Madonna. Sideshow Bob. Javier Mascherano. Mr Benn. Milkwood.
All of them are masters of reinvention.
Having already successfully transformed from one of Cardiff’s best high end restaurants into a cafe serving epic brunches, Milkwood has once
again started opening again on Friday and Saturday nights when they
serve a menu of refined small plates.
It provides an
opportunity for head chef Cornel Uys to flex his creative muscles with a
menu of Asian influenced modern British cooking.
Originally hailing from South
Africa, Cornel joined the Milkwood team in 2021 and previously headed
up the kitchens at 3 AA Rosette country hotels like Ardanaiseig Hotel in
Scotland and Castell Malgwyn in Pembrokeshire.
His menu reads very well. In fact, I'd have gladly ordered everything on it.
A pair of good margaritas (£9) were big on booze, citrus and sweetness. They were just the ticket on a scorching summer’s night.
Out of our two snacks, crisped cubes of earthy Mangalitza black pudding (£6) were the star of the show. Their accompaniments of a golden runny egg
yolk, the
vital sweet acidity of pickled walnut puree, and an onion puree with a lovely caramelised complexity, were all bob
on.
A crumpet (£6) was generously topped with excellent smoked salmon and
white crab meat mayonnaise but it was let down by the slightly stodgy
carb component.
Our solitary vegetable dish of the meal was nicely charred little gem
(£6) that was layered with bags of flavour - a creamy coconut dressing,
delicately acidic confit lime with no mouth puckering qualities, and
lightly pickled cucumber.
A precisely cooked fillet of flaky miso cod (£13) demonstrated why it’s
such a good flavour combination. The deeply savoury and slightly sweet
piece of fish was elevated by a silky and buttery brocoli puree, earthy
shiitake mushrooms, a savoury dashi and salty
pearls of lumpfish roe.
A few elements began to repeat themselves in different dishes as the
meal progressed but it’s hard to grumble really when they were all so
tasty. This time, a long-cooked piece of beef short rib (£12) and a deep
flavoured beef dashi were joined by more of that
excellent onion puree, shiitake mushrooms, lumpfish roe and
crispy onion rings.
A sticky caramelised
chicken thigh skewer (£9) teased apart into pieces easily and was lovely
stuffed into a soft flatbread with a light, crisp, and gingery kimchi
and a spring onion mayonnaise with the lightest
whiff of alium.
Having regretted not ordering the char sui pork belly (£9) straight out the gate, I
ordered a portion as a pre-dessert and I was very glad I did. It was the
star of the meal.
The gloriously tender char-licked slices of sweet and
savoury barbecue pork were exceptionally well-rendered
of fat, making the wobbly stuff equally as enjoyable as the meat
itself. More of that caramelised onion puree and a fresh cucumber and fennel slaw
with a good thrum of chilli were very good garnishes.
Dessert was almost an unmitigated success - an aerated mango mousse (£6)
with bags of flavour and a sweet yet refreshing pineapple and mint
compote were both great but a warm white chocolate custard was a little
overset and eggy rather than silky and chocolatey.
With their delicious, well-priced and ambitious small plates and lovely
service, we had a really good meal at Milkwood. Of course, it was
inevitable their latest reinvention would be another success.
The details:
Address - Milkwood, 83 Pontcanna Street, Pontcanna Cardiff CF11 9HS
Web -
www.milkwoodcardiff.comTelephone - 02920 232226