Archive for August, 2009

OUTLAWED IN ROCK

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Having suffered under canvas in gales and torrential rain for three nights, my husband and I thought we deserved a break from wet barbecues and booked into Nathan Outlaw’s restaurant at Rock’s St Enodoc Hotel. It was also a welcome respite from the eight charming but occasionally very badly behaved teenagers we were sharing our holiday with. Nathan Outlaw at the St Enodoc is a refreshing contrast to his restaurant at The Marina Villa Hotel in Fowey. More relaxed, less formal, simple local menu, good wines and delicious cocktails. As the rain beat down outside there was no chance of a drink on the terrace but we consoled ourselves with my favourite caipirinha inside. Simon loved his Porthilly mussels (collected in the Rock estuary) in beer and my scallops with bacon and hazelnuts were a great combination.

Excellent service then delivered a beautiful Cornish rib eye and cod with a parsley crust (not so much a crust as a coating but that is splitting hairs) and perfect spring greens. We loitered on the sofa after dinner for as long as we could justify before venturing back out – well fortified - to our very draughty land rover and subsequently a marginally less draughty tent. Sadly Nathan was the other side of Cornwall that night – but it was a great evening and am ever hopeful of meeting him at the Cornwall Food & Drink Festival in September.

Kate

Road Runner

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

In a valiant attempt to sort out this month’s finances, I thought I’d take up running (because it’s free you see) in lieu of spending my evenings in my local. Plus I thought it would give me that wonderful ‘outdoorsy’ glow I’d always hankered after and have thus far spent a fortune on blusher trying, and failing, to achieve.

Despite looking the part (in my head anyway) with shiny new trainers and an eye-catching head to toe lycra ensemble, my first few outings made me realise, rather quickly, that Paula Radcliffe I am not. Not even a little bit. It’s fair to say that, as a former rower, I am not the most nimble of people. However, never one to be defeated and being the eternal optimist, I have signed up (perhaps somewhat rashly) for a half Marathon that is taking place in September.

The name of the event, ‘The Music Half Marathon’, was what attracted me in the first place, and allowed me to momentarily forget that, however nice it sounded, I was still actually expected to run further than I have ever felt necessary in my life. I’m hoping that the various bands that will be playing live music at different points around the course will take my mind off the pain and exhaustion I am likely to experience. Hey, I might even enjoy it!

On the upside, since I’ve started running regularly I have to say I’ve got tons more energy and it’s a great stress reliever. Training is going well and I can comfortably run for about 9 miles now. It’s going to be the last 4 that will be the killer. Admittedly I’m still working on the rosy glow, the closest I ever got can only be described as ‘sweaty and disheveled’, but it’s a working process. I’ll let you know how the race goes.

I thought I’d include a link to a beginner’s training programme in case any of you fancied taking up running. Surely it’s worth it, if only to use as an excuse to eat tons of chocolate (for energy, obviously).

http://www.runnersworld.co.uk/news/article.asp?UAN=67

Lucy

Kioskiosk

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Kioskiosk is a part of the Super Contemporary exhibition at The Design Museum. It gives small independent businesses a chance to sell their products rent-free in a prime London location. Different designers occupy it daily and this weekend was my boyfriend’s turn to sell his t-shirt designs. I decided to jump in with him and sell some homemade cakes – a perfect opportunity to use a KitchenAid mixer and make a few recipes from the 90th anniversary cookbook. I invited a few of my favorite bloggers down to sample the cakes and showcased the mixer along with the cookbook. The Kiosk is a great space with heaps of character; in a fab location overlooking City Hall and Tower Bridge. Our kiosk was aptly named ‘T-shirts and treats’.

The baking commenced and first off was the bread. I used the 90th anniversary Candy Apple KitchenAid mixer (should I be getting this excited about a piece of kitchen equipment?) and produced a few recipes from the anniversary cookbook. Honey and walnut granary bread, followed by a simple white bread recipe from the BBC and the wonderful soda bread recipe from eatlikeagirl’s blog.

On to the cakes, I decided to make lemon and vanilla tart, chocolate brownies, chocolate chip cookies, flapjacks, lemon and earl grey tea chiffon cake and a range of chocolate, lemon and lime, cherry and vanilla flavoured cupcakes!

