The chic Hotel Les Esclargies in Rocamadour is my kind of hotel. Spending a fair amount of time in luxury hotels gives you an eye for what really matters and what is just ostentatious fluff. But what serves me best is an uncomplicated place of simplicity, with a certain amount of elegance, and a shedload of peace and quiet.
Read the full story hereAuthor Archives: Terry Marsh
Hotel Les Esclargