Located on Duncan Street is the Distrikt Cellar Bar, Leeds most unique and independent gastro bar. Stepping down the staircase from the outdoor courtyard area perfect for alfresco drinking, lies this basement bar. However, stepping through the doors soon allays any fears that this may lead to the dark, dank cellar of previous years. Instead a beautiful space is secreted away. Nods to its previous incarnation remain with a low ceiling but the glamorous touches capture the eye. A decent-sized bar at the far end of the main room glows from bright lighting behind, capturing the sparkle of the various premium spirits and wines. The ambience is relaxed and welcoming, with its subtly painted walls adorned with local artworks for sale gives it an intimate, homely feel. Comfortable booth-style seating lines the periphery of the area, and the DJ booth is as hi-tech as you'd find in a club, rivalling any upmarket West End bar and fulfilling a much-needed niche in this area.
The proprietors are especially worth a mention, being friendly, helpful and extremely efficient with a level of service usually reserved for hotel bars and top restaurants. The music is a sound track of laid back tunes and chill out house beats completes the ambience of the bar, but are unobtrusive and well levelled so groups and couples can converse without having to shout at each other.
The clientèle is a broad spectrum of all ages brought together with a common love of good food, spirits and music, and tends to attract a more discerning punter. However, where Distrikt Bar really thrives is its unique and individually tailored food menu created by master chef Paul Behnke whom has worked for many international & London Michelin star restaurants and gastro pubs. I spoke to Paul and asked him to explain the all new foraging menu to me, as I had little knowledge of this cuisine.
The Monday foraging menu uses a significant number of our ingredients that cannot be bought from the store or ordered in. They are foraged from the parks, woods and shorelines around, and are locally sourced for freshness and taste. This commitment to a new style of cooking that turns away from the, no tomatoes unless briefly in season, olive oil, foie gras, sun-dried tomatoes or any other of the key Mediterranean ingredients that have come to dominate haute cuisine in recent decades - to something distinctive and regional, it made sense that a lot of our ingredients should be those we could find, not least because they are so available, that's the beauty of Yorkshire and its natural surrounding areas.
The foundation of every cuisine is great ingredients. I studied recipe books & nature books, learned about wood sorrel, ground elder and particular kinds of seaweed to be plucked from the shore. We also developed a network of professional foragers. We have one man who has been doing it for decades. He is one of those rare characters, and told me of a forager who supplies him with Kentish truffles whom is a self proclaimed wizard, and has an invisible friend who tells him where to forage! All we know is he finds the best truffles we have ever tasted.
Foraging shapes you as a chef, I know it has shaped me. If you see how a plant grows and you taste it in situ you have a perfect example of how it should taste on the plate. But it's more than that. When you get close to the raw materials and taste them at the moment they let go of the soil, you learn to respect them. We never alter the raw material to such an extent that, when they reach the plate, they no longer have any connection with their origins.
The restrictions can be frustrating as the produce has to be in season and to a high standard, but this forced us to be more inventive, creating new and exciting recipes daily.
The joy of cooking begins afresh each day creating a recipe around the naturally gathered ingredients. From the customers point of view you are experiencing unique dishes created and crafted from start to finish by a chef with the skills of Heston Bloomfield.
Paul is accredited within his profession as a class leading chef and it will not be long I am sure till he will become a household name.
The evening I attended the Distrikt bar the well priced menu of only £5, skews towards sharing tasting platters with a choice of:-
Rare Yorkshire beef, w/wood sorrel crème fraiche, braised cherry tomatoes Manchego and home cooked crisps
Crayfish & pickled Kent sea vegetable salad w/salsa rossa & Rye brea
Parma ham, fresh pear, pickled rock samphire w/blue Stilton cheese & oat cakes
The portions suffice nicely, whilst (two people could happily chow down through two or three platters) the quality, freshness and presentation is secondary to none and live up to the best restaurants I have frequented. Considering the quality and reasonable price for the food, it is worth making the trip to visit regardless of your location.
Visit: http://distrikt.co.uk for directions and a full synopsis of there ethos read more