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Wild boar collar and shoulder |
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Ingredients for Original of the Species - Mangalitsa to right of the picture. |
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Wild boar collar and shoulder |
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Ingredients for Original of the Species - Mangalitsa to right of the picture. |
For the second year running the Central and East regional heats of BBC’s The Great British Menu, now in its twentieth year, were scheduled to be shown towards the end of the programme’s 2025 run.
There was much to dread - the judges still included the jollily bullying Tom Kerridge, the not at all funny comedian Ed Gamble and a new judge in the form of a stony-faced, dour Scottish woman chef with the disapproving, unsmiling demeanour of a dreich day in the Highlands and the sense of us all being ‘doomed’ (to recall Private Fraser). Perhaps it is unkind to label the trio as ‘The Bad, The Worse and The Miserable’ or perhaps not. Of course, this trio was balanced by the excellent Andi Oliver full of energy, discernment, knowledge and ebullience - there could be no better celebrity to front the programme than she in her colourful glad rags and distinctive look, less a wet weekend in Edinburgh and more a calypso on an Antiguan beach.
The region’s four competitors included only two who worked in the West Midlands, the others inevitably working in London. This latter pair were Sally Abé with her East Midlands roots who seems to be a perpetual Great British Menu competitor though always very charming and Harry Kirkpatrick from Norfolk, Head Chef at Trinity in Clapham, that well known Midlands/East Anglia suburb.
The West Midlands however was well represented by two chefs - Thom Bateman, chef proprietor of The Flintlock in Cheddleton in Staffordshire, who has previously appeared in the programme although he was beaten on the Judges day by Tom Shepherd, and Grace and Savour’s and Kynd’s David Taylor, originally from Nottingham but now well established as a star of West Midlands cuisine. I have dined at Taylor’s restaurant several times and enjoyed watching demonstrations by Bateman at last year’s Ludlow Food Festival.
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Kirkpatrick, Thom Bateman, Andi Oliver, David Taylor and Abé. |
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David Taylor’s canopé |
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Thom Bateman’s canopé |
The day after my most recent visit to David Taylor’s immaculate Grace and Savour at Hampton Manor back in November 2024, it was announced that the manor’s other esteemed restaurant, Stuart Deeley’s Smoke, would close in February 2025 with Deeley leaving at the end of 2024, and would be replaced by a second David Taylor restaurant to be called Kynd (see Blog 446). I’m sure the time relationship between my visit to Hampton Manor and the important announcement was purely coincidental.
Kynd opened on 28 February 2025 as planned and I was delighted to be the first paying customer through the door on that opening day. I was in a happy mood as I headed along the country lane, walking from the railway station to Hampton Manor and I was buoyed up by the late afternoon sunset and the groups of snowdrops in the hedgerows on either side of the road. It was only the second time I have visited one of the manor’s restaurants while it was still daylight and it was certainly easier to find my way around the grounds with the light still present. And so I alighted on Kynd in the building which had once been home to Smoke. Where once Stu Deeley had been Lord of this particular part of the manor, now David Taylor held the reigns of culinary power.
I was the first diner. Not quite the first man at the top of Everest or on the moon but a nice feeling especially after the relaxed, friendly greeting from Keoghan who had been so helpful in arranging a taxi for me when I was last at Grace and Savour. To all intents and purposes this was just like a revisit to Smoke which was not a bad thing at all. It was cosy and warm and nicely lit and decoratively rustic. It was easy to make myself comfortable and feeling vaguely euphoric, I launched straight into a decidedly lip smacking, spicy margarita which was an absolute riot in the mouth and then a ‘snack’ of three different types of charcuterie including venison with fennel and cured beef and then I was presented with fresh, delightful sourdough with Ampersand butter, one of my favourites (fie! though marmite or miso or seaweed butters! give me rich, golden traditional butter to spread on to my comforting fresh, delicious bread any day! Fie, I say!)
Meanwhile, I’ve had a very pleasing week - a night in Stratford upon Avon staying at the excellent Hotel Du Vin where I dined before going to the Royal Shakespeare Theatre to see the present fabulous production of Hamlet (meets the Titanic) which, improbable as it may sound, worked wonderfully well particularly with its spectacular special effects and remarkable acting though here the director is worthy of special mention. Luke Thallon was a splendid Hamlet, the best I have seen in the theatre, and Nancy Carroll, was the best Gertrude, stately and long suffering like Queen Camilla, I have ever seen, full of convincing emotion highlighting her guilt and shock and horror of what is going on around her and how much she is responsible for it all. Few scenes in the theatre will ever be as memorable as that where the dead and dying characters slide down the severely sloping deck of the sinking ship Elsinore and plunge into the ocean while Horatio prays that flights of angels will give Hamlet a good send off.
But back to my Stratford dinner. On this occasion I chose the excellent prix fixé menu and enjoyed 2 courses for £29. To start I had a generous slice of Wye and Severn smoked salmon which was entirely edible and no problem for the chef to place on the plate. I liked being served a large piece of lemon in a muslin bag- no chance of having to deal with annoying lemon pips - but the accompanying dill creème Fraiche was more soothing than tasty.