Love's Restaurant, Birmingham
3 Canal Square, Birmingham, West Midlands B16 8FL
0121 454 5151
www.loves-restaurant.co.uk
Imagine, if you will, a romantic 'mamma & poppa' restaurant serving outstanding food set on a triangular Piazza beside a canal and overlooking a footbridge. Only this canal is in Birmingham, not Venice, and the restaurant is run by the young husband and wife team of Steve and Claire Love.
Steve (pictured above) is a young chef who is undoubtedly
destined to become one of the brightest stars in the British
culinary firmament. He is a former National Chef of the
Year and the 1997 Roux scholar that sent him to Paris for three
months to work with the legendary Alain Ducasse. Steve
trained at his home town's college in Stratford upon Avon and at
Birmingham's College of Food, while his CV includes spells at The
Welcome Hotel in Stratford, Ettington Park, Waldo's Restaurant at
the Thameside Clivedon hotel and Mallory Court in Leamington
Spa.
Together with his wife Claire, who looks after the front of
house and is responsible for the excellent wine list, they opened
Love's in Canal Square, Browning Street, in September of last year.
Within four short months they had been visited by an AA
Inspector who without hesitation awarded them the maximum full set
of three red rosettes.
Passionate about his art, there is an elegance and purity about
Steve's style that creates dishes that are as appealing on then eye
as they are on the palate. Using only the freshest of regional
produce, his cooking ensures that full flavours are eloquently
expressed, while the combination of ingredients achieve a harmony
of rare and exquisite beauty. But a warning; this is a
restaurant for genuine gastronomes. If your perfect restaurant is
somewhere where the ambience is clean over the top, the menu so
vast that no kitchen could be expected to do it justice, with a
wine list the size of a family bible, then sorry - but Love's is
not for you.

A recent lunch off the A La Carte menu(£34 for two and
£38.50 for three courses) started with a warm butternut
squash veloute set with a tiny morsel of goat's cheese and dressed
with herb oils, that first lulled the palate into a sense of
absolute content before firing-up the taste buds on all cylinders.
There are also a Table d'Hôte menu at £20.00 for
two, or £25.00 for three courses as well as a £55.00
tasting menu.
A starter of slow cooked breast and braised leg of wood pigeon,
pink almonds, blackberries and 85% abinao chocolate was a brilliant
display of how such a basic rustic dish can be transformed into a
sophisticated delight. A Meli-Melo of Loch Duart Salmon added
a whole new dimension to smoked salmon.

A main dish of pan cooked wild sea bass, with smoked almond
gnocchi, glazed chicken wings, Paris mushrooms, chestnuts and blood
orange curd combined a cunning combination of flavours and
textures. Similarly a pink seared haunch and braised shoulder
of Finneborough venison, served with a pear marinated in red wine,
butternut squash and pearl barley showed just how much of the
essential flavours Steve Love can extract from his gastronomic
assemblies that looked so splendid on the plate.
With these we shared two half-bottles, a stunning crisp,
asparagus and citrus Sancerre from Henri Bourgeois, and a rich
juicy Cahors Malbec, Château de Cedres, both from
Connolly's.

I suppose I should draw a veil discretely over the passion fruit
pre-dessert that so effortlessly cleaned the plate while awakening
the taste buds for the pleasure to come. But I won't, suffice
it to say that it would be next to criminal to miss these visual
and epicurean works of art. For example the union of a glazed
lemon tartlet with raspberries marinated in red wine, or the exotic
flavours of poached pineapple in a coconut milk porridge, are, to
quote the Bard - 'Stuff as dreams are made of'.
Service by Claire and the exemplary Broonagh - from Northern
Ireland - was professional, caring but never obtrusive. The
coffee and petit fours were excellent. Truly this is restaurant
heaven, but even in heaven there is a snag - car parking is awful,
so park in Brindley Place and walk over the bridge.
If Love's is our restaurant heaven, what then is our hell?
Good question: anywhere pompous and pretentious, where
chef-less kitchens use chilled or frozen dishes and microwaves,
while the wine lists are put together by accountants with an eye to
profits rather than marrying with the food.
The Reviewers

James Day
James Day is a 'Virtual-Foodie' who edits popular food news
and reviews website Eat the
Midlands which carries up to date articles
covering all things foodie in the region, alongside reviews written
whilst on his travels around our finest eateries meeting with
chefs, and local producers.
James also runs the Midlands Lifestyle Dining Club, Gourmet Life which offers the regions
foodies exclusive discounts at some of the finest restaurants in
the region - which must meet strict selection criteria, including
sourcing at least 20% of their main a la carte menu from the
region.
James' other project includes running the popular and
established county wide dining guide Dine With Us.
Philippe Boucheron