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Water Lane Walled Garden opens in Hawkhurst, Kent

Water Lane Walled Garden, Hawkhurst, Kent

Water Lane Walled Garden, Hawkhurst, Kent

Water Lane Walled Garden opens its gates on 2 July

www.waterlane.net | @water.lane

Water Lane is an idyllic walled garden with a vinery and Victorian glasshouses on the Kent and Sussex borders. A long-term project over many years to come, the site is being sympathetically transformed into a working kitchen garden with vegetable beds, cut flowers, restored vinery, outside spaces and a pavilion for dining and events. The restaurant at Water Lane opens on 2 July, alongside select garden plants for sale and a small shop.

Down a pretty, hedgerow-lined lane full of cow parsley, ox-eye daisies and buttercups and with long vistas across the High Weald of Kent, is Water Lane. Step through the large wooden gates to the hidden walled garden, an historical horticultural masterpiece with Grade II Victorian glasshouses dating back to the 1800s, including a Melon House, Cucumber House, Pelargonium House and Peach Case and a Vinery, on what was once the Tongswood Estate.

Water Lane is an ongoing restoration project in the hands of new custodians Nick Selby and Ian James who bring with them a wealth of food and horticultural passion from their previous business, Melrose and Morgan, a grocery store and kitchen with shops in London’s Primrose Hill and Hampstead. In collaboration with many partners, notably East Sussex based architectural company, RX Architects, the project has a ten-year timeline to restore the site to its full capacity as a productive walled garden with 13 Victorian glasshouses and 72 no-dig beds, measuring over 650 metres, growing vegetables, fruit, herbs to provide for the garden restaurant and cut flowers for sale, including Larkspur, Dahlias, Sweet Peas, Nigella, Honesty, Cosmos, Zinnia and Cerinthe.

The site of the old poly tunnel in the garden has been transformed into a beautiful terrace with tented stretch awning, open kitchen, wood-fired oven and tables and chairs from British company Very Good & Proper’s new outdoor sustainable furniture range. Every table has open views out on to the glasshouses, long flower borders and vegetable and cut flower beds.

When Nick and Ian set up Melrose and Morgan in 2004 their intent was to champion the local, the artisan and the small-scale. They were as passionate then as they are now and are delighted to be championing the diverse and brilliant food and drink producers in the High Weald and bringing their produce to the table.

The menu at Water Lane reflects its sense of place in the English countryside. The short and ever-changing menu by head chef Jed Wrobel is guided by the seasons with British produce-led cooking that is simple and elegant but prepared with imagination and care. The menu focuses primarily on vegetables either grown in The Walled Garden’s own no-dig beds or from nearby organic and biodynamic farms. The menu will also include small amounts of grass-fed meat and day boat fish from nearby Hastings and Rye. 

Sample menu highlights include overnight oats, apricots, cherry compote; kedgeree; melon, plum, cherry and mint on the breakfast menu and for lunch, flat bread with potato, cherry and Winnie’s Wheel; pearl barley stuffed peppers and green sauce; wood-fire baked plaice with fennel and olives; lamb and feta meatballs with milk and chard and for pudding, cherry and almond tart or poached peach with bay custard and crumbs.

The wine list is supplied by Keeling Andrew and Co, the merchant arm of Noble Rot, and includes wines from nearby Kent and East Sussex vineyards Tillingham and Westwell, amongst a list of classic options and more interesting and unusual wines. The aperitif menu will change with the seasons and will include the Water Lane Bicyclette, Elderflower Sour, local gin-based cocktails and Vermouths.

A productive garden

The Walled Garden at Water Lane is an on-going project and a labour of love and will take many years to fully restore. The Peach Case and Vinery will be restored while fruit trees, such as apples, pears, quince and fig will be planted and grown ‘espalier’ along the red brick walls. Four of the glasshouses have already been restored in 2017/2018, due to a generous benefactor, the granddaughter of the original head gardener, Ernest Hardcastle. The second and smallest of the four is the Cucumber House. It has raised brick beds and the remains of the original hot water pipes that heated them. For the last few years’, these beds have been boarded over, but now the team are uncovering them and planning their future use. Beneath the boards the team found 18 inches of compacted soil and underneath that a layer of ‘clinker’, a by-product of the boiler that heated the water for the garden and helped create a warm bed for the plants to flourish. The glasshouse is once again being used to grow cucumbers as well as tomatoes, aubergines and other salad crops that will suit the warm conditions.

The Walled Garden holds many aspects of note and will delight both amateur and serious gardeners. In the height of Summer, the focus of floral activity is the incredible Melon House Border that runs nearly 30m long and is 3m deep. The star of the show each Spring is the Euphorbia characias subsp. wulfenii, with its chartreuse-green heads that provides colour and structure throughout the bed and has also, delightfully, self-seeded around the rest of the garden. The acid-green of the Euphorbia is perfectly offset by the deep red and purple of Berberis thunbergii Rose Glow and Physocarpus Diablo with its tiny pink flowers, Aquilegia Ruby Port, Geum’s Totally Tangerine and Marmalade, and the swaying purple pom-pom colour pops from the Allium cristophii.

A programme of courses and events at Water Lane will be announced shortly.

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Water Lane Walled Garden
Water Lane, Hawkhurst, Kent, TN18 5DH
Instagram: @water.lane
www.waterlanet

 

 

 

Limited Edition Billy Tannery Goat Desert Boot

New Made In England Desert Boots. A limited edition collaboration between sustainable leather company Billy Tannery and a Suffolk-based shoemaker.

www.billytannery.co.uk

May 2021… // Innovative British leather brand Billy Tannery launches a new unisex Desert Boot, made in England from its sustainable goat leather. The limited time collaboration sees this iconic boot style made for the first time in British goat leather, produced in the brand’s own small batch tannery.

“The Desert Goat” is available in three colourways - Chestnut leather, Black leather and a stunning Green suede. For £275 the boots will then be made-to-order near Woodbridge in Suffolk by master shoemaker Jadd Friedman of Jadd Shoes.

Billy Tannery began when founders Jack Millington and Rory Harker discovered that due to growing demand for goat meat and dairy in the UK, there were thousands of goatskins going to waste. Now, having partnered with ethical goat meat supplier Cabrito, Billy Tannery uses the leftover hides to produce goat leather in its own “microtannery”, based on a farm in Leicestershire.

Founder Jack Millington said, “Despite being an icon of British footwear culture, it’s sad that most desert boots are now made cheaply in the Far East on an industrial scale from materials that have circled the globe. We think your boots should do most of their travelling on your feet, so are delighted to launch these desert boots made just a couple of counties away from where the leather is made”

Download press kit here

More information can be found at www.billytannery.co.uk and on Instagram @billytannery

Billy Tannery was founded by childhood friends Jack Millington and Rory Harker, both 33 and from the Midlands. Their backgrounds are in marketing and design, so they had no previous experience in the leather industry. After discovering the terrible waste of goat hide in the UK, they decided that they had to act.

Billy Tannery’s range of products includes bags, wallets, aprons and regular collaborations in footwear, headwear and further afield. The brand offers a lifetime repair guarantee on all of its products in an effort to ensure many generations of use, which is one of the main factors in making a product sustainable.

The first leather brand of its kind in the UK, with a vertically integrated supply chain from hide to final product, Billy Tannery is able to offer something extremely rare - genuinely traceable leather goods.

Jadd Shoes was founded by master shoemaker and QEST scholar, Jadd Friedman. It is based near Woodbridge, Suffolk. www.jadd.shoes

 

Hand forged drinks and cocktail utensils made by Alex Pole Ironwork

Drinks set made by Alex Pole Ironwork at his Somerset blacksmith forge

Drinks set made by Alex Pole Ironwork at his Somerset blacksmith forge

Celebrate World Cocktail Day with drinks and bar utensils handmade by blacksmith Alex Pole in his Somerset forge

It is World Cocktail Day on 13 May, a global celebration that marks the date of the first definition of a cocktail on 13 May in 1806. As lockdown restrictions lift, and outdoor socialising is permitted, take the cocktail bar outside and up the glamour with traditionally hand-forged black steel and copper drink making utensils.

Alex Pole Ironwork four-piece drinks set

Made in Alex Pole’s blacksmith forge in Somerset, the set includes a corkscrew, traditional bottle opener, ring bottle opener and three cocktail spoons. The corkscrew and spoons are hand forged in ‘black’ stainless steel and the bottle opener in steel with a leather lanyard. (£135 alexpoleironwork.com)

Use the Alex Pole Kitchen Ladle (£65 alexpoleironwork.com), made using forged ‘black’ stainless steel and a hand beaten copper bowl and copper rivets, to serve a fruity summer punch. Created by cocktail mixologist and consultant Nick Strangeway, who is a founding partner of Hepple Gin, the recipe for Summer Punch is extracted from The Forge Kitchen, written by Alex Pole and Pooch Horsburgh (£25). The Forge Kitchen cookbook is a culinary collaboration between one blacksmith and 21 chefs. Each of the Forge chefs, including Nathan Outlaw, Mark Hix, Thomasina Miers and Gill Meller has taken their recipe inspiration from cookware handmade by Alex Pole. They have given the cookware and utensils purpose and function, creating delicious recipes suitable for anyone to cook at home.

Summer Punch by Nick Strangeway, founding partner of Hepple Gin

Makes 8-10 servings

It gets extremely hot in the forge! Here's something to cool a blacksmith - or anyone else - down after a hot day.

