Röski Liverpool

Masterchef the Professionals winner Anton Piotrowski opened Röski on Liverpool’s Rodney Street almost two years ago and after lunch there recently I can’t understand why it has taken so long to eat there. The dining room isn’t large and on a Saturday lunch time it was around half full. They have created a wonderful relaxed feel here, just the sort of place where you look forward to sitting down to a nice long lunch and a glass or two.

At weekends only the tasting menu is available at a cost of £75. There is the option to add additional courses, aged Wagyu fillet (£20), cheeses (£10) and Röski’s gone carrots (£10). We opted for the basic menu and were not disappointed as portions size is quite generous and so didn’t feel we needed the additional courses. Wine pairing is also available at £75. The wine list has good variety and price points.

The first offering is a take on the classic Liverpool ‘Chippy Tea’. The 100 day aged Beef Nugget with Chip Shop Sauce was superb, the curry sauce had depth, richness and complexity.

I have long been a fan of the sourdough bread from the Baltic Bakehouse in the nearby Baltic Triangle and was pleased to see it on the menu here served along with Bovril Butter. The butter had just the right amount of Bovril to give a gentle, comforting, savoury flavour without overpowering. The bread was so good we had seconds.

Roasted Orkney Scallop
Pea, Smoked Eel and Chorizo Jam
Turbot,Southport Brown Shrimp, Tartare Hollandaise
Red Cabbage Bolognese
Rabbit, Cos, Apple, Christian Drouin Cider Gravy
Toffee, Girly Grey Ice Cream
Peanut Butter Parfait, Brioche Ice Cream

The cooking was faultless with many highlights on the menu. The Red Cabbage Bolognese could easily be mistaken for the real thing, the flavour was intense and just as you would expect it to be. The roasted Scallop was also delightful with perfectly cooked Scallop and sweet, toasted sweetcorn.

With cooking this good I daresay it won’t be long before I go back again. It may well be the best cooking in the city.

5 Great Places for Coffee in Liverpool.

The demand for coffee currently has no bounds and for many it is an essential part of their day. While growth of coffee in the UK may have begun with the large commercial operations there is now an explosion of small independent retailers as customers have become increasingly discerning in their daily fix of caffeine. Liverpool is no different to other major cities, boasting a fine range of options for coffee drinkers. This in no way attempts to be a definitive list but is simply the places I particularly like.

Moose Coffee.

American influenced and so much more than a coffee shop. It has been serving coffee and fantastic food for over ten years now and is something of an institution. Always busy and it is easy to see why. There are so many reasons to visit and the coffee is always good.

Moose Coffee. 6 Dale Street.

Open Monday – Sunday 8am-5pm.

Root

This may well currently be my favourite place. The atmosphere here is always relaxed and is a great place to stop for a while and relax. You could be excused from thinking you had walked into an advert for Apple such can be the number of customers hard at work tapping away on their laptops. This is a place of great charm and you will want to return time after time and the coffee is so good. It has an intriguingly shaped communal table as well as plenty of regular seating. You can also have your coffee outside if the weather is good.

Root Coffee. 52 Hanover Street.

Open Monday – Saturday 8.30am-6.30pm, Sunday 9am-6pm.

Bold Street Coffee

Back in business again after a period of closure in 2018 the only problem is it’s so busy no matter what time of day you choose to visit. Thats no bad thing of course because it tells you everything you need to know, the coffee is really good here. Located at the very top of Bold Street near the bombed out church it makes an excellent stop off for those en route up towards the cathedrals and The Philharmonic. Don’t be put off, its well worth the wait.

Bold Street Coffee. 89 Bold Street

Open Monday-Wednesday 7.30am-6pm, Thursday-Friday 7.30am- 10pm, Saturday 8am-10pm and Sunday 9.30am-10pm.

