Randomness Guide to London - Differences between Version 13 and Version 12 of Le Cassoulet, CR2 6PA

Version 13 Version 12
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The restaurant opened in January 2008 in Croydon, a couple of minutes walk from South End, Croydon's highest concentration of restaurants. As of November 2008, after almost a year of service, the restaurant had settled in well and seemed to be doing reasonably good business despite the recession - early service saw the restaurant half full, and they were only taking bookings for sittings at 18:30 and 21:00 at weekends. The restaurant has cemented itself as the most upmarket in Croydon, and one can only hope it continues to do well.
The restaurant opened in January 2008 in Croydon—a location that has surprised many—a couple of minutes walk from South End, Croydon's highest concentration of restaurants. Croydon does have good places to eat if you know where to look: the Banana Leaf offers excellent South Indian food, and the [[Croydon Steak House, CR0 1BE|Croydon Steak House]] has attracted customers with first class steaks "as large as you like" as successfully as it has resisted refurbishment since the 1970s. A £50 per head bistro is a big step up for the area, though, and time will tell whether or not the proprietor Malcolm John will make a success of the venture. When we visited on a bank holiday Monday in March 2008, the restaurant was far from packed, and only serving a single sitting.
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The following information relates to a visit during March 2008:

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On a follow-up visit in November 2008, the menu had changed slightly: the boeuf bourguinonne had disappeared, as had a ham hock starter not reviewed here. A confit of pork belly with puy lentils and parsnip puree was delicious, as was a Valrhona chocolate fondant.
Service was polite, attentive and knowledgeable. All the waiting staff we spoke to were French. The restaurant takes bookings by telephone, or online via their website (provided by opentable.com). Three courses with wine for two people came to just over £100, and we felt that that was good value. At the end of our meal, a taxi was procured for us in less than five minutes.
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Service is polite, attentive and knowledgeable. The restaurant takes bookings by telephone, or online via their website (provided by opentable.com). Three courses with wine for two people came to £120, and we felt that that was good value. At the end of our meal, a taxi was procured for us in less than five minutes (although be prepared to give fairly precise directions to the driver, if your reviewers' experiences are anything to go by).
A late March menu change may render some of the reviews below out of date. Certainly there was, sadly, no sign of the free nibbles reported by Andy Hayler.
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A menu change in March 2008 may render some of the reviews below out of date. Certainly there was, sadly, no sign of the free nibbles reported by Andy Hayler.

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<div class="last_verified">Last visited by [[elvum]], 29 November 2008. Opening times taken from the Time Out review, March 2008.</div>
<div class="last_verified">Last visited by [[elvum]], 24 March 2008. Opening times taken from the Time Out review, March 2008.</div>
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category='Bistro Food,French Food,Restaurants'
category='French Food,Restaurants'
== Line 31 == == Line 27 ==
host='87.194.129.234'
host='213.165.225.132'

French bistro in South Croydon, close to South Croydon Station; sister restaurant to Le Vacherin in Chiswick.

The restaurant opened in January 2008 in Croydon—a location that has surprised many—a couple of minutes walk from South End, Croydon's highest concentration of restaurants. Croydon does have good places to eat if you know where to look: the Banana Leaf offers excellent South Indian food, and the Croydon Steak House has attracted customers with first class steaks "as large as you like" as successfully as it has resisted refurbishment since the 1970s. A £50 per head bistro is a big step up for the area, though, and time will tell whether or not the proprietor Malcolm John will make a success of the venture. When we visited on a bank holiday Monday in March 2008, the restaurant was far from packed, and only serving a single sitting.

From the starters menu, a warm salad of scallops with black pudding and bacon (£7) was well-balanced and flavoursome. A goat's cheese tartlet lacked cheese and was a little generous with the cream, but was perfectly pleasant. Advancing to the main courses, the eponymous cassoulet (£14) came in its own pot and included pieces of duck confit, belly pork and garlic sausage, topped with breadcrumbs (which some decry as heresy, but made it no less tasty). It was perhaps a little more liquid than is common, but had an excellent earthy garlic flavour. Boeuf Bourguinonne (£14) consisted of a slightly sweet beef and wine reduction, in which swam generous chunks of tender beefs, smoked bacon, onions, mushrooms and carrots — each of which was perfectly (and hence presumably independently) cooked. It came with pureed potatoes. A side-order of dauphinoise was cheesy and unctuous, the former due to grilled Vacherin cheese on the top (which again, some decry as heresy).

The creme brulee (£6) was a generous portion, well-flavoured, with plenty of vanilla seeds in the custard, and a good layer of caramelised sugar on top, although the dish arrived cold and the sugar was ever so slightly soft. The cheese plate was a good mixture of hard, soft and goats' cheeses - if anything perhaps a little cold and under-ripe, but served with a good selection of accompaniments: bread, hard wheat and rye biscuits, celery and half a fresh fig (£7). The restaurant has a good selection of dessert wines - we had a fruity Baron Phillipe Sauternes, and a spicy, caramelly Pineau des Charentes.

Service was polite, attentive and knowledgeable. All the waiting staff we spoke to were French. The restaurant takes bookings by telephone, or online via their website (provided by opentable.com). Three courses with wine for two people came to just over £100, and we felt that that was good value. At the end of our meal, a taxi was procured for us in less than five minutes.

A late March menu change may render some of the reviews below out of date. Certainly there was, sadly, no sign of the free nibbles reported by Andy Hayler.

See also:

Last visited by elvum, 24 March 2008. Opening times taken from the Time Out review, March 2008.

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