Lemon sherbet
3 unwaxed lemons
Caster sugar

Raspberry syrup
100g caster sugar
100g frozen raspberries

Ingredients

200ml Hepple Gin
100ml Hepple Douglas Fir vodka
100ml Martini Rosato or other rosé vermouth
100ml raspberry syrup (see above)
50ml lemon juice
20ml lemon sherbet (see above)
600ml chilled green tea

To finish garnish with plenty of herbs, flowers and fruit.

Method

To make the lemon sherbet, zest the lemons and place the zest into a bowl. Juice the zested lemons and place into a measuring jug. Weigh the amount of lemon juice you have. Weigh out the same/equal weight of sugar (to the weight of lemon juice) in a separate bowl. Add the sugar to the lemon zest and mix well. Leave to one side to allow the sugar to draw out the oils from the zest. Stir occasionally. Once the sugar is quite wet and beginning to dissolve, add the lemon juice. Stir until the sugar is completely dissolved. Sieve the mixture and store in the fridge until ready to use. This will make more sherbet than you need for the recipe. Any leftover can be frozen for future use, or it’s great for making sorbet with.

Meanwhile, make the raspberry syrup. Place the sugar into a bowl and cover with the raspberries. Leave the raspberries to defrost over the sugar, mixing together once the raspberries are soft. Add 50ml of hot water and stir again, mixing well to dissolve all of the sugar. Place the mixture into a sieve over a bowl and leave to drip through the sieve whilst you prepare the rest of the cocktail. The sieved liquid is your raspberry syrup.

Mix the cocktail ingredients together and pour into a punch bowl or small cauldron, filled with a block of ice. Garnish with herbs, edible flowers and fruit and serve immediately.

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About The Forge Kitchenware

Alex Pole is a British blacksmith making traditionally hand-forged kitchenware and cooking utensils, made in the fires of his Somerset workshop. Forging is the ancient art of shaping metal by heating it in a fire and hammering. It is an art that is full of tradition and folklore but with many modern applications.

Alex has been working as a blacksmith for over 25 years and founded The Forge Kitchenware in 2015. He makes pieces for home kitchens, outdoor cooking and bespoke pieces for cooks, chefs and restaurants including Nathan Outlaw, Christian Stevenson aka DJ BBQ, Gill Meller, Mark Hix and Thomasina Miers. Each piece is individually forged, using local materials, wherever possible, by a small team of skilled craftsmen dedicated to producing the highest quality work. One of Alex’s primary aims is to promote blacksmithing, and the makers movement, across the UK and to show its relevance in the 21st century.

Every piece of Forge Kitchenware be it a skillet, knife, coffee scoop or an axe, starts as a simple bar of steel, which is heated and repeatedly hit on the anvil until it is the correct size, shape and style. Heat, strike, repeat! The Forge Kitchenware takes the everyday and redefines it to create beautiful and tactical, yet wholly functional, pieces of work. Each piece is designed with simple form, clean lines and functionality and are made to last a lifetime.

Notes to editors

Alex Pole Ironwork
The Forge
South Harp Farm Yard
Over Stratton
Somerset, TA13 5LB

www.alexpoleironwork.com | @alexpoleironwork

Blacksmith courses and Forge and Feast events will resume later in 2021.

For more information, interview or a site visit to The Forge, please contact Hannah Blake at The Dining Room on 07730 039 361 or hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk

Rose Veal 'pop up' boxes from The New Meat Project

Rose veal calves in Devon for The New Meat Project

Rose veal calves in Devon for The New Meat Project

The New Meat Project launches monthly ‘pop-up’ boxes of harder-to-source meat from small production farmers

The New Meat Project is launching a new series of ‘pop-up’ meat boxes. Starting on 1 April with British rose veal, each box will focus on meat that might be hard to source in supermarkets, or the farmer may have difficulties getting their product to market. Each month, The New Meat Project specialist box will include a selection of cuts and five recipes and information about the meat, breed and farmer. The box will go on sale at the beginning of each month and be sent out to customers the first week of the following month.

There are similarities between the fate of billy goats in the goat dairy industry and bull calves born in the cow dairy industry, so it’s fitting that the first meat box for The New Meat Project, whose sister company is Cabrito Goat Meat, should be veal. And, just like goat meat, veal is delicious and deserves to be celebrated.

The New Meat Project veal box costs £70 (including p&p) and includes steak (either rump or sirloin), 500g dice, 500g mince, four burgers, four escalopes, 400g medallions and either rolled brisket or shin.

Sushila Moles at The New Meat Project, comments, “During my ten years at River Cottage and my ten years of being one half of Cabrito, our award-winning goat meat business, I have met and got to know many exceptional British producers and farmers. Champions of sustainability, they are hard-working and dedicated people, who have endless enthusiasm for their work. Knowing how hard they work and wanting to support them, was part of the reason I set up The New Meat Project: to give the public access to them and them access to customers.

She continues, “In some cases, selling these farmers’ products can be tricky because they are quite specialised and they may only have animals at certain times of the year, meaning we can't get a consistent supply. The good news is we have come up with a solution with our ‘pop up’ meat boxes, starting with veal. Veal is still trying to lose its image of cruelty and we will not change the minds of the British public overnight. However, we founded The New Meat Project to strengthen the connection between the UK farmer and the UK consumer, to celebrate and support British farming and to encourage the British consumer to eat ethical, well reared meat. Veal fits those ideals perfectly.”

Veal meat boxes launching on 1 April

Rearing bull calves for meat and selling it as ‘rose veal’, when it is at its best, is something UK farming does really well. However, the awful images of calves in crates being exported to Europe in the mid-1990s and its reputation of cruelty has burned into the imaginations of the British public. That kind of barbaric veal production and transportation was banned across the EU in 2006. 

Veal’s reputation has struggled to recover and many consumers still consider veal to be cruel. The perverse outcome of a justified campaign to end a cruel rearing and export system was the euthanizing of healthy animals, which has in turn, done tremendous damage to this part of the food system. The majority of veal now reared for meat is minced for highstreet burger chains, but this does a disservice to the farmer and cheapens a high-quality British product.

Small herd in Devon

The veal sold through The New Meat Project comes from a small dairy herd of Jersey cows on a farm in mid-Devon, which has won awards from Compassion in World farming for its rearing operation, and whose welfare standards are far higher than those required by law.

The calves are kept in a free-range system in groups of 24, only coming into sheds when the ground is too wet for grazing. Once inside, they are in groups of 12 with plenty of space and bedded on straw.  Aside from natural grazing and milk, the animals are fed a mix of silage and a processed feed, milled on the farm, made from home-grown barley and UK rape seed. There is no soya in their diet and it is a low-impact farming system.

The calves are reared to around six months old, the same as lambs and kid goats, and then hung for two weeks to allow the flavour to develop. It is a truly exceptional product and deserves its place on the table.

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About The New Meat Project

From field to fork, ordering fresh meat online from independent farmers reared in the traditional way, has never been simpler. The New Meat Project is an online butchery service delivering native breed, free-range and grass-fed meat from small farms, predominantly in the South West, which have been slow-grown to the highest welfare standard. Delivery is convenient and environmentally conscious from farm to doorstep and is fairly priced for both the customer and the farmer. All animals travel no more than an hour from the farm to a local, small and family-run slaughter house.

Founder Sushilia Moles says, “Our mission is to encourage people to change the way they buy meat, to no longer accept the disappointing industrialised food from supermarkets and instead make the choice to support small-scale, family-run farms. Buying meat online, which is farmed using traditional and high welfare, sustainable practices is often too expensive, which is why we focus on offering a fair price to our customers and the farmers we work with, without ever compromising on the provenance of the meat or our environmental policy. I believe good food should be for everyone and we promise the best quality meat at fair prices for both the customer and farmer, which is better for the health of your family and the health of the planet.”

About Sushila Moles

The New Meat Project is founded by Sushila Moles. Having gained a Masters in Food Anthropology and worked in food related businesses all of her life, Sushila has first-hand experience that farming is a force for good in society. Her working life has taken her from Michelin-starred restaurant, Rhodes 24 as head waiter to La Fromagerie in Marylebone, where she could indulge her love of cheese and to River Cottage, where she played a lead role in promoting one of the country’s best known sustainable and ethics driven businesses. Sushila is also co-owner of Cabrito, the multi award-winning goat meat business, run by her partner James Whetlor, that has been at the forefront of changing the UK goat dairy practice of euthanizing unwanted male kids and rearing them for meat instead. These experiences combined have convinced her of the importance of high welfare, low impact meat in our food system, both for our own health, the health of our communities and for the health of the planet.

Notes to editors

The New Meat Project was founded in November 2020 by Sushila Moles

Sushila is co-owner of award-winning ethical goat meat company, Cabrito Goat Meat

Website: www.thenewmeatproject.com
Instagram: @thenewmeatproject

For more information about The New Meat Project or founder Sushila Moles, please contact Hannah Blake at The Dining Room on 07730 039361 or hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk

BBQ and fire cooking tools by Alex Pole Ironwork

BBQ Tools Kit by Alex Pole Ironwork

BBQ Tools Kit by Alex Pole Ironwork

Get ready for outdoor cooking this summer with British handmade BBQ tools forged by Somerset blacksmith

www.alexpoleironwork.com

Barbecue season will start early this year with the slight easing of restrictions meaning up to six people can meet outdoors. As lockdown restrictions lift and outdoor socialising is permitted, the great British barbecue season will begin in earnest.

At Alex Pole Ironwork there is everything a keen barbecue or fire cook needs to cook over flames, including spun iron pans and skillets that can be used on open flame, skewers, spatulas and tongs.