92 Degrees

92 degrees can lay claim to being the first combined roasters and coffee shop, opening in 2015. A favourite haunt of students from nearby Liverpool University it is always a great place to visit and they never seem to serve a bad cup of coffee. Despite its popularity you can always find somewhere to sit and its a great place to relax after a few hours seeing the sights in the Georgian Quarter of the city.

92 Degrees. 24 Hardman Street.

Open. Monday- Friday 7.45am- 7pm, Saturday 9.30am-7pm and Sunday 10am-6pm.

Filter & Fox

Another great location that is so much more than a place for a great cup of coffee as they also have an excellent selection of cocktails and wines.. Indeed their website claims that they have cured almost as many hangovers as they’ve caused!! Filter & Fox offers a welcome break from the crowds of shoppers on nearby Bold Street, it is often an oasis of calm and great place to while away the time while thinking what to do next on a visit to the city.

Filter & Fox. 27 Duke Street

Open Monday- Sunday 8am-8pm.

Secret Liverpool Part 2

In Part 1 I detailed some of the more unusual and less well known sights in the centre of the city around the original seven streets. In this post we venture a little further afield but still in and around the city centre and very walkable from place to place.

Lime Street Station. Many visitors to the city arrive at its main railway station but few are aware of art to be found on the station steps and glass panels. “Liverpool to Liverpool – Chronicles of an Aimless Journey” by Simon Faithfull was commissioned as part of the Liverpool Biennial in 2010 and consists of 181 drawings with have been etched into the paving and glass panels. They are not easy to see from a distance but it is well worth a wander to see how many you can spot.

A short walk along Lime Street brings you to the old Lewis’s Department Store. Although it closed for business in 2007 locals still arrange to meet there. Above the main entrance on Ranleagh Street is a statue and three relief panels by the renowned sculptor Jacob Epstein. Its official title is Liverpool Resurgent and represents the rebuilding of the city following the damage sustained in the second world war. The statue of a naked man on the prow of a ship is known locally as Dickie Lewis and has become a celebrated landmark. It has been a popular meeting place for courting couples since it was installed in 1956.

From Lewis’s head up Mount Pleasant unto you reach Rodney Street and the old Scottish Presbyterian Church of Saint Andrew. In the adjacent churchyard is the Tomb of William MacKenzie. Constructed in the shape of a pyramid it is perhaps the most unusual tomb in the city. Local folklore suggests that William, who died in 1851, was a keen gambler and left instructions that he was to be entombed above ground sitting at a card table. Sadly this seems very unlikely as the tomb itself wasn’t constructed until 17 years after he was buried. It does however make for a nice story.

Close by is Oldham Place where the walls are covered in brightly painted murals. If you have an interest in street art it is well worth a visit. Do also take in the yard at the bottom of the street.

Heading back down into the Liverpool One shopping area there is an American Eagle on the former US Consulate building in Paradise Street. The consulate opened in 1790 when Liverpool was a major trading port for ships from the United States. The eagle was easily recognised by American sailors, many of whom could not read or write. As trade declined following the second world war the consulate closed but the eagle remained. Originally carved from pine it required frequent maintenance and renovation so was eventually removed, restored and put on display in the Museum of Liverpool. The bird on Paradise Street today is a fibreglass replica but is no less striking.

Old Dock. The Old Dock was the first wet dock in Liverpool built in the early part of the eighteenth century by Thomas Steers. As Liverpool grew as a port the dock became too small and was eventually closed in 1826. The site was filled in and redeveloped and finally ended up as a multi storey car park which was finally demolished as part of the Liverpool One development in 2001. The dock was unearthed and a viewing window created which is located just outside the John Lewis department store.

Lusitania Propeller. The Lusitania was a passenger liner owned by Cunard which regularly sailed between Liverpool and New York. She was sunk by a torpedo from German U-boat in May 1915 just off the southern coast of Ireland as she was returning to Liverpool. The propellor on display in the Royal Albert Dock was salvaged from the wreck in 1982 and is one of four that were on the ship.