Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Traditional Family Christmas is Best

Children really do prefer a traditional family Christmas and spending time with mum and dad to countless expensive presents.


A new study has suggested that what makes children happy at Christmas is being with their family, not receiving sack loads of presents. 

Researchers found that 40 per cent of children would rather Father Christmas brought them time with their parents and immediate family, instead of being given their annual treat of stocking fillers.



A quarter of children are also hoping that they will get festive visits from family members that they rarely see during the year, according to the research by holiday company Butlins.



Board games and quizzes are popular among children, with one in five saying they would be happier if their families played traditional games.



"Seeing mum and dad work hard throughout the year, and not being able to spend as much time with them as they'd like, is prompting kids to think about the bigger picture," according to Mark Hunter, of Butlins.



"Of course they are looking forward to Santa's arrival, but they are also hoping for quality family time - the chance to reconnect and enjoy each other's company," he added.

However, 15 per cent of them worry that this will lead to arguments during family gatherings.

Research was done for Butlins by www.onepoll.com among a sample of 1,000 children aged six to 16 from September 13-26 2011.

Monday, December 5, 2011



Here's culinary adventurer Adam Clark and co-cooking conspirator Adrian Foulkes at the Padstow Christmas Festival demonstrating their panfrying prowess.

If you missed their bravura performance at the festival, here's a little reprise of their recipes.

INGREDIENTS

· 250g of courgette grated

· Salt and black pepper

· 600g minced turkey

· 2 medium free-range eggs

· 1 ½ tsp ground cumin

· 3 tbsp chopped coriander

· 3 tbsp chopped mint

· 2 garlic cloves crushed

· 60g chopped spring onion

· Sunflower oil for frying

DIPPING SAUCE

· 2 tsp sweet chilli sauce

· 1½ tsp toasted sesame seeds

· Zest and juice from 1 lime

· 1 tsp soy sauce

· 1 tsp honey

· 10g fresh ginger minced

· 2 tbsp blended sesame and vegetable oil

· 1 spring onion finely sliced


METHOD

1. Heat the oven to 180*C.

2. Put the grated courgette in a sieve, mixed with a ¼ teaspoon of salt, and leave to drain for 15 minutes.

3. Squeeze out as much liquid as possible with your hands, then put the courgette in a large mixing bowl along with the turkey, eggs, cumin, coriander, mint, garlic, ¾ of the spring onion, a teaspoon of salt and some black pepper. Mix together well and shape into 12 patties weighing about 80g each.

4. Heat some sunflower oil in a large frying pan and fry the patties for four minutes, turning once, until nice and brown on both sides. Transfer to a baking tray and finish off in the oven for a further 10 minutes.

5. To make the dipping sauce just combine all the ingredients and put into dipping bowls.

6. Mix some of the sweet chilli and sesame oil in a separate bowl and brush this over the turkey cakes as soon as they come out of the oven. Sprinkle with sesame seeds and serve with dipping sauce.


CRANBERRY, ORANGE & PORT SAUCE


INGREDIENTS FOR TWO 12 OZ JARS

· 225g fresh cranberries

· 4 whole cloves

· 1 whole cinnamon stick

· 1 onion, peeled and finely diced

· 50g fresh ginger, peeled and minced

· 1 clove of garlic, minced

· 100ml red wine vinegar

· 100ml port wine

· 250g unrefined caster sugar

· Juice and zest of one orange

· Salt and freshly cracked black pepper

METHOD

1. Peel and finely dice the onion, mince the garlic and fresh ginger and mix it all together.

2. Place all the ingredients apart from the orange zest into a medium size saucepan and season lightly with salt and freshly cracked black pepper.

3. Over a low heat, bring to the simmer, stirring occasionally.

4. Cook the sauce until a thickened drip consistency; this takes about 20 minutes, add the orange zest, remove from the heat and leave to cool. It will thicken as it cools, so don’t let it get too thick.