There is a strong and growing movement towards using more sustainable cooking utensils and cookware. That movement also goes hand in hand with the increase in desire to not import goods from the other side of the world.

Alex Pole comments, “The pans we cook in, the utensils we serve with, and the cutlery we use, are as important to any meal as the ingredients, it’s all part of the flavour, and the pleasure of cooking. Why cook an organically reared, 48-day salt-aged steak that cost £40 in a £6 aluminium, chemically coated frying pan? That is about as insulting to both the cow and the farmer as you can get, not to mention the use of the chemicals to make mainstream pans ‘non-stick’.”

The tools we use in the kitchen are probably the most used items in our houses, other than our phones and devices, and as such will start to play a big role in the global push towards more environmentally conscious living - spun steel and cast-iron pans will last a life time (several in fact if well looked after). Make it properly, buy it once, and it can be passed on down the generations.

Buying properly made, British made kitchenware adds to the drive towards a cleaner world. It also adds to the flavour of the food and experience of cooking it.

Cook with Alex Pole Ironwork tools this summer.

BBQ Tools Set

The ultimate tool set for any keen fire chef or BBQ maestro, including six skewers, tongs, spatula and a meat fork, all wrapped up in a beautiful canvas roll made by Francli Craftwear in Cornwall. (£225 alexpoleironwork.com)

11-inch frying pan

Beautiful hand sun carbon steel, which is smooth and naturally non-stick, with forged handles and copper rivets. This beautiful pan will last a lifetime if cared for properly. (£135 alexpoleironwork.com)

Four-piece drinks set

Set up a bar in the garden with a corkscrew, traditional bottle opener, ring bottle opener and three cocktail spoons. The corkscrew and spoons are hand forged in ‘black’ stainless stell and the bottle opener in steel with a leather lanyard. (£135 alexpoleironwork.com)

The Forge Kitchen Cookbook

The Forge Kitchen is full of inspiration and outdoor cooking ideas and recipes. A collaboration between Alex Pole and co-author Pooch Horsburgh and 21 chefs including Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Gill Meller, Anja Dunk, Valentine Warner and Olia Hercules, each of The Forge Kitchen chefs has taken their inspiration from cookware made in the fires of Alex Pole’s Somerset forge.

The Forge Kitchen fuses traditionally made kitchenware with contemporary chefs and the very best ingredients to create a unique set of ingredients. Recipes include scallops with brown shrimp and sorrel butter by Olia Hercules; hogget with salsa verde by Gill Meller; chilli squid with ginger, basil yoghurt and sweetcorn chutney by Nathan Outlaw; beetroot tatin with roasted garlic, thyme and goat’s cheese; and piperade with baked eggs and crispy pancetta by Thomasina Miers.

“The Forge Kitchen celebrates the vital energy between great kitchen tools, great ingredients and great cooking - and the results are beautiful, satisfying and delicious.” Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, River Cottage

The Forge Kitchen is £25 and available to buy at www.alexpoleironwork.com

About The Forge Kitchenware

Alex Pole is a British blacksmith making traditionally hand-forged kitchenware and cooking utensils, made in the fires of his Somerset workshop. Forging is the ancient art of shaping metal by heating it in a fire and hammering. It is an art that is full of tradition and folklore but with many modern applications.

Alex has been working as a blacksmith for over 25 years and founded The Forge Kitchenware in 2015. He makes pieces for home kitchens, outdoor cooking and bespoke pieces for cooks, chefs and restaurants including Nathan Outlaw, Christian Stevenson aka DJ BBQ, Gill Meller, Mark Hix and Thomasina Miers. Each piece is individually forged, using local materials, wherever possible, by a small team of skilled craftsmen dedicated to producing the highest quality work. One of Alex’s primary aims is to promote blacksmithing, and the makers movement, across the UK and to show its relevance in the 21st century.

Every piece of Forge Kitchenware be it a skillet, knife, coffee scoop or an axe, starts as a simple bar of steel, which is heated and repeatedly hit on the anvil until it is the correct size, shape and style. Heat, strike, repeat! The Forge Kitchenware takes the everyday and redefines it to create beautiful and tactical, yet wholly functional, pieces of work. Each piece is designed with simple form, clean lines and functionality and are made to last a lifetime.

Notes to editors

Alex Pole Ironwork
The Forge, South Harp Farm Yard, Over Stratton, Somerset, TA13 5LB

www.alexpoleironwork.com | @alexpoleironwork

Blacksmith courses and Forge and Feast events will resume later in 2021.

For more information, interview or a site visit to The Forge, please contact Hannah Blake at The Dining Room on 07730 039 361 or hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk

Lifeforms Design designs new bar launching in Broadstairs

Visual by Lifeforms Deisgn for Reign in Broadstairs

Visual by Lifeforms Deisgn for Reign in Broadstairs

New Art Deco Bar in Broadstairs, inspired by Art Deco architecture, designed by Lifeforms Design

Lifeforms Design has completed the project brief for the full design and kit out of Reign, a new bar and lounge launching in Broadstairs and due to launch in Spring 2021.

Designed by founder Lee Pollock at Lifeforms, which celebrates its twentieth year in the industry this year, the design of Reign is inspired by the building’s Art Deco architecture. 

With a bold use of colour including midnight blue, forest green, crystal lighting with brass and marble details, Reign is a short walk from the iconic Viking bay and will offer guests morning coffee, afternoon tea, Champagne and cocktails.

With a square footage of 1560, Reign will have a capacity for 50 guests, while the design as a whole is covid compliant and takes into account covid restrictions with spacing and screens between tables.

The building on Albion Street, in the heart of Broadstairs, was built in the 1920s, so the design decision to work with classic turn of the century elements, with a nod to Art Deco design, such as brass and the dark colour palette, was a natural choice. Lifeforms Design have included Deco Modern design details which are complementary to the architecture of the building and also to the Victorian seaside charm and heritage of Broadstairs.

The design of Reign showcases the elegance and opulence of the Art Deco movement and Lifeforms has used key features of the movement to create a breathtaking design, combining geometric shaping, marbleised texture, and metallic finishes. The dark and atmospheric colour palette adds glamour and depth to the space, while statement crystal lighting, supporting various shapes and sizes of glamorous crystal droplets and beads give off a dazzling effect once illuminated. The bespoke furniture, including banquette bar seating has been designed by Lee himself and fabricated by N&J Upholstery.

While the client, Paul and Katy King, had strong ideas for the project, there wasn’t a specific brief given to Lifeforms. Lee worked with Paul and Katy to define the brief and give shape to their ideas, which mostly came from a pinterest board. Lee comments, “Working from a blank brief can be a challenge but by gaining a clients’ trust early on we can take a limited brief and expand it to make all elements work, combining functionality and beauty.”

“We’ve really enjoyed working with Lifeforms Design. Lee understood what we wanted from the very first meeting. He has a fantastic eye for detail and passion and knowledge of his craft. We are absolutely blown away by the end result at Reign and feel it is exactly what we dreamed it would be.” Paul and Katy King, Reign in Broadstairs.

Reign will open for takeaway coffee and pastries on 1 April before the outside space opens, in accordance with government regulations, on 12 April and will open in full, on 17 May.

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About Lifeforms Design
Lifeforms Design by Lee Pollock is an award-winning design practice for restaurants and bars.

Winner at the Restaurant & Bar Design Awards, Lifeforms is based in Margate on the South East coast of England with projects all over the country from London to Leeds.

Celebrating its twentieth year in business, Lifeforms provide a full range of interiors and architectural design services across hospitality, leisure, retail and commercial industries. Colour, form and texture are a signature design trait combining luxe and industrial.

Previous projects include Auberge in Waterloo, London; Peggy Porschen Cakes in Belgravia, London; Skew Restaurant & Oyster Bar in Bishops Stortford in Essex and Livin Italy, Leeds.

www.lifeforms-design.com | @lifeforms_design

About Lee Pollock

Born in Newcastle Upon Tyne, Lee began his route into interior design working at RMJM Architects, Faulkner Browns Architects and V&A Design. Eschewing formal training, Lee learnt on the job assisting on the design, drawing and technical aspects of projects. In 2002, Lee launched his own design practice, Lifeforms Design. His first client was Town Centre Restaurants, a company which is still a Lifeforms client to this day.

With a love of clean lines, in particular the ambition of modernist brutalist architecture and colour, Lee draws inspiration from all aspects of living, from classic cars to the Lake District to the shingle on the beach of his home town of Whitstable, on the south east coast of England.

Lifeforms is now established as a leading design practice in the UK, with a reputation for creating distinctive and imaginative solutions. Lee takes an active role in each project and his experience covers projects from multiple commercial roll-out units to one-off bespoke sites.

My goal for each project is to provide a space that stimulates, invigorates and engages users. Colour and texture are vital; the shingle on the beach, tents in a campsite, landscapes. Anything can be an inspiration.” Lee Pollock, Lifeforms Design

For all press enquiries, imagery and interviews with Lee Pollock, please contact Hannah Blake at The Dining Room PR |Hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk | 07730 039361

The Small Holding at Pub in the Park, 9-11 July

Will Devlin from The Small Holding at Pub in the Park, Dunorlan Park, Tunbridge Wells, 9 - 11 July

- Festival tour tickets on sale 19 March

- Certified as ‘Good to Go’ with social distancing where needed

- Pub in the Park festival touring eight UK locations from June to September 2021

- Live music from Craig David, Kaiser Chiefs, Rudimental and more

- Michelin-starred food created by Tom Kerridge, Paul Ainsworth, Marcus Wareing and more

- Pub in the Park is throwing a party for key workers, by giving away 8,000 tickets to local heroes

Will Devlin, chef owner of The Small Holding will be at Pub in the Park in Dunorlan Park, Tunbridge Wells, 9-11 July.  It’s the ultimate foodie festival - superstar chef Tom Kerridge will once again be bringing together incredible chefs for restaurant pop ups and live music from James Blunt, Beverley Knight, Craig David and The Lightning Seeds.

