Brothers Lukasz and Bartek Jedrejek are injecting a hint of Polish cooking, among other international influences, into their Edinburgh restaurant. Andy Lynes reports.
Chef Lukasz Jedrejek hasn't taken the most orthodox route into hospitality. He moved from his native Poland in 2004 to study biochemical science, working part-time as a chef to help pay his way. He then spent six years working for the Scottish National Blood Transfusion Service before making a career change in June 2016. He joined forces with his brother Bartek and opened the 34-seat Lovage in a back street just off Edinburgh's Royal Mile.
"I thought, if I don't do it soon, I'll be a scientist with a Monday to Friday, nine to five job for the rest of my life," says Lukasz, whose previous experience includes Edinburgh fine-dining stalwart the Witchery and the city's Golf Tavern pub. Bartek has worked at Tom Kitchin's Scran & Scallie and Castle Terrace, both in Edinburgh, as well as fine-dining restaurants in Warsaw and Lublin in Poland.
Lovage, named after their favourite herb and one that is common in Polish cooking, runs with a brigade of just four, including the brothers as joint head chefs. That might sound like a recipe for disaster, but Lukasz says that they have found a way to make it work: "My brother deals with the sweets. That's not my thing. For the rest of the menu, we sit together, discuss and cook different ideas. Sometimes we argue, but not seriously."
A single à la carte menu with five starters and mains, three desserts and a selection of cheese is offered Tuesday to Sunday for dinner and Friday to Sunday for lunch, with a shorter three-three-three menu for parties of more than nine, priced at £29.95 for two courses and £34.95 for three. "When we started, we were open lunch and dinner every day, but it wasn't really working during the week," Lukasz says. "The whole idea behind closing for lunch is so we can put more effort into the dinner dishes, and maybe in the near future have a tasting menu as well."
Although the dishes are modern and inventive, Lukasz rejects the label ‘molecular', despite his scientific background. "You can bring in some of that, using different ingredients like agar, but I think, not in this place because we've got a tiny kitchen. You really need a lab to bring science into a restaurant."
The Lovage menu reads as a dizzying tour of global gastronomy, from a hake main with lentils, romesco sauce and curry hollandaise (£17.95) to a starter of 24-hour slow-cooked pork belly (£8.95) served with oak-smoked tofu, poached pear, Savoy and Chinese cabbage kimchi with fish sauce, soy sauce, sugar, chillies, daikon and carrots. âIn Poland, you have pork belly with sauerkraut,â Lukasz says. âMaybe thatâs why I think it goes really well together.â
But at the heart of the menu is produce from Scotland. Favoured suppliers include Campbell Brothers (meat, fish and greengrocers), Mark Murphy (vegetables) and Ben Robertson of Fungi and Forage for mushrooms. The brothers also forage for their own ingredients, collecting pine cones for a sorbet to accompany their best-selling chocolate fondant dessert (£7.95).
âYou just put them on sugar and leave them in jars for a few weeks so they start producing syrup,â Lukasz says. âThe sorbet is made from buttermilk, sugar, glucose and the pine extract.â
With its central location, smart but relaxed ambience (exposed brick, blue banquets, high ceilings and simple wooden tables) and affordable yet ambitious menu, Lovage attracts tourists, but the brothers are keen to cultivate locals.
âYou canât run a business on tourists,â says Lukasz. âTheyâre here, and then the next day theyâre not. Only a small percentage will come back. If youâve got local people, thatâs how you can tell that youâve got a well-run restaurant.â
From the menu
Starters
Mains
Desserts
38 St Maryâs Street, Edinburgh EH1 1SX
0131 557 5754
lovagerestaurant.co.uk