Cuisine Salutes the Country’s Finest Restaurants
MEDIA RELEASE 21 FEBRUARY 2006]
Cuisine Salutes the Country’s Finest
Restaurants
Winners of Cuisine Restaurant of the Year
Awards Announced
The winners of the second annual Cuisine Restaurant of the Year Awards, in association with Singapore Airlines, have been announced following an intense judging process of the 25 finalists.
The finalists, selected from well over 100 initial entries, competed in three categories – metropolitan, provincial and winery restaurants – with the supreme winner – Cuisine Restaurant of the Year 2006 - chosen from the winners in each group.
The eight judges travelled the length and breadth of the country late last year, visiting each of the finalists in pairs, sampling the fare, critiquing wine lists, experiencing the service and examining the fine details that can make the difference between a good restaurant and an outstanding one.
Head Judge and Cuisine Food Editor, Lauraine Jacobs, comments, “We ate some excellent food, discovered some seriously good wine lists and noted service that was attentive, intelligent and neither too familiar or intrusive. Our overall winner was, in the words of one judge, “incredibly hard to fault” but the others came very close. In the restaurants that truly impressed us we found tight well-formed menus where every dish is tried, tested and worthy of presentation. There was also an air about the great places that tells you the staff really care, and the owners continually reinvest in and upgrade those restaurants.”
Cuisine congratulates the following winners:
Supreme Winner: Cuisine Restaurant
of the Year 2006
The French Café, Auckland
Best
Metropolitan Restaurant: Cuisine Restaurant of the Year
2006
The French Café, Auckland
Runners Up
The Grove
Restaurant, Auckland
Logan Brown Restaurant & Bar,
Wellington
Best Provincial Restaurant: Cuisine
Restaurant of the Year 2006
The Bach, Taupo
Runner
Up
Herzog Winery & Luxury Restaurant, Marlborough
Best
Winery Restaurant: Cuisine Restaurant of the Year
2006
Amisfield Bistro, Central Otago
Runner Up
Te
Awa Winery & Restaurant, Hawke’s Bay
Winner Best
Metropolitan Restaurant and Supreme Winner
The French
Café
Opaque glass windows, sitting amid the less
fashionable shopfronts of Auckland’s upper Symonds Street,
conceal the promise of the epicurean experience inside The
French Café. This is a restaurant that has dedicated
owners, Creghan who runs front of house and her chef husband
Simon Wright are committed and inspired. Simon’s cooking is
almost impossible to fault - the menu is tight, well
conceived and the judges were partial to the way all entrees
can be ordered as mains. Overall, a clear winner that
Cuisine is proud to recommend.
The French Café, 210
Symonds St, ph: 09-377 1911,
www.thefrenchcafe.co.nz
Winner Best Provincial
Restaurant
The Bach
This small, well-run restaurant
occupies a premier position on Taupo’s lake front with views
across to the mountains of Tongariro National Park and the
judges were delighted with their dining experience. For one
it was “near-perfect” and another commented that “the staff
were confident and fully in control which made for a very
relaxing evening”. Owner Daniel Kemp has developed this
tiny gem from an original Taupo bach (hence the name) into
an inviting dining space where fine wine and food are
presented in an informal setting.
The Bach, 2 Pataka Rd,
Taupo, ph: 07-378 7856, www.thebach.co.nz
Winner Best
Winery Restaurant
Amisfield Bistro
Constructed from
heavy beams in the manner of the early colonial buildings of
central Otago, Amisfield winery melds into the surrounding
terrain, yet is strikingly architectural. The menu, from
chef Daniel Monopoli, strikes the same balance between
elegance and rusticity. There’s a strong Mediterranean
influence, and while a full à la carte selection is
available, most diners go for the fixed-price “trust the
chef” option, and wait for the daily market-driven selection
of small plates to unfold. It’s trust well placed. Casual
but sophisticated, Amisfield is everything a holiday maker
could want from a vineyard dining experience.
Amisfield
Bistro, 10 Lakae Hayes Rd, RD1, Queenstown, ph: 03-442 0556,
www.amisfield.co.nz
Lauraine Jacobs comments, “Some of the achievements of the finalists were outstanding but the three winners displayed elements of surprise, excelled at the basics and provided a memorable experience that left us wanting more. We look forward to regrouping later this year for the third annual Awards and no doubt the hospitality industry will have experienced more changes that contribute to keeping these awards fresh and exciting – not only for the judges but for our readers and diners.”
The latest
issue of Cuisine (# 115) is on sale nationwide from 27
February priced $8.95 from all good newsagents and
supermarkets.
ENDS.
NOTES TO EDITORS
Cuisine
magazine is New Zealand’s leading authority on food, wine
and good living.
The 2006 Cuisine Restaurant of the Year
Awards judging panel is:
- Lauraine Jacobs: head judge,
restaurant critic and food editor of Cuisine, Auckland
-
David Burton: restaurant critic and food writer for Cuisine
and The Dominion Post, Wellington
- Natalia Schamroth:
chef and Cuisine food writer, Auckland
- Pip Duncan:
restaurant and food industry consultant, Auckland
- Karl
du Fresne: restaurant critic and wine writer for Cuisine and
Sunday magazine, Wairarapa
- Jeremy Jones: former
restaurateur and chef, Marlborough
- Charmian Smith:
restaurant critic for Cuisine and editor of the Good Living
section of the Otago Daily Times, Dunedin
- Simon Wilson:
editor of Cuisine,
Auckland
ENDS