Food from The Hand & Flowers | Atul Kochhar restaurants |The Small Holding |The Half Moon Inn |The Kentish Hare

Music from James Blunt | The Kingdom Choir | The James Martin Band |The Lightning Seeds | Nerina Pallot | Paul Dunton | Craig David | Judge Jules | Paul Dunton| Beverley Knight | Toploader | Craig Charles

Tom Kerridge said: “After the year we’ve had, I think everyone deserves a good-knees up - and what better way to do it than Pub in the Park! We’re so excited to be doing what we do best, bringing back our feel-good festival to the towns we love and filling it with lush music and proper good food!”

During the weekend, Pub in the Park will stage a special session called A Thousand Thank You’s, by providing free tickets to local health care heroes and key workers across NHS trusts, the emergency services, and local people. That’s 8,000 Thank You’s across the whole tour. 

Tom Kerridge continued: “Key workers have been the true superheroes of this pandemic, and we want to say thanks by offering 1000 complimentary tickets in each of our towns so these superstars can let their hair down while enjoying some awesome music and lush grub.” 

Pub in the Park has been designed with public health restrictions in place and has been awarded the Visit Britain ‘Good to Go’ certification, meaning the tour will have covid-safety measures in place if needed, but as government restrictions ease so will the events.

Chris Hughes, CEO at Brand Events, said: “We’re thrilled to be bringing back our brilliant food, drink and music festival to eight towns in 2021. All of our events are flexible, adaptable and ready to get even more free as the country begins to unlock. We’re ready to bring the public some much needed fun - watch out for more line-up announcements and tickets on-sale soon!”

For more information please visit: https://www.pubintheparkuk.com/ 

-ends-

About The Small Holding

Will Devlin, 32, is the chef owner of The Small Holding, a kitchen and farm on a country lane in the village of Kilndown on the Kent and East Sussex borders. The 34-cover restaurant has a Michelin Green Star and was voted the best restaurant in Kent at the Taste of Kent Awards. Growing, foraging and cooking the best ingredients is at the core of The Small Holding, with daily changing menus, using home-reared and home-grown ingredients from the farm, which is less than 10ft from the kitchen.

www.thesmallholding.restaurant
@the_small_holding_

Ranters Lane | Kilndown | Kent | TN17 2SG

For more information, images, interview or to visit The Small Holding, please contact Hannah Blake hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk | 07730 039361

Praise for The Small Holding
A group of folk growing amazing things, then pulling them out of the ground, sometimes knobbly and lumpy, then cooking and serving them. It’s perfectly imperfect and I wouldn’t change a thing.” Grace Dent, The Guardian

“The menu reads like a list of all that is good in a British Larder. Self-sufficiency, careful sourcing, purity of intent and an absolute focus on flavour. It’s easy to fall in love with The Small Holding for the warmth of the staff, its good intent and deft execution.” Tony Turnbull, The Times

The Small Holding and The Curlew reopening on 19 May

The Small Holding, Kilndown, Kent

The Small Holding, Kilndown, Kent

The Small Holding and The Curlew are opening on 19 May

After a year in lockdown, reservations are open for tables at chef-owner Will Devlin’s restaurants, The Small Holding in Kent and The Curlew, East Sussex.

www.thesmallholding.restaurant | www.thecurlew.restaurant

The Small Holding was awarded a Green Michelin Star in January, while The Curlew will reopen after first launching in February 2020 and being in lockdown, just three weeks later. The Curlew will offer small and sharing plates such as a whole rib of beef from Paley Farm, pork and kimchi dumplings or Tenterden new potatoes with Hinxden Dairy crème fraiche and caviar.

The menu at The Small Holding has evolved and Will has used the time during lockdown to refine the dining experience. The new menu is defined by hyper-seasonal and sustainable ingredients with a focus on the farm’s own produce, but undefined by the number of courses or choice. There will be no formal menu at The Small Holding. Instead, guests will be offered a multi-taste dining experience featuring the best ingredients on that day from the farm and local suppliers. Vegetables and fruits from the farm, harvested within hours of guests arriving, foraged ingredients, homemade charcuterie and zero waste animal cookery from the farm’s own livestock is the main focus.

The new style menu starts with home-made kombucha or broth and breads and fresh butter, made on site with the rich yellow cream from a local herd of Guernsey and Holstein Friesian cows. The menu falls into themes such as ‘The Farm’ with raw peas, elderflower and radishes; ‘The Glut’ with Kohlrabi, green apple and yarrow; ‘Preserves’ of fermented roots and smoked bacon broth; ‘Cured’ with homemade fennel salami and sourdough; ‘Fish’ with oyster, chive and pickle; crab, chamomile and fennel; lobster and tomato and ‘Sweet’ with gooseberry, honey and cream; carrot, cream cheese and hogweed; strawberry, meadowsweet and basil.

The restaurant is open Wednesday to Saturday for lunch and dinner costing £75 per head and for Sunday lunch. A drinks flight including juices, shrubs, wines, beers and kombucha will also be available.

Will Devlin says, “Lockdown gave me the opportunity to focus on our purpose and to remember what The Small Holding is about, which is the deep connection between the farm and kitchen and a sense of place. We nearly lost it all and we need to remember what we’re fighting for. Lockdown has been a massive opportunity to realise that.”

-ends-

www.thesmallholding.restaurant
@the_small_holding_

Ranters Lane | Kilndown | Kent | TN17 2SG

About The Small Holding

Will Devlin, 32, is the chef owner of The Small Holding, a kitchen and farm on a country lane in the village of Kilndown on the Kent and East Sussex borders. The 26-cover restaurant was voted the best restaurant in Kent at the Taste of Kent Awards and is set in one acre of land, permitting a unique connection between farm and table. Growing, foraging and cooking the best ingredients is at the core of The Small Holding, with daily changing menus, using home-reared and home-grown ingredients from the farm, which is less than 10ft from the kitchen.

Will’s second site, The Curlew, a former 17th century coaching inn in Bodiam, East Sussex opened in February 2020 and is 8 miles from The Small Holding. www.thecurlew.restaurant

For more information, images, interview with Will Devlin or to visit The Small Holding or The Curlew, please contact Hannah Blake hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk | 07730 039361

Praise for The Small Holding
A group of folk growing amazing things, then pulling them out of the ground, sometimes knobbly and lumpy, then cooking and serving them. It’s perfectly imperfect and I wouldn’t change a thing.” Grace Dent, The Guardian

“The menu reads like a list of all that is good in a British Larder. Self-sufficiency, careful sourcing, purity of intent and an absolute focus on flavour. It’s easy to fall in love with The Small Holding for the warmth of the staff, its good intent and deft execution.” Tony Turnbull, The Times

“Striding confidently into its second year, Will Devlin’s restaurant shows no sign of slowing down, ‘a truly sensational experience’ is one fan’s heartfelt comment. The level of ingenuity generated by a kitchen on turbo drive, fuelled by its own small holding, hen coop and piggery is prodigious.” Will Devlin was named ‘Chef to Watch’ in The Good Food Guide 2020.

Praise for The Curlew

“I must tell you about The Curlew, a restaurant by Will and Matt Devlin, the same brothers who opened The Small Holding in Cranbrook on the Kent-Sussex border last summer… They deserve a bit of smoke blown up their trouser legs for everything they and their excellent staff have achieved in the past 12 months, too. It’s not easy to do clever, complex, locally sourced dining in rural places without coming across as overly earnest and saintly, offering the locals lovely things without a jot of pretension. Almost as lovely as this job gets” Grace Dent, The Guardian

Kid goat offal added to the Cabrito Goat Meat webshop

Cabrito kid heart goulash

Cabrito kid heart goulash

Kid goat offal added to the Cabrito Goat Meat webshop

www.cabrito.co.uk/shop

New products, including kid heart and kid liver have been added to cabrito.co.uk, the consumer retail arm of Cabrito Goat Meat. Both cuts are a delicacy and prized by those who love offal. It’s lean, nutritious and simple to cook.

Selling offal via online delivery can be complicated but James Whetlor, ex-chef and founder of Cabrito has reacted to consumer demand for the product.

Since pivoting from restaurant sales and wholesale during lockdown, Cabrito has seen consumer online sales through the website increase by 530%, year on year (Jan ’21). To reflect the increasing demand and appetite from consumers, Cabrito sells kid and ex-dairy nanny goat meat including leg, shoulder, chops, racks, neck, diced and mince plus burgers and sausages. Goat meat is becoming more mainstream as chefs and food writers including Thomasina Miers, Gizzi Erskine and Zoe Adjonyoh cook with it.

James Whetlor comments, “We’ve been asked many times to sell what St John restaurant calls ‘the slippery bits’ for a long time. Offal is very sensitive so it’s taken a while to work through the logistics and treat it right, but I finally feel we can do it justice and have been delighted by the customer demand and response. Carcass balance and using every part of the animal is really important to us, so being able to sell the offal is another way Cabrito is committed to nose to tail and zero waste.”

