I've been to Vivat Bacchus a few times, and as a result am close to adopting a policy of refusing to visit restaurants that don't dedicate an entire room to their cheese selection. It's a fantastic place.
My most recent visit was my first evening visit, the rest all being to take advantage of the lunch deals, and my first time in the restaurant downstairs. Despite being part of a fairly recent office building the restaurant has great character. The brick walls, bottles of wine and wooden wine boxes that adorn the place give it a much warmer feel than you might expect from looking at the outside.
The friendly welcome we received was also greatly appreciated. Being three scruffily dressed 'creative types' turning up at restaurants in the middle of the legal district packed with suits we are occasionally prepared for looks of disdain, but the front of house staff were amongst the most welcoming I've come across in the city, and remained as such throughout the evening.
My two fellow diners chose to eat from the £16.50 set menu that offered two courses and a glass of champagne. The set menu contained two starters, two mains and two desserts (three courses were available for £19.50, one of the desserts was a cheese board with a £4.50 supplement).
I chose to eat from the a la carte menu, settling for cured salmon with orange and creme fraiche to start and a fish pie for the main course.
The wine list is big in this place. The list itself is actually only two sides of A4, but I have a feeling that if you were to let the sommelier loose with your credit card there are plenty more that go unmentioned in the depths of the cellar. The sommelier was very friendly and happy to explain what was available, and we plumped for a bottle of white from their 'summer wines' board at £25 (a lovely British Gewurztraminer, not usually a big fan of sweet wines and was going on the basis of the recommendation, but it had just right the right balance and certainly a great one for the summer).
Both courses arrived quickly, and disappeared about as quickly too. All utterly delicious, perfectly cooked. The fish pie had a fantastic combination of flavours, and the puff pastry lid which was stuffed with the fluffiest mash potato simply melted in the mouth.
Finally to one of the more anticipated parts of a trip to Vivat Bacchus. The cheese room. I'm slightly biased as being a big fan of cheese a restaurant which dedicates a room (two in fact, one upstairs and one downstairs) to it's cheese is always going to earn my respect. There's also something very nice about the way it ends the meal. Rather than being brought a selection of cheeses you may not even like, or having a trolley of cheeses that's been left out all evening trundled over to the table, the three of us crowded into the little room while the different options were explained by the waiter - who knew enough about the selection to be some kind of cheese sommelier in his own right.
It's not cheap, the cheese room. I know this from previous visits when getting a little overexcited in the selection process set us back about £30. Armed with this knowledge we picked four cheeses to share between the three of us, the waiter offering suggestions that would help balance the palate. The cheese is served with some slices of french bread, oat cakes and grapes, and our selection came to around £15. You do have to like your cheese to justify that sort of money on just four, but it's the first time I've heard someone still talking about a cheese course the morning after, as was the case with one of my fellow diners.
We paid around £100 including service - two set menus, my la carte, cheese and a bottle of wine - and would happily do so again. I've certainly spent more on food that didn't earn as great praise as this did from the three of us.
A great meal, great atmosphere and great staff, I'd highly recommend this place. read more