La Cave a Fromage has opened a cheese room as part of the new Bistro du Vin restaurant in Soho and is in talks with another restaurant group about the concept.
Part of the Hotel du Vin group, Bistro du Vin was launched earlier this year as a stand-alone restaurant brand with sites in Clerkenwell and Soho. The temperature-controlled cheese room at the Soho branch, which opened in July, houses around 80 British, French and Italian artisan cheeses and a selection of charcuterie supplied by La Cave a Fromage's parent company Premier Cheese.
Part of the Hotel du Vin group, Bistro du Vin was launched earlier this year as a stand-alone restaurant brand with sites in Clerkenwell and Soho. The temperature-controlled cheese room at the Soho branch, which opened in July, houses around 80 British, French and Italian artisan cheeses and a selection of charcuterie supplied by La Cave a Fromage's parent company Premier Cheese.
Choose your cheese board to eat in or take away |
“We are always looking to spread the word on cheese and get more people to experiment and taste, so this is another interesting avenue,” said director Amnon Paldi, who operates two shops in Kensington and Brighton and the wholesale business with Eric Charriaux. “We are also talking to another restaurant group about the concept and will hopefully announce something in October.”
Bistro du Vin plans to open two more sites in London this year in Chiswick and Shoreditch, and is aiming for a total of 10-12 sites in the capital in the next 18 months.
Since opening, the cheese room has proved particularly popular with women, said Paldi.
“It's something we've also noticed in our shops over the past 3-4 years,” he said. “More and more women are eating cheese and are interested in stronger more unusual products, like washed rind cheeses.”
www.la-cave.co.uk
* First published in the Cheeswire section of Fine Food Digest's September 2011 issue. Click here
“It's something we've also noticed in our shops over the past 3-4 years,” he said. “More and more women are eating cheese and are interested in stronger more unusual products, like washed rind cheeses.”
www.la-cave.co.uk
* First published in the Cheeswire section of Fine Food Digest's September 2011 issue. Click here
No comments:
Post a Comment