Showing posts with label red cabbage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label red cabbage. Show all posts

Friday, 29 December 2017

Large Doner Kebab, The Best Kebab House, Edinburgh








Offering: Large Doner Kebab

Establishment: Best Kebab House, Leith


Date and time:  various times over 2017

Price: £6.50

Seating: 3 high rise chairs




Over the years many working-class areas the length and breadth of the country have become home to certain kind of urbanite, providing of course that area had more than a bookie and a pub. What’s more, these areas are usually not as homogenous as the more exclusive parts of the city; oftentimes, containing a variety of people of different creeds and colours making up this melting pot reflecting in the diversity of choice available for shoppers and kebab conquerors alike. Leith is one such area. Gentrified almost beyond recognition, in Leith Walk it was common place to see drunken, obnoxious good-time boys on the first day of British Summertime proclaiming their own greatness with gleeful gusto and rank self-awareness; the rancid junkie in his casual stupor or indeed a charming character, ‘Buzz' known for his transcendental aerosol gas intake, who would make friends with any of the aforementioned with the ease and similar objective of a Salamander Street operative extracting coin from said inebriate.

Whilst these inhabitants still exist in Leith today, there has been a rapid intake of the English hipster crowd, accelerated though perhaps not sparked by the emergence of student flats for Edinburgh University residents in the Shrub Hill area of Leith Walk. It is now more common to see sheepskin coats, thick rimmed glasses with Apple laptops in hand than Buzz or his sympathisers exiting one of the nearby pubs. Slowly but surely, the historical characters have either died off or moved further towards the Foot of the Walk to nearby Junction Street where pubs are still cheap and stabbings unreported.

One thing that’s not changed over the decades though is that Best Kebab House is still regarded as a Leith institution. We’ve previously spoken about the bad blood that once existed between them and the owners of Original Best Kebab House and sadly, after much controversy, the OBKH lost its operating license due to a number of violations though mainly thanks to operating after 1AM – a practice it was not entitled to. It’s a shame really. The chilli sauce was in a different league – it genuinely lived up to its name whereas the more common establishments serve a glamorised tomato ketchup.

The meat, with its smoother spaced touch gives the impression of being slightly cheaper than the OBKH fare and thus less chewy, it also doesn't taste tremendously well seasoned.


Some years ago, before the conflict, Best Kebab House used to operate from the now defunct Express Best Kebab (or something, God knows what it was called but it lasted around two months and was quite frankly sub-par) and previously OBKH. Back when it was a united entity, it truly was the best kebab in Leith. Utterly unrivaled on this end of Princes' Street, the closest kebab by proximity was Leith Walk Kebab and Pizza House across the road from Pilrig Street, once adorned with Coca Cola signs and unquestionably not worth the effort. At Elm Row, there is a place that's had more names than Buzz has had aerosol cans, it was half decent when it was known as Chillies though for the last ten or so years it's been known as Olympos.

The Best Kebab House of 2005 was the pinnacle of doner achievement in Edinburgh. The sauce was identical to OBKH, the famous potatoes had the most delicious thick coating, one would forget chips existed. Best Kebab House in 2017, whilst not living up to those lofty standards - the product still packs punch. The chilli sauce, though delightfully textured tastes more common, quite sweet and has a runny viscosity, it is still a handy companion to curly doner slithers. The meat, with its smoother spaced touch gives the impression of being slightly cheaper than the OBKH fare and thus less chewy, it also doesn't taste tremendously well seasoned.

With prevalent red lettuce and the timeless salad sauce, the kebab does a lot of things right. The pita bread, despite being unremarkable is sturdy and carries its contents proud. The accompanying tatties are still a draw, with salad sauce and pickled cabbage they are a devourer's delight however they're a shadow of themselves. Previously, the coating of the most delectable fried chicken had been sealed upon a roast potato whereas now, its as if some of the batter from lesser chicken once shared a tray with the potato. The kebabbery is such a clean place and the seating area, whilst small is spotless, I often have no problems parking myself here for 15 or so minutes though at times, it can be busy and you might be tempted by the fried chicken across the road.    