The KitchenAid swirled in one direction and twirled the opposite way as I marvelled at the egg whites turn from liquid to a spongy mass. The lemon and earl grey cake, I was happy to say was made without butter. Never had I made such a cake and I was slightly nervous as I placed the mountainous foam into the oven. I was delighted to see the result, a lightweight sponge upturned onto the cooling rack. It didn’t taste half bad either.

The flapjacks nearly turned into a crumby, albeit tasty mess but a few minutes longer in the oven hampered any chance of this happening. I used Jordans rolled oats, which are, in my opinion the best oats I have ever used when making flapjacks.

All that was left to do was decorate the 42 cupcakes…

Eight hours later I was free to collapse in front of the TV before turning in for an early night. I woke earlier on Sunday and we headed off to the Kiosk.

My first sale was two loaves of bread, something that made me glimmer with excitement. Many sales later, Sarah Moore aka fingersandtoes came to visit and it was great to meet her. I found out some very useful information on London knitting groups and she went away with a sample of the lemon and earl grey cake and a KitchenAid cookbook.

I thoroughly enjoyed the baking and we now have plans to rent a stall at London weekend markets to sell our ‘t-shirts and treats’ on a regular basis. So watch this space.

Sarah

SKI SOMEDAY

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

It’s practically the law, when you return from one holiday, to book the next.

So, just back from a fortnight wielding a bucket and spade in Cornwall, and eating my own bodyweight in clotted cream, I’m busy mulling over the options.

In my mind, I’m an OK skier.  Skiing is something I can do.  Sadly, the reality is that I’m not and it isn’t.  I’ve only done it three times: the first two were a disaster (with less than helpful encouragement from my own personal instructor – “Why do you keep falling over all the time?”); the third was something of a breakthrough and I actually quite enjoyed it.  That was a long time ago.  Since then, babies have come along, the bank balance has suffered and I have turned my skills to building sandcastles, jumping over waves and eating lots of fish.  And the aforementioned clotted cream.

But I secretly wonder if, underneath the sun dress and flip flops, there’s a great skier just waiting to get out.  The girls in the office keep mentioning Scott Dunn’s new ski season and I feel quite sure that if we went skiing with Scott Dunn it would be a revelation.  At least I’d be able to soak in a hot tub if I didn’t fancy the slopes, or wanted to avoid being humiliated by my five year-old daughter who is guaranteed to be better than I am (even in her first year).

So, while I wait for my ticket to win the lottery and book a family skiing holiday, I shall be entering Scott Dunn’s competition to win a week in St. Anton.  The added bonus is that all the proceeds from my £20 raffle ticket will go into the fund to get Ed Drake (Britain’s Number One Alpine Skier) to the Winter Olympics in Vancouver next February.  So at least Ed can get to the slopes this season, even if I end up having to stick to the seaside.

Fingers crossed.

Celia

Ed Drake, doing his stuff...

Ed Drake, doing his stuff...

...Holly doing hers

...Holly doing hers

Kirstie’s Homemade Home

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

I’m not a natural “crafter”. I prefer to buy things when they break, not fix them.

I don’t immediately think of re-upholstering a chair rather than throwing it out, or making my own Christmas cards rather than buying the supermarket multipack.

So, it’s been quite a shock to the system that having watched almost the entire series of Kirstie’s Homemade Home, I’m beginning to find that I actually want to make things.

Last week, Kirstie had tired of making stained glass, candles and wallpaper and had moved onto making her very own patchwork quilt. The Nigella of the homewares world, Kirstie showed us that making something old fashioned and laborious, could end up being a family treasure.

The nearest I got to doing something similar was joining the cross-stitch club when I was at school. The main motivation for this, however, wasn’t to make something pretty but rather because we got to watch Neighbours whilst we stitched!

So this week I am officially starting my very own patchwork quilt. Made out of old tea towels, t-shirts and more. Watch this space.

Amanda

 © Jo Cowill (www.cowslipworkshops.co.uk)

Whatever happens in Vegas…

Monday, August 17th, 2009

As we touched down at McCarren Airport in Las Vegas, we could see our hotel glistening from the tarmac – the beautifully bronzed Wynn Encore. It stood out majestically amongst the other hotels on the strip, which seemed to rely on themes to draw in the punters. Like pirates and parrots? Visit Treasure Island. Want a bit of rock n’ roll? Then The Hard Rock Hotel is for you. If your tastes are more ahem, adult, then a stay at Hooters is a must.

