Thursday Food had, prior to this official dining experience hosted by ROK Hotel General Manager Jaap van Dam, Director of Sales & Marketing Marlene Buckridge, and Food & Beverage Manager Sherene Brown, dropped in unannounced one Sunday. Brunch was top of mind. The experience was a positive one and it was evident that, opening glitches aside, this property, from the fastidiously curated public space art courtesy of Jessica Jones, to the outstanding service delivered by bellman Wuzando Salmon and the elegantly styled plates, can be a spot to return to.
Valet parking out of the best way, we made full use of the many cosy vignettes that form a part of the lobby and enjoyed a not-so-typical, very refreshing passion fruit mimosa. A relaxed tour of the hotel followed by mouth-seducing jerk chicken poppers with mango aioli, and Harbour seafood cake in Scotch bonnet rice paper topped with sweet chilli corn salsa as we checked out ROK and Ocean Front suites. There have been surprise gift bags too! Each stop heightened expectations.
Back on the second level it was time to open napkins within the Palate restaurant and revel in a special welcome from Executive Chef Volae Williams. A cursory glance on the menu didn’t disappoint. The only real challenge was what to pick! There was no must furrow the brows for the menu, yes all eight, formed the tasting menu.
Starters included a wealthy coconut pepperpot soup whose flavour, already perfect, was kicked up several notches because the coconut milk seduced the callaloo. Nice start, even for those non-soup lovers. The salad that followed — a fresh bowl of baby greens and Granny Smith Apples, goat cheese, tomatoes, walnuts, roasted beets, passion fruit-thyme vinaigrette and a passion coconut seafood crudo a melange of salmon, shrimp, mussels, passion jus, fresh herbs, lime juice, plantain chips, cold press coconut oil — was a lightweight, tasty and fresh option. Aptly portioned to depart diners satisfied but with room to proceed with the ultimate starter, the roasted tomato tartare: sun-dried tomatoes, black olive, tapenade, pesto, beet hummus finished with a slice of local tomato and garlic bread chip. The fusion was smartly balanced with the beet complementing the potency of the sun-dried tomatoes and black olive.
Truth be told, Chef Williams had shown his range and will have pressed pause. He didn’t, and as a substitute rolled out fish, beef, poultry and lamb courses.
The snapper papillote: a up to date spin on roasted fish in foil in coconut jus, with steamed bammy, water cracker, steamed callaloo and fried okra. The fish alas was not fall-off-the-fork fresh so didn’t absorb the flavours of the seasoning as we’d have wanted it to.
The chef had higher fortune with the melt within the mouth petite filet which might have been served alone. It was that good. The poultry course was next: pimento grill chicken breast in a mango jerk sauce with sides of market vegetables and potato mash. The mango jerk sauce was an interesting notation infusing an equal balance of sweet and savoury.
The ginger herb crusted rack of lamb closed the mains on a warm, pungent note. Again, the smart portions allowed each course to face by itself.
Volae Williams is a chef tasked with the revival of downtown Kingston as a culinary destination; we’ll be fastidiously watching. Our eyes can even be pealed on one more young talent, pastry chef Chauntoi Perkins, who uses her classically French pastry training as her base to include flavours which might be peculiar to our palates.
A powerful array of desserts that ranged from mini mango cheesecakes to coconut almond tart, fresh pineapple compote, coconut whipped ganache to chocolate coffee, soursop sphere to the more familiar cornmeal pudding, salted caramel, sweet potato pudding, orange meringue, mini gizzada and Busta, aptly labelled “Memory Lane”.
As we tucked into way too many sweet treats within the relaxed setting of ROKstone under a cover of stars (we would moved from the Palate restaurant), complete with live music, it could have been lots easier to amble as much as the ROK suite. Perhaps next time! For, rest assured, there will be many more ROK soirées.
Photographer: Garfield Robinson