a hearty linseed base. It had a few juicy blueberries inside, but, otherwise, just not very good.
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Blueberry & Linseed Muffin. £4. (September) |
My companion tried one again when we visited in September. It looked slightly different, more focus on the blueberries, but was again just not very good, a bit too burnt and dried out. The juicy blueberries were nice though.
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Cereal Bar. 4€. |
"Fruit, nuts & seeds."
I had to try all the breakfast sweets, right? It is just in my nature. So, the second to last day day, I went for the least appealing one: the "cereal bar".
I'm not really sure why this was listed under Sweets vs Healthy. Sure, it had some sweetness and sugar, but I don't think it had more than the crêpes drizzled with agave or the parfait sundae.
Anyway, the cereal bar came as a pair. And they were actually quite good, basically, fancy homemade granola bars. The bars were loaded with ... everything. Oats, dried raisins, cranberries, pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, peanuts, and likely many more things. The bar had just the right level of sweetness, good crunch, and, well, I'll admit, surprised me. I'm not generally a granola bar girl, but these were very good, for granola bars.
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Cereal Bar. €4. (September) |
I ordered these several times in September, as did my companion, when we wanted a snack to have later in the day. We were both again impressed with them, far better than any granola bar you can buy in a store. He doesn't really like this sort of thing, but he did say it was the best granola bar he had ever had, and even offered that it was better than most oatmeal or granola.
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Pain au Raisin. £3.50. [ June Visit ] |
After the lackluster muffins, it was time to move on to other pastries, which actually looked pretty good when I saw others order them. The first one I went for was the pain au raisin.
It was far better than the muffin. It had flaky outside layers. The inside layers seemed a bit undercooked and doughy, but, I'm kinda weird and liked that. In between the folds was a moist custard and some juicy, plump raisins.
Overall, actually quite good, and a stark contrast to the horrible muffin.
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Pain au Raisin. £3.50. [ September Visit ] |
On my next visit a few months later, I also added on a pain au raisin to one of my meals. It was nearly identical to the first time around, flaky outside layer, moist custard between the rolls, plump, juicy raisins.
I certainly liked it, and when I am craving a pastry, it is a great choice.
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Pain au Chocolat. £3.50. |
I continued my streak of ordering a baked good alongside every meal, and opted for the pain au chocolat. Ok, actually, I asked for a "chocolate croissant", and my server corrected me. My companion laughed and said the same thing happened to him when he ordered a chocolate croissant. We stand corrected.
Like the pain au raisin, it was pretty good. The exterior was flaky, and this one wasn't undercooked at all, with decent layers. Inside were two bars of dark chocolate, really quite nice chocolate.
Was it a boulangerie in Paris quality croissant? Nah. But far better than you normally get at any hotel, or even most bakeries in the US.
Protip for next time: ask for it warmed up.
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Croissant £3.50. |
My final morning, I decided to get the plain croissant, the last pastry that I had not tried. After my companion's review of the butter, I asked for butter and preserves on the side.
I also asked to have it warmed up. My server was a bit perplexed. "Hmm, we already have the pastries here", she said. "But, maybe we could figure out somewhere to put it to warm it up?" She thought a second longer, and offered, "Or, I could send it to the kitchen?" I told her it wasn't a big deal, but, if possible, I'd like it warm.
And ... she delivered! A nice, warm croissant.
Like the pain au raisin and pain au chocolate, it was pretty good. Flaky exterior, super buttery and rich. It absolutely did not need more butter slathered on it, but, I wanted to try the butter, and hadn't yet tried the toast when I ordered, so, I thought this was my best way to try the butter. Swoon, that butter.
The croissant was fine on its own, and, actually, I wouldn't get it with butter again. I'd like the croissant, warm, with a poached egg on the side, so I could make my own breakfast sandwich. And if I wanted butter, I'd get the toast.
The preserves were pretty standard, just strawberry jam and orange marmalade, nothing remarkable.
So, another custom order queued up if I ever return: warm croissant, side of poached egg, make my own breakfast sandwich.
