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Variety fare
Continental, Indian, Chinese... the cuisines are many. MARIEN
MATHEW 'stops at Sams' and writes.
ITS SMART, trendy and neat. The metal furniture, brown checks and
striped furnishings looked pretty. Even the toilet was well kept
which was so unexpected considering our natural inclination to
leave public places messy. But then its just barely a month old.
Hope the same ambience will be maintained at Stop at Sams on TTK
Road, Alwarpet.
The menu had Continental, Indian and Chinese. With the Clinton
hangover lingering still, we stuck to the Americana part. There
is a good variety to choose from. Though quite a few mocktails
are listed, I was totally sceptical about them. Yet we decided to
give them a try and asked for Lemon Margarita (Rs. 35) and Virgin
Colada (Rs. 45). To my pleasant surprise both turned out to be
quite good, particularly the Margarita. It had enough zing to
make you almost not miss the tequila.
Please as punch we were, yummy Broccoli cocktail (Rs. 55) made
things look rosier. The salty, lightly bitter olives and almond
slivers improved on the broccoli mayonnaise combination. The take
off on shrimp cocktail is certainly worth trying. The Chicken
Lollipop (Rs. 75) with tomato-garlic sauce was also nice.
The vegetarian main course dish, Baked vegetables in potato
jackets (Rs. 115) were creamy, cheesy and so, tasty. By the way,
portions served are rather big and the service friendly.
The evening was going so smoothly that we were quite unprepared
for what followed. The Traditional fish and chips (Rs. 125/-) was
the first killjoy. Now I am beginning to think that there is a
jinx with the fish. This time it announced itself even before the
dish got to the table. And the taste confirmed what the smell had
hinted. There was something fishy about the fish.
The stuffed chicken with mushroom sauce (Rs. 160) managed to save
the situation to some extent. Of the two chicken breasts served,
one was a bit sour. This was puzzling because, even if the
vinegar bottle had tipped over it should have fallen on both the
pieces. The other piece was perfectly fine. It would have been
interesting to know how the taste difference came about. The
sauce was rather interesting.
The desserts, Cinnamon apple pie (Rs. 55) and Black current
cheesecake (Rs. 70) didn't leave any mark. Besides apple, raisins
and nuts, the apple pie had a kind of chocolate dough. Why don't
we leave the well known classics untouched? Or if we have to
improvise, why not call it just that? The pie was all right but
one missed the real thing.
The cheesecake had layers of sponge in it, something totally new
to me. Try hard as I did, it kind of left me cold. Well chef
Samir Singla, can definitely do better than the current dessert
selection.
The former chef from Park Sheraton was into catering, very
successfully too, before opening the restaurant.
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