5. Pour the cranberry sauce into a sterilized jar and seal.

6. Try adding a spoonful of the sauce into a casserole, especially lamb or game.

GLUTEN-FREE SUNFLOWER & YOGHURT SCONES


INGREDIENTS FOR 10 – 12

· 225g Doves gluten free self-raising flour

· 1 tsp baking powder

· 25g sunflower margarine

· 2 tbsp golden caster sugar

· 50g raisins

· 4 tbsp sunflower seeds

· 100ml natural yoghurt

· 1 egg

· About 2 tbsp milk


METHOD

1. Preheat oven to 200*C.

2. Line a baking tray with greaseproof paper.

3. Sift the baking powder and flour into a large bowl and rub in the sunflower margarine evenly.

4. Stir in the caster sugar, raisins and about half the sunflower seeds, then mix in the yoghurt and egg beaten together, adding just enough milk to make a soft but not sticky dough.

5. Roll the dough out on a lightly floured surface to about 3cm thickness.

6. Cut into 6cm rounds and lift onto prepared baking tray.

7. Brush with milk and sprinkle with the reserved sunflower seeds.

8. Bake for 10 – 12 minutes until well-risen and golden brown.

9. Cool on a wire rack. Serve split and spread with Red Stuff jam and Cornish clotted cream.

SAUCE BASE FOR CORNISH FISH STEW


INGREDIENTS

· 1 red gurnard, head removed, gutted & chopped through the bone into chunks

· 1 pinch of saffron

· 1 star anise

· 1 branch of thyme

· 2 cloves garlic – cut in half

· 1 tsp fennel seeds

· 2 tbsp olive oil


METHOD

1. Place all this into a container, mix well and leave to marinade over night.

2. The next day roast off this fish mixture until golden brown. Set aside.

3. In a large heavy based saucepan roast together: 3 carrots, peeled and roughly chopped, 2 sticks of sliced celery, 1 small leek, washed and roughly chopped, 1 onion or 2 banana shallots, peeled and diced, 1 bulb of garlic cut in half across the cloves and a branch of thyme

4. When all of this is roasted golden brown, add the fish mixture to it and stir in 1 tbsp of tomato purée and 1 baking potato peeled and coarsely grated. Mix together well.

5. De-glaze the pan with 50ml brandy and 50ml Pernod and allow pan to flame.

6. Then add 1 tin of chopped tomatoes and 750ml of fish stock, or water with fish bouillon cube.

7. Bring this slowly to the boil and simmer for 1 ½ - 2 hours, stirring gently.

8. Remove from heat and allow to cool before blending until smooth in a strong food processor.

9. Pass this through a fine strainer, pressing well to ensure you are left with a beautiful silky fish sauce / soup. Season to taste with salt and freshly ground black pepper.

10. Roast what fish and shellfish of your choice in a large pan, add the sauce base and place a lid on top. Pop this in the oven at 180oC for 8 to 10 minutes.

11. Remove lid. Serve into suitable bowls with saffron dumplings, say, or croutons, chopped parsley and rouille.

COME OVER FOR LUNCH OR DINNER SOON

You don’t have to be an overnight guest at Bedruthan or our sister hotel the Scarlet to enjoy our seriously good food. We are committed to well-sourced, simply cooked seasonal food, and if you tuck into lunch or dinner at either of our hotels you are guaranteed a feast for your eyes as well as your taste buds. Our cliff top restaurants overlook beautiful Mawgan Porth Beach with stunning views of the Atlantic beyond.
So come and experience the Scarlet’s superb menus for £19.50 for three courses. For your special locals lunch offer code, please go to www.scarlethotel.co.uk/localoffer
Bedruthan has an exciting new all day bistro café opening in February 2012 and a seafood restaurant opening in April 2012. Keep an eye on our website at www.bedruthan.com for further details of menus and prices.

To book, please call Bedruthan Steps on 01637 860 555 or the Scarlet on 01637 861 800.

@RedStuffChef @ChefMattBurns @JmEcoChef @BedruthanSteps @theScarletHotel


Friday, November 11, 2011

Homemade Christmas Gifts


Homemade Christmas Gifts
by Genevra Fletcher


Homemade Christmas gifts…a wonderful idea in theory. But how do you pull it off in poised and elegant Kirsty’s Homemade Home style as opposed to DIY bodge disaster?

