Tom Parker Bowles amp Olly Smith Dishes fit for an emperor and wines to go with curry YOU Magazine
Tom Parker Bowles & Olly Smith: Dishes fit for an emperor and wines to go with curry - YOU Magazine Fashion Beauty Celebrity Health Life Relationships Horoscopes Food Interiors Travel Sign in Welcome!Log into your account Forgot your password? Password recovery Recover your password Search Sign in Welcome! Log into your account Forgot your password? Get help Password recovery Recover your password A password will be e-mailed to you. YOU Magazine Fashion Beauty Celebrity Health Life Relationships Horoscopes Food Interiors Travel Home Food Tom Parker Bowles & Olly Smith Dishes fit for an emperor and wines to go with curry By You Magazine - October 10, 2021 Tom is tempted to order the entire menu as he discovers dishes to delight a Mughal emperor. I’ve been looking forward to Clay’s Hyderabadi Kitchen for a while. Ever since I first tried its at-home dishes, in lockdown, as was once the way. Hyderabad was the furthest outpost of the great Mughal Empire, a city where lavishly scented, courtly cuisine – with its fragrant echoes of Persia and Turkey – meets the thrilling tang and heat of the Andhran south. This was love at first bite. Epic starter of Andhra-style fried chicken lavished with fresh chilli and curry leaves. Image: Matt Inwood An easy stroll from Reading Station, the restaurant is small and softly lit, busy even past nine. The walls are painted a gentle terracotta, plants hang from the ceiling and there’s a cracking wine list from my old mate, Zeren Wilson. The only problem is the menu. We want it all. Every chat, pakora and pepper fry, each kofta, bhuna and daal. Now, Bill and me are serious eaters. I would go as far as to call us elite athletes in our own particular way. We certainly put in the training, and once managed ten different meals, ranging from tasting menus to tacos, in one particularly glorious (albeit ultimately dyspeptic) 12-hour Baja California bacchanal. But even we can’t break the entire menu. There are salty cabbage pakoras that wear their fragile batter like exquisite wisps of crisp silk, dunked in a green coriander chutney of bracing verdancy. And grilled jumbo prawns, the very essence of sweet succulence, lavished with mustard and ghee. Pork belly, the fat artfully rendered, is cooked in a thick chilli jam, the sweetness tempered by a sharp tamarind kick. Andhra-style chicken fry, heavy on the fresh chilli, curry leaves and seasoned salt, is Indian fried chicken on an almighty, epic level. These are just the starters. Epic starter of sweet and succulent grilled jumbo prawns. Image: Matt Inwood ‘Village style lamb’ is baked in a dough-sealed clay pot with onion, ginger, lots of chilli and a whole bulb of garlic. It tastes of love, and a life well lived, richer than the Nizam of Hyderabad, and every bit as mighty. Biriyani, also cooked in that clay pot, uses lamb loin, served pink. Each luscious grain is swelled with spiced, fecund delight. Even more remarkable is that chef and co-proprietor Sharat Syamala does all this alone. One man! Damn, he can cook. His wife, Nandana, runs front of house with warmth and charm. I cannot tell you how much I love this place. And there’s still half the menu to discover. Hey ho. Any excuse to return. About £30 per head. Clay’s Hyderabadi Kitchen, 45 London Street, Reading; clayskitchen.co.uk DRINKS Olly’ s wines with curry National Curry Week is upon us and with the precision of Robin Hood’s archery skills, wine matches wonderfully with spice. For the bull’s-eye, pair with care and note the level of heat as well as the texture of the dish. Is it rich and creamy, or light and spicy? A reliable all-rounder is rosé, but if you’re really hitting the hot stuff, scented Torrontes from Argentina is my ultimate pick for quenching. WINE OF THE WEEK FINEST TORRONTES 2020 (13%), £7, Tesco. Perfumed as a lychee shopping in Duty Free, this bright white from Argentina is a bargain beauty. PIERRE JAURANT LANGUEDOC RED 2020 (13.5%), £5.99, Aldi. Mellow, mighty and yet so cheap. This wine is magic with a madras. THE BEST PINOT GRIS 2020 (13%), £8.75, Morrisons. This is pure Alsace excellence – lush, silky and terrific with a tikka masala. CHÂTEAU LA NEGLY LA NATICE ROSÉ 2020 (12.5%), £12.50, Co-op. A nectarine pineapple joyride of a wine. Exuberant, fruity and fabulous. MARTIN POMFY DEVIN JUZNOSLOVENSKA 2020 (13.5%), £15.50, tannerswines.co.uk. Wine in full bloom! A gingery, fragrant explosion of exoticism. RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR Kids can eat for free at these restaurants during October half-term How to make the viral negroni sbagliato with prosecco at home 7 Halloween recipes with serious hex factor Popular in Food Gabriela Peacock 14-day plan Anytime baked eggs May 23, 2021 Joe Wicks’ maple-glazed chicken thighs with Asian slaw June 6, 2021 Mary Berry is returning to TV screens for a brand new June 15, 2021 Eleanor Maidment My summer taste notes July 4, 2021 Uyen Luu’ s sticky mustard marmalade ribs July 25, 2021 Annie Bell’ s white peach bellinis recipe August 8, 2021 M& S has launched a new crunchy Caramilk-inspired golden chocolate spread August 24, 2021 Deliciously preserved pickle and jam recipes September 19, 2021 Gordon Ramsay’ s bang bang cauliflower October 3, 2021 Wow right now Clodagh McKenna’ s speedy family dinners October 24, 2021 Popular CategoriesFood2704Life2496Fashion2240Beauty1738Celebrity1261Interiors684 Sign up for YOUMail Thanks for subscribing Please check your email to confirm (If you don't see the email, check the spam box) Fashion Beauty Celebrity Life Food Privacy & Cookies T&C Copyright 2022 - YOU Magazine. All Rights Reserved