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Review: NOSTRESS Restaurant


Review: NOSTRESS Restaurant

Naomi Boxall dines at the Old Town French/Asian fusion restaurant

Written by Naomi Boxall
for Expats.cz

NOSTRESS dishes up fusion food: by definition a mixture of French and Asian influences. There are menus depending on the time (daytime or evenings) and they have a business menu that changes weekly. Despite an initial kerfuffle over reserved tables outside the restaurant (we wanted to view the people´s reaction to the giant shoe in the roundabout at V Kolkovně, Dušní, Vězeňska and Široká - an exhibit from this year´s Sculpture Grande open-air art fest), and then the disappointment of not being able to have our first choice of wine (a Bordeaux Semillon), we settled with a Côtes de Provence Semillon and ordered starters from the well attired, if a little snooty, waiter.

Pan seared foie-gras with caramelised apples may not have been many peoples´ first choice, due to animal rights reasons, but I was desperate for liver, and this certainly satisfied the craving. The foie-gras was the perfect consistency: light and smooth yet gooey. It was warmed all the way through - not cold on the inside as occasionally served - and four sumptuous pieces lay supine over an apple rosti, over which was drizzled a caramel reduction sprinkled with crisp bits of apple. There was enough there to dilute one glass of wine and for the others to try, without me feeling as though I´d lost out on a few bites. While my starter was being sampled, I tasted the dim sum from a friend´s two-tiered steamer. The dumplings were a little fat for my liking (I prefer mine with less pastry) but the prawns were plump and juicy, and there was a hint of basil underlining the chilli heat of the green curry sauce. The surimi dumplings were unremarkable and the chicken a little dry for my taste, but perhaps that was intentional to mop up the semi-spicy red curry sauce?  Another companion took the vegetable samosas which were gently spiced, but very well teamed with a tamarind dipping sauce.

Expats.cz Rating
Atmosphere
Food
Service
Overall
From our plate
290 CZK Dim Sum
480 CZK Foie gras
440 CZK Grilled fillet of halibut
395 CZK Lamb shank
150 CZK Warm pear croustillant with almond cream
150 CZK

Pancakes

30 CZK Vanilla ice cream
40 CZK Mattoni
45 CZK

Espresso

The inclement weather forced a move to the inside of the restaurant, and we chose the smaller non-smoking section to the right of the bar, so we could still people-watch to a certain extent. I chose the halibut as a main dish. The largest of the flatfish, it´s very easy to overpower its delicate sweet flesh with strong seasonings: I wanted to see whether the saffron sauce was an ingenious complement - or not. I was in luck. Served on a bed of greens (beans, broccoli, haricot vert) the fish delivered exactly what I needed (a semblance of a healthy option). The bright yellow sauce was rich and salty, but not overbearing, adding the saffron ‘sea air´ fragrance to the sweet, fresh fish - I gave it a 9 and didn´t want to share.  My companions were not so lucky: the salmon - supposedly accompanied by a ginger and lime sauce, was neither gingery nor limey. It was well cooked, and the potatoes it came with were also good, but ‘could have been better´. Lamb shank was the meat used in the lamb curry: a good cut of the beast, but one that´s apparently hard to flavour, as this shank tasted only of shank, and not at all of curry - a disappointment. The tuna tartare appears fabulous on the plate, four mounds of minced tuna held together with shallots amongst other vegetables and drizzled liberally with salsa verde, but it too could have used a little more lime - not as much as to turn it into cerviche - but at little zing wouldn´t have gone amiss.

One of my companions couldn´t see past the crčme brulee, but claimed it mediocre. I trust him, he´s French. The strawberry mille feuilles with raspberry sauce was enjoyed, but would be more aptly named trois feuilles; it lacked the finesse expected from this sophisticated dessert. The pancakes with vanilla ice cream and brown sugar were traditional: neither special, nor bad. A friend scored the winner this course: the warm pear croustillant with almond cream: deliciously sweet, he fended his plate from our scavenging forks. The presentation and portion size of all of the desserts was superb, and they did bring my coffee with my dessert, rather than have me wait until my sweet was finished for the bitter aftershock (I prefer the conflict of tastes rather than waiting).