Update (September): I tried the croissant again when we visited in September, and we both ordered it. I was again impressed. Super buttery, decently flaky exterior and moist inside. The butter level is what really sets it apart.
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Granary Toast / Butter / Preserves. £4.50. |
My companion ordered the full English breakfast one morning when I wasn't with him, and he came back talking about how amazing the butter was. He said it was just like Paris. Great butter. All he wanted after that day was toast with butter.
The next time I was with him, he did just that, ordered a side of toast (with the butter of course). It also came with strawberry jam and orange marmalade.
They offer two types of toast, white or granary. He went for granary, a decent hearty bread, loaded with seeds. I also thought it was cute how it came served with all four slices standing up. The piece I had was kinda over toasted, but the other slices were not.
The over-toasting didn't really matter though, because, well, the butter. As he said, that was good butter. It was rich, creamy, sweet, and salty. Seriously, why does everywhere have better butter than the US?
I too would have been happy just eating toast with this butter subsequent days, but, alas, I didn't discover it until my final day. The granary toast was good, and I know it isn't on the menu, but, I do wonder if they'd serve the brioche they use to make french toast with butter? Now that is what I really wanted.
2017
The "Sweets" menu was a bit different this time around. It still had the brioche eggy bread, the strangely categorized toast, and pastries, but the muffins were gone (good! Those weren't winners), but alas, my favorite breakfast bars were also gone. No extra baked goods were added as replacements. However, the granola and regular porridge were moved here.
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Porridge / Berry compote / Maple syrup. £7.00. | |
Previous years listed the porridge as a "Healthy" item, but this year, it moved to sweet. Which was ... interesting.
When I ordered, I was asked if I wanted it made with water or milk. I opted for milk. I was not asked if I wanted it with berry compote or maple syrup, as I had been the prior year, so I suspected that meant they choose to just serve it with both now.
But the porridge showed up without any sauces or mix ins. Just plain porridge. A "Sweet", really? I asked for the maple syrup.
The porridge was good - warm, comforting, creamy, well cooked. But it was just plain oat based porridge. The maple syrup helped sweeten it nicely of course, but I found myself wanting mix-ins. Some nuts, seeds, berries, something. Which I know they have ...
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Pain au Chocolate. £3.50. |
The pain au chocolate was as good as I remembered.
And even though I didn't ask, delivered warm.
Flaky exterior, nice layers, good quality chocolate inside. They really do nice pastries.
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Pain au Chocolate: Burnt Bottom! £3.50. |
Except the next time I ordered it, it came ... burnt.
I think they just over toasted it. I appreciate that they toast the pastries, but, alas, this totally ruined it.
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Pain au Raisin. £3.50. |
The pain au raisin wasn't as good.
It was fine, served warm, but the custard wasn't really creamy or plentiful, the pastry not quite as crispy nor flaky, and overall, was just boring.
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Granola | / Greek yoghurt & strawberries. £8.00. |
The granola changed significantly between visits.
It moved from the "Healthy" category to the "Sweet", which was quite ... peculiar, given that it uses unsweetened yogurt, has no drizzle of anything on it, and the granola is less sweet than the previous version. The berries on top are naturally sweet, sure, but then shouldn't the pancakes be in this category since they come with fruit? And they come with honey!
Anyway, ok, this was a "Sweet".
The changes were a mixed bag.
I had stopped ordering the granola per the menu last year because I disliked the runny, tart, low-fat yoghurt. The replacement with thick, creamy, full fat Greek yogurt was much improved. This was great yogurt, er, yoghurt, and I appreciated the richness. I didn't feel the need to sub in whipped cream!
But the granola that I had loved so much before, made with assorted colors of quinoa, and a sticky agave(?) sweetener, was completely different. This was still house made, but basically regular granola. Oats, no quinoa. Dry, crispy clusters. No sweet sticky. It was fine, but ordinary, granola.
On top was sliced strawberries, perfectly arranged. These replaced the mixed berries from before. The strawberries were great, super fresh and ripe, quite tasty. I really liked the pumpkin seeds as well, nice crunch. And microgreens finished it off, like on my porridge the first day.
Since I had this after the failed pancakes, I had my honey and maple syrup available to drizzle over the top, which was excellent. I think if I were to order it again, I'd certainly get honey on the side, or perhaps the lemongrass syrup fruit from the fruit salad instead of just plain berries. Because even though they put this in the sweet category, sweet it was not.
So overall, I was pretty torn by this. I was glad that they improved the yogurt. I liked this yogurt. The fruit was great. But I lamented the loss of the granola I had loved so much. I suppose this appeals much more to the masses.
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Custom "Granola" Order. |
I liked the Greek yogurt from the Granola bowl. But I didn't really care for the granola itself.
I liked the mango and candied peanuts from the Coconut & Cardamom Quinoa Porridge, but not the porridge itself.
And I was curious if the pecans, bananas, and salted caramel sauce were still the same for the Brioche Eggy Bread (that I didn't quite care for, but liked the salted caramel, and thought bananas and pecans would be good toppings too).
So, I ordered the Granola ... minus the granola. The Brioche Eggy Bread ... minus the brioche eggy bread. And the Coconut & Cardamom Quinoa Porridge ... minus the porridge.
Basically, a bowl of plain Greek yogurt, with toppings for the other dishes. And I did this via room service, starting with a "I know this is crazy, so, if this is way too complicated, just tell me.". But she told me it was no problem.
I was skeptical that I'd get anything even approaching what I actually wanted, but I was pleasantly surprised when my order arrived. It was mostly correct, with each topping in its own bowl (don't mind the syrup on top of the yogurt, I spilt it as I was arranging the tray for a photo op).
So, from the "Granola" - the same good thick creamy Greek yogurt, a great base for my custom creation. Exactly what I wanted.
From the "Coconut & Cardamom Quinoa Porridge", a bowl of 4 chunks of mango, a bowl of candied peanuts, and a little pitcher of passionfruit sauce. The mango was my absolute favorite, ripe, juicy, flavorful. I ended up mostly eating it on its own, I couldn't wait long enough to assemble some "perfect bites". I'd gladly get more of the mango again. The candied peanuts were a close second though, exactly what I remembered, and an awesome snack alongside my coffee. They worked great on the yogurt too, but I mostly just munched on them quite happily. Again, I'd gladly just take a bowl of these! The passionfruit though I didn't like. In this form, it was more clear that it wasn't real fresh passionfruit, and rather was some kind of too sweet, too fake syrup. I poured some over the yogurt, which really would be fine if I liked the passionfruit, much like any packaged yogurt with fruit sauce that comes with.
From the "Brioche Eggy Toast", a little bowl of pecans, a bowl of sliced fresh banana, and ... a bowl of maple syrup. Doh. I mostly ordered this for the amazing sweet salted caramel! I was also glad I didn't bother ordering the Brioche Eggy Toast, as I was disappointed by the use of just fresh sliced bananas and plain pecans before. That dish would be so much better with bruleed, or even just roasted bananas, and candied, or even just toasted, pecans! They were both fine, but, just raw ingredients. The maple syrup too was fine, and helped sweeten the yogurt, but I prefer the maple syrup for the porridge, and honey for the yogurt.
So overall, this was a fun experiment and basically a success. It confirmed that I still liked what I liked, and gave me more ideas ...
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Custom "Granola" Order #2. |
Another day, I made a similar request.
A bowl of Greek yogurt with toppings, no granola. The yogurt seemed different. It was thick, but a bit watery at the same time, and very tart. I didn't like it, at all. But, I still tried my toppings, mixing them in differently hoping to like the yogurt. I never succeeded.
I asked for the mango again, and was told they don't serve mango. I didn't bother push it, I had mango enough on the trip.
I also asked for the salted caramel sauce, and was told they don't start serving desserts until 11am. This one I pushed back on, reminding her that they have it with the brioche eggy toast. She seemed skeptical, but I did receive it this time. It was ... very sweet, and quite tasty mixed into my coffee actually. I also tried spreading it on bread, but didn't care for it that way. It was tasty with the peanuts though.
The peanuts this time came as just roasted peanuts, not candied. Which was fine, they were actually good salted roasted peanuts, and I liked them with spoonfuls of caramel, but, just good roasted peanuts.
