Enigma’s
8-course tasting menu is priced smartly: at $230, it’s not an eat-here-every-week
affair, yet it isn’t so costly as to become seemingly prohibitive unless phrases
like my yacht also escapes your lips (Sushi Masaki Saito, this is directed
to you). It’s a place to visit if you are celebrating an occasion or to really
unwind, which is where I found myself a couple of days before Christmas. Another
year of work was in the rearview mirror and the holidays were about to begin – why
not get it started with a bang?
I wanted to
give my brain a rest… no more decisions, just feed my body with provisions and
provide a few hours of blissful conversation to melt away the stress. It seemed
to start in that vein as a warm shot of Enigma’s immune booster was presented
at the table. Yet, before we could cheers to good health, a host of decisions
had to be made: did we want a juice ($75), cocktail ($130) or wine pairing to
go with the meal? Did the occasion need some extra indulgence because we could
get a spoon of sturgeon caviar ($80) added into the lobster chawanmushi or
have an extra alba truffle dish? Please… just let the table have the lovely
warm ginger citrus shot before inundating us with pesky decisions.
Luckily, once
the pairing and supplementary questions were out of the way, we didn’t need to
decide on anything else, other than what steak knife to use – more on that
later. Instead, we were treated to two delicious snacks: a wonderful corn tartlet
made from an impossibly thin crispy shell holding a buttery sweet corn espuma
studded with popped kernels and other crunchy nutty bits that made me moan;
and a chicken skin sandwich piped with a lovely miso-butter mousse. Yum!
What looks
like a salad comes next, baked leaves of black cabbage, kale and spinach piled
around squash and a smoked foie gras centre. Each bite is rich and oily…
much too oily for my taste.
The lovely
beetroot tuna cannoli were more up my alley, the sheets of ruby beetroot
sandwiching chunks of tuna in a horseradish cream. Or the following kombu poached
potato where chunks of soft humble potato were augmented with creamy uni and
lovely crispy potato frizzles that made me want to lick the dish.
Of course, the
chunks of delicately barely poached through lobster are delicious, but that silky
egg of the chawanmushi was the star, each bite filled with so much
flavour that made me wonder if this was going to be the peak of the meal.
This was
paired with a crispy lobster kromeski, a crispy croquette that was tasty,
but nothing compared to the egg, and a seaweed salad that could really benefit
from being cut into more manageable bites.
In a
gimmicky manner, a box of knives is brought to the table, and we’re asked to
select one for the meat courses to come. It’s a strange interlude, perhaps
meant to create excitement or a sense of participation. While it wasn’t a
distraction I minded, it also didn’t really add much to the meal either and is
likely annoying for the two staff members who needs to occupy themselves with
the task.
Quite
frankly, the following BBQ Iberico pork was so melt-in-your-mouth that I could
have cut the coin of loin with a butter knife. It was a sing from the heavens
type of dish that makes me appreciate the prized Iberico pig. The white peach
salad, XO sauce, and dollops of apple gelee all did an excellent job at
complimenting the pork.
Executive
Chef Quinton Bennett comes out for the last savoury dish and explains that he
uses PEI beef as he loves that the cows are finished with potatoes to give the
meat an extra richness. The steak didn’t disappoint, and the accompanying king
oyster mushrooms were fantastic dusted with bone marrow and the pickled onion
petals such a lovely contrast against the meaty plate. Now that’s a way to
finish.
Dessert
begins with a plate of fallen leaves made from various juices. It’s a beautiful
start, our spoons brimming with crispy textures and sweet flavours that made me
wistful that the meal was nearing the end.
A trio of
petit four are presented with a lovely wafer cake, citrus gelee, and a really
large indulgent chocolate truffle.
All this is to warm us up for the fruit tree, which Chef Quinton cheekily tells us to get our cameras ready to “Instagram the hell out of the dish”. It’s certainly the most photographed dish of the menu, the gleaming red apples just calling out to the picked and eaten.
Like the first bite of the meal, you’re greeted with a fluffy
heavenly cream that’s wrapped around a slightly savoury dill laced salad centre
that really works. A fantastic last bite that takes Enigma FOUR days to
prepare. Boy did I feel guilty for not taking a few more photos.
To end,
tables are given a goody bag for breakfast. My only complaint, and the reason
why Enigma did not score a 9 out of 10, is that these takeaway bags are made per
couple. If you’re dining with friends (like in our case) and do not live
with your dining companion, it makes for an awkward end to the meal.
Enigma, if you’re going to give something away, just make it so that each person gets something to go. Or keep it simple and have everyone leave with just the menu. Either way, the meal was great, why have someone leave on a strange note?
Address: 23 St. Thomas Street
____________________________
Gastro World's Grading System
- Anything under 5 - I really disliked and will never go back
- 6 - decent restaurant but I likely won't return
- 7 - decent restaurant and I will likely return
- 8 - great restaurant that I'd be happy to recommend
- 9 - fantastic restaurant that I would love to visit regularly and highly recommend
- 10 - absolute perfection!
Is That It? I Want More!
Other Gastro World posts similar to this: