Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Fay Maschler on London Restaurant Festival Menus

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

A Festival Menu should encapsulate, explain and deliver the essence of each participating establishment. The menus will be an opportunity to concentrate even more than usual on creativity, seasonality, surprise, nurturing and good value.

Menus at different fixed price points will give potential customers confidence. Places that they may have been diffident about trying become understandable and accessible.

Festival Menus provide the opportunity for restaurants of any ethnicity to convey precisely what their cuisine contributes and the part it plays in the astonishing range of restaurants that London possesses.

The many events of the festival will culminate in the London Restaurant Festival Awards presented on the evening of 13 October in association with the London Evening Standard.

Among the awards is the category of Best London Festival menu, which will go the restaurant – in each price category – that in the opinion of the judges has most creatively, generously and deliciously presented an edible snapshot of how they feed us

Inspired? Restaurateurs can register now to participate with a Festival Menu at London Restaurant Festival. Download the forms here:

Restaurant Registration Form [PDF 308KB]

Restaurant Registration Prices [PDF 134KB]

Restaurant Registration Guidelines [PDF 129KB]

How to get involved with London Restaurant Festival

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Last week we sent out a “call to arms” to encourage as many London restaurants as possible to sign up and take part in the inaugural London Restaurant Festival.

Happily the response has been really enthusiastic. Hundreds of restaurants of all sizes, cuisine and budget have been requesting registration forms. These are now filtering back and we are hoping that our first-year target of 1,000 restaurants might be reached by the time the festival kicks off in October.

The restaurants involved will all be running their own Festival Menus. These are a bedrock of the festival. Below is an outline of just what we mean by the Festival Menu “event”:

The London Restaurant Festival is not about coupons and vouchers. Instead, the participating restaurants will offer great value, and inventive cooking, to customers through their Festival Menus.

These will run throughout the festival at all participating restaurants from The Wolseley to family-run independents and from Pizza Express to hidden gems that few have experienced.

The Festival Menu ‘event’ is inclusive and wide-ranging. Lunch menus of two courses will be priced at £10, £15 or £20 (whether drinks are included depends on the restaurant). Dinner menus of two courses will be priced at £15, £25 and £40.

There is no limit to the number of restaurants that can run their own Festival Menu and all will be listed on the London Restaurant Festival website – www.londonrestaurantfestival.com

To register, download the forms here:

Restaurant Registration Form [PDF 308KB]

Restaurant Registration Prices [PDF 134KB]

Restaurant Registration Guidelines [PDF 129KB]

A taste of things to come

Monday, April 6th, 2009

 

 

Since our event at the Club at the Ivy a couple of weeks ago work on the inaugural London Restaurant Festival has gathered pace with encouraging briskness.

 

The heady degree of enthusiasm for the festival from all quarters is now being matched with hard graft from the team here to ensure that we not only give London’s restaurateurs a great boon but also offer Londoners, and visitors to our great capital, the most engaging and satisfying restaurant festival possible in year one.   

 

As one of the aims of this blog is to keep you updated with our progress I plan to post regularly.

 

I had a great lunch with Chris Hughes on Tuesday. Chris is the man behind the successful Taste events and I’m pleased to say is now one of the partners in the London Restaurant Festival.

 

We are extremely pleased to have him and his team – particularly Taste editorial director Tess Willmott – on board. Tess joined us for lunch along with our festival manager Penny Smith and we discussed the possibilities for Taste’s event during the first London Restaurant festival in October. There were several new and exciting ideas batted around and we’ll let you know specifics further down the line.

 

We also agreed that the London Restaurant Festival would have a colourful presence at the main Taste event in Regent’s Park that takes place this year June 18-21.  On that, tickets are now on sale for this event. See www.tastefestivals.com

 

I also spent some valuable hours with another of our key partners this week. Visit London are an integral part of the London Restaurant Festival and one of their contribution to date has been the construction of this superb website. Of course, this site as it stands is just an hors d’oeuvre compared to the slap-up offering that is now under construction.

 

I sat down with Julie Chappell, the head of media at Visit London, and Joanna Tatti, the technical project manager, to methodically go through all of the content, functionality and so forth of the website. Work is now underway to build a site that will serve as the ‘mother ship’ for the London Restaurant Festival and it will launch in July.

 

They are an extremely impressive and professional team and we are lucky to have them supporting us.

 

I popped into the RSVP show at the Business Design Centre in Islington as Tim Etchells had asked if I would speak on why restaurants make good venues for entertaining clients and corporate events.  

 

Tim is a founding partner of the London Restaurant Festival and his company Single Market Events Ltd runs RSVP and also London Fashion Week and the British Motor Show among others. He’s arguably the most experienced figure in events management in the country so Fay and I are extremely pleased that he’s seen fit to support the London Restaurant Festival in such an integral way.

 

The following day I visited a particularly interesting event. Earlier in the week I got chatting to a man on my train to London. He is called Bryan Toye and his company – Toye, Kenning and Spencer – is a distinguished livery company established in 1645. He’s also a prominent figure in the Royal Warrant Holders Association.  

 

We got onto the subject of the London Restaurant Festival – my ability to re-direct any conversation onto one about the festival is becoming finely tuned – and he mentioned a food and drink fair taking place in London at which all those taking part shared the privilege of holding a royal warrant.

 

This struck me as a rather ingenious idea so I went along last Thursday. It was being held in Victoria and was only quietly promoted at the request of the royal household. Despite this, word soon got about, the sun shone and the place was buzzing with people scoffing their way through the most delicious sausages from HM The Queen’s favourite sausage maker from Newmarket, breads for Partridge’s, truffles from Prestat and cheeses from Paxton and Whitfield. There were about 30 stalls.

