Wishing you a safe Christmas for 2020

Merry Christmas from Rice and Things

Christmas will be different this year at Rice and Things. The pandemic’s hold on the country means that we are unable to serve you in the way that we are used to. BUT we will serve you!

So this year we are unable to offer a dining service but are offering a stunning Christmas Takeaway Meal menu which comprises of a starter and two mains. You can even complete the luxury by ordering a half or full cake to munch on whilst drinking your complimentary bottle of sorrel.

So although it won’t be the same, we still will do our best to help you have a great Christmas season!

Merry Christmas from Rice and Things

View our Christmas Takeaway Meal menu

Avon & Somerset Constabulary show their support for the Black Lives Matter movement at Rice and Things.

Rice & Things would like to thank Avon & Somerset Constabulary for showing their support and solidarity for the Black Lives Matter movement, following the tragic death of George Floyd, which has sparked protests across the USA

Rice and Things’ director Chef invited Bristol Police to Take The Knee in solidarity with the anti racism protests that will be taking place in Bristol on Sunday 7th June.

Supt Andy Bennett expressed the police’s wish that the racism that has led to the protests should never happen in Bristol, and that they wanted to show their support for the cause of justice and equality.

 

An Open Letter from Chef (Rice and Things) on BLACK LIVES MATTER

“Rice and Things stands in solidarity with all of our Black Brothers and Sisters across the globe at this crucial time in our history. In working towards stamping out this dangerous, evil that lives among us called racism, we symbolically take the knee in show of our support for this evil to be eradicated, with no stone left unturned.

We take the knee alongside Avon and Somerset Police Constabulary. There is a reason for this. Let me be clear. There is a vote of thanks we give to the Force not just in terms of what is happening now, but with regard to the journey of anti-racism that they have been on.

With specific reference to current Chief Constable Andy Marsh, Chief Superintendent Andy Bennett, and paying tribute to former Chief Constable Colin Port, I pay tribute to them, as over the years they have shown both vulnerability and humility in their attempts to eliminate racial inequality within their workforce, and in the ways that their officers execute their duties. It has not been easy. They have implemented change and are still looking for ways to try to eradicate racism from the within the organisation, out.

Chief Constable Andy Marsh has done an exceptional job in the way he has gone about creating the balance of closing the gap both within the constabulary, and within the communities that he serves across Bristol. It is not something to take lightly. As we face the stark realities of the impact of structural racism, it is fitting to acknowledge where work is being done. So we thank him for his support, and the officers who stand against racial injustices and inequality. As we work together our aim is to get this monster under control.

Finally, and most importantly, I want to remind our Black Brothers and Sisters across the globe, that as we campaign for change, the real change has to come from within. We need to stop killing and hurting each other senselessly. And in the same way we stand in solidarity against the senseless police brutality against our communities, we need to stand in solidarity against the senseless, needless implosion of self-hate, territorial nonsense, and a misplaced sense of “respect” which leads to the loss of life. We here, in Bristol, have seen our children 14 years an upwards facing years in prison through senseless murders they have committed. Our first step is that we have to start to clean house, working together in unity and caring for each other; as the old adage says, united we stand, divided we fall. Let us choose to fall together, as we stand together for change.

We are in pain for George Floyd, for systematic oppression everywhere, the extremes we see where the only “weapon of ammunition” for deadly force we possess is a packet of sweets! (Trayvon Martin shooting, Florida).

We also weep for the losses we create within our own communities by our own hands.

May the souls of our slain rest in peace. But those of us with breath, may we continue to campaign for the justice that we deserve. I call to action every organisation who is willing to work towards sustainable change, stamping out the evils of inequality and injustice, so that we are able, step by step creating something different.

I am a man, a Black man, raising Black men, responsible for Black men in my employ. I pledge to fight until there is nothing left to fight.”

Chef.

A la Carte Menu

(Dinner Menu: Done to Order – available Tuesday-Sunday between 5.30pm – 10.00pm)

Starters

Vegetable Fritters (V)
Caesar Salad (V)
Sweet & Sour Chicken Bits
Crispy King Prawns
Chicken Wanton
Stamp & Go
Red Herring & Water Crackers (S)(H)
Ackee & Saltfish in the middle

Salad Dishes

Salad de’ Rice & Things
Special Fish Salad
Chefs Salad
Caesar Salad
Plain Black River Salad

Side Orders

Clarendon Mash Potato
St Thomas Fried Green Plantain (V)
(crushed with salt)
St Thomas Fried Ripe Plantain Slices
Garlic Bread (V)
St Mary Roti (V)
Rice & Things Festivals (V)
French Fries (V)
Southfield Roast Potatoes (V)
(Plain or with Cheese, Garlic and Herbs)
Coleslaw

Seafood

Shrimp Dishes

Shrimp Dishes
(unless otherwise stated)
Hope Garden Butterfly Shrimps
Vere Curry Shrimps (H)
Rosegrey Coconut Shrimps
Tolegate Shrimps with Cashewnuts (N)
Shrimps de Rice & Things Combination

 Lobster Dishes

St Best Garlic Lobster
St Mary Curried Lobster (H)
Seaside Steamed Lobster
Portmore Lobster in Oyster Sauce
Hanover Grilled Lobster
Greenbank Lobster in Sweet Peppers

Fish

Fish Dishes
(unless otherwise stated)
Pego Keys Steamed Fish
Island Escovitch Fish (H)
Little Ochi Brown Stew Fish (H)
Sunny Acre Sweet & Sour Fish (Fillets)
Yallas Curried Fish (H)
Jamaican Capital Ackee & Saltfish
Manchoniel Roast Fish (Dr Fish)

Meat

Beef, Lamb and Goat
(unless otherwise stated)
Golden Grove Curry Lamb Chops (H)
Boston Barbeque Lamb Chops
Cheapside Garlic Lamb
Mitchell Town Curry Goat (S) (H)
Westmorland Stew Oxtail (S)
Guys Hill T-Boned Steak
Belfield Stew Beef
Beef de Rice & Things Special (Roasted) (H)

Poultry

Poultry Dishes
(unless otherwise stated)
Spring Village Fried Chicken
Lionel Town Curried Chicken (H)
Faiths Pen Jerk Chicken (H)
Southfield Chicken & Sweet Peppers
Rice & Things Chicken Lasagne
Walkers Wood Brown Stew Chicken
Mothers Stuffed Chicken Breast

Pork

Chapleton Stewed Pork (H)
Authentic Jamaican Pork Chops
Maypen Pork Chops in Black eye Beans Sauce
Rice & Things Barbeque Pork Chops
St Thomas Pork in Garlic & Ginger Sauce
Boston Jerk Pork (S) (H)

Vegetarian

Vegetarian Vegetable Combination (V)
Ze Chef Special Vegetarian Stew (V)
Plain Chop Suey (V)
Tofu Chop Suey (V)
Manchester Curry Chunks (V) (H)
Manchester Veggie Chunks (V)
Sunny Side Steamed Calaloo (S)(V)

all meals served with:

  • Rice & Peas
  • White Rice or
  • Boiled Food  (S)

N= Contains Nuts
V=Suitable for Vegan
H=Hot or Spicy
S=Subject to Availability

Desserts

Sliced Jamaican Fruit Cake & Rum Cream
Black Forrest Cake (S)
Ripe Banana Fritters (S)(V)
Cinnamon Slice
Fruitful Vale Fresh Fruit Salad (V)
Ice-cream
Annotto Bay Ripe Banana Split
Selection of Cupcakes (S)

(S) = Subject to Availability
For full list of available drinks please request menu

Set Menu Options

Available from 5pm Tuesday-Sunday. Private dining requires booking.
Please check with waiting staff for availability

Set Menu 1

Minimum of 3 people

  • Mitchell Town Curry Goat (S)(H)
  • Jamaican Capital Ackee & Saltfish
  • Spring Village Fried Chicken

Set Menu 2

Minimum of 5 people

  • Jamaican Capital Ackee & Saltfish
  • Mitchell Town Curry Goat (S)(H)
  • Spring Village Fried Chicken
  • Faith’s Pen Jerk Chicken (S)
  • Perry Town Peppered Steak

Set Menu 3

Vegetarian Option
Minimum of 3 people

  • Manchester Veggie Chunks (V)
  • Chef Special Ital Stew (V)
  • Henrietta’s Vegetable Combination (V)
  • Jamaican Capital Ackee & Saltfish

all served with

  • Rice & Peas, White Rice or Boiled Food
  • and a Crispy Salad or Hot Steamed Vegetables

N= Contains Nuts
V=Suitable for Vegan
H=Hot or Spicy
S=Subject to Availability

Jamie Oliver at Rice & Things

Jamie Oliver with Chef at Rice and Things Jamaican Restaurant, Bristol

In 2010 Jamie Oliver contacted Chef to ask if they could meet. Jamie had heard about Rice & Things restaurant and wanted to feature Chef in his forthcoming TV series. He also wanted to spend some time talking to Chef, watching him cook and learning to understand his culinary viewpoint.

