So, yesterday I went to a nice gastro-pub type place in between Apsley and Kings Langley called 'The Rose and Crown'. Pub names are so unimaginative, I know at least five hundred Rose and Crown's. If I had a pub I'd call it 'The Bull's Left Testicle'. You definitely wouldn't get it mixed up or forget the name and it's fairly memorable. That's marketing, that is! Anyway, in harmony with the blindingly creative name (sarcasm) it was a typical country pub inside. I do like the whole country pub vibe though, so I was happy.
I didn't get a drink but my mate got a beer, of which I had some because SHARING IS CARING of course! I do forget how much better beer is from a tap. The menu looked good. Lots of somewhat interesting combinations of flavours and it seemed like they had made a good effort on devising a creative menu. The starters looked slightly better than the mains and we're a bunch of rebels so we decided to get two starters and a dessert.
I ordered one pork belly with black pudding, apple fritters and lambs lettuce, and one warm fig and prosciutto ham salad with salsa verde. My food came out and I was pleasantly surprised. Neat, fine-diningish presentation on long rectangular plates. Awesome. I hoped it tasted as good as it looked and yet again, I wasn't disappointed. Although the apple fritters could have done with some kind of spice, they were light, crispy and golden on the outside and then when you cut into it there's sweet steamy soft apple. That, together with the pork belly was a wonderfully classic flavour combination. By that time another friend had arrived and she pointed out that the skin wasn't crispy as it should be, but I'm pretty sure it wouldn't have worked as well if it was. The soft, juicy pork with the delicately crispy fritters and the (slightly less than fresh) lambs lettuce was all the crunch I needed. The ironness of the black pudding added a welcome and completing dimension. However, there was way too much and so I left most of it. I think for a lot of people black pudding is a dangerous flavour as it kind of tastes like exactly what it is. It has to be used with caution. I, for one don't want to be too harshly reminded that I'm basically eating a scab.
I was swapping between the pork belly and the fig and ham salad. I couldn't decided which I liked more. The figs and ham were warm! I didn't expect the warmness, but I loved it. It wasn't hot, just gently warmed. I do like a warm salad. I'm gonna lay off saying 'warm' for a while now.. This dish was a balancing act. Sweet figs, soft salty ham, tangy salsa verde, which I've decided I love and then there was a slightly bitter herb that had been laid over it all. I'm pretty sure it was dill. It looked like dill, but didn't taste exactly like I know dill to taste. Hm.. it was probably just dill. Either way, all together it was a mini, melt in your mouth festival on the palate. As a huge contrast, I tried some of my friend with the beer's portobello and oyster mushroom salad on bread. It was awful. The untoasted bread absorbed any of the flavour from the already flavourless creamy sauce. The mushrooms lent an earthiness which could have been nice if it was paired with something better. It just ended up feeling like you were chewing on soggy, warm (oh dear, there's that word again), earthy clay. Poor him.
Dessert. Sadly, this food adventure led me to the realisation that pub desserts are usually a huge disappointment. Two of us couldn't decide between the salted caramel and chocolate in a pastry pot with Chantilly cream and the crème brûlée with red wine poached pear, so it was decided that we would get both and have half each. A very smart plan. Crème brûlées seem to come either warm (really? again?!) or cold. I prefer warm. This one was cold. They went kinda overkill with the brûlée bit and it ended up slightly burnt, which made the whole thing more bitter than it should have been. The poached pear was okay. It needed more spice. A bland effort compared to my starters. The dishes may be quite hit and miss here considering the mushroom mistake that took place earlier. I probably just lucked out with the first course. The sweet caramel, sweet pastry case, sweet chocolate and the sweet caramel sauce on the side was just a whole lot of sickly sweet with not much to temper it aside from an upsetting, teaspoon amount of Chantilly cream on the side. Not much going on flavour wise here at all. No vanilla, no cinnamon, no nothing. Just a sweet, sweet sadness.
Overall I'd give it a 6.2 out of 10, and a very vaguly enthusiastic meh.
http://www.roseandcrownkingslangley.co.uk
PS: Warm.
Faraoh of Phood
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