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Sunday 12 January 2014

Menier Chocolate Factory, 53 Southwark Street, London SE1 1RU

Menier Chocolate Factory, 53 Southwark Street, London SE1 1RU
12/01/2014

She said: I’ve often found it frustrating when I have a clear, long Sunday free and wouldn’t mind a bit of theatre but the West End is closed for 50% of the weekend…So I was delighted to be able to book a meal and a show at the Menier Chocolate Factory for a special occasion. Set in, yes, an old French chocolate factory, the restaurant is a bright, large room with dark wood floors and furniture. There is a slightly raised central dining area with other tables set around the room alongside the brick-exposed walls and period windows. I guess due to the nature of the building, the room was pretty cold with little help from the electric heaters; one elderly couple next to us spent an excessive amount of time moving the dial of one such heater with little effect. Still, the room is very atmospheric and though we were one of the first to arrive, it quickly filled up with pre-theatre diners, mostly of a well-to-do, older-ilk, no doubt due to the Voltaire performance we were seeing. I was disappointed Menier didn’t have a cocktail list. A Sunday Bloody Mary would have been perfect but they did have a choice of two specials: hot cider or a glass of fizz with elderflower so we toasted with the latter. Although there is a pre-theatre menu, I opted for a la carte. My starter of smoked salmon with a spicy potato cake and orange crème fraiche was so-so. The salmon was good but the potato cake luke-warm and cardboard-like and if there was any orange in the crème fraiche it missed my palate. However my main course of artichoke and sage tortellini was divine. I ordered a sticky toffee pudding for dessert but thankfully a lady next to me received hers just as I placed my order; I could see it was a mountain of sponge with just a thin sticky topping so I quickly switched to the brownie which again was a delicious juicy rich chocolate delight. My latte was piping hot just as I like it and in the size I like it – big. By the time I made it in to the theatre my belly was full and my mind ready to engage with the absurd world of Candide. I would definitely recommend Menier for future dinner-theatre dates.


He said: I love the Menier theatre, with its small, in-the-round stage where you can catch every actor’s most subtle expression. It’s a long way from the giant, mechanical productions pumped out by the West End sausage factory; the jewel box feel of Menier shows reminds me of high school plays (except with talent to boot): you feel like it belongs to you and you belong to it. The restaurant itself has a nice, laid-back vibe, but the food is just ok, nothing special. The thing that stood out for me was how quickly the food came out. You can understand that with the play starting at a fixed time, and with 80 or so dinners all arriving at roughly the same time, the kitchen will have to make some compromises. There was nothing wrong with any of it, just that it lacked finesse: it seemed to me a bit like assembly line cooking. Still, the drinks were nice and it was a great day out, and I would go back, but with expectations adjusted: the Menier is about theatre on the stage, not on the plate.

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