Cabrito Kid liver is £5 per 600g

Kid liver is delicious served pink after being seared quickly in a hot pan. Try seasoning with cumin and chilli and serving with chopped salad, seasoned yoghurt sauce and lemon wedges, to squeeze over.

Cabrito Kid heart is £4 per 300g (2 pack)

Kid heart needs a little trimming, before slowly braising with onions, sweet paprika, passata and sour cream for a Hungarian style goulash and served with wide ribbon pasta, boiled potatoes or rice.

Cabrito kid offal can be bought online at www.cabrito.co.uk/shop

About Cabrito

Cabrito’s one sentence mission statement is to put all billy goats born into the dairy industry into the meat industry.

Devon based James Whetlor used to be a chef having worked in London for ten years and at River Cottage and knew he could do something about the plight of the male billy goats, who are historically euthanized at birth in the dairy industry. Calling on his 10 years of chef experience and contacts in London, James began working with goat dairies to supply restaurants.

James is International Director of Goatober working with partners in America, Europe and Australia and is consultant for the European ‘Food Heroes’ project, which aims to end food waste in farming across the EU.

James’ first book GOAT: Cooking and Eating (Quadrille Books) has been widely acclaimed as genre-defining and won a James Beard Foundation Award for best single subject book. His second book, Cooking on the Big Green Egg is publishing on 15 April, 2021 (Quadrille Books).

Instagram @cabritogoatmeat

Ooni x Alex Pole Ironwork #100axes

Axe designed by Alex Pole for Ooni Pizza

Axe designed by Alex Pole for Ooni Pizza

OONI PIZZA OVENS LAUNCHES OONI AXE IN COLLABORATION WITH BRITISH BLACKSMITH ALEX POLE

Ooni Pizza Ovens, the world’s number one pizza oven company, has launched a limited-edition Ooni Axe in collaboration with British blacksmith Alex Pole Ironwork.

A first for the brand, the Ooni Axe is a unique, original piece forged by hand, heat, and hammer.

The Ooni Axe is the result of a distinctive partnership with Master Blacksmith Alex Pole and his assistant Joe Garnett, who share the same passion for craft and fire as the pizza oven brand. With nearly 30 years’ experience, Alex Pole Ironwork was established in 2006 and delivers high-quality, hand-forged kitchenware, utensils and tools.

The Ooni Axe is forged from top quality Swedish steel where every stroke is unique to that individual product and offers a blend of cutting-edge modern design principles and the most ancient of crafts.

Alex Pole, Founder of Alex Pole Ironwork, said: ‘It has been a fantastic opportunity for all of us at The Forge to work with Ooni on this very special collaboration. The axes that we have forged embrace the values of simplicity, function and traditional craftsmanship - a tool to last a lifetime.’

The handle is crafted from only the finest cuts of exquisite Ash, hand-selected by Sam Morris at the Axe & Edge Tool Co. They are hand-sanded and stained with an ebony wood stain and coated with a protective linseed oil to provide a premium, smooth finish. 

Kristian Tapaninaho, Ooni CEO and founder, said: “ When we decided to create a new axe to capture our love of fire-building, we knew we wanted to make something different and unique, and we needed a partner with that same passion to help deliver our vision. Master Blacksmith Alex Pole is that man. We recognised the same shared passion for craft and fire. And so - the Ooni Axe was born.”

The Ooni Axe is now available for $299 / £249 / €299 from uk.ooni.com. To explore the full Ooni product range, visit uk.ooni.com.

About Alex Pole Ironwork

Alex Pole Ironwork was established in 2006 to deliver high-quality, functional products for the home and garden. The business has slowly evolved over the years and now specialises in hand-forged kitchenware and utensils. 

Only traditional techniques are used at the forge and all work is forged by hand and, wherever possible, materials are sourced from the local area. One of the brand’s primary aims is to promote blacksmithing, and the makers movement, across the UK and to showcase its relevance in the 21st century.

Alex Pole started Art college in 1991 where he first studied jewellery making, then architectural ironwork. In 2013, Alex travelled to Sweden to attend a course at Gransfors Bruks, the world-renowned axe-making centre, and discovered a great love of toolmaking. From this point on, he moved his work in a new direction and included knife and axe-making, as well as developing a wide range of kitchenware.

Alex’s main role today is to design and prototype new products, often assisted by the whole team, and to develop the Forge Kitchenware brand.


Green Michelin Star for Will Devlin at The Small Holding

Will Devlin at The Small Holdinh

Will Devlin at The Small Holdinh

The Small Holding, Kent has been awarded a Michelin Green Star in the Michelin Guide 2021.

The new star was given to chef Will Devlin via a digital awards ceremony on Monday 25 January, presented by Kent based TV presenter Davina McCall.

This is the first year Michelin has awarded its green star for sustainable gastronomy to 23 restaurants in the Great Britain and Ireland guide 2021, after debuting in the French 2020 guide.

The award recognises restaurants with a focus on environmental practices and is only awarded to those which hold a Plate, Bib or Star distinction. Many, like Will Devlin at The Small Holding work directly with growers, farmers and fishermen, forage in hedgerows and woodlands and grow their vegetables and rear animals. Other recipients of this year’s Green Star include Black Swan, York; Coombeshead Farm, Launceston; L’Enclume, Cumbria; Restaurant Sat Bains, Nottingham and Silo, London.

Will Devlin, chef owner of The Small Holding, commented, “What an incredible feeling! This Green Star encompasses everything about The Small Holding and our drive for sustainability. This award is for everyone on the team, in the kitchen, on the floor and on the farm who all work so hard and really deserve this, I’m so proud.”

Gwendal Poullennec, international director of the Michelin guides commented, ‘These restaurants are not only an inspiration for the industry but also for all the readers and users of the Michelin Guide.”

www.thesmallholding.restaurant
@the_small_holding_

Ranters Lane | Kilndown | Kent | TN17 2SG

About The Small Holding

Will Devlin, 32, is the chef owner of The Small Holding, a kitchen and farm on a country lane in the village of Kilndown on the Kent and East Sussex borders. The 26-cover restaurant was voted the best restaurant in Kent at the Taste of Kent Awards and is set in one acre of land, permitting a unique connection between farm and table. Growing, foraging and cooking the best ingredients is at the core of The Small Holding, with daily changing menus, using home-reared and home-grown ingredients from the farm, which is less than 10ft from the kitchen.

Will’s second site, The Curlew, a former 17th century coaching inn in Bodiam, East Sussex opened in February 2020 and is 8 miles from The Small Holding. www.thecurlew.restaurant

For more information, images, interview or to visit The Small Holding, please contact Hannah Blake hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk | 07730 039361

Praise for The Small Holding
A group of folk growing amazing things, then pulling them out of the ground, sometimes knobbly and lumpy, then cooking and serving them. It’s perfectly imperfect and I wouldn’t change a thing.” Grace Dent, The Guardian

“The menu reads like a list of all that is good in a British Larder. Self-sufficiency, careful sourcing, purity of intent and an absolute focus on flavour. It’s easy to fall in love with The Small Holding for the warmth of the staff, its good intent and deft execution.” Tony Turnbull, The Times

“Striding confidently into its second year, Will Devlin’s restaurant shows no sign of slowing down, ‘a truly sensational experience’ is one fan’s heartfelt comment. The level of ingenuity generated by a kitchen on turbo drive, fuelled by its own small holding, hen coop and piggery is prodigious.” Will Devlin was named ‘Chef to Watch’ in The Good Food Guide 2020

The Forge Kitchen cookbook

The Forge Kitchen cookbook by Alex Pole and Pooch Horsburgh (£25)

The Forge Kitchen cookbook by Alex Pole and Pooch Horsburgh (£25)

The Forge Kitchen Cookbook
Alex Pole, £25

The Forge Kitchen is a collaboration between Alex Pole and co-author Pooch Horsburgh and 21 chefs including Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Gill Meller, Anja Dunk, Valentine Warner and Olia Hercules. Each of The Forge chefs has taken their inspiration from cookware made in the fires of Alex Pole’s Somerset forge. The pans we cook in, the utensils we serve with, and the cutlery we use, are as important to any meal as the ingredients, it’s all part of the flavour, and the pleasure of cooking.

Blacksmiths have been forging iron for many thousands of years and a staple of their craft has been the production of kitchenware and cooking implements. The hearth has always been the centre of family life - providing both warmth and sustenance by means of a heat source - and that is still the case today. In fact, it seems to be becoming more and more popular to cook on an open fire, either indoors or out, and the best way to do this is by using iron utensils.

The Forge Kitchen fuses traditionally made kitchenware with contemporary chefs and the very best ingredients to create a unique set of ingredients. Recipes include scallops with brown shrimp and sorrel butter by Olia Hercules; hogget with salsa verde by Gill Meller; chilli squid with ginger, basil yoghurt and sweetcorn chutney by Nathan Outlaw; beetroot tatin with roasted garlic, thyme and goat’s cheese; and piperade with baked eggs and crispy pancetta by Thomasina Miers.

“The Forge Kitchen celebrates the vital energy between great kitchen tools, great ingredients and great cooking - and the results are beautiful, satisfying and delicious.” Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, River Cottage

The Forge Kitchen is £25 and is available from the online shop on www.alexpoleironwork.

Alex Pole Ironwork at The Forge

Alex Pole Ironwork kitchenware

Alex Pole Ironwork kitchenware

The Forge Kitchenware

Alex Pole is a British blacksmith making traditionally hand-forged kitchenware and cooking utensils, made in the fires of his Somerset workshop. Forging is the ancient art of shaping metal by heating it in a fire and hammering. It is an art that is full of tradition and folklore but with many modern applications.