Bedruthan Steps Hotel has come up with a great way to help you with creating your Christmas crafts this year so you can make some wonderful homemade presents for your family and friends.

Our Cornish Christmas Craft Fair Weekend (25th - 27th November) at beautiful Bedruthan Steps in Cornwall is a chance to stay in luxury and enjoy all sorts of inspiring craft sessions and food demonstrations.

We’re guarantee to get you and your family making a whole range of beautiful handmade presents; we’re talking the sort of bespoke, handcrafted gift your friends and family will treasure and feel blessed to receive.

Our head chef is going to show you how to create the most delicious Christmas dinner - with all the trimmings, but at a fraction of the price and with everything ready prepared so you can have a relaxing Christmas Day. Come to our Christmas Preserving class and we’ll teach you how to create your own festive flavours to add another homemade and personal touch to your Christmas table.

And what’s more, to make your life really simple, we’re hosting a Cornish Christmas Fair at the hotel. Our aim is to make it easy to get your Christmas shopping done and find just the right presents for family and friends. There really will be something for everyone, with plenty of inspiration for gifts that will leave all those ubiquitous and expensive shop bought ‘must have’ presents out in the cold.

We are offering a very special rate from £74 per person per night including dinner, bed and breakfast for two night stays during our Homemade Christmas Weekend of November 25th, 26th and 27th.

The weekends are suitable for every generation.

To find out more, please call us on 01637 860 555 or email stay@bedruthan.com. To book now, please click here.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Homemade jams, sloe gin and vodka anyone?





Culinary adventurer Adam Clark

Adam's gooseberry jam.

Nature's bounty.

The family that forages together stays together!





by Culinary Adventurer Adam Clark

You may not know this yet, but I decided a little while ago to stand down as head chef of Bedruthan Steps Hotel. Why? An exciting new culinary adventure was calling me.

I've taken up a new role as food development chef for Red Hotels (the company that runs Bedruthan and its sister hotel the Scarlet) and my ambition is to create a range of Red Hotels own branded products.

Wooden spoon in hand, I've got off to a good start by creating preserves for both hotels to serve with breakfast, afternoon tea etc.

And I've been lucky enough to have spent quite a bit of my working day food foraging some of Cornwall’s most beautiful spots, gathering edible hedgerow treasures from which to create some wonderful Red Hotels fare.

On days off, I've taken my family on food foraging expeditions, gathering the most wonderful sloes, so abundant this year and so early. I've never seen them so big. I've also discovered the merits of the wild plum, and squirrelled away a bumper crop.

Back in the busy Bedruthan kitchen, I set to work with my finds. Now, if you stop for a drink at Bedruthan's bar, and you will see on the spirits shelf our very own sloe gin - a wonderful liquor with a lovely flavour and wonderfully warm feel to it. Just what you need on your return from a windy beach walk.


Excited by my success with the sloe gin, I used some of the wild plums to make a flavoured vodka, which after just a few days is already looking enticing. I can only imagine how quickly that is going to go once I put it in the bar. Be sure to look out for it when you next visit us.

Hopefully, with all the sloes I picked with the help of my family, there will be enough to go round. My children Archie and Daisy, my wife Tania, my brother Nick, sister Penny, niece Anna and I all really got stuck into the picking and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves on a beautiful sunny day in St. Agnes. We had walked over the beacon with views as far as St Ives one way and Newquay the other, and the colours of the heather and gorse over one of the highest points for miles was incredible. The different shades of purple and golden yellows were really lovely.

It hasn’t all been a blue skies ideal life though, I've been in my full on wet weather and bramble protection gear as I took on some seriously spiky bushes.

Firstly, the blackberries. Well, I had to get stuck in didn’t i? So in I went and came out laden but truly scratched and bloodied. It was worth it though, and our apple and bramble jam is a real seasonal treat.