Getting out of the taxi at the Encore and stepping into the cool air-conditioned lobby, we knew we’d made the right choice. A proper grown up hotel. No cheesy muzak or grubby buffets for this hotel. Instead style and sophistication seemed to ooze from its every pore, from the cool clubby tunes pumped from the invisible speakers, to the beautiful hostesses plying gamblers with drinks.

A quick trip to the pools further reinforced our perceptions. We had our pick from a family style pool and the ‘European Style Pool’. No prizes for guessing which one we plumped for. The European style pool featured a resident DJ, cabanas, alcoholic snow cones and Baywatch style cocktail waitresses. Swimming? Who was here to swim? This was all about posing.

But onto the food. Our first meal in Vegas was spent in a jetlagged fug. We went to Maggiano’s, a lovely trattoria opposite our hotel. Was it lunch? Was it dinner? Who cares. We were in Vegas. We ordered like refugees who hadn’t seen food in years. Two enormous salads, garlic bread, garlicky crumbed (what is it about Americans and crumbing?) mushrooms and more. Huge portions. I’d forgotten how big they were across the pond. It was good but then even a Happy Meal would have been gastronomic heaven after our airplane meals.

The rest of our trip was spent shopping, sunbathing and of course, eating at many of the restaurants that dominate the hotels. We had magnificent burgers at Stripburger, with pickle fries (deep fried bread crumbed – yes, more crumb – pickles) and wonderful steaks at Craftsteak. We enjoyed zingy sushi, sashimi and more deep fried things at Tao. Dessert at Tao was especially special for the husband. He has a thing, you see. When he sees the words ‘sorbets’ and ‘ice cream’ on the menu, he knows more often than not, the hapless waiter or waitress will not know what they are, and will often have to trudge back to the kitchen to find out. He was disappointed this time. Not only did our waiter know what they were, but the sorbets on offer were the husband’s holy trinity – mango, passion fruit and raspberry. The husband was in heaven. The evening continued upstairs at the club where he was even more delighted to see semi clad caged dancers writhing to the music. Now, anyone who knows my husband will know he hates dancing. So it was quite a surprise when I had to drag him away muttering the words ‘complete philistine.’ Wonder what he meant.

The only low eating point came in the form of ‘Rosemary’s’ which reminded me of Oslo Court in London’s St John’s Wood. If you’ve been there you’ll know the decor and menu are resolutely stuck in the 70s. Just like Rosemary’s. We couldn’t leave fast enough. A quick appetiser, an entree, no pudding thanks very much – ‘We’ve got a plane to catch,’ we lied gamely. We were back on the Strip in an hour, drinking French martinis and dancing at our hotel bar & club – Blush. A bottle of champagne and 3 martinis later, it was time to gamble. The husband was mildly successful and made $5, which I promptly lost, along with $20 more dollars on the slots - ‘Jusss one more pull, ’ I slurred. Fearing he had a wife on the edge, I was swiftly dispatched to bed.

Our final meal was at Postrio, Wolfgang Puck’s casual Italian eaterie at The Venetian, an Italian themed hotel complete with waterway – pizza, salad and a glass of beautifully scented Californian Chardonnay. We enjoyed the slightly surreal images of gondolas, Italian costumed counts and countesses, mingling with shoppers, and marveled at the world that was Vegas. Completely bonkers, yet a wonderful respite from reality. We’d be back.

Nish

Sweetcorn fritters

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

My first summer in London has been amazing and I’ve enjoyed some incredible meals, although I have definitely missed the BBQs that dominate the summer menu back home.

So when the sun came out on Sunday, I gathered some friends together, bought a disposable BBQ (not quite what I’m used to cooking with!) and with meat, salad and tomato sauce in hand, we headed to the common.

My favourite and easy addition to a BBQ (or brunch) is corn fritters, and after realising that some of my English friends had never even tried them (must be a Kiwi/Aussie thing) I prepared my best batch!

Corn fritters are so easy to throw together, relatively healthy, and although nothing fancy - they are always popular.

I love them because most people already have the ingredients in their pantry, they only takes minutes to prepare and you can easily throw in selection of vegetables or spices to create your own personal variations.

Click here for a recipe, serve with dollop of sour cream and sweet chilli sauce, and done - the perfect addition to your Kiwi BBQ!

http://www.goodtoknow.co.uk/food/137296/Sweetcorn-fritters

Shannon

When foodies and PR’s collide

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Last night Fi and I made our way down to the #BPRSummit kindly organized by Sarah Canet of Spoon PR and Tim Hayward, food blogger extraordinaire of word of mouth fame.