The pumpkin seeds I ordered so I could have some crunch, and they were as expected.
The final dish was just honey, which I really liked before with the yogurt, but, with lackluster yogurt, it didn't help. I also spread it with butter on toast, and that was fine.
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Toast (White & Granary) / Butter / Preserves. £4.50. |
Since I liked the butter (er, toast), so much previously, I ordered it again this year. It was still great.
I opted for both white and granary toast, which came as two slices of each. Well toasted, crispier than I'd make it at home, but, fine. I think I liked the white more, its simplicity with butter just works great, but the heartier one was good too.
This time my preservers came in little pots rather than bowls, X brand. I didn't need it. The butter was still amazing.
Seriously, who knew that white bread with just butter, ok, lots of butter, could be soooo good?
The next time I ordered toast, I was not asked which kind I wanted, so I assumed that meant I'd get both. Instead I got only the granary toast, which confirmed to me that I really do prefer the white version.
I enjoyed it with butter, but I also had maple syrup on the table for my porridge, so I drizzled it with maple syrup, and added a sprinkle of salt, both in addition to the butter, and that was pretty awesome.
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Granary Bread & Butter. |
I liked the butter. I liked adding toppings to the toast. On a day where I ordered a slew of toppings to try on the yogurt, I also wanted to try making my own versions of gourmet toasts. They are trendy these days, right? Fancy toast with butter & honey. With salted caramel and pumpkin seeds. I had many ideas. The thing is, I didn't love the thin crispy toast. I really liked the thicker granary toast used with the avocado dish, or the thicker brioche used with the eggy bread.
So I tried to order that. I was told that they only have the one kind of toast. I explained that I wanted the thicker toast, and gave details on which dishes they came with. She said, "I can give you a slice of bread". I said sure, realizing I wasn't going to get anywhere on this on.
And what I got? Yup, a slice of the granary bread, but thicker as I wanted. Soft and fluffy, and more like what I wanted, although I really wanted *this*, toasted, just like with the avocado topped version ...
The bread was good though, soft, fluffy, hearty and loaded with seeds. But it needed toasting.
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Granary Bread: Toasted! |
The next day I tried again. I said the same words, but this time I got two slices (yay!), and, they were toasted.
This was much better, exactly what I wanted, and a great base for making my own custom toasts.
Sides
There was no sides menu during my first two stays, but this was added in the future. Maybe they got sick of everyone trying to order sides?
2016
I ended up ordering a bunch of things a la carte, even though they weren't on the menu. I haven't listed prices here since I'm not really sure what they charged for them. But when you stay in hotels for multiple weeks at a time, sometimes you just want certain things, not the composed breakfasts, and I really appreciated that they let me cobble together breakfasts as I pleased.
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Side of Sausage. |
A few days into my stay, I decided I wanted some sausage. This happens from time to time. I'm not generally a sausage eater, at least, not for lunch/dinner style sausages. But I do love a good breakfast sausage. I prefer patties, well spiced and seasoned, and drizzled with maple syrup. I actually had no idea what kind of sausage they had, particularly as they don't actually list any sides on the menu. But I knew the full English breakfast had sausage, so, I asked for a side of sausage, totally off menu, and they obliged.
I ordered it alongside sweet crepes, which I knew would have agave drizzle, so I thought it would work well to have the sweet and savory combo.
The sausages were well prepared, the casings had a nice snap to them and were browned on one side. But ... I didn't like the sausage inside at all. It was just mush, in a really strange way. It also was entirely unseasoned.
Definitely not my style of sausage.
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Custom Meal: Side Fried Eggs, Side Berries, Side Mixed Toast, Pain au Raisin. |
On my second visit, one morning, I decided to be rather annoying. I had been traveling for 2.5 weeks, and I was just sick of fancy composed breakfasts. I wanted ... eggs and toast and fruit. Simple. Oh, and a pastry of course.
The closest things on the menu are the Full English Breakfast (but that comes with sausage, bacon, tomato, black pudding, and mushrooms) + the fruit salad (but that comes with melon that I'm allergic to, and pineapple that I didn't really want). So ... I asked for what I wanted. And I (mostly) got it.
