Showing posts with label Cake shops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cake shops. Show all posts

6/02/2013

Rochelle Adonis Cakes & Confections (Perth WA)

193 Brisbane St
Northbridge Western Australia 6003
(08) 9227 0007
Website
Facebook


Hours:
    Wed-Sun 10 am - 4 pm

         Cake + Coffee Wed to Fri
         High Tea Wed to Sun
         Take-away Wed to Sun


Rochelle Adonis Cakes + Confections on Urbanspoon  
Rochelle Adonis - Just the name and the branding of the business conjure up images of exquisite delectability and gorgeous high-end manor tea afternoons, floral crockery and laced-up dresses. 

Rochelle Adonis is many things at once: a cake shop, a patisserie and a degustation studio that produces its own cakes and sweet and savoury morsels under the culinary direction of Rochelle Adonis, Sandro Puca, Alexa Hughes & Sarah Stone. They define themselves as "dessert-inspired pastry chefs with a passion for all things gorgeous, delicious and innovative". Beyond the High Tea experience, Rochelle Adonis offers cooking classes, prepares special-occasion cakes, caters for functions by arrangement, and has cooking lessons. 

Rochelle Adonis offers High-Tea sessions at 49 Dollars per head from Wednesday to Saturday at 12pm and 2pm, with an extra session at 10am on Saturdays. I decided to make the High Tea my lunch and visited at 12pm with great expectations.  

THE PLACE AND SETTINGS
The place has two communal tables and a little decked table by the shop window, with several food cabinets, the left wall being shelved with administrative material and the crockery. 

The tables are set with gorgeous fine vintage china cups and saucers, fine glass water decanters, rose floral arrangements, and vintage silverware. The right wall is wonderfully decorated with a selection of food photos and drawings, in different sizes an shapes, all aesthetically arranged. The sort of classy wonderful settings you see photographed in gourmet and interior magazines. The big let down were the cheap thin paper serviettes provided, the type that flights from your lap moved by the air movement created by any person passing by you. It doesn't make any sense bothering to set the table so wonderfully to then have a paper serviette.

The tables being communal, are especially suited for groups, and not as much for solo eaters or couples. I was placed in a table that was taken for a group of ladies, who were a bit surprised at me being placed in the only spot left in their table, when the other communal table had plenty of free seats. They were very friendly, but still, the awkwardness, mostly on their behalf, lasted the whole time I was there.

The toilets are clean, but they are separated from the dinning room area, at the back of the building, they are tiny, basic and a bit run down. 





FOOD AND DRINKS 
Everything you eat at Rochelle is prepared in situ in their kitchen, and your fee entitles you to two trays with four food morsels -canapé sized- one savoury and another sweet, plus a pot of the drink of your selection (French pressed coffee and/or loose tea). A palate cleanser is offered as an intermezzo between the two servings.

All the food was delicious, creative, well presented, with a great mix of textures, colours, and flavours, and I cannot choose just one morsel as the highlight. I enjoyed every single one of them. My only problem was with the size of the morsels, which are great for a degustation, but not for a lunch if you eat like a normal person and get to the place hungry.

The teas on offer are French Earl Gray, English Breakfast, Indian Spice Chai, Jasmine Green Tea, Parisian Rose, plus a variety of tisanes like Vanilla Berry, Lemon-grass and ginger, apple and cinnamon, rose and hibiscus, and Moroccan tea.

The Chai Tea and the coffee I chose were excellent. The pots are well-sized, so you will have plenty to drink throughout the whole experience.

THE SERVICE
The girls attending to you at Rochelle are lovely and attentive, chatty and very friendly. On arrival, they will explain how the event is going to be ran, take your drink order, and, once the food trays are out, they will describe to you each piece in detail.

Despite he high tea consisting of just two trays and the drinks, the event took about one hour and a half. There is no problem for that, to me. The problem is the spacing between the two servings. Wouldn't it be better asking customers if they are ready for the second serving instead of Rochelle deciding that for them? The morsels are minuscule; therefore, if you are at lunch time, it is a torture having to wait for the food you are craving for, no matter how much water or tea you drink, or how lovely the conversation with your friends is.

No menu description was provided on arrival, except for the teas. I asked one of the waitresses about it, and she told me that the chef decides the menu on the day, and that is why a printed menu was not provided. Being so, I couldn't remember what I had eaten like half an hour after finishing. After finishing, and before leaving, I talked to the same waitress about the menu and she told me that their menu is seasonal and changes every few weeks... Therefore, it is not decided on the day. T-h-e-r-e-f-o-r-e, they do not provide a printed menu because they do not want to, whatever the reason might be. There is no need to lie, as anybody can easily connect two different statements on the same subject e-a-s-i-l-y. 

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT
+ They should find a place that has an ampler space for dinning, so they can offer customers a more personalised and comfortable settings and service, tables for solo and coupled eaters, and toilets directly linked to the dinning room. 
+ They should Improve the sizing of their portions. I do not think they are going to get bankrupt if they do so.
+ They would make themselves a favour if they got fabric serviettes. If that is a burden on their budget, thick good-quality paper ones with their brand logo printed on them would make a great difference.  
+ Providing a printed menu is a gesture of courtesy towards customers, who pay almost 50 dollars for the visit. A loose sheet of paper with the logo of the business and the menu written on it can be easily printed. 

+ They should make an effort to cater for vegans. A vegan session once a week would attract more customers, and would be an awesome thing to have. 
+ Why not making the place a bit more male friendly?