Then there was the rosehips and the sea buckthorn, discovered on our own sand dunes below the hotel, so in i went again. If the prickles from the roses weren’t bad enough, have you seen the thorns on a sea buckthorn? There is no easy way of gathering these as the thorns are massive and not easily seen in amongst the berries and leaves but i managed to get myself a little routine going on and got a little savvy in how to handle this plant. And again it was well worth it after using a River Cottage recipe to make sea Buckthorn and apple jam, a real special jam that I will be making for our speciality range.

As for apples, I have never seen so many wild apples as I did this year. I have taken up most of the conference fridge with crates of crab apples and am slowly working my way through them.

I'm enjoying my new role; it's very satisfying to be providing both hotels with their preserves and I have been receiving good feedback too.

We have been spending time getting our labels and jars organised so that we are able to let our guests have some memories of their stay to take back home with them, so please ask when you visit if you love tasting our preserved Cornish countryside.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Seaweed Crisps Recipe


Seaweed Crisps Recipe
By Adam Clark



I thought it might be nice to share some knowledge with you about our beautiful Cornish countryside. As some of you know, I have a passion for wild food and enjoy getting out and spotting ingredients that can be bought back to the kitchen.

There's great joy to be had in making the most of our local larder.

I’m sure as kids you all used to love looking, feeling and playing with the different seaweeds on the beach. Well, who knew that some of them can be turned into something delicious?

Here I am going to talk about sugar kelp, so called because of it’s lovely sweet flavour. It is also known as sweet oarweed.

It is a very common member of the kelp family and is distinctive for its long, dark brown curly edged belts. It's usual a good six inches wide and sometimes over six feet long.

You can normally find it very near or below the low tide mark, as it does not like too much exposure by the tide. You can normally see them hanging vertically in the water, swaying in the current.

So, to make delicious crispy sugar kelp crisps

1. Rinse the seaweed well in fresh water
2. Hang the fronds up to dry; they don't need to be completely brittle when you cook it, but they should at least be shrivelled and leathery (yes, really).
3. Cut across into two cm strips and fry in batches in at least one cm of hot sunflower oil.
4. In a matter of seconds the strips will puff up and change colour.
5. Remove with a slotted spoon and drain on kitchen paper.

So, there you have it…delicious sugar kelp crisps.

Bedruthan salutes The Loose Salute

We are very proud of our local musical talent. The Loose Salute, a band from just up the road in Newquay, were on Dermot O'Leary's Radio 2 show this weekend.

Listen here from about 13:40.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Spare 2 minutes and Keep Cornwall Beautiful

Bedruthan Steps

Have you visited Cornwall? Do you care about keeping our natural environment beautiful?

Can you spare 2 minutes, then, to do your bit to protect Cornwall's areas of outstanding natural beauty?

All we want you to do is fill in a short online survey about your trip to Cornwall.

Red Hotels Ltd, owners of Bedruthan Steps and the Scarlet hotels, is supporting sustainable tourism enterprise CoaST with its project comparing sustainable practices in national parks and protected areas in Europe. CoaST's aim is to discover how we can improve our practices here in Cornwall.

CoaST is an independent body and social enterprise based in a refurbished barn in Cornwall. CoaST consists of 3 women and 1 man who variously:
encourage,
inform,
network,
research,
lobby,
measure,
persuade,
object,
question,
bend ears,
break boundaries and
never knowingly give up.

Most of Cornwall's visitors come for the environment and visit one or more of the 12 distinctive Cornwall Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) during their stay.

We are asking you - followers and friends of Bedruthan Steps and the Scarlet hotels, and as visitors to Cornwall - to answer a few simple questions about how we can develop sustainable tourism in Cornwall's beautiful protected areas.

CoaST's short survey only takes 2 minutes of your time, and we would really appreciate it if you could complete in the survey online. The deadline is 31st July 2011.


And click here to find out more about what Bedruthan Steps and the Scarlet's sustainable practices.

Click on the following links to read more about our commitment to the environment in various different guises:

Thank you so much for helping. If you have any questions, please contact:
Marja
At CoaST
01872-562057
info@coastproject.co.uk

Friday, June 24, 2011

Baby Swimming











by Genevra Fletcher

Here's a lovely moment captured at Bedruthan's baby swimming class on Tuesday. Gorgeous Georgia seems to be lapping up every moment of her swimming lesson.

