Nutbourne Battersea
29 Ransomes Dock, 35-37 Parkgate Road, Battersea, SW11 4NP
https://www.nutbourne-restaurant.com/020 7350 0555

Nutbourne is in that bit of Battersea with little to offer in the way of public transport so I drive and am able to park in one of their off-road spaces. With the upcoming tube extension this will all change as the area becomes accessible to the hoi-polloi. As Fiona and I ponder the menu we fortify ourselves with a crisp appley glass of Nutbourne Vineyard. Nutty Brut 2013 (£11.50).
Some bread turned up but it was really just the vehicle to showcase a trio of butters, crab, smoked and locally foraged wild garlic that impressed with their broad-brush flavours.
Next up was an amuse-bouche. The mushroom marmite pastry was a revelation. Bursting out of the delicate chou pastry was an umami flavour explosion with the impact of an Anthony Joshua uppercut. Crispy chicken skin was also intense with a slick of rich saffron aioli for extra impact.
Fiona loved sucking on her grilled Langoustines, lardo, lemon thyme, garlic, chilli (£16) – the seafood stood up well to the garlic and chilli kick…
Cured Chalk Stream trout, garden peas, cow’s curd, smoked rapeseed oil, pea shoots (£10.50) was a perfect spring dish. The trout was top quality – firm-textured and grease free with sweet crunchy peas and the curd adding textural contrast. Fiona was sticking to the fizz but since I was driving I moved onto a Seedlip (the world’s first distilled non-alcoholic spirit) and tonic . I often drink tonic with a drop of angostura bitters and this was similar but less bitter and a touch sweeter. However it did feel like a proper drink unlike most ‘mocktails’.
The mains may not have have been delicate assemblages featuring a clinically sous-vided piece of protein, but were all the better for the serious application of flame to flesh. Fiona’s Spatchcock baby chicken, grilled spring onions, cherry tomatoes, cucumber yoghurt (£16) was a fusion of traditional English with Levantine influences which she described as being full of flavour – ‘dirty’ food but in a good way!
Roasted cod, salsify, sea herbs, clams, lemon vinaigrette, nasturtium (£17.50) had a great mix of textures but was a little over-salted for me. I love the cod/clam combo and the way the dish layered flavours.
Fiona’s hot chocolate fondant, peanut butter ice cream, candied bacon (£6) was slightly lacking in the ‘ooze’ factor but a luscious glass of Lustau Pedro Ximenez (£6) added the necessary sweet lubrication.
Salted caramel tart, brown bread ice cream (£6) is a dessert classic. Salted caramel is suffering from over-exposure at the mo but as part of a combo with the savoury ice cream created a fantastic pudding.
The Gladwin brothers (henceforth to be referred to as the GeeBees your honour) are doing something more profound than just creating a great neighbourhood restaurant with a lively atmosphere and friendly service. They are creating an ecosystem for a British rustic cuisine based on cleverly sourced produce, local wines and big bold flavours. We should support them.