Restaurant review: Creperie Doux Sourire

I’ve written before about the factors that make a restaurant perfect for solo dining: a good table that doesn’t face a wall or, worse still, the bogs; a great view to enable people watching; a menu that doesn’t make you feel like you’re missing out – no small plates or other “everything has to be shared” formats – and staff that respect rather than judge the choice made by solo diners.

Get all that right and, whether you’re up at the window at Mama’s Way or tucked away in a corner of London Street Brasserie, you’ll have a brilliant time. Take a book, if you want to pretend you’re not going to scroll your phone, order a glass of wine, sit back and enjoy. I really like solo dining these days: so much so, in fact, that I was even quoted to that effect in the Independent. Fancy, right?

The criteria for picking a restaurant to review on your own, though? That’s another kettle of fish.

The thing is, reviewing restaurants is about giving readers a representative picture of what a place is like to eat at. Some of that – the room, the service, the view, the background music – is largely the same whether you have a table for 1 or 11, this is true. But it falls down when you come to the food, because in many restaurants you want to see a decent range of what the kitchen can do. With two of you, that can be six dishes – more, if you’re greedy. On your tod it risks giving a lopsided perspective.

What that means is that when I review solo, I think some kinds of restaurants lend themselves especially well to that. Places where most of the dishes – be they pizza, tacos, momo or biryani – are variations on a single theme are ideal: I may like or love my pizza, for instance, but the one someone else might have eaten with me will share a lot of its DNA. It’s a safer bet that my view of that restaurant will be a typical one.

Casual places tend to be better too, because people are more likely to eat at those alone, possibly in a rush – although it’s a hill I will die on that an unhurried solo meal is one of life’s great joys. And some restaurants are particularly unsuited to reviewing solo, and here’s where the overlap with the opening paragraph comes in: anywhere with small plates or dishes designed for sharing, for instance, is a bust.

I always think of my poor friend Jerry, who went on a solo holiday to Valencia determined to try paella, only to find that the restaurants there would only serve it for two people; he came home with a paella pan but no first hand experience of the city’s most famous dish. Personally I’d have ordered for two, got them to box up the leftovers and eaten them in my hotel room the next day, but Jerry is far less gluttonous than I am (and awfully nice and polite, for that matter).

The reason I tell you all this is that this week’s review was meant to be of a fancy food pub out in the sticks, the kind of place that as a non-driver I don’t review anywhere near as often as you might like. But my dining companion, who has a lovely car and enjoys giving it a run-out, cancelled on me at fairly short notice, leaving me looking at my to do list and scratching my head, trying to work out the best option.

So this week you nearly got a review of Paesinos, the new pizza place that has opened opposite Jackson’s Corner, a perfect candidate because one pizza will tell you if the dough, the base and the tomato sauce are good. And I nearly dropped in next door instead to Just Momo: even the name suggests they only do one thing, although they offer chow mein too. I also considered Biryani Mama, although their name is misleading as biryani is a fraction of the dozens of dishes on their menu: they do more different kinds of chicken starter than biryanis, for crying out loud.

I swerved all those places because I had a better option in mind. Creperie Doux Sourire (it translates as “sweet smile”, and if you thought it meant “two mice” you and that Duolingo owl need to have a word) has been open since late last year in the glass-fronted site on the Oracle Riverside next to Vue Cinema. It’s their second branch: the first opened last May in the salubrious surroundings of Windsor station, although it looks like it was either a replacement or a rebrand for a wine bar called Gregory & Tapping that used to occupy that pitch.

I thought it merited a visit if only for being unique: after all, if you did want pizza, momo or biryani those places I mentioned are hardly trailblazers, but opening a creperie in a funny little spot that was previously home to a Starbucks for what felt like forever struck me as a brave move. And I was right: when it first opened there was a slightly withering response online, both in comments on the Reading Chronicle‘s Facebook page, where you’d expect such things, and the Reading subreddit, where you might not. The general feeling was that it was a lot of money to spend on a pancake, along with a suspicion that it was something of a gimmick.