Jamie came to visit Rice & Things with his team, filming Chef cooking a variety of traditional Jamaican dishes including saltfish, peppered steak, oxtail and hominy porridge.

Jamie Oliver with Chef at Rice and Things Jamaican Restaurant, BristolThroughout the day Jamie and Chef exchanged experiences and chatted. Chef talked to Jamie about his own personal journey, his political views, and his wish to see a future legacy to improve the lives of young people.

They found that they shared the same perspective on many of the important issues of life, finding many similarities in their culinary passion and their wish to create a lasting legacy that would improve people’s lives.

Chef said of Jamie: ‘He’s an amazing guy, who is looking for a better future for generations to come. The diversity of his thought and work both attracts and inspires me’.

Jamie has recently launched his latest book “Jamie’s Great Britain” which classes Chef’s food as a new British Classic.

The book accompanies a series by the same title which was broadcast on 20 October.

Read about Jamie’s visit to Rice & Things in this article by The Sun newspaper:

For the tour last year, Jamie and his team packed up a Land Rover, complete with kitchen and bar, and in Bristol he visited Chef’s humble 12-table Jamaican restaurant and takeaway, Rice & Things. Since then, the pair have struck up a friendship and Jamie has even asked Chef to help him mentor graduates from his Fifteen chef training scheme.Chef, 34, recalls their first encounter: “Someone phoned the restaurant saying they worked for Jamie Oliver and asked if they could come and see me cook. At first I thought it was a wind-up but I decided to see what happened and invited them along. They said they liked what I was doing and the next thing I knew Jamie was walking through the door. Immediately we struck a good chord as he was passionate about his job. Like me, he isn’t just in it to win it — he is in it because he has a heart and soul.”Jamie Oliver with the staff of Rice and Things Shy Branatic Neufville, 38, likes simply to be known as Chef – but he is about to be unwittingly catapulted into the culinary limelight after Jamie chose to devote two pages of his new cookbook to him and his small Bristol restaurant… Jamie, 35, explains: “Chef has become an inspiration to me. He is wise, he is a one-man band give or take, and he makes my hair stand on end. Recently, I met Desmond Tutu and Bob Geldof and they were amazing, but I enjoyed the time I spent with Chef just as much. He has come to this country and contributed in a beautiful way. When it comes to this business we’re in, a lot of people talk the talk but he is doing it with a sense of grace, authority and wisdom – he does his job effortlessly…. …Just being in his presence is something special. I remember coming out of his restaurant Rice and Things thinking, that’s the most inspiring person I’ve met for a long time. He represents hope and success and in my opinion he is a big talent.”
The Sun Newspaper’s feature about Jamie Oliver meeting Chef at Rice and Things Jamaican Restaurant, Bristol

Wine Menu

Red Wine

Red Wine
(Hse only by the Glass)
House:
Las Estrellas Merlot 2009 (Chile)
Chanti
Joffe Hijas Malbec 2006 UCO Valley Mendoza Argentina

White Wine

White Wine
(Hse only by the Glass)
House:
Las Estrellas Sauvignon Blanc 2009 (Chile)
House:
Rouwke’s Drift South African Cape White:
Sacchetto Prosseco Frizznte di Paolo:
Vouray 2002

 Rose Wine

Rose Wine (Glass)
Villa de Anges 2009
Rice & Things Special Sorrel Wine

Other Wine

Sauvignon Bordeaux / Blanc
Pinot Grigio
Traben Trabacher Wurzgarten Riesling 2008
Foundling Chenin Blanc 2009 Voor Paardberg (S. Africa)
Cotes de Bergerac
Moscatel
Avery’s 10 yr old TAWNY Port

Ainsley Harriott & Len Goodman visit Rice & Things

From start to finish it was a bit of an adventure. From having the small space of Rice and Things overrun with camera crews, to the amazing personality that is Ainsley Harriott, it was a great experience. Chef, over two days, exposed Ainsley to the way we cook ‘Rice and Things’ style, following which Ainsley was inspired to cook his own dish with a little bit of Rice and Things flair!

