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Roast for Breakfast
We have been told, and I believe, that breakfast is the
most important meal of the day. We need to have fuel to catapult
ourselves onto the unsuspecting world. We need to be energised and
replete with foods that hopefully someone else has prepared. Breakfast
away from home offers many advantages.
Britain was for many years dismissed as a culinary wasteland. A French
friend even had the temerity to suggest that the reason we in the UK
adopt the foods of other nations so readily is that we have no culinary
heritage of our own. I begged to differ in strident fashion and the
Gallic guy gets out of plaster on Bastille day. It’s more that we have
rather overlooked our fine dishes and have always been overshadowed by
our cousins across the Channel, who have had the knack of
self-promotion. We should follow their example.
It’s breakfast that seems to catch the imagination of visitors to these
shores. They suppose that we Brits eat a fried breakfast every day.
Many of us wish we could, but the constraints of time, finances and
waistline prevent a big fry-up from being anything other than a
too-infrequent treat.
Roast in Borough Market offers very decent breakfasts. Yes, you will
assume, dear reader, that the sausages will be superb and that the
bacon will be memorable. Right on both counts. Roast has a great
reputation for all things meaty. An evening meal here should not be
passed up. But Roast has vegetables as well.
The Full Monty, Traditional English, and Big Fry-up are all the same
thing. Substantial, delicious, moreish, tempting and meat-laden
breakfasts. We wax lyrical about them because they are, from time to
time, just what we crave. But how’s about vegetarians? Menus will offer
vegetarian specials and non-meat options but they are often boring and
almost always too worthy – fiddle-head fern cutlet and yak’s milk
smoothie.
I am not a vegetarian, as I am by nature greedy. I love food in all its
myriad guises so if for whatever reason I felt unable to eat meat, I
would want to have the option of still enjoying the best food. So what
about breakfast? Roast has a menu that embraces vegetarians, holds them
close, says “There, there, you’re safe now” and presents them with a
grown-up brekkie sans meat.
Try the Veggie Borough which includes a Veggie Borough banger, grilled
tomatoes, field mushrooms, tattie scone,
wholemeal toast and your choice of eggs. Now, that’s what I call a real
breakfast that just happens not to include meat. Those veggie bangers
are substantial sausages made of vegetables and grains. The texture is
hearty and firm, and they’re full of herby flavour.
If your mind is set on somewhat lighter fare then you could do worse
than a 3-egg omelette. These are fluffy and flecked with the fresh
green of chives. Neal’s Yard Cheddar cheese, field mushrooms and herbs,
or Smoked trout are your veggie options. A side order of bubble ‘n’
squeak might be tempting but remember it’s fried in beef dripping. For
my overseas readers I should explain that this confection is a
traditional Monday dish made from left-over potatoes and greens from
the Sunday lunch. Patties of these crushed vegetables are seasoned and
then fried till slightly browned. Delightfully comforting and rustic.
There are plenty of lighter items for vegetarians to graze upon.
Toasted cottage loaf with a selection of English
preserves, fresh fruit salad, muesli with Earl Grey prunes and yoghurt
for the more health-conscious. Also Scott’s porridge oats with a jug of
cream for the colder mornings. Two boiled eggs with Marmite soldiers
for those with a taste for the finer things in life. Gypsy toast with
stewed cranberries, bananas, pistachios and soured cream. Kippers with
lemon and butter. Smoked trout with scrambled eggs.
The Full Borough is the meal of choice for the carnivore of the
species. High-quality ingredients to remind us of why the most
celebrated of British meals is still so popular. Ramsay smoked streaky
bacon, Cumberland sausages, fried bread, Ramsay of Carluke black
pudding, grilled tomatoes, field mushrooms, bubble ‘n’ squeak and your
choice of egg, poached, fried or scrambled.
Roast has an appealing early-morning ambiance. Its prices are
reasonable for such an establishment. The ingredients are well-chosen
and the finest of their type, from the jams and preserves to the
sausages and bacon. Breakfast isn’t a meal to be rushed. This is a
departure from your usual routine. Order some Roast special-blend
English breakfast tea instead of your mug of instant coffee. Indulge in
a generous cooked breakfast prepared by chefs who are more awake than
you are. Relax and read the morning papers rather than scraping the
toast over the kitchen sink. In other words, enjoy!
Breakfast Menu
Monday - Friday 7.00am - 11:00am
Saturday 8.00am - 11:30am
Roast, The Floral Hall, Stoney Street, London SE1 1TL.
Reservations and Enquiries: 0845 034 7300
Fax: 0845 034 7301
Email: feedback@roast-restaurant.com
Visit Roast here
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