She, her big brother Reuben and her mum and dad all had a whale of a time with baby swim teacher Lisa Zachary of Swim Academy for Babies.

I like the authentic swimming pool steam-on-the-lens quality of these photos.

The underwater shot demonstrates in action the mammalian dive reflex (which stops a baby taking an immediate inhalation of breath when submerged in water).

I always get this baby reflex mixed up with the moro reflex - the one where a baby throws up its arms when it feels unsupported.

We are running baby swimming sessions as part of our programme of activities for Bedruthan's Young Families Month - our June long celebration of mum, dad and baby bonding!

The baby swim lessons are for Bedruthan guests only, and are for 0-5 year-olds. We run 2 classes, each for half an hour.

What's so good about swimming for young babies?
  • Warm water and gentle exercise can help your baby sleep and stimulate your baby’s appetite.
  • Babies are more relaxed in water, and it’s a fun environment for babies to develop strength, to exercise, and to explore balance and buoyancy.
  • Babies are well adapted to swimming and are born with a swimming reflex. When placed on their tummies in warm water, babies will move their arms and legs in a swimming motion. By encouraging this, you can help baby transfer these involuntary movements into coordinated swimming movements.
  • Water play is a multi-sensory activity. Babies use all of their senses to explore water: sight, sound, touch. They also engage their sense of balance and muscular movements and pressure.
  • Your baby’s brain is developing rapidly. When you expose your baby to water environments, your baby is more likely to have successful water experiences in the future.
More useful information about baby swimming here.

And also:


Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Should Cornwall Council Tax Tourists £1 per night to say here?

Should Cornwall Council Tax Tourists £1 per night to say here?

Click here for more information.
Bedruthan Steps is about as beautiful as beautiful comes.

Land locked? For your very own sea view, where ever you may be at the moment - click here.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Surfboard Competition Winner!



The winner of the Bedruthan Quiver Surfboard Competition is Kelvin White. Congratulations Kelvin! 

The Quiver team are now busy putting the winning design on Kelvin’s board. We will be updating the website, so keep logging on to see the board’s progress as it takes shape and colour.




In second place is Claire Bugler’s design. We loved this Claire, it gave us all a good chuckle and sharing laughter is one of our favourite things here at Bedruthan.




In third place is Elle Hiller’s design. We loved your use of colour Elle, and all the imagination that went into it. Luke was especially fond of the rabbit.


And one of our absolute favourites was this design by Rose, aged 5. We loved your brilliant bold use of colour and materials. You are a great artist, Rose.


Thank you so much to everyone who took the time to create a design and enter. We really appreciate the trouble and care you went to.



Bedruthan owner Emma Stratton and Quiver designer Luke Hart found it really had to choose the winner, as there were so many great designs. They really were all exceptional! 


We will be mounting all your designs on a surfboard to go on display at Bedruthan this summer to showcase them all.



“Picking a winner was really hard,” said Luke. “I know all of them would look great on a surfboard.The winner of the Bedruthan Quiver Surfboard Competition is Kelvin White. Congratulations Kelvin!



The Quiver team are now busy putting the winning design on Kelvin’s board. We will be updating the website, so keep logging on to see the board’s progress as it takes shape and colour.

We like local companies
Quiver Surfboards are based in Newquay, Cornwall, and have been in the industry for over 25 years. All Quiver Surfboards are made at the Seabase factory, where custom made performance shortboards & longboards, retro fishes, and mini-mals are famous world wide. www.quiversurfboards.co.uk




Wednesday, May 25, 2011

It's the journey, not the destination

Well, in the case of Bedruthan Steps and the Scarlet hotels' Sustainable Travel press trip, the journey was as important as the destination.

We wanted to show journalists and bloggers from up country just how accessible Cornwall can be and encourage them to promote sustainable forms of travel.

And as champions of simple pleasures, we wanted to make the journey itself a part of the holiday experience, rather than something to be endured until reaching the hotels.

