|
110
Restaurant at Circus Casino Manchester - members'
reviews |
"I was very impressed with 110 Restaurant. The food was phenominal, absolutely gorgeous and well worth the money." - joanne griffin, manchester ~ NEW MEMBER (14/5/2011 ~ visited on a Fri evening) |
|
"My partner and I had the 3 courses for £20 offer which was an excellent price, not just for three courses on a Saturday night, but also for the quality of the food. For what we had, you would expect to pay more and I was amazed at the value of money. I had King Scallops for starter and they can cost quite alot on the fish market. For my main course,
I requested my steak to be cooked medium/rare and it was cooked to perfection. The chunky chips that came with it were lovely and wholesome.
The dessert was a trio of puds, displayed lovely on the plate. The service was fantastic and we always had a waiter nearby if we needed them, but they weren't in our faces every few minutes like they are in some restaurants.
As it was my birthday, they put us in the small room for special occasions although I would've preferred to have been in the main dining room so we could've seen the pianist play and watch the chefs in the kitchen. In a way, we felt like we were missing out on the fun and ambience of the larger dining area. It was a really lovely fine dining experience and I can't wait to visit again. I have already recommended it to my friends, colleagues and family." -
danielle cetiner, manchester ~ NEW MEMBER (11/5/2011 ~ visited on a Sat evening) |
|
"After
wandering by, I've noticed the Jean Christophe
Novelli inspired menus being advertised in the
window, but have never paid a visit until now.
A casino isn't usually the kind of place that
we would consider specifically visiting for a
meal, but we jumped at the chance to see why Restaurant
110 sits proudly near the top of Manchester's
most highly rated restaurants (Feb 2009).
The restaurant itself is situated at the back
of the casino area, and the two are separated
by a curtain, so you don't ever really feel
as if you're in a restaurant unless looking away
from the casino area. The décor is fine,
but has a slightly cheesy feel about it due to
the casino views, its quite noisy and the booths
are very large due to the inclusion of video screens,
in case you fancy a flutter whilst at the table.
It was fine, but never really felt like a proper
restaurant.
Service was very friendly and semi formal, and
our orders were taken promptly. The wine arrived
very soon after, and was a perfectly acceptable,
zesty Chablis, which paired well with the majority
of our courses. We didn't see the option of wine
per glass, so I'm assuming that its not available?
The wine list on the whole was quite good though,
with plenty of good value on there too.
We waited a fair while for our appetiser of bread,
balsamic and olives to arrive, and eventually
had to ask a waiter about it. They soon arrived,
but unfortunately, the olives were bland, the
balsamic slightly too harsh, and the bread was
cold in the middle and semi burned on the outside,
I assume as they were cooked too quickly after
being forgotten? Consequently, our starters arrived
just after we started the appetiser. We were already
starting to suspect that the 'JC Novelli influenced
menu' marketing, was simply that.
I opted for the Thai crab cakes, which were fine
and well cooked, although the chilli mango accompaniment,
and lack of any obvious lemongrass, fish sauce,
galangal, or anything typically Thai, made them
feel more Indian. My other half's Carbonara was
huge, and would have made a decent main course.
Despite being billed as Carbonara, it was more
like a ham and mushroom Penne, with not too much
flavour, but at the same time, not offensive either.
Overall, very disappointing considering the rave
reviews that this place has, along with its claims
of being 'Fine Dining', which are unfortunately,
so prevalent in Manchester's dining scene these
days. During our starters, we were asked 3 times,
by 3 separate waiters if everything was OK, which,
as friendly as it was, gave a very disorganised
feel to the service, especially after the forgotten
appetiser.
We waited around 20 minutes for our mains, which
I have to say, when arrived, were actually well
worth it. My Crispy Duck on a bed of greens was
well cooked, extremely tasty, and a few Chinese
restaurants could learn a lot from the chef in
this instance. The only gripe was the unusual
sweet chilli-esque dressing, which didn't really
fit, and I feel would have been a better match
as Hoi Sin or Plum? My better half's Haddock on
White Bean Mash, was superb. Lovely fish, well
cooked, on a brilliant tasting bean puree. I'm
meat obsessed, but was hoping that the Mrs wouldn't
finish it, but she did unfortunately for me. The
side of mixed veg was unremarkable, and the courgette
was overcooked to a mush. I've got to say though,
a side order wasn't really necessary as portion
sizes on the mains were huge!
For desserts, we settled on Toffee Banana Fritters,
which were OK, although a tad greasy, and the
cheese board, which was a very disappointing,
yet inoffensive mix of decent smoked cheddar,
bog standard brie, and la roule. There was no
sign of the blue cheese that the waiter mentioned
before ordering, but nevermind. By this point
we had already lowered our guard, and realised
that this was nowhere near a fine dining establishment,
so our critical minds had relaxed, and we were
just enjoying the night out. The fact that the
wine had been drank helped too, no doubt!
To sum up, this is indeed a very good eatery for
one based in a casino, and the Hi
Life card makes it great value, as is always
the case wherever you use it. However, once again,
as is becoming increasingly too common in our
great city, this is nowhere near fine dining,
and I really don't understand why so many places
try give themselves this title. £40 a head
and a man dressed in chef whites doing the cooking,
doesn't constitute this title. Restaurant 110
is fine, as in acceptable, OK, decent, in almost
every aspect. Still, our preference when paying
around £80 for a meal and decent bottle of
wine, is to eat in a real fine dining restaurant,
and I don't see us returning unless it's for a
flutter. Even then, without the Hi
Life card, there really are handfuls of better,
and 'finer', places to eat in town, for pretty
much the same money.
Food 6/10 - Service 6/10 - Ambience 5/10 - Overall
6/10"
-
Chris Handley, Salford ~ TRUSTED REVIEWER (2/2/09
- visited on a saturday evening)
|
|
|
|
| |