Looking around me, only vaguely uncomfortable from overeating, the colour of the walls reminded me of sun-dried fertile soil - therefore totally at odds with the faux greenery adorning both the tables and the corners of the rooms. The art on the wall is well lit, both attracting and keeping your eye; I believe a lot of it is for sale. In the brightly coloured and clean bathroom, the water at the sink pours from a waterfall spout onto your hands, provided you get your hands positioned in front of the sensor first.  It´s a novelty, but I quite like novelties in the ‘ladies´.

NOSTRESS really was all that: no stress. It´s easy dining in pleasant environs served by highly competent staff. I can be certain that the food served will meet my tastebuds various and slightly impetuous desires provided I choose my dishes wisely.  It´s a great place to meet people, being in the centre of town, merely a stone´s throw from bars for ‘afterwards´, so it will continue to be a place I frequent.

NOSTRESS RESTAURANT
www.nostress.cz
Dušní 10, Prague 1
+420 222 317 007


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User comments

Rachel (Guest)Published: 08:05:52 07.08.2007
Brewsta, I believe you're cutting Ms. Boxall entirely too much slack. After reading this review I'll clearly seek my restaurant advice elsewhere and go back to using Expats.cz strictly for the classifieds. Cheers Brewsta and seriously, keep up the critique!
Brewsta (Guest)Published: 10:34:31 06.08.2007
Thank you, Julie. Much appreciated. I do have a comment on all the comments. I certainly have been hard on other restaurant reviewers around town, so I won't say its wrong to be tough on them. Those are people who clearly present themselves as experts and experienced reviewers. I mock and joke, but in the end, I try to point out the specific issues. My aim is constructive criticism. Kelly did provide a little of that, but got too overheated. I think it is possible to criticize without getting personal and characterizing someone as being like a "snob" or even "an American." (I don't think she is either one). Some of the issues mentioned are also the responsibility of an editor. This isn't a one-person operation. Like a blog. But like many blogs, it is a first-person account of a dinner with a group of friends or a date. Yeah, the "definition" of fusion jumped out at me. I make plenty of mistakes (though I can correct/update the blog in seconds when someone kindly points it out). But I also learned a few things here. Who knew halibut was the largest of the flat fish? I think Ms. Boxall is relatively new at this. So, I think people should cut her a little slack. She's not getting a big salary and expensive account for writing these. Maybe a free dinner. Why not help her along? If readers don't like her work after a few more articles, then they can ask for their Expats.cz subscription money back.
Julie (Guest)Published: 12:27:20 31.07.2007
As someone who wrote the bulk of the reviews on this site 2 years ago and chose to pass up the job when it was recently offered, I think I will reconsider after reading this review. You aren't writing for Gourmet, it's a website for EVERYONE! If you want some tips on how to write reviews, look at "Czech Please" Brewster's food blog, which is informative and funny and not snobby at all. Sorry if some of us have been hard on you.. but really --- read some other reviews first and see what the tone is... better luck next time!
Kelly (Guest)Published: 05:11:36 26.07.2007
Dear Naomi, 1--did you even bother to edit your own writing? I quote exactly your writing: "but at little zing wouldn´t have gone amiss." 2--If you are a professional reviewer, please include info for people who eat vegetarian meals. You are entitled to eat all the meat you want, but I bet some 1/4 of all Expat readers are vegetarians or vegans, or at least people who eat such meals. Can you please offer info for us? 3--Again I quote..."The tuna tartare appears fabulous on the plate, four mounds of minced tuna held together with shallots amongst other vegetables and drizzled liberally with salsa verde, but it too could have used a little more lime" Are you serious?!?!? I kept thinking of Eric Idle deadpanning about Australian table wines. Alas, I believe you were not making a joke, but rather you were dead serious about what you wrote. I got news for you, you came across as a complete snob... an American middle class woman desperatley trying to act like an Aristocrat. You failed
Brian (Guest)Published: 10:47:19 25.07.2007
Thankfully, Nostress is a lot less pretentious than your review.
Catherine (Guest)Published: 03:39:41 25.07.2007
Dear Naomi, fusion food is not "by definition a mixture of French and Asian influences". And is this seriously the first time you have experienced the wonders of a no-touch faucet? Wow.
 

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