So what did we do?

We invited various members of her majesty's press to embark on a good old fashioned adventure. They boarded their train at Paddington at 5am - early, I grant you, but the immediate administration of hot coffee and croissants helped to ease their pain, and besides, there's something exciting about being up and about at that time.

After watching out the window as the home counties galloped by and the seeing the sea reached right up to the train tracks at Exeter, the group arrived at Bodmin Station at noon.

Waiting on the platform to meet them was Timo, of Cornwall cycling specialists Mobius Bikes, with mountain bikes for each of them.

Timo guided the bloggers and journalists along country lanes and back roads to the start of the Camel Trail at Bodmin, then along the trail itself past Camel Valley Wines.

A fudge stop helped everyone to enjoy their journey that little bit more, followed by a fish and chip lunch in Padstow. The cycling element of their sustainable journey was rewarded at 7pm with a well deserved hot tub on the cliffs outside the Scarlet.

Then a Biotravel green taxi whisked them back to Bodmin for their train back to London.


Bodmin station has rarely - if ever - seen so many bicycling bloggers and
sustainable travel journalists.



With the free, fresh wind in your, life comes without care when your biking.






Stopping for a breather.

A well deserved glass of wine wouldn't go a miss, but there is such a crime as being drunk in charge of a bicycle.



Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Sew fantastic: go on, try the crack cocaine of craft



Bedruthan's sewing course with Poppy Treffry could transform the most needle phobic individual into a superlative stitcher.

In fact, Poppy's style of freehand machine embroidery is so addictive that TV home making guru Kirstie Allsop once described it as the 'crack cocaine of craft'.

Read on here for a fix of the ultimate textile temptation.

Knit one, pearl one at Bedruthan



Never realised that knitting can be political? Read here to find out how.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Funky Doodle Do: simple pleasures and upcycling

By Genevra Fletcher






Funky doodle do, mouthwatering, fabulous - these are just a few of the adjectives I hear guests and other members of the Bedruthan massif mutter as I tread the freshly carpeted corridors of the hotel.

No, they have not all run mad. They are referring to our new furniture: cheerfully-hued sofas set with jewell-coloured cushions, stylish reclaimed Ercol-style sideboards and tables.

Although I should be back at my desk, I cannot resist stopping in the Bedruthan Ballroom to sink deep into one of those perfectly plumped cushions.

Skyving I'm not. One of many wonderful things about working at Bedruthan Steps is that the hotel promotes a strong ethos of well being, known as the Bedruthan Philosophy. One strand of this philosophy, which the owners encourage all employees and guests to embrace, is the enjoyment of life's simple pleasures.

A perfectly plumped cushion must, surely, be one of life's greatest simple pleasures, so I do not feel too guilty about sinking into one of the new sofas and savouring the moment. I am, after all, living one of Bedruthan's dictums.

Beauty is another Bedruthan principle, brought to mind by The Ballroom's new sideboards and tables. They were created by uber upcycler Lucy Turner, a furniture and surface design artist from Penryn. We like supporting Cornish artists. Read more here.


Lucy specialises in transforming old pieces of furniture, in particular 50s and 60s tables and sideboards, with the clever use of laser cut laminates. Her work is the perfect complement to Bedruthan's 60s architecture and sustainable ethos. We are interested in all things sustainable, especially where tourism is concerned. Read more here.



For more information about Lucy, see her website here and take a look at her blog here.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Royal Wedding Street Party at Bedruthan

Our Royal Wedding celebration - with its seagulls, pasties and cream teas - was perhaps more cliff path party than street party, situated as it was overlooking Mawgan Porth Beach and the Atlantic Ocean.


It had all the best elements of a traditional street party, though, with an added Bedruthan twist.

Bunting billowed in the gentle sea breeze. Sunlight - glinting off the waves below - dazzled us. Even the seagulls seemed suitably reverend about the occasion with the Union Jacks, fluttering overhead, keeping them at a respectful distance from the food.

Ah, the food.