The star of the show was Len Goodman. As he admitted in the show, he was really a novice when it came to Jamaican cooking, but he tried everything Chef placed in front of him! He absolutely loved our mother’s stuffed chicken breast, with callalou and Jamaican herbs and spices. But he also tasted our signature dish of curry goat and rice, ackee and saltfish and the vegetarian’s choice – veggie chunks and beans.

Over the two days we had a blast, and would welcome them back to the restaurant with open arms, any time they are in Bristol!

Rice & Things interviewed for the Independent Newspaper

Caribbean cuisine is becoming increasingly popular in the UK … and there’s more to it than jerk chicken at carnival

David Gerrie goes in search of some authentic soul food

In search of the perfect jerk food while trying to avoid the braying tourist crowds of Jamaica’s Negril resort, we took the advice of a local taxi driver and wound up at an obscure beach shack, standing in front of a cooking device that would have sent health-and-safety officers in this country screaming into the ocean.

In between what looked like massive sheets of char-blackened chicken wire and hulks of smoking logs were sandwiched a variety of lumps of meat. A tiny table in the sweltering heat and a Long Island iced tea later, we were presented with these meaty chunks, accompanied only by a bucket of industrial-strength jerk sauce.

Rice and Things Exclusive Jamaican Restaurant in Bristol (John Lawrence)

We had ordered a quarter of a chicken each, but, oh my, how we wound up wishing that we’d ordered a whole one. The quick hit of the fiery, crunchy rub, the mellowness of the moist meat inside and the long, long endorphin-releasing rush of that searing sauce made this one of the best lunches we have ever eaten.

Until recently, it’s been nigh-on impossible to replicate that exquisite experience on these shores. True, Levi Roots and his ilk have done much to popularise Caribbean cuisine in the UK, but, apart from in indigenous communities, you still can’t pop down to your local high street for a spot of Caribbean.

Times are changing, though, with London experiencing a new boom in Caribbean eateries and savvy businessmen and West Indian ex-pats spotting Brits’ familiarity with, and love, of intense spicing as well as the ease with which we adapt to foreign cuisines. So it’s time to get to know your callaloo from your cassava and your ackee from your saltfish.

Chef Branatic Neufville cooking away (John Lawrence/The Independent)

Caribbean cuisine is a blend of African, Amerindian, European, East Indian, Arab and Chinese influences. While each island will have its particularities, most restaurateurs say that some 80 per cent of all Caribbean cooking is centred on Jamaica – its heavy emphasis on jerks and marinades seems to be reflected in most recent UK openings. Like Cajun and West African cooking, Jamaican cuisine has its own Holy Trinity of ingredients – Scotch bonnet peppers, spring onions and fresh thyme.

Outside London, Bristol probably has the largest number of Caribbean restaurants, with Branatic Neufville, the chef/owner of the Rice and Things Exclusive Jamaican Restaurant, emerging as the local guru for all things Jamaican. “Arriving from Jamaica 14 years ago, I saw the acceptance of ethnic foods in the UK,” he explains. “Bristol is a diverse, fast-growing city with guaranteed investment from the food trade and a large, tightly knit, family-oriented Jamaican population.

“Whether you like it or not, Jamaica’s food, music and culture make it the driving force of the Caribbean. Much of our inspiration and many of our ingredients – ginger and marsala – are influenced by other nationalities. In fact, the Chinese and Japanese will tell you our cuisine is a lot like theirs.

“Lots of people tasting Jamaican cooking will say that it tastes like the food that their grandma made. Really authentic Jamaican recipes can be replicated over here, but if you try and fiddle with them or modernise them too much, it will end in tears.”

There are certain rules that should be adhered to, Neufville says. “You must leave the bones in your meat, stab and slash it right down to the bone and lovingly massage your rub or marinade in to the flesh. I’m also a stickler for using authentic Jamaican ingredients, such as wild cinnamon and tamarind, pimento leaf (like a spicy bay leaf), pepper elder – a hillside vine with an incomparable flavour and cayenne-like bird peppers.

Chef Branatic Neufville chopping spring onions for a jerk marinade (John Lawrence/The Independent)

But there is a downside, he says, to the growing trend for Caribbean food. “The problem is that a lot of Caribbean people have started cooking a watered-down version of their food over here, because they want to fit in,” he says. “If you had been intoxicated by the food in Jamaica 40 years ago and walked into a lot of today’s UK Caribbean restaurants, the food would taste nothing like it did back then.”