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Toast (granary and white), butter. |
Since the toast (er, the butter) was so good, I decided I wanted some toast. I had enjoyed the hearty, seedy granary bread before, but I wondered about the white bread. I really wanted the brioche that they use for the french toast (er, eggy bread), but, I didn't want to push my luck. So when I was asked if I wanted granary or white, I said, could I have both? I really was a pain in the butt, every single day, but they never seemed to mind.
The toast, just like when I had it before, was more toasted than I like. Very crispy. I again liked the seeds in the granary one, but I think I liked the simple white toast a bit more, it was a little fluffier, and more plain, so the bread didn't detract from the butter.
Because, the butter. Swoon. Seriously, I don't understand how even England has better butter than the US, and even in a hotel restaurant. It was so creamy, so rich, and nicely salted. The toast was fine, but really, I just wanted spoonfuls of butter. Which I may have done.
I'd get this again, just to enjoy the butter, but I'd ask for the toast to be lightly toasted, or perhaps, to just have warm bread and butter? Why do we toast it for breakfast and just serve it warm with dinner anyway?
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Fried Eggs Over Medium. |
Alongside my toast, I also opted for a fried egg. I don't like eggs, but, on the off-chance that I wasn't in love with the butter, I thought I could make myself an egg sandwich. Also, I just wanted to try the eggs in a preparation I like. I had the egg fried in my companion's breakfast sandwich, and I admired the dark yellow yolk, but I don't like runny yolks, so it was fairly lost on me. So, I ordered a fried egg, over-medium.
It is very rare to get an egg over medium done properly. I'd say that about 60% of the time they are over done, with very hard yolks and usually crispy whites. 30% of the time they are under, yolks still totally runny. Getting a yolk that has a slight run, a white that is set but not crispy, is really quite hard. But the chefs at Plum + Spilt Milk really do know how to pull off eggs, in seemingly every preparation.
The eggs were perfectly over-medium. The whites weren't too crispy or rubbery. The yolks had a slight ooze. Stunning. They were also perfect circles, which leads me to think they cooked them in rings? Eggs are serious business here.
Anyway, the egg was perfectly executed, but, uh, it was just a fried egg. I added salt and pepper, and I did dunk some of my toast in the yolk, but, at the end of the day, I just don't really ever want eggs. Oops. At least I got to experience the super intense orange yolk ...
The only flaw here is that I only wanted one egg, so I ordered one egg, but got two. I don't blame them much for that though, most people who order eggs actually, uh, like eggs?
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Bowl of Berries. |
The day I got the bowl of berries alongside my crepes basically set me up for ordering berries nearly daily after that. As I mentioned, there is a fruit salad on the menu, with melons and pineapple and lemongrass syrup, which I had (modified to not have melons) on my first trip, but it turned out, all I wanted was the berries. So, I started asking for bowls of berries, and, I got them.
The portion was always huge, a giant bowl of perfectly ripe berries (blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries). Sometimes they threw a little mint in there. The berries were always ridiculously good. I really don't understand how they source such good berries, but, they do.
The raspberries were always my favorite, followed closely by the strawberries and blueberries, and lastly by the blackberries, but I was glad to have the mix. I'd continue to order these, preferably with whipped cream, daily.
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Bowl of Berries with ... Cream. |
As I mentioned, when creating my perfect meal, I asked for a bowl of berries with whipped cream. I expected the quantity of berries I had received other times, and, well, some whipped cream.
Instead I got a larger gravy boat of cream, and a small bowl of berries, less than half the size of previous orders. It had only two raspberries, always my favorite element!
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Side of Granola. |
I also managed to get a side of granola (after first receiving a side of muesli) to create my perfect meal with the fruit and whipped cream.
This was a generous portion, far bigger than I expected. It allowed me to see what the base granola really was.
So, it didn't have raisins in it. I could have been avoiding those the entire time!
It was crunchy, and sticky. Quite sticky. Clearly, they do mix some agave in here.