Alex has been working as a blacksmith for over 25 years and founded The Forge Kitchenware in 2015. He makes pieces for home kitchens, outdoor cooking and bespoke pieces for cooks, chefs and restaurants including Nathan Outlaw, Christian Stevenson aka DJ BBQ, Gill Meller, Mark Hix and Thomasina Miers. Each piece is individually forged, using local materials, wherever possible, by a small team of skilled craftsmen dedicated to producing the highest quality work. One of Alex’s primary aims is to promote blacksmithing, and the makers movement, across the UK and to show its relevance in the 21st century.

Every piece of Forge Kitchenware, be it a skillet, knife, coffee scoop or an axe, starts as a simple bar of steel, which is heated ad repeatedly hit on the anvil until it is the correct size, shape and style. Heat, strike, repeat! The Forge Kitchenware takes the everyday and redefines it to create beautiful and tactical, yet wholly functional, pieces of work. Each piece is designed with simple form, clean lines and functionality and are made to last a lifetime.

Blacksmith courses and Forge and Feast events will resume in 2021.

Alex Pole is founder of The Forge Kitchenware.

Day to day, Alex’s main role is designing new products, often assisted by the whole team and developing the Forge Kitchenware brand.

“I have always had a fascination with metals for as long as I can remember. From sitting with my mum watching her make jewellery as a four-year-old to casting lead soldiers in my pre-teens, it feels like I've always been drawn to this material.

I started back in 1991 with attendance to art college to first study jewellery making, then architectural ironwork. After that came the wandering years - filled with travel, training, exploration, experimentation and a beer or two.

In 2013 I travelled to Sweden to attend a course at Gransfors Bruks, the world renowned axe making centre, and discovered a great love of tool making.  From then on I moved my work in a new direction - this included knife and axe making, as well as developing a wide range of kitchenware. Blacksmithing is not just a craft to me , but a way of life, and one that gives great satisfaction not only to me but, I hope, others as well.”

Valentine's Day from Will Devlin at The Small Holding and The Curlew

Barbecued lobster, fermented tomatoes, sea buckthorn & chervil butter (Key & Quill)

Barbecued lobster, fermented tomatoes, sea buckthorn & chervil butter (Key & Quill)

Valentine’s Day from chef Will Devlin at The Small Holding, Kent and The Curlew, Sussex

Chef Will Devlin has created two special Valentine’s Day menus from his restaurants The Small Holding in Kilndown, Kent and The Curlew in Bodiam, Sussex. Both menus are exceptional dining experiences safely delivered to your doorstep while all the prep and hard work has been done, meaning all that is needed is to add the finishing touches, plate up, and enjoy.

Using the best from the farm, land and sea starting with a bottle of English sparkling the menus include home-cured trout, pickled oysters, lobster and venison and of course, chocolate. Each of these elements come with full and easy instructions from chef Will Devlin.

Each menu is available to pre-order now on The Small Holding’s website, until 5pm on 10 February, for local delivery on 13 February.

Valentine’s Menu from The Small Holding

Bottle of Squerryes 2016
Bacon & onion brioche, cultured butter
Oysters pickled in wild garlic vinegar
Wild venison, salt baked celeriac, preserved vegetables
Barbecued lobster, fermented tomatoes, sea buckthorn & chervil butter
Creedy Carver duck breast, slow cooked leg, roasted squash, seaweed sauce
Miso & chocolate pudding, blackcurrant jam
Arthur Allsop’s Winter Truffle Camembert
£180 for two

Valentine’s Menu from The Curlew

Bottle of Oastbrook Sparkling Rose
Gin cured trout, fennel salami from The Small Holding, kimchi squash dumplings
45-day aged rib of beef, triple cooked chips with smoked rosemary salt, winter salad & Sussex Blue cheese sauce
Double chocolate & salted caramel shortbread, preserved cherries, meadowsweet cream 
£120 for two

About The Small Holding

Will Devlin, 32, is the chef owner of The Small Holding, a kitchen and farm on a country lane in the village of Kilndown on the Kent and East Sussex borders. The 26-cover restaurant was voted the best restaurant in Kent at the Taste of Kent Awards and is set in one acre of land, permitting a unique connection between farm and table. Growing, foraging and cooking the best ingredients is at the core of The Small Holding, with daily changing menus, using home-reared and home-grown ingredients from the farm, which is less than 10ft from the kitchen.

www.thesmallholding.restaurant
@the_small_holding_
Ranters Lane | Kilndown | Kent | TN17 2SG 

 For more information, images, interview or to visit The Small Holding, please contact Hannah Blake hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk | 07730 039361

Praise for The Small Holding
A group of folk growing amazing things, then pulling them out of the ground, sometimes knobbly and lumpy, then cooking and serving them. It’s perfectly imperfect and I wouldn’t change a thing.” Grace Dent, The Guardian

“The menu reads like a list of all that is good in a British Larder. Self-sufficiency, careful sourcing, purity of intent and an absolute focus on flavour. It’s easy to fall in love with The Small Holding for the warmth of the staff, its good intent and deft execution.” Tony Turnbull, The Times

Cooking on the Big Green Egg

Cooking on the Big Green Egg by James Whetlor, Quadrille, April 2021

Cooking on the Big Green Egg by James Whetlor, Quadrille, April 2021

Cooking on the Big Green Egg
Everything You Need to Know from Set-Up to Cooking Techniques, with 70 Recipes

By James Whetlor, published by Quadrille, foreword by Tom Kerridge
1st April 2021, Hardback, £25

Big Green Egg is the pioneer redefining British Barbecue. With a cult following amongst BBQ experts around the world, Big Green Egg has been helping people discover the true meaning of flavour for over 40 years. Rapidly gaining favour amongst keen home cooks who want to cook restaurant quality food, the EGG is a favourite of celebrities such as David Beckham, Holly Willoughby, James Martin and Meghan Markle, and loved by some of the UK’s best chefs including Tom Kerridge, Gordon Ramsay and Daniel Clifford.

The EGG is a kamado-style grill that heats up to 1,000°C using NASA inspired ceramics to hold the temperature rock steady, with a burn time of 18 hours of cooking time, meaning anything from slow-smoked brisket to roast chicken, pizza or even smoked oysters are now easy to achieve. As more and more enthusiasts realise what a versatile and practical piece of cooking hardware the EGG is, experts and amateurs alike are looking for recipes to test out their skills and maximise the EGG's capabilities.

Cooking on the Big Green Egg introduces a new range of techniques previously never possible on the traditional barbecue and gives instructions and recipes for everything you'd ever want to cook on it. Award-winning author of Goat: Cooking and Eating, James Whetlor, guides the reader through the basics of using a Big Green Egg, with a full explanation of how to maxmise its cooking potential, including: How does it work? How do I get started? How do I grill, smoke, pan-cook, cook on direct or indirect heat?

With James's advice, tricks, tips and methods, you're ready to cook your way through 70 original recipes including meat and joints, whole fish, vegetables and jaw-dropping BBQ feasts. With this book by your side, you’ll go from beginner to EGGspert in no time, and be cooking, eating and enjoying delicious food with unparalleled flavour.

About the Author

Winner of a James Beard award for his first book Goat: Cooking and Eating (Quadrille, £20) James Whetlor is the founder of ethical meat business Cabrito Goat Meat. He worked as a chef for 12 years in London, before moving back to his hometown in Devon and working at River Cottage. His award-winning business Cabrito now sells goat meat to restaurants, catering businesses and supermarkets, from a network of farms across the country, as well as his own online shop. Goat also won the Guild of Food Writers Best Single Subject Food Book of 2019.

Feature Ideas

-   Things You Never Knew You Could BBQ: From curries to Christmas dinner, keep grilling all year round

-   Playing with Fire: You’ve invested in a BBQ, now here are the 12 essential recipes you need to become a true grill-master

-  Summer Sizzlers: Menu ideas for BBQ season that will please the whole family 

-   Green Grilling: Barbecuing isn’t just about meat, learn the best ways to barbecue vegetables and even puddings

-   The Heat is On: A guide to charcoal, how it affects the grill and where to buy the best coals

Big Green EGG

The Big Green Egg is the choice of top restaurant chefs and enables home cooks to achieve restaurant quality food at home. The charcoal-fuelled, ceramic Big Green Egg uses state-of-the-art patented technology that is ready to cook on in 12 minutes and provides 80+ hours of cooking in one bag of charcoal. The advanced ceramic insulation and airflow vent accurately control the temperature to maximise cooking time for unprecedented ease of use and complex depth of flavour. Walk away for hours in the confidence the EGG’s temperature will remain rock solid and food is cooked to perfection.

For more information about the book, Big Green Egg or James Whetlor, please contact Hannah Blake at The Dining Room on hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk or 07730 039361

The Small Holding at Home

Duck leg, borlotti beans and chanterelles at The Small Holding, Kent

Duck leg, borlotti beans and chanterelles at The Small Holding, Kent

The Small Holding at Home

The Small Holding at Home is an exceptional dining experience safely delivered to your doorstep from Will Devlin and his chefs at The Small Holding in Kilndown, Kent. The Small Holding team have done all the prep and hard work meaning all that is needed is to add the finishing touches, plate up, and enjoy.

