7 weeks to go until what I hear you ask? The start of the summer holidays? The end of the summer holidays? No, something very important for our High Street – the deadline for submission of your Kent Life and Kent on Sunday Food & Drink Award nomination!!!!
What I’ve Learnt This Year
Firstly, thank you very much for such a positive reaction to last week’s blog. In light of the awful events this week, being kind seems all the more important so whether you spread the blog or not, at least just spread the message.
Be Kind.
I was walking home from the train station on Wednesday, around midnight and was shocked to see the lights on in Sulston’s Kitchen. Assuming I was going to surprise some burglars (although not sure why they’d put the lights on!), imagine my surprise when I see Ben and Kirsty Sulston still working! But why wouldn’t they? They’re thriving, they’re busy, this is their livelihood and they, just like other business owners, want to deliver the best product & the best customer service that they can. As Eat Around Tonbridge blogger, I chat to foodie business owners and, recently, I’ve been shocked to learn of some of the abuse that they suffer and I feel compelled to speak out. Sometimes the abuse is face to face and other times it’s behind the facade of social media; but regardless of how it’s delivered, it’s often damaging to the business and hurtful to individuals. I’m pretty sure that I’m preaching to the converted with this blog but please spread the word. This applies to all businesses, not just foodie ones: Feedback, good and constructive, for any business is interesting – it can tell them something they didn’t know about their product or their customer and help them to improve. But bad feedback is just that – it’s bad; not helpful, just hurtful. I’m not telling you not to complain if something’s gone wrong during your meal or evening out! Not at all! But we must all go about it the right way. Be polite in your complaint, give them a chance to reply and most of all, do it face to face or over email/phone, not social media or Trip Advisor. Proprietors are working hard and really doing their best to deliver quality. As we all know, sometimes things go wrong. Be generous. Be forgiving. Be kind. I’d love to hear your thoughts on this, so please fire away… Eat Reviewer.
Tuesday Tonbridge News and The Bakehouse events!
Last year Tonbridge eating establishments did so well at the Kent Life Food and Drink Awards and the awards just keep coming! This weekend The Black Rose Bakery received the bronze award at Cake International, Alexandra Palace, for a truly stunning cake. Eat Around Tonbridge would like to congratulate Nichola for achieving this accolade….and making and transporting this cake! Amazing – puts my Paw Patrol 4th birthday cake to shame… The Black Rose Bakery’s award winning cake – all hand made! Last Friday I was kindly invited to the cheese & wine tasting at The Bakehouse at 124 which was run in conjunction with Tunbridge Wells based Fromage & French. The Bakehouse was a great setting for cheese and wine – dimly lit, people in snug corners ready to indulge in the delicious cheeses and wines. Gaelle from Fromage & French talked you through the eight cheeses, ranging from goats’ cheese to Roquefort, whilst Chris was the wine man, explaining the origins of the wine and which might compliment each cheese. To accompany them all was delicious bread from The Bakehouse, of course. Most of the wines were new to me so I left feeling quite clued up: Vermentino ‘warmed my cockles’ whereas my friend could have drunk a whole bottle quite easily, she told me! The Roquefort and dessert wine was a revelation: the sublime combination of saltiness and sweetness, I was converted. The Brie de Mieux was the piece de resistance (really sorry Francophiles, can’t find the accents), arrogantly oozing all over the platter, its strong flavour making it one of my favourites. The night was a bit ‘up and down’ as we had to keep getting up for a new wine so it certainly felt less relaxing and more a-tasting but I would definitely return. I think it’s great that Tonbridge is enjoying these types of evenings or events and you know what I’m going to say, if you want them to continue, we must support them! This Friday The Bakehouse is hosting its famous pizza night – delicious sour dough bases with interesting toppings including Kentish Blue cheese – you don’t get that in Rome! Read about it here and support it by booking at The Bakehouse or on 01732 360382! Bon appetit!