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Whipped Cream. |
And, finally, I did get my whipped cream to put on my custom creation. Of course, I had asked for a bowl of berries with whipped cream and just expected a scoop, like with my crepes. Instead, I got a big bowl of whipped cream.
It really was quite funny, I wound up with far less fruit than I wanted, more granola, and way, way more whipped cream. But I'm not complaining.
I'm glad they were willing to make whipped cream for me all the time, even though clearly not standard. Note: this was unsweetened, just, cream. Fluffy, rich, cream.
2017
In 2017, they finally added sides to the menu, basically all the components of the other meals.
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Custom Meal of Sides. |
Much like the year before, I reached a point where I just wanted a few different things, not any of their fixed meals, so I ordered exactly what I wanted. Everything here was *actually* on the menu now though, and was amusingly a Healthy main dish (fruit salad, really, a main not a side?), a Sweets main dish (uh, the toast? A sweet? And not a side?), and then two sides: Irish potato cakes and black pudding.
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Stornoway black pudding. £3. |
I got brave.
Like the year before, where we finally ordered haggis, I used the opportunity to order black pudding. Yup, made with congealed blood. I'd never had it before. I ordered it on a day where I was getting a slew of little side dishes to make up a meal, so, if I didn't like it, I had plenty of other options.
It came served in a cute cast iron pan. It … wasn’t what I expected, but I kinda liked it. It was very moist, broke apart easily, and tasted more like oatmeal than anything else. I found out that it is made from Scottish oatmeal, plus beef suet and of course the pork blood. The flavor wasn't actually very intense, and it wasn't meaty like I thought it would be.
This was certainly different, and I still can’t really figure out how I felt about it. I think I liked it. I think.
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Irish Potato Cakes. £3.50. |
I also got a side of Irish potato cakes one day, a new addition to the menu, available either as a side, or as a composed meal with bacon and fried eggs.
The serving was two thin baked cakes. They were incredibly boring. Dry. Flavorless. Completely unseasoned.
Maybe these would be good with syrup or something? Or at least ketchup? But nothing was offered, and honestly, I didn't really care.
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Grilled Smoked Bacon, Paddock Farm Sausage. £3 each. |
One morning I went to breakfast straight from the gym, where I had done a strength training session. I wanted protein, and was a bit sick of Greek yogurt. So I decided to try the meats. I ordered these alongside a feast of other items, knowing that I kinda thought I wasn't a fan of english style bacon, and that I hadn't liked the sausage the prior year.
And ... I didn't care for them.
The sausage was again well prepared, good browning on it, nice snap to the casing. But the filling just wasn't a flavor or texture I liked.
The bacon was thick cut, ham-style. I salvaged some end bits where it was more crispy, but, really, this was just ham-y, and totally not my style.
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Severn & Wye Smoked Salmon. |
One morning I opted for the smoked salmon.
But wow, I didn't like it.
It was really oily, and too soft. If that makes any sense. Nicely served with a lemon to drizzle over however.
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Baked beans. £2.50. |
I grew up eating baked beans, cold, from a can. I still find it strange that people eat them warm. These were warm.
They were also really heavy on the tomato sauce. The beans were ... standard little soft beans.
Honestly, this tasted to me like Spaghetti-Os sauce with canned beans added. The flavor wasn't very developed at all.
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Slow Roast Tomato. £2.50. |
I'm not sure why I ordered slow roast tomato ...
It was ... fairly boring slow roast tomato.
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Spinach & Hollandaise. |
Since I liked the spinach with hollandaise from the eggs florentine, I decided to just get the spinach and hollandaise one day.
The spinach arrived cold, sadly. It was completed unseasoned as always. Just, cooked spinach.
The hollandaise was also cold. It seemed even stranger like this, so very thick. More like an aioli to dip fries in than a sauce for eggs.
Sadly this experiment wasn't very satisfying.
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Scrambled Eggs. |
I tried the scrambled eggs one morning, mostly because I was bored with the menu, and knew that I needed protein.
They were ... scrambled eggs. Meh. I think real eggs though at least. Unseasoned completely, so I really needed the salt and pepper shakers.