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Service ✪✪✪✪
20 Grange Road
Darlington
County Durham
DL1 5NG
01325 483 787
www.trufflerestaurant.co.uk
There is something wonderfully defiant and old-fashioned about a restaurant with a proper cheeseboard.
To me, it shows that the place really cares for its produce (maintaining a good cheese board is both a science and a labour of love); it forces front of house staff to really swat up on the subject (you can’t just invent the names on the board – well, you could, but one day you’ll be caught out by a real fromage-fancier); above all, it offers customers like me a serious treat at the end of the meal, a journey of adventure with unexpected flavour bombs enroute.
As an unreformed cheese addict who finds himself rather underserved in our region, this board was the first thing I spotted as we sat down to dinner at Truffle in Darlington. I took it as a very good sign indeed.
I was mostly right.
This was a meal of much charm, with several attractive plates bringing together ingredients that really enjoyed each other’s company. More of which in a moment. But first: the cheese. Oh, the cheese! ![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi843TyR42VI-3RIaieLdjXZUZNadLix-QI0Byy7PNMLz_GI8g6co3gkjiaMkhjDcshatD9xQ98QEnaT6jl9_tFueq5AZglPWisbQM2fPLYZ9m6p_j6gUc3q_ftG9cipprZuIv8zqtdpMc/s320/Cheese%252C+plated.jpg)
Our waiter cut us hunks of all these and more, plated up with fresh grapes, superb crackers and a fine chutney. He left the jar of truffle honey on the table, an act of generosity we both greedily abused. A cheese course like this is all too rare, but a pleasure for which I am willing to forgive flaws elsewhere. Chapeau!
I’m afraid there were some to forgive. My dessert, a pistachio sponge with an ice cream of the same, certainly looked the part but was rather dry and lacking in flavour.
Earlier, a piece of halibut was rather tragically overcooked to the texture of tinned tuna. I had ordered it to find out how its crust of Beaufort, a powerful alpine cheese of the Savoie region, would work. I have a feeling this may be Phil Howard ‘s recipe from The Square, complete with leeks and artichoke pureé. Perhaps in his Michelin-starred hands this combination would make sense; here it really didn’t.
This, however, was the only instance of ingredient-clash. Earlier, my starter of rabbit ballotine featured meat that was cooked so delicately as to have me wondering for a moment whether it had been cooked at all. It came with a silken purée of Jerusalem artichoke and was stuffed with very nifty mushroom duxelles, lifted with some flash-pickled wafers of raw beets and mandolined raw asparagus. A dish of technique and temperament.
Mrs Diner jealously guarded her own starter, and with good reason. Small but perfectly cooked scallops - creamy within but caramelised without - were paired with a breaded nugget of good black pudding and some judiciously truffled cauliflower “couscous”.
Her main course was a winner too: a properly made - crèpe and all - Wellington of quite delicious pink venison matched to a hearty blob of horseradish mash and a little (actually, too little) rich Bordelaise sauce.
In case you haven’t sussed it yet, this is a North East restaurant that has its boots firmly embedded in French soil.
The reduced sauces, the classic, complex, time-consuming preparations: these all demand a sound knowledge of the kind of techniques that have come down from Carême, Escoffier et al. To find them in this bit of Darlington, opposite a defunct sex shop and just down from the grot-house of a pub where we took a pre-dinner sharpener, was more than a pleasant surprise.
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We managed to run up a fair bill by enjoying it all a little too much. We had ordered from the à la carte menu (mains are around £20), but there is an excellent value early bird menu of three courses for £22.
The people of Darlington aren’t exactly starved of good restaurants. To the south are Rockcliffe Hall’s transformed Orangery and Hurworth’s excellent gastropub The Bay Horse, and of course, just a few minutes to the north is the unmissable Raby Hunt, with possibly the best cooking in the whole of our region.
But don’t overlook, as I did for far too long, this little gem of a place on Grange Road. It’s certainly worth a visit. Just make sure that, whatever else you do, you order the cheese.
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