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The Cinnamon Club
The Cinnamon Club was the brain-child of Iqbal Wahhab.
Hmmm, that name rings a bell. Yes, my dear musing reader, you
are right, Iqbal is the very chap who leapt to celebrity after
famously describing Indian waiters in the UK as miserable gits. I am
sure he won just as many supporters as he did critics. Indian
restaurants in general did not have a good reputation
for service. There were notable exceptions but
on the whole your welcome at the local curry house would range from
muted to nonexistent.

The Old Westminster Library was first opened to the public
in 1893 and was carefully converted into The Cinnamon Club in 2001. It should have opened in 2000
and the reasons why it didn’t are a catalogue of building and financial
horror. Money trickles too slowly, builders down tools, builders
find other work, money arrives, builders are otherwise
occupied, and bits of building fall off. A lesser man than entrepreneur
Iqbal Wahhab would have thrown in the towel.
The very culinary fabric of the new Cinnamon Club was a
catastrophe. The stoves, and they are always handy in a restaurant
kitchen, arrived late and when they were installed the kitchen was
still minus a couple of vital parts: gas and electricity. Enter one
youthful and talented chef from India, Vivek Singh who saved the day by
suggesting that the opening cocktail party could be salvaged if the
brand new tandoors could be commissioned.
That first day was a baptism of fire in
every sense. Vivek surmounted all odds (including a
truly dumb waiter) to present the first of the Cinnamon Club’s many
triumphs. That night saw the launch of what was considered by many to
be the first “cool” Indian restaurant in London. It has undoubtedly
helped to raise the bar on expectations, and on quality of food and
service in Indian restaurants.

The Cinnamon Club won the Restaurant of the Year Award at
the World Food Awards last November and became a member of Cool (that
word again) Brands 2009/10. A collection of everything popular and
trendy, Cool Brands has been listing the most fashionable brands of the
year since 2001.
Perhaps cool isn’t the word that I would attach to The Cinnamon Club.
That smacks of shifting and fickle tastes which often have nothing to
do with quality. A step across the threshold of this restaurant will
have you convinced that there must be other more fitting superlatives
to use. Something appropriately Victorian and solid. ‘Regal’ works
well but it does hint at stuffy, and The Cinnamon Club is far from
that. Perhaps a melange of ‘stunning’ and ‘welcoming’ would fit the
bill.
A soupçon of marble, the shimmer of leaded glass,
tan leather and suede, high-backed banquette and dark
wood contrive to offer the guest a haven from the rigours of
Westminster. Those clients number amongst them the powerful and the
posers, the celebrated and the celebrating, and anyone who wants a
unique and thoroughly engaging culinary experience. Think fine French
dining with an Indian vibrancy. An unbeatable marriage when those two
elements are thoughtfully combined.
The restaurant is famed for its game. It’s unlikely that you would have
come across much of that in your standard, or even
high-end Indian eatery, but Executive Chef Vivek Singh says that
“Offering game on the menu gives us a point of difference and
immediately sets us apart from other kitchens, and so we started using
it on our menus. But
the real reason that I like to experiment so much with game in our
restaurants is that in India, despite our rich heritage and tradition
of cooking with game, we’ve lost all those recipes because of a
complete ban on any type of hunting. It’s been like this since 1947.”
His emphasis on fresh and seasonal ingredients allows for a frequently
changing bill of fare. Every visit will offer you new delights prepared
by Vivek and Head Chef Hari Nagaraj.
The venison at the Cinnamon Club is the best you will find in any
restaurant of any ethnic persuasion. The meat is tender and the spices
are subtle and aromatic. Roast saddle of ‘Oisin’ red deer with pickling
spice and Bengali Beetroot Crush could be on the menu and if it is I’d
advise you to take advantage.
Rabbit is an often overlooked meat and it’s a pity. It’s a white,
free-range meat with a mild but distinctive flavour. Hunter’s Style
Rabbit Tikka with dill and mustard and hot garlic chutney could entice
you to try bunny for the first time. You won’t be disappointed. Crisp
Zucchini (Courgette) Flowers with spiced vegetables and slow-cooked
marrow is meltingly light and delicious and the choice of those who
would rather not eat meat.
Fish and seafood are here in abundance. Norwegian King Crab and
tamarind salad, Char-grilled Monkfish, Char-grilled Halibut with green
pea and potato crush and yoghurt ‘Kadhi’, and Tandoori King Prawns with
coconut malai curry might find their way to your dinner-plate.
The dessert list is surprisingly long. Puds are not a strong suit at
most Indian restaurants and that’s a shame. Indian home cooks prepare
wonderfully sweet and perfumed dishes. Buffalo milk ‘Kulfi ’ with green
cardamom and pistachio is a classic but the Green Apple Sorbet is
remarkable. There are lots to choose from so you might want to save
some space and enjoy the Tasting Plate of assorted desserts. It’s a
selection for two people and it’s one to linger over.
The Cinnamon Club can boast 27 pages of wines and cocktails. It’s
another indication of its pedigree. No, not just the number of wines
listed but the quality of the wines. The sommelier here is worth his
weight in gold and that thought led me seamlessly to order a cocktail
called Fool's Gold, described as complex and clean: cardamom, Gabriel
Boudier saffron gin and a sprinkle of edible gold leaf. This should be
the restaurant’s signature cocktail, offering the glitz of a big
international city combined with a waft of exotic spice. Perhaps that’s
the best analogy of the restaurant itself: a harmonious mix of the best
of East and West.
This restaurant has a loyal following of discerning regulars. It has
received plaudits and gongs and it would seem impossible to find fault.
I am not an expert on Indian food so I can’t suggest that a dish has
its origins in a particular far-flung region of the subcontinent. I
can’t compare the charms of a recipe here to those of my grandmother’s
food in Agra, but I can state that the food here is amongst the best
that you’ll find in either Asia or Europe. Your visit is sure to be
memorable. Mine was.
The Cinnamon Club has its own cinema. It’s free and seats are available
on a first-come first-served basis. Call for ‘forthcoming attractions’.
Opening Times
Breakfast weekdays 7.30am - 9.30am
Lunch Mon - Sat 12.00pm - 2.45pm
Dinner Mon - Sat 6.00pm - 10.45pm
Library Bar weekdays 11.00am - 11.45pm
Cinnamon Club Bar Mon - Sat 6.00pm -11.45pm
The Cinnamon Club
The Old Westminster Library,
30-32 Great Smith Street,
London SW1P 3BU
Phone: 020 7222 2555
Email: info@cinnamonclub.com
Visit Cinnamon Club here
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