It was a great opportunity to get a bunch of food bloggers and food PRs into one room and have a big old discussion, which is exactly what happened. The speakers for the evening included Luchford PR, Sarah Canet, Oliver ‘thringforyoursupper’ Thring, Tim Hayward and Anthony Silverbrow.

I spent most of the time craning my neck as we were sat at the back and I wanted that all-important glimpse of the infamous bloggers whose work I read daily. The debate was interesting and we as PR’s took away some key learnings. We were told the good, the bad and the ugly PR approaches.

We had a few laughs at (as the bloggers like to call them #prfail’s) but it was great to hear first hand what they want (or indeed don’t want) from us.

It’s not rocket science - blogger relations can be simple, here are some of the gems we picked up on:

  • Read the blog first before even contemplating contacting to offer free samples
  • Never assume bloggers want to write about your products
  • Be strategic in your approach, be personal and tailor your approach
  • Don’t contact too many bloggers about the same product as they do not want to all be writing about it at the same time
  • Bloggers have real life jobs so don’t organise events in the daytime as they cannot attend

It was noted that many PR agencies are seeing problems by hiring a graduate for their digital campaign for two reasons:

  • They aren’t having enough time to learn traditional PR
  • The remaining members of the company aren’t being taught about digital

The general consensus is that EVERYONE needs to learn.

Wild Card has made a cracking start on their digital offering. Yes, we have hired a graduate with digital experience to kick-start our digital team but the importance for us is for that graduate to feed the knowledge throughout the company. We are holding weekly digital sessions to broaden the company knowledge and want to be able to implement our skills and hit the ground running. We now have a digital offering for our existing and potential new clients and are looking forward to building meaningful relationships with bloggers like we have journalists (and not just throw our products at them hoping to get some coverage!).

Digital communications is new for all of us but we strive to learn it, practice it and currently we are loving it!

Check out the links below for some of the bloggers thoughts on the evening:

http://withknifeandfork.com/meeting-with-the-‘enemy’

http://www.themccormackmethod.com/2009/08/blogger-pr-summit/

Fellow bloggers in attendance who kept us interested last night:

Lizzie of Hollowlegs
Chris of cheesenbiscuits
Daniel of Young and foodish

Sarah & Fiona

Superb Sunday lunch

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Everyone loves a lazy Sunday lunch, and I can’t recommend Le Vacherin in Chiswick highly enough for the occasion. This little restaurant in leafy Chiswick gets things just right, and whilst it’s not a casual pub lunch type place, it feels very cosy and welcoming, and is certainly special enough to be a bit of a treat. It’s also the sister restaurant of the acclaimed Le Cassoulet, which has won several awards for best local restaurant. Le Vacherin’s food is fantastic, with dishes including Burgundy Snails, South Coast Seabream with Cockle Butter and Creamed Potatoes, and Tart Tatin for two. Plus the three-course Sunday lunch for £19.95 per person definitely makes it easier to indulge (well, easier on the wallet, anyway). I cannot wait for next month, when the season for the restaurant’s namesake – gooey Vacherin cheese – kicks off.

Le Vacherin, 76-77 South Parade, Chiswick, W4 5LF
020 8742 2121

Laura

Image (c) Kake L Pugh

A small corner of England

Monday, August 10th, 2009

The thought of returning, whether for a day or a week, always fills me with a thrill of anticipation. Tresco, part of the Isles of Scilly, boasts clear turquoise waters, white sandy beaches, sub-tropical gardens and a host of breathtaking vistas.

29 miles from Lands End, the short helicopter trip immediately immerses you into island life – no queues, no cars, no high street, just peace and quiet – the ultimate get away.

What to choose? A Cornish cream tea on the terrace of the Island Hotel, Betty Stogs beer battered Newlyn cod and chips at the New Inn, a freshly baked Cornish pasty at the world famous Abbey Gardens or a tempting meze platter served with style at the Flying Boat Clubhouse?

What to do? A visit to the gardens, Valhalla museum, Cromwell’s Castle or just a spot of beachcombing on Apple Tree Bay? I should, of course, check out Neil Pinkett’s latest exhibition at Gallery Tresco, but don’t think I’ll have time to attempt the quick crossing to nearby Bryher for a coffee at Hell Bay.

I think I’ll have to decide when I get there.

Ruth