But actually, I thought it had potential. I remember eating buckwheat galettes in the Marais, with an earthenware cup of Breton cider, and thinking it was faintly marvellous. On many stays in Bristol I’d walked past the gloriously Gallic Chez Marcel, in the heart of the old city, and bemoaned the fact that I already had lunch plans. Besides, Doux Sourire’s website made many encouraging noises, talking about local ingredients and, if the menu was to be believed, buying the best from both home and abroad, the likes of Ogleshield and Tunworth rubbing shoulders with Serrano ham.

So Creperie Doux Sourire was idiosyncratic, it was slap bang in the middle of Reading and, with the recent demise of Mission Burrito, it was the only independent restaurant on the Oracle Riverside. I figured that alone had to make it worth a shot so on a weekday, on my ownsome, I turned up early evening to take my table for one.

When you consider what a sterile space this could be, I think Doux Sourire has done a good job of making it homely. It felt much more spacious than the Starbucks used to be, and lining so many tables against the full length windows meant you had a fighting chance of looking into the room rather than out on the rainswept Riverside. They had one of those glass fireboxes by the entrance and, pleasingly, French music was playing.

My table was tucked away in the corner. It gave me a good look into the room, and I liked it – the tables were rustic without being rudimentary, and you could see dozens of bags of flour stacked away behind the counter. The shelves on either side, with creepy dolls looking down from them, were less successful: I’m not sure what the thought processes behind that were. French farmhouse is a very winning aesthetic, haunted French farmhouse less so.

But the welcome was warm and immediate, and my server brought over a couple of blackboards with a handful of specials on them – a salad and a soup on one, a couple of crêpes on the other. Doux Sourire’s menu overall felt more to me like a lunch menu than a dinner one, a sentiment arguably reinforced by the fact that the place shuts at 9pm. There were a handful of toasties, a cheeseboard, a baked Tunworth and hand carved jamon, or otherwise you had one of the crêpes. Toasties came in just under a tenner and the crêpes ranged from twelve to sixteen, more if you wanted your crêpe made with buckwheat flour.

So it was tricky to take a starters, mains, desserts approach to the place, although I did my best: it’s the responsibility you bear when you dine on your own, you see, to try and cover as many bases as you can. But first, wine. I expected this to be a strong point, given Doux Sourire’s origins as a Windsor wine bar, and the list was compact – five whites, three reds, an orange and a rosé, all available both by the glass and the bottle. I was a little disappointed not to see any Breton cider, a traditional accompaniment to this sort of thing, and the beer selection was limited too, although it had a couple from Marlow brewery Rebellion.

My red, a pinot noir, came out in a chunky, rustic, stemless bowl of a glass, and as the strains of C’est Si Bon floated through the restaurant I thought that this, on paper, had the potential to be absolutely my kind of place. A warm welcome, a good glass of wine, non-stop chansons and galettes, the kind of bubble of Francophile otherness Reading hadn’t quite had since Forbury’s closed. Sign me up, I thought.

My starter didn’t offer conclusive proof that Doux Sourire would be that sort of place. I’d gone for the special, the cauliflower soup with truffle oil. I never order soup, but I had a feeling that a toastie then a galette would have been too samey, so soup it was. And bits of it worked – the texture was velvety, and the squiggle of truffle oil offered something without overpowering everything. I am as dismissive of truffle oil as a quick cheat as the next person, but it had its place here.

The problem wasn’t what was there, it’s what wasn’t: the truffle offered a little contrast but otherwise the soup was all sweetness without anything to offset it and make it interesting. When my soup was brought over I also took custody of a little salt and pepper mill. I think in all the years I’ve been reviewing restaurants I have never seasoned anything I’ve eaten, unless it’s chips, but about halfway through this soup I broke out the salt mill. As I did so I couldn’t help wishing the kitchen had taken care of this for me.