Despite the changes in Leith Walk, despite the change in ownership of Best Kebab House, its new recipes and its ever changing clientele - I can't blame the hipsters for diminishing the quality of the beloved kebab sold here. It's still worth a visit, serves a mean doner and with an original side dish that you simply won't get elsewhere in Edinburgh. Whilst the hipsters might have chased away the beloved Arthur Willaims, who was rumoured to be alienated by the hummus in the chilled aisles of Scotmid, it would seem that Best Kebab House will always remain in some form or another.

Verdict: 7/10

 

Saturday, 17 December 2016

Large Doner Kebab, Topkapi, Edinburgh.



Offering: Large Doner Kebab

Establishment: Topkapi Kebab House, Edinburgh

Date and time: 19th November 2016, 23:15

Price: £7

Seating: Two seats, one table.


Since 1982, Topkapi Kebab House has served predominantly those living in the western area of the city with kebabs, pizzas and burgers. As per usual, this blog will attempt to decipher the intricacies and subtleties if the doner offering. One of the most notable things about Topkapi is that they offer a mixed kebab at the price of a mere £24. At that price, you could get a two course meal and drink at an average priced resteraunt or a holiday not very far, to price a takeaway kebab so highly, one must assume that the quality of this doner will be far superior to your average babbery. 

Noticing that Topkapi only serves one size of kebab, I was alarmed enough to have second thoughts when I noticed the chef grab a polystyrene box that would normally be associated with a smaller sized kebab. I was about to go next door to the former Samsun's and now City Kebab House when I managed to stop myself. I remembered some time ago, around a decade or so when I had a very tasty pizza from Topkapi - it was that promise that made me remain.

I asked the chef to provide all the cuttings, from a nice varied salad to the salad and chilli sauces - he kindly obliged. Whilst my kebab was being prepared, I turned to the left and noticed a poster declaring a Topkapi kebab as the "only kebab you can eat sober" - I found this slightly tasteless but this also added to the weight of expectation that Topkapi had imposed on herself. This kebab had to be high standard.

My first impressions were that the kebab if seriously small (what is this- My First Doner?) - for that price, it should be about a third bigger - yes, it's well packed and it is holding itself together but the fact remains, if Topkapi are charging £7 for a kebab that easily fits in a small container, a container probably more suited to a baked potato then you can't help but feel robbed.

The salad does include a supporter you rarely see, but whenever they do pop up, it's always a pleasure - red cabbage. I feel as though more kebab shops should give this purple companion the time of day - it really does add a tangy, zesty crunch to the whole experience, an ingredient worthy of any doner dish.

The sauces were both quite watery, however I did really like the tangy salad sauce. It's sister sauce, the chilli was very disappointing, it did have a sweetness to it but nothing resembling a burn.

The salad does include a supporter you rarely see, but whenever they do pop up, it's always a pleasure - red cabbage...


I was beginning to feel seriously disappointment in this kebab, it's sauces, the size and the price point were beginning to take it's toll on me, that was until I realised where the money actually went - the meat. The meat in this kebab was undeniably high quality, the kind of meat one would expect would have been a high quality cut with plenty of marbling. Make no mistake, this meat is some of the best quality you can get in a take-away in Edinburgh, but sadly, that's where it ends. The seasoning of the meat is not distinctive at all, it seems like they've treated the meat as a high quality steak whereby the only seasoning needed is salt and pepper and you let the cut do the talking, for me this is mediocre. If the accompanying sauces had more character, only then would such an approach be successful, unfortunately, that was not the case and the whole doner project really falls flat.

One of the more notable aspects of this doner wonder is that it's pita bread base holds together very well. At no point did it look as though it could not be contained and this is shown in the photo above, way better than anyone could put in words.

Whilst I was tucking into this doner, a drunken man covered in blood approached the counter asking about the mixed kebab, he promptly stumbled out after hearing the price. I felt as though the chef just said it was £24 to get rid of an awkward looking customer but upon greater inspection, the prices marked on the lit signs also signaled what was conveyed to the yob. He didn't even stick around after the chef suggested that he could offer a smaller one for £12 - almost double the price of mixed kebab in many other places around town.

Overall, tonight I felt that bleeding drunken man's pain. I realised why he left after hearing the prices. I'm sad to say, for tonight only, he maybe had greater intuition than I did. Or maybe not as he had clearly been on the losing end of a brutal beating.

Verdict: 5/10