 

It was the first time such an event had taken place and not only was it intriguing to see what HM The Queen and HRH The Prince of Wales like to eat but also to discover some suppliers I had no knowledge of.

 

I had a chat with the people who created the event as I think there may be scope for a similar one during the London Restaurant Festival. We shall see.

 

Other possible events were explored this week during a visit to Sister, a PR company on Carnaby St who look after that area and also Regent’s St.

 

We discussed an event focused on Ganton St that is now almost exclusively made up of restaurants and also a new take on a Mad Hatter’s Tea party inspired by David Bowie on Heddon Street. Watch this space.

 

So, busy times. I’m now off to see Mark Wogan, a former chef, passionate foodie and son of Sir Terry, who is an enthusiastic supporter of the London Restaurant Festival and tells me he has some ideas for events. I’ll let you know about that, and much more besides in my next blog.

 

Please do get all the people you know to register on www.londonrestaurantfestival.com and also tell your favourite restaurants to get in touch and get involved.

 

London’s top chefs turn out to find out more about LRF

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

So now I really feel like we’re up and running. Around 150 people associated with the London restaurant industry including chefs Mark Hix, Richard Corrigan, Pierre Koffman, Claude Bosi and Fergus Henderson and restaurateurs Nick Jones, Des MacDonald, Marlon Abela, Des Gunawardena and David Loewi turned out last night for a reception to find out more about the London Restaurant Festival.

Given that we had invited about 180 people this was hugely encouraging if a little nerve-racking. Fay and I, and the growing team, have always been convinced that the concept for a London Restaurant Festival is a winning one but it is rather pointless if no one else gives a fig.

However, the fact that those gathered were so enthusiastic and supportive of the idea was reassuring. For me, it really shored up the commitment to create what I am confident will become, in time, the world’s most stimulating restaurant and food festival.

In keeping with this growing spirit of goodwill, and enthusiasm, Des McDonald, CEO of Caprice Holdings, who also sits on the LRF steering committee, generously provided the location –The Club at the Ivy. We are extremely grateful for this and also the delectable food provided by Urban Caprice. Both are owned by Richard Caring, who also sits on the LRF steering committee.

Mumm provided the champagne for which we are also grateful.

The evening wasn’t just about having drinks and eating small food however. Fay gave an elegant turn explaining her motivation for creating the LRF and highlighting the fact that the restaurant industry, as an entity, has too long been neglected and the time has come for its celebration. She also stressed the fact that the LRF is for all restaurants and not just the swanky ones. On her blog, on this site, she expands on this.

I then revealed that the LRF gala opening night party will be on October 7th at Quaglino’s and co-hosted by Vanity Fair before sharing some of the events we are planning and chivvying those gathered into contributing ideas. In my experience chefs and restaurateurs are always coming up with inventive ideas to boost their business, in the LRF they now have an umbrella under which these ideas can be fostered, and marketed, so the potential is fully realised.

Tim Etchells, the MD of Single Market Events, and one of our founding partners, then reassured guests that the LRF wasn’t just a couple of hacks with a good idea and no way of actually making it happen.

With a successful roster of events that include London Fashion Week, the British Motor Show, the Good Food Show and the Top Gear Show Tim explained how Single Market Events would help make the festival sing.

I won’t go into it here but if you would like more information on the nitty gritty then please register on this site and we will provide the information you require.

Mayor Boris Johnson’s office called me earlier in the day and he apologised for not being able to attend but reiterated his wholehearted support for the LRF and said he would help in any way he can. October 7th is firmly in his diary.

In his place Sally Chatterjee, the interim head of one our key founding partners Visit London, said a few words outlining the importance Visit London places of the LRF and how they can enable it achieve the scope of its ambition. I would like to thanks her for taking the time to come along.

It was good to see LRF committee member Janet Street Porter who is a fervent supporter of London restaurants and a passionate Londoner.

“I think it’s (the LRF) a fantastic idea,” she said. “We’ve been useless in championing our restaurants and this is just what London needs.”

This was a sentiment I heard repeatedly throughout the evening from photographer Richard Young and Daily Mail columnist Richard Kay to the teams that run the New West End Company (Oxford, Bond and Regent streets) and those from Covent Garden.

Hoteliers Gordon Campbell Gray (No 1 Aldwych) and Sinclair Beecham (The Hoxton) were no less ebullient in their support.

Such a variety of guests, and such a groundswell of support, is crucial and heartwarming but now the work really gathers pace to ensure all the events flourish in year one.

The London Restaurant Festival concept

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

entrance_garrisonLast year I was chair of the judges for The London Restaurant Awards. I remember looking round Grosvenor House Ballroom – that inevitable venue – at the end of the awards evening and seeing too many disappointed faces of short-listed chefs who had not won and who furthermore had paid a good deal of hard-earned money for a seat at the interminable dinner. I thought then, there must be a better way of celebrating London’s astonishingly wide and interesting array of restaurants than this. I thought about London Fashion Week and the support it received not only in terms of press but also occasions like the reception given in Downing Street. Chefs and restaurateurs should receive as much recognition as designers of clothes. Both industries employ many people and contribute to the economy as well as to the gaiety of the nation.

I suggested to Simon Davis, my partner in our consultancy A Private View that we should take Tim Etchells of Single Market Events (who run London Fashion Week) out to lunch to discuss a London Restaurant Festival that would be a city-wide joyful and beneficial celebration of the restaurant business. One small meal (at The Club at The Ivy in case you are interested) has gathered pace and impetus and the support of many including the Mayor’s office – Boris looks as though he enjoys a good meal – Visit London, and Growing Spaces. This is the start of something that should grow bigger and more agreeably boisterous year on year.