03.Sep.07, 10:42 EDT Blog edited on: 15.Apr.08, 10:47 EDT
Beneath elaborate bronze wall lights, ornate chandeliers, marble columns, and shimmering silk curtains lies the luxurious restaurant at The Ritz.
Two gleaming gold figures, The Thames and the Ocean, overlook a dining room brimming with glittering opulence and original Louis XVI style. Panelled mirrors adorn the north wall from painted ceiling to the floor, and a garden terrace seeps onto the lush fringes of neighbouring Green Park.
The reception is surprisingly warm without an air of stuffiness as staff usher my dinner date and I through the lavish lobby, past the Rivoli Bar, the Palm Court tea room (where cucumber sandwiches are rumoured to fetch £10.00 a pop) and into the palatial Ritz restaurant.
There convenes, not a clique of the socially elite but, a variety of clientele from the requisite genteel older gentlemen in suits to the ladies who lunch.
We toast our ostentatious surroundings with a crisp glass of bubbly and admire the equally sumptuous menu.
Like kids in a candy shop we feast our eyes upon the celestial selection of main courses beckoning us from the menu: butter poached Cornish lobster with new season almonds, or tournedos of Aberdeen angus rossini. It's a close call but in keeping with the seafood theme I take a chance on the roast fillet of wild seabass with caramelised squid and chorizo, veloute of garden peas and broad beans.
It arrives, presented on a bed of creamy garlic mashed potatoes, accompanied by a full-bodied 2002 Villa Maria Reserve New Zealand Chardonnay which has an aromatic nose of ripe exotic fruits.
Heaven on a plate.
My companion tucks into the tender fillet of lamb with liquorice and fennel scented jus, aptly topped off with a glass of the 2002 Spanish Vina Real Rioja Crianza.
It's an enriching experience for all of the senses, which expands both our minds and our waistlines.
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