Creating a restaurant quality experience at home is now possible. Using fresh from the ground autumn and winter produce from the farm, The Small Holding team have created three different set menus, with additional bread, charcuterie, cheese plate, wines, beers and soft drinks to choose from, too. The menus will change each week so there will also be a new dining experience from The Small Holding to try at home. Custom from the At Home meals are vitally important as Kent is in Tier 3.

Each menu includes several ready to serve dishes such as home smoked salmon, slow cooked goat terrine or apple and cobnut cake. The main course for each menu has a few elements to be finished at home such as bone in pork chops from The Small Holding’s own rare breed Large Black pigs, hand-dived scallops from Orkney and pan roast venison loin. Each of these elements come with full and easy instructions from chef Will Devlin.

Each menu is available to pre-order for local delivery or collection on Friday or Saturday night and costs from £35 per person.

Will Devlin says, “Our At Home boxes will help us survive this second lockdown but it’s more than that, it’s also about telling a story through the ingredients we grow on the farm and championing the community of incredible suppliers who work with us, such as cheese from Alsop & Walker, cream from Hinxden Dairy, English sparkling wine from Squerryes and craft beers from Cellar Head. We can only get through this if we work together as a community because, together is stronger.”

For Friday and Saturday dinner, orders are available for delivery and collection via pre-booked time slots. Order by 12pm for dinner on Friday or by 12pm on Thursday for dinner on Saturday. Diners are also welcome to collect between 12pm-4pm on their chosen day.

The Small Holding at Home

Menu one                                                          
Home smoked salmon, pickled cucumber, fennel & radish salad
Creedy Carver duck leg, bean stew, chanterelles
Apple & cobnut cake, cream cheese icing

Collection £35pp and delivery £45pp.      

Menu two
Slow cooked goat terrine, preserved vegetables & truffled cheese
Tamworth pork chop, potato & sage terrine, red cabbage, cider sauce
Miso mousse and pine marshmallow

Collection £45pp and delivery £55pp.

Menu three
Grilled Orkney scallop, pumpkin, Exmoor caviar
Wild venison, smoked potatoes, swede fondant, salted baked beetroot, bacon & chestnuts  
Sea buckthorn & dark chocolate tart, meadowsweet cream

Collection £50pp and delivery £60pp.      

-ends-

About The Small Holding

Will Devlin, 32, is the chef owner of The Small Holding, a kitchen and farm on a country lane in the village of Kilndown on the Kent and East Sussex borders. The 26-cover restaurant was voted the best restaurant in Kent at the Taste of Kent Awards and is set in one acre of land, permitting a unique connection between farm and table. Growing, foraging and cooking the best ingredients is at the core of The Small Holding, with daily changing menus, using home-reared and home-grown ingredients from the farm, which is less than 10ft from the kitchen.

Praise for The Small Holding
A group of folk growing amazing things, then pulling them out of the ground, sometimes knobbly and lumpy, then cooking and serving them. It’s perfectly imperfect and I wouldn’t change a thing.” Grace Dent, The Guardian

“The menu reads like a list of all that is good in a British Larder. Self-sufficiency, careful sourcing, purity of intent and an absolute focus on flavour. It’s easy to fall in love with The Small Holding for the warmth of the staff, its good intent and deft execution.” Tony Turnbull, The Times

 

The New Meat Project launches

Sushila Moles from The New Meat Project

Sushila Moles from The New Meat Project

The New Meat Project is a new online butchery launched by Cabrito Goat Meat co-founder and ex-River Cottage events director, Sushila Moles.

From field to fork, ordering fresh meat online from independent farmers reared in the traditional way, has never been simpler. The New Meat Project is an online butchery service delivering native breed, free-range and grass-fed meat from small farms in the Malvern Hills which have been slow-grown to the highest welfare standard. Delivery is convenient and environmentally conscious from farm to doorstep and is fairly priced for both the customer and the farmer.

Founder Sushilia Moles says, “Our mission is to encourage people to change the way they buy meat, to no longer accept the disappointing industrialised food from supermarkets and instead make the choice to support small-scale, family-run farms. Buying meat online, which is farmed using traditional and high welfare, sustainable practices is often too expensive, which is why we focus on offering a fair price to our customers and the farmers we work with, without ever compromising on the provenance of the meat or our environmental policy. I believe good food should be for everyone and we promise the best quality meat at fair prices for both the customer and farmer, which is better for the health of your family and the health of the planet.”

The New Meat Project only works with small farms in the Malvern Hills which are within 75 miles of each other, and with farmers who rear their native breed animals outdoors and to the highest possible welfare standards. The stretch of land between the Wye Valley and the Cotswolds, taking in the River Severn and the Malvern Hills, provides some of the best farmland in the UK, rich in space and fertile soil and grass. All animals travel no more than an hour from the farm to a local, small and family-run slaughter house.

Pigs
The New Meat Project pigs are traditional native breeds including Hampshire, Large Black and a few Welsh sows that lead a properly free-range life on the farm. The sows and boars all live together, mainly living in wooded and scrub areas where their favourite natural behaviour is to root and forage, which in turn gives life to new grasses and wildflowers the following year. They have a happy life and slowly reach maturity for a superior, deep flavour with excellent texture and covering of fat.  

Cows
The New Meat Project heritage breed beef is 100% grass-fed. The calves are born in the field and live outside with their mothers, all year round, only coming in if the weather is so wet that they can't find enough grazing. The Hereford and Aberdeen Angus are two of the best native breeds in Britain, both with rich, beefy flavour, good marbling and layer of fat. All beef is dry-aged for a minimum of 28 days to develop an extra layer of  flavour.

Lamb
The New Meat Project lamb comes from one farmer who grazes his sheep on pasture at the foot of the Malvern Hills. It has won best in show at the Three Counties Show many times over the years. The lamb is 100% grass-fed and hormone and antibiotic-free and the animals spend their entire lives outside. The meat is hung for 10 days to develop flavour and texture.

Chickens
The New Meat Project chickens are fully free-range and slowly grown to the high standards of the Soil Association. The birds are free to roam from dawn to dusk, scratching, pecking and spreading their wings, while at night they come inside to bed in their sheds. With over 50 years of farming experience, the high-welfare calm lifestyle of these chickens is evident in the taste of the meat. 

Founder
The New Meat Project is founded by Sushila Moles. Having gained a Masters in Food Anthropology and worked in food related businesses all of her life, Sushila has first-hand experience that farming is a force for good in society. Her working life has taken her from Michelin-starred restaurant, Rhodes 24 as head waiter to La Fromagerie in Marylebone, where she could indulge her love of cheese and to River Cottage, where she played a lead role in promoting one of the country’s best known sustainable and ethics driven businesses. Sushila is also co-owner of Cabrito, the multi award-winning goat meat business, run by her partner James Whetlor, that has been at the forefront of changing the UK goat dairy practice of euthanizing unwanted male kids and rearing them for meat instead. These experiences combined have convinced her of the importance of high welfare, low impact meat in our food system, both for our own health, the health of our communities and for the health of the planet.

For more information about The New Meat Project or founder Sushila Moles, please contact Hannah Blake at The Dining Room on 07730 039361 or hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk

The Christmas Box

The Christmas Box from The Small Holding and The Pure Meat Company

The Christmas Box from The Small Holding and The Pure Meat Company

A collaboration between The Small Holding and The Pure Meat Company

This Christmas order a restaurant quality dinner box from The Small Holding, Kent. Chef Will Devlin from The Small Holding and farmer Tom Cunningham from The Pure Meat Company have created The Christmas Box, filled with everything needed for the main eating event on Christmas Day. This unique partnership sees Kent’s best farm-to-table chef collaborate with a first-generation farmer, who is committed to rearing meat that is ethical and sustainable.

Filled with farm-fresh and restaurant quality ingredients, The Christmas Box centerpiece is a fully free-range bronze turkey, naturally reared on Tom’s farm in Shadoxhurst, Kent, alongside pigs in blankets and stuffing balls from the farm’s free-range Tamworth pigs.

The Christmas Box starts at £130 serving 2-3 people with a boned turkey breast and a boned and stuffed turkey leg, sausage stuffing balls, pigs in blankets, roast potatoes, honey roast parsnips, glazed butter and thyme carrots, braised red cabbage, buttered leeks, redcurrant sauce, bread sauce and roast turkey gravy. All the vegetables are home-grown on the farm at The Small Holding. Diners can choose a larger turkey (up to 8-9 kg) and the option of the bird being whole or having the legs taken off the crown and stuffed and rolled. The medium Christmas Box serves 4-5 people and costs £200 and the large box, serving 6-8 people costs £250.

Each Christmas Box, whether small, medium or large also includes a bottle of award-winning Squerryes Brut 2016 Vintage Reserve, with spiced baked pears on the nose and on the palette an abundance of rich, ripe fruit and a hint of brioche. A perfect bottle of English sparkling wine from Kent to start the Christmas celebrations.

The Christmas Box collaboration between The Small Holding and The Pure Meat Company began in May, when 180 bronze turkey poults were hatched at the farm. From the moment they were born they were nurtured. For the first six weeks of their lives they were nestled up in a warm cosy barn under heaters. Once they have feathered up and can face the weather at around 6 weeks old, they are ready to be properly free-range out in the wildflower meadows. The birds spent their days running, flapping, chasing bugs and pecking grass, slowly growing to full natural maturity at about 7 months. They were fed on a locally milled grain feed with no antibiotics, exactly as nature intended.

The Christmas Box is available to order online from www.exploretock.com/thesmallholding and is to be collected from The Small Holding on Tuesday 22nd or Wednesday 23rd December.