Spread out over red gingham covered tables - platter after delectable platter of pasties, mixed foraged leaf salads, baked ham hock, poached salmon, Jemima Puddleduck eggs with saffron and lemon mayonnaise, English jellies and trifles, mini meringues and scones with strawberry jams, rhubarb Victoria sponges…






Guests and members of the Bedruthan team gathered together to watch the screening of the ceremony, sipping our specially mixed Bedruthan Royal Wedding tipple and waving their Union Jacks.

Once the ceremony was over, the newly weds were safely back at Buckingham Palace and the balcony kiss had taken place, we all made our way outside for our Bedruthan style street party, winding our way along a path made up of beach windbreakers. Hotel director Debbie Wakefield snipped the red ribbon and some good old fashioned British marching band music got the party started.





After the traditional British and Cornish fayre it was time for some traditional British fun - games of skittles on the lawn, tug-of-war and face painting.

The guests carried on the party while the Bedruthan team went back to work - after a sneaky peak at replays of the balcony kiss.













Monday, March 28, 2011

Hairy Hot Wax Torment

Hairy Hot Wax Torment
by Genevra Fletcher


Bedruthan's head chef Adam Clark is a man of rare qualities and rare hairiness too.

It was this hirsute quality of his that made his Comic Relief commitment to have his back waxed in public all the more valiant.

But was his demonstration of bravery not bordering on Bedlam?

You decide.

Click here to witness Adam's gallantry / insanity as he subjected himself to his hairy hot wax torment.

Adam, we salute you.

Genevra Fletcher


Friday, March 18, 2011

Spring has sprung!

Tin mine near St Agnes.

Gorse bushes and a quintessential Cornish tin mine.

Man and his Man!

Common sorrel tastes like apples.

Lesser celandine, aka spring messenger!


Head chef Adam Clark enjoyed a beautiful sunny walk in St Agnes this week.


Spring has arrived in Cornwall. The landscape is beginning to burst into colour - lots of lush greens dotted with beautiful yellow flowers. Out on my walk I took in fields of daffodils, dandelions, gorse and some lovely lesser celandine. The little yellow flowers on this very common perennial herb are among the first to show in the spring. The lesser celandine is also known as the spring messenger, as it appears - without fail - in the last week of February. The flowers and leaves are edible and taste good raw in salads. Its small leaves are shaped like horseshoes or love hearts - depending on your viewpoint - and make an attractive garnish on starter dishes.


Just outside my dad’s house, I found some great patches of hairy bittercress, which is not hairy at all! Nor sharp to the taste! In fact, when young as it is at the moment hairy bittercress can be eaten whole - flower, leaf and stem - and has an excellent spicy flavour, somewhere between mustard and cress. It's lovely raw in sandwiches, great in any salad or mixed with cream cheese.


Out on my walk I found sorrel in abundance, which is very common throughout the British Isles. Sorrel has a real tang to it that reminds me of apples. Yes, it's like eating the skin on apples - quite refreshing to eat while your on a long, hot sunny walk. The leaves are great for shredding and folding into an omelette at the last moment. I have also found that a fish sorrel sauce goes very well as an accompaniment to fishcakes.


I couldn’t resist taking a photo of some bright gorse flowers growing in front of a quintessential Cornish tin mine beneath a clear blue sky. Look carefully at the photo and you will see, just above the roof, the moon still high in the sky at 2pm! Gorse flowers get quite a bit of kitchen attention at Bedruthan too. Last year, we made a great ice cream and this year we will be adding its delicate flavour - reminiscent of coconut - to other recipes too, so watch this space!


I have included for you a nice photo of the famous rock near St Agnes head called ‘Man and his Man’. If you have never done the cliff walk at St Agnes, I recommend it; the scenery is breathtaking. And hey, keep an eye out for some of the aforementioned little treasures - you might be able to collect your tea on your way home!


Well, that’s it for this week, apart from to tell you that Sous Chef Adrian has made some delicious Alexanders Vodka that you will be able to find in the bar at Bedruthan. Pop along one evening to try a Forager's Mojito and feel inspired to take a foraging walk of your own.