As a final bonus, most of the ingredients needed for replicating Caribbean cuisine at home are readily available at most good supermarkets. You don’t need any hi-tech kitchen widgetry and if you’re looking for a foreign cuisine that instantly transports you to its original home, there really isn’t any finer example.

But remember, it’s soul food, so take your time and always cook it with your heart rather than your head.

Taken from the article by David Gerrie in the Independent Newspaper on 28/08/14.
Read the full article here: http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/food-and-drink/features/caribbean-cuisine-is-becoming-increasingly-popular-in-the-uk–and-theres-more-to-it-than-jerk-chicken-at-carnival-9698009.html

Bristol Caribbean community honoured at awards ceremony created by Rice and Things

From left, awards presenter Sherie Eugene, organisers chef Branatic Neufville and Barbara Brown and Patrick Hart, who was also presenting awards

ELDERS from Bristol’s Caribbean community have been honoured for their contribution to society at a ceremony at Colston Hall.

As part of Black History Awareness Month and the 50th anniversary of Jamaica’s independence, the first generation of Jamaicans to arrive in Britain were recognised for paving the way for future generations.

The event was the brainchild of chef Branatic Neufville from Rice and Things restaurant in Stokes Croft. The Jamaican-born chef has been cooking all his life and set up his own business after being inspired by an elder who wanted to buy his food.

Known as “Chef”, the Jamaican said he wanted to organise the ceremony as Jamaica celebrates 50 years of independence.

The Garage Gospel Choir performs

The first wave of Caribbean people to arrive in the UK came from Jamaica in 1948 at the invitation of the British government, to help replenish the workforce after the war.

The main award of the night was for a life-time commitment to race equality.

‘Harsh life’

chef on BBC website
Chef from Rice and Things

Mr Neufville said: “It’s about respect… and ensuring that our elders are feeling, on their last days, that the message they have started, someone is taking it up and is prepared to carry it along.

“It’s about time our youths, our younger generation, respect the harsh life they had to put up with when they just came here.

“It wasn’t as easy as what we’ve got now and we must pay attention to what they’ve done and show them the gratitude that they deserve.”

He said: “I have so much respect for the older generation and wanted to treat them to the best food imaginable. To combine it with an award ceremony is the icing on the cake.”

Gloria Morris was given the Outstanding Individual Contribution award at the Colston Hall ceremony Pictures: Dave Betts

Over 80 people were honoured at the gala dinner with 20 special honours made in the first awards ceremony of its kind.

Chef Neufville treated the 120-strong guest list to a four-course authentic Caribbean banquet. The menu included lobster and crab, callaloo steamed in coconut milk, escovitch tilapia fillets as well as chef’s signature curried goat dish.

Chef was taught to cook by his grandmother in Jamaica
He said: “When you look around you and see the level of breakdown in society, in discipline, in knife crime, the gun crime, it’s all young people below the age of 25.

“What that says to me is they have no regards for the legacy that has been left and the things that have been done so we can have a better life. It’s being taken for granted.

“We need to take back society and not let it go to rot.

“We need to show some respect for the work these people have done, not just the black migrants but those that helped us to settle here when we came here because we couldn’t have done it on our own.”

Goat curry

Mr Neufville, who was taught to cook by his grandmother in Jamaica, cooked a four-course Caribbean banquet for the guests, including lobster and crab, callalou steamed in coconut milk, escovitch tilapia fillets and goat curry.

He said: “Some of them end up in old people’s homes and the food – there’s a difference in culture – there’s no care as to what they eat. Tonight might be a night that they have eaten a real Caribbean meal in a long while.”

Barbara Brown, a consultant who helped organise the night, said: “The benevolence across the city has been amazing. In outlining what we hoped the event would be, others have extended themselves so that we can collectively say ‘thank you’.”

The venue has been donated by Colston Hall, with Bristol Blue Glass offering glassware for the awards.

A message of support has been sent by the governor-general of Jamaica, Sir Patrick Allen, talking about the courage and endurance of the migrants of the 1950s and 60s “pathing the way for the benefit of future generations”.

Full Story http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-19963762 & http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/generation-Jamaicans-honoured-banquet/story-17106781-detail/story.html

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