MIND 
> BYO bubble wine, Cava or Champagne.
> Additional pots of tea/coffee will cost you 4.50 Dollars. You will pay the same if you want hot chocolate instead of tea or coffee. 
> They do cater for celiacs and vegetarians.

 ***
High Tea, to be high in my list of highness, should mix great food, decent portions, great service, great settings, and an attention to the detail.  

Rochelle Adonis is a great experience regarding the quality and creativity of the food, but far behind regarding attention to the detail and thought put to treat customers in a personalised way. I absolutely loved the table settings, but the presence of paper serviettes and the administration books, printer, cables and other business-related material on display rested a bit of charm to the whole experience. Still, this is a lovely experience, if you are woman and/or if you are a group of women. Rochelle is also a lovely place to buy cakes and slices to enjoy at home.  

MY RECOMMENDATION
Avoid the Noon session if your stomach is empty and you want to appease your hunger. A morning or afternoon degustation will certainly leave you more satisfied, and your stomach won't feel the pressure of the food not coming when you want it.

Location: 7/10
Layout: 6/10
Ambience: 6/10
Staff: 7/10
Service: 7/10
Table settings: 9/10

Food: 8.5/10
Coffee/Tea: 8.5/10
Pricing: 6.5/10 


UPDATE
Rochelle Adonis has finally left their ugly mini-mini location and has moved to a more charming location in the ever-blooming Beaufort St. The new place has three different seating areas, plus an alfresco area, looks like a proper cafe, it is classy, beautiful and charming.

The new location Corner between Beaufort and 2 St Albans Street.

3/03/2013

Esther's Cake Shop (Northbridge, Perth WA)

Shop 4, 364 William St
Northbridge WA 6003
(08) 9228 8783
Hours:
    Mon-Sun 8:00 - 20:00


Esther's Cake Shop on Urbanspoon

If you like Asian cakes, buns and pastries on the go, Esther's bakery is a must stop on William St. You will notice the place if you walk along the street because of the lovely smell coming from the shop a few metres before you get there.

The shop itself it is very small, no specially charming, and mostly self-service. Nothing remarkable but for the lovely  sweet and savoury buns, cakes, cake slices, seasonal Chinese sweets, and some traditional European-style cakes and pastries they sell. As in many Asian cake shops, the sweets are mildly sweet, while the savoury stuff is a bit sweet. 

Most times, the pastries and buns are warm, just out of the oven. My fav things there are the mango crepes (with fresh mango and whipped cream, forget counting calories), the custard puffs, their sweet-savoury "odd" pizza slices (not for everybody as it is an odd mix of sweet and savory) and some of the cake slices.

THUMBS UP
Good prices.
Friendly service
Warm fresh stuff.
They open long hours, every day of the week.

THUMBS DOWN
No Efptos.
A place mostly for takeaways.
Some of the shop attendants have a limited English.
If you are not used to Asian bakeries, some of the stuff might taste odd. 

10/25/2012

Utopia Bubble Tea (Perth WA)

71 Barrack St
Perth Western Australia 6000
0430 886 066
Official Website
Facebook Official Australia
Facebook Shop Perth



Utopia Bubble Tea on Urbanspoon The place is very functional, clean, cool, and open, perfect for both takeaways and hanging around with mates. It is always full of young Asian people from overseas, especially Koreans, Japanese and Taiwanese, which make me want to enter any place because they are  very cool.

Utopia has  a huge range of bubble tea (milked or not), crushed ice concoctions, smoothies and even Lavazza coffee.
The taro milk tea is great, made using fresh taro (not taro paste) -or so I was told- and the taste of the tea is there, present, not hidden by anything. Sweet but just a bit, enough to make the flavours come and wander around your palate. Other flavoured teas I have tried, quite a few, are consistently good. My favourites so far being the mango green milk tea and the coconut milk tea. The only one I find too sweet is the newly added Oolong Cheese Latte.

Some of the sago balls they use are humongous, and very chewy-gummy. I love them, but they can overwhelm some people. If that is your case, go for the jelly or other extras, which are equally yummy but smaller. Their selections of toppings varied in shapes, textures and sizes, so, suit yourself. They have some little tubes with some samples on the counter, so you can see for yourself what they area, and how they look like.
Their sweet cabinets and shelves are really eye-catching even if you are not into sweets, with a beautiful selection of cakes, cake slices, pastries, cookies, and sweet and savoury buns. The pieces I have tried so far (hazelnut chocolate -my fav-, Tiramisu cup, egg tart and Pineapple cake)  are good, although they have different degrees of sweetness. A bit expensive for the sizing, but very fresh, good-looking and well-packaged. On the other hand, they seem to be mass produced; forgive me if I am wrong.

Their big cakes are stunning-looking, but again their prices are quite high. There are at least two Asian-style bakeries in Perth CBD hat bake daily and offer good quality beautiful whole cakes at cheaper prices. Ditto re the buns. They are not part of any chain. So I would go to those to cater for your big cake needs. Still the ones here are so eye-candy!


Service is fast and friendly - consistently. Day after day. Always with a smile. I love their wall of wishes, which is in tune with the Buddhist tradition you see in temples around South East Asia. They also have charity programs and donations, specials, free top-ups or size upgrades throughout the year, and new seasonal products are regularly added to the menu. They are really good at marketing what they sell, and do well at attracting and keeping their customers. That is what I call a dynamic approach to sale. That explains why the place is always busy and customers are happy.

Awkwardly enough, I do not have much negative to say, beyond what I have said about the cakes, which is not negative at all. I am getting too soft? :O.

Summer is coming, so pop up at Utopia and bubble around a bit.