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For more information, images or interview please contact Hannah Blake hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk | 07730 039361

About The Small Holding
Will Devlin, 32, is the chef owner of The Small Holding, a kitchen and farm on a country lane in the village of Kilndown on the Kent and East Sussex borders. The 26-cover restaurant was voted the best restaurant in Kent at the Taste of Kent Awards and is set in one acre of land, permitting a unique connection between farm and table. Growing, foraging and cooking the best ingredients is at the core of The Small Holding, with daily changing menus, using home-reared and home-grown ingredients from the farm, which is less than 10ft from the kitchen.

Praise for The Small Holding

“A group of folk growing amazing things, then pulling them out of the ground, sometimes knobbly and lumpy, then cooking and serving them. It’s perfectly imperfect and I wouldn’t change a thing.” Grace Dent, The Guardian

 About The Pure Meat Company

The Pure Meat Company is a first-generation family farm run by two brothers, Tom and Sam Cunningham with a clear purpose; to tread a little more lightly upon the planet.

Tom, aged 22, founded the farm in 2017, with a passionate belief that farming could - and should - be done differently. Frustrated by the fast-and-forced farming methods widely employed by the industry, the brothers knew that there is a better way to produce meat.

The Pure Meat Company farms three hundred acres across the Weald of Kent stitched together by dense hedgerows, deep-rooted trees and a network of pure water courses for properly free-range, native breed cows, pigs and sheep to graze, root and forage. The farmland is made up of permanent pasture, 100 acres of wildflower meadows and ancient woodlands, most of which have never been ploughed. Tom and Sam farm ethically and sustainably and the result is slow-raised meat, reared gently and sustainably in the heart of Kent. www.puremeatcompany.co.uk/shop

The Small Holding at Home

Produce from the farm for The Small Holding at Home

Produce from the farm for The Small Holding at Home

The Small Holding at Home

Ranters Lane | Kilndown | Kent | TN17 2SG

#thesmallholdingathome

The Small Holding at Home is an exceptional dining experience safely delivered to your doorstep from Will Devlin and his chefs at The Small Holding in Kilndown, Kent. The Small Holding team have done all the prep and hard work meaning all that is needed is to add the finishing touches, plate up, and enjoy.

Creating a restaurant quality experience at home is now possible. Using fresh from the ground autumn and winter produce from the farm, The Small Holding team have created three different set menus, with additional bread, charcuterie, cheese, wines, beers and soft drinks to choose from, too. The menus will change each week so there will also be a new dining experience from The Small Holding to try at home.

Each menu includes several ready to serve dishes such as hot smoked trout, slow cooked goat terrine or apple and cobnut cake. The main course for each menu has a few elements to be finished at home such as bone in pork chops from The Small Holding’s own rare breed Large Black pigs, hand-dived scallops from Orkney and pan roast duck breast. Each of these elements come with full and easy instructions from chef Will Devlin.

Each menu is available to pre-order for local delivery or collection on Friday or Saturday night and costs from £35 per person.

Will Devlin says, “Our At Home boxes will help us survive this second lockdown but it’s more than that, it’s also about telling a story through the ingredients we grow on the farm and championing the community of incredible suppliers who work with us, such as cheese from Alsop & Walker, cream from Hinxden Dairy, English sparkling wine from Squerryes and craft beers from Cellar Head. We can only get through this if we work together as a community because, together is stronger.”

For Friday and Saturday dinner, orders are available for delivery and collection via pre-booked time slots. Order by 12pm for dinner on Friday or by 12pm on Thursday for dinner on Saturday. Diners are also welcome to collect between 12pm-4pm on their chosen day.

The Small Holding at Home

Menu one
Hot smoked trout, pickled cucumber & fennel
Large Black pork chop, potato & sage terrine, red cabbage, cider sauce
Apple & cobnut cake, cream cheese icing

Collection £35pp and delivery £45pp.

Menu two
Slow cooked goat terrine, preserved vegetables & truffled cheese
Marinated cod, seaweed mashed potato, broccoli and pickled chilli, lovage & wild garlic sauce
Miso mousse and pine marshmallow

Collection £45pp and delivery £55pp.

Menu three
Grilled Orkney scallop, pumpkin, Exmoor caviar
Creedy Carver duck, smoked potatoes, winter truffle sauce
Sea buckthorn & dark chocolate tart, meadowsweet cream

Collection £50pp and delivery £60pp.

About The Small Holding

Will Devlin, 32, is the chef owner of The Small Holding, a kitchen and farm on a country lane in the village of Kilndown on the Kent and East Sussex borders. The 26-cover restaurant was voted the best restaurant in Kent at the Taste of Kent Awards and is set in one acre of land, permitting a unique connection between farm and table. Growing, foraging and cooking the best ingredients is at the core of The Small Holding, with daily changing menus, using home-reared and home-grown ingredients from the farm, which is less than 10ft from the kitchen.

For more information, images, interview or to visit The Small Holding, please contact Hannah Blake hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk | 07730 039361

Praise for The Small Holding

A group of folk growing amazing things, then pulling them out of the ground, sometimes knobbly and lumpy, then cooking and serving them. It’s perfectly imperfect and I wouldn’t change a thing.” Grace Dent, The Guardian

“The menu reads like a list of all that is good in a British Larder. Self-sufficiency, careful sourcing, purity of intent and an absolute focus on flavour. It’s easy to fall in love with The Small Holding for the warmth of the staff, its good intent and deft execution.” Tony Turnbull, The Times

Big Green Egg launch heritage breeds steak box

Farmison Picanha steak on the Big Green Egg

Farmison Picanha steak on the Big Green Egg

Big Green Egg and Farmison & Co launch limited edition Heritage Breeds Steak Tasting Box

Limited quantities only. Exclusively available to buy online, pre-register here

Images here

Big Green Egg has been championing quality artisan food producers and helping people to discover the true meaning of flavour for over 40 years. Eating grass-fed, dry-aged beef is one of the finest eating experiences a diner can have, which is why Big Green Egg has partnered with Yorkshire Dales master butchers Farmison & Co to launch an exclusive Heritage Breeds Steak Tasting Box. 

Costing £100, including p&p, the limited-edition box contains three fabulous, but very different, cuts of heritage breed beef, dry-aged for prime flavour and texture. The meat comes exclusively from Heritage Breeds including Angus, Shorthorn and Hereford. For the ultimate steak experience at home, the box also includes bone marrow melt and Droitwich beech smoked salt. 

Each box comes with an expert tutorial and recipe card from EGG’s head chef Luke Vandore-Mackay, who recommends different cooking techniques on the Big Green Egg, including reverse sear and cooking ‘dirty’, directly on the hot coals. 

The Big Green Egg is the choice of top restaurant chefs and enables home cooks to achieve restaurant quality food at home. The charcoal-fuelled, ceramic Big Green Egg uses state-of-the-art patented technology that is ready to cook on in 12 minutes and provides 80+ hours of cooking in one bag of charcoal. The advanced ceramic insulation and airflow vent accurately control the temperature to maximise cooking time for unprecedented ease of use and complex depth of flavour. Walk away for hours in the confidence the EGG’s temperature will remain rock solid and food is cooked to perfection.

The Big Green Egg x Farmison & Co Heritage Breeds Steak Tasting Box includes

SIRLOIN CHOP ON THE BONE, 60 day dry-aged Angus: This unique steak is BIG. Cut extra thick on the bone for big, beefy flavour, the sirloin chop is a Big Green Egg exclusive in collaboration with Farmison & Co. 

PICANHA, 32 day-aged Angus: Also known as the Rump Cap Joint, the Picanha is the prime cut in Argentina and fast becoming the new must-try steak in the UK. The thick fat covering is left on, giving incredible succulence, flavour, and tenderness. 

FLANK, 14-day-aged Shorthorn/Hereford/Angus: Long, flat, and prized for its incredible beefy flavour, this lean cut is seeing a revival. It features delicate marbling throughout, which gently melts away during your cook.

Two packs of Kettyle Bone Marrow Melt: Added to steak in the final 2 minutes of cooking, this bone marrow from Kettyle Irish Foods, takes an already impressive piece of meat to the next level. 

One pack of Droitwich Beech Smoked Salt: Harvested by hand from some of the oldest and purest salt springs in the world and crystallised using renewable energy, this salt is hard to beat. 

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For more information please contact:
Hannah Blake at hannah@thediningroompr.co.uk or 07730 039361

Notes to editors 

About Big Green Egg 

Big Green Egg® is the pioneer redefining British Barbecue. Established 40 years ago in the USA, the Big Green Egg is a charcoal based ceramic cooker that offers a wide range of precise cooking modes. It can grill, roast, smoke or bake in temperatures ranging from 80 to 400C. 

The EGG uses state-of-the-art NASA inspired ceramics and patented technology to provide advanced insulation, meaning the EGG’s temperature can be precisely controlled, for searing direct heat for pizzas and bread or low and slow for pulled meat. The EGG is fuel efficient and can be used to cook large pieces of meat with confidence. 

The EGG introduces a whole new range of techniques previously never possible on the traditional British BBQ. Rapidly gaining favour amongst keen home cooks, the EGG is also used by some of the UK’s best chefs in gastro pubs and Michelin starred restaurants. 

The Big Green Egg is available in five sizes and can be customised to suit individual configurations and garden spaces. A variety of nest stands, side shelves, and tables are available. Lifetime warranty.

Alfresco Concepts is the exclusive distributor of the Big Green Egg in the UK, Ireland and Channel Islands. 

www.biggreenegg.co.uk