Tick tock – how time flies! EAT is 1 today + The Clock House & Creams Factory
Eat Around Tonbridge is 1 today! I should probably have some stats on the number of blogs, likes, competition entries I’ve had in the last 12 months but I’m too busy telling you about more new places! How fitting, that in the week that the Eat Around Tonbridge blog celebrates its first anniversary, new places are opening in Tonbridge and we hear that Sankey’s fishmonger is coming! Tick, tock…The Clock House opens its doors at noon today but I managed a sneaky peek of Tonbridge’s new tapas restaurant on Wednesday at the launch party. It looks great – spacious, clean, fresh – and it’s an horologist’s dream with clocks adorning all the walls! Photo credits throughout – Kerry Barton, Studio 23 The ‘theatre kitchen’ was in full swing providing miniature tapas off the menu for guests to try – sea food paella, albondigas (meat balls), patatas bravas (fried potatoes in a tomato sauce) to name a few. The meat balls stood out for me – very tasty! I was impressed with the authentically Spanish menu (even down to the desserts) and that Dan and the team haven’t tried to offer too much: there seems to be enough on the menu to offer variety but not to overwhelm. Sea food paella Photographer in tow (lots of pics in Gallery), after The Clock House we hot-footed it up to Creams Factory to see how week one is going. It’s open until 10pm and when we arrived around 9pm there was a lovely mix of clientele in Tonbridge’s new gelateria. The ice creams (gelato is healthier than traditional ice cream) are made on site and look so tempting, in soft peaks, winking at you through the display cabinet saying “Pick me!” I tried some salted caramel and it was divine – I hear the mint choc chip is good too and at £2 for one scoop on a cone, it’s not too pricey. A rainbow of gelatos… Competitions with both The Clock House and Creams Factory are in the planning so keep your eyes peeled and make sure you enter. But I know you’ll enter as you’ve been so supportive of the Eat Around Tonbridge blog this last year. Thank you for all the likes, shares, retweets & comments (positive and not so positive!) of the restaurant and café reviews, interviews with our local foodies and competitions – I really appreciate it. I’m proud of the blog and its followers; as a collective, we have promoted local businesses and encouraged them on their way – I’m sure we helped Tonbridge yield a bumper crop of awards at the Kent Life Food & Drink awards in 2016. And what you may not know is that, thanks to the blog & your positivity I have a new career, and started my own business as a freelance writer (links at the bottom). So thanks for that too. So please do continue to eat around Tonbridge as it evolves and continue to support the blog – let me know what you’d like to see and I’ll add it to the very long list! Enjoy the long weekend! Eat Reviewer The problem with taking a photographer…is that she wants to photograph me! @eat_tonbridge @writerforbiz https://www.facebook.com/Caroline-Kings-1424474217859290/
TABLE: Meet the Ryneharts Part 1
The enthusiasm from Susanna and Mark Rynehart is infectious when I speak to them about their lifestyle change – swapping supermarket shopping with indy-shopping, the high street butchers and farm shops for example. Over the next few months, I’m going to track the Ryneharts’ progress as they change their shopping and eating habits. And don’t switch off now thinking this isn’t for you – I’m an online supermarket shopper and had my eyes opened. It all started for the Ryneharts with a wish list of an intimate wedding within the local community, serving their guests a wedding breakfast of local produce. Our lovely Tonbridge Castle & Tonbridge Old Fire Station ticked all the boxes and they were married last June. They then started to wonder why ‘indy shopping’ should only be for special occasions & after Christmas 2016, decided to make it less novelty and more normal. In their words, they wanted “better food”. They care about the origins of their food, the carbon foot print – how local it is, seasonality, packaging – all those things that we read about and they wanted to escape the rat run of the supermarket and the “tyranny of choice” as Mark calls it. Over the past few months they’ve sourced meat, cheese and veg from a variety of local independent food retailers – this is how they spend their Saturday mornings, sometimes dragging their teenage sons with them. Their sons are an interesting gauge of the success of this change: despite the two boys thinking this is a fad (apparently last year it was slow-cooking), Susanna and Mark have noticed that the boys are commenting more that their meal is “delicious” and devouring the meat in front of them – previously they might have laboured over a meal, pushing it round with their forks. The Ryneharts don’t meal-plan – they purchase what’s local (and by default seasonal) and create a meal from that basket, perhaps adapting a well-loved recipe to include an ingredient that’s in season, sometimes new to them. By purchasing from independents, they’re building relationships there and feel comfortable to be adventurous, asking the experts behind the counter for advice. They’re relishing being creative with a lamb joint – roasting it one day, curry the next – and they’re really savouring it – paying more means that you’re a more conscientious cook, avoiding waste (although they’re eager to tell me that savings can be made – buying a sack of potatoes for example might cost £10 and last months if stored correctly vs less economical supermarket quantities). Their enthusiasm was so infectious that I was compelled to try it myself – due to a lack of time I just visited Haywards farm shop and spent about £44 on quite a lot of meat and veg that was on my list (I’m a meal planner…). The shop was quiet when I arrived, as I’d secretly expected but that didn’t last for long as it became very busy! In a shop groaning with fresh produce, oddly, I was attracted to packaged goods! Out of all the cherry tomatoes, I chose the plastic packaged ones (there were a lot on offer) and then wandered over to the fridge to peruse more pre-packaged goods! (I bought some Haywards chicken nuggets). They’re even giving it away & I’m going for plastic! The revelation was the roast chicken. We cooked it the next day & my two children, usually picky and slow at eating – devoured it! Maybe there’s something in this I started thinking… So far, so good for the Ryneharts but will they be able to maintain their commitment to the cause, the time, the spontaneity of filling the basket with what’s available? Or will they cut corners for convenience? – like the rest of us! Let’s wait and see!