The thing that redeemed the soup was the sourdough bread that came with it, and a brilliant accident. The menu talked about the soup and bread and said ADD CHEESE £2.00. Now, I assumed this meant I’d get some to top the soup with, but that was my happy mistake. Because what I got instead was a thick slab of sourdough completely enveloped in cheese, toasted until golden and brown-spotted. And it was absolutely divine. Somehow the bread was almost totally smothered in cheese – practically on both sides – and the whole thing was a treat.

It didn’t go with the soup, you couldn’t really eat it with the soup. But for two quid, your fair to middling soup was accompanied by a magical slice of cheese on toast. I couldn’t decide whether this reflected well or badly on Doux Sourire, so it was probably a bit of both. It also made me think that coming here for a toastie at lunchtime was a good idea: if they could do this with one slice of bread, imagine what they could do with two! But Doux Sourire’s menu is funny in this respect: for toasties it trots out Paysan Breton brie or a nameless goats cheese, whereas elsewhere on the menu cheese royalty – especially Ogleshield – is left unable to achieve its full potential.

My pinot noir, by the way, was disappointing. It wasn’t unpleasant, but for a tenner I thought it was a little thin and unremarkable, a rather one-dimensional mixture of cherry and oak. I ordered a viognier to follow up, and again although I liked it enough I thought it was unspecial. I’d obviously been ruined for wine in general and French wine in particular by my recent visit to Paulette, but I expected a bit more from a place which was at least slightly wine-led, very proudly French and descended from a wine bar. Je Ne Regrette Rien was playing in the background, and I wasn’t sure I could completely identify with the blessed Edith.

One of the specials, a rather avant-garde combination of crêpe filled with ragu, was off the menu but never mind – with my unerring ability to sniff out the most expensive thing on the menu I’d ordered something called the Spaniard. It was sort of Spanish, but on paper it was more like an advert for European unity, incorporating as it did Serrano ham, a buckwheat galette, pesto, sundried tomato and cheddar. I make that easily four nations on one plate.

I’d picked it because Doux Sourire makes much of its hand-carved jamon, and I don’t think I know of anywhere in Reading, with the possible exception of Thames Lido, that has ever done this. And god knows I’ve moaned about it enough over the years, so when it did crop up on a menu I felt duty bound to order it. The chap proudly told me that they carve it themselves, and told me there’d be a slight delay as they had just finished a ham. So I saw him take another one out of – I’m not making this up – a cardboard box, place it in the jamonera (the fancy stand thing with the clamps) and, with great ceremony, take the first slices off it.

I took a picture of the ham being carved and sent it to Zoë, having dinner up in London on a rare night away with work. I’m popping this ham’s cherry, I said.

Fucking hell came the response. It might just be the best thing in the Oracle since I left. You can quote me on that.

And again, the theory was so good but the practice is what counts, because you can’t eat theory. My buckwheat galette turned up looking the part, and you couldn’t argue with the sheer quantity of jamon – a big heap of it on top and an awful lot stuffed inside, so much that it could actually be hard to cut. But I wasn’t entirely sure that this mishmash of ingredients showed anything off to its best effect. The ham was, and I can’t believe I’m saying this, overkill, and although it was better than the clammy packet stuff you so often get in the U.K. it didn’t have that melting, savoury quality you get in the best of the Spanish stuff. Maybe it would be better served on its own – you can get a platter of it for eighteen pounds – but in a galette it just got lost.

And again, the mixture of the good and the ordinary was a problem here. So the ham was decent, if not the best, but the pesto felt shop-bought, with that vinegary note that suggested it wasn’t just made of basil, pine nuts, parmesan and really good oil. The cheese was decent enough, but the sundried tomatoes had that feeling too, of being entry-level supermarket fare. And although the balsamic glaze wasn’t as overkill as it could have been, it felt unnecessary. Doux Sourire drizzles it on all of their savoury crêpes, and if you ask me they shouldn’t. I’m not sure a pile of leaves, also drizzled but not dressed, added much.

All of this detracted from what could have been a very enjoyable, buttery galette, which should have been the feature attraction. And just to add to the onslaught of constructive criticism, in most of the places I’ve eaten or seen crêpes, they are assembled by folding the edges in, creating a square shape. For this one, Doux Sourire just folded the whole thing in half, and what that meant was that the filling was very unevenly distributed, with a lot of it in the middle and none of it at the edges.

This reads like a demolition of something I didn’t mind, but it’s more motivated by frustration that it could have been better. Doux Sourire has a limited menu, most of which consists of permutations of a couple of things, so it stands or falls on the quality of its ingredients, and that’s where I felt like there were mixed messages throughout. And the other reason why this is important is that my crêpe cost eighteen pounds fifty. Some of the challenges I’ve heard about Doux Sourire’s pricing feel a little misjudged – after all, we think nothing of paying fifteen quid for pizza – but even I thought this was a lot of money for something that didn’t quite hit the target.

I felt a moral responsibility to stay for dessert, so I had the baked cheesecake. You get to pick your toppings, and one of them was caramel sauce, so I went for that. The menu said that all Doux Sourire’s desserts were home-made – most of them are sweet crêpes or waffles – and I could believe this was true. But again, I noticed the flaws more than I should have. The texture of it didn’t feel especially baked, and the biscuit base was so thick that getting a fork through it felt like a series of high risk manoeuvres.

I had gone for caramel sauce, hoping to get a caramel au beurre salé, but it was more like the generic butterscotch syrup you so often see instead, and there was too much of it. Little nubbins of what could have been toffee had been strewn on top. It was my mistake to pick this, as it detracted from what could have been a perfectly serviceable cheesecake with a hint of lemon, notwithstanding the huge plate of baked biscuit it was standing on. I suspect a better option would be a sweet crêpe, but that’s the other thing about Doux Sourire’s menu: limited replay value, you see. Speaking of replay, I was pretty sure we were on to our second rendition of La Vie En Rose coming through the speakers by then.

I was by no means the last customer, but as I settled up – sixty quid including tip – I spoke to both my servers. They were absolutely lovely and really attentive throughout, and told me that they’d been open since October and things were going well. They have regular jazz nights which are booked out in advance, and I can see they could be a lot of fun.

I found myself really pleased that their brave experiment was succeeding, so far, and as I paid my bill and thanked them and told them I’d had a nice time I did also find myself wondering, before it was even begun, how I would end this review. The Oracle was a bleak place at half past eight, and two people in quick succession asked me if I had any change. I walked to my bus stop past Côte, still doing a very brisk trade on the Wednesday before payday. What would sixty pounds have bought you there?

So yes, this is hard. The romantic in me wants to give Doux Sourire a higher mark because I want it to be good and brilliant, the combination of the wine bar Reading still needs and the French bubble it hasn’t had for too long. And I want to give them a higher mark because they really seem to care, and the service was excellent. I want to give them a higher mark than this for lots of reasons, but if I did I would be awarding the rating they might have one day, rather than the one they have now.

I hope that as they settle in they sort out their inconsistencies and find a place in Reading’s affections. If it was in my gift, which it isn’t, I would get them to stock more and better wine, and exclusively French wine at that. I would look at a menu that feels too narrow, and find a way to make better use of their produce, and for that matter I would get better produce. I’d maybe lose the creepy dolls from the shelves, while we’re at it, but I’d keep the music and the service. But am I talking now about what Doux Sourire could be, or am I, like James Stewart in Vertigo, trying to just shape it into what I really want?

Perhaps they’ll do perfectly fine as they are. I do sort of hope so. I may well drop in for a toastie one lunchtime, and a coffee – they have a big Victoria Arduino espresso machine, a serious piece of kit – and when I do I hope to see them prospering. I might go on my own, though. It’s that kind of place.

Creperie Doux Sourire – 6.8
Unit R19, The Riverside, RG1 2AG
0118 2294645

https://www.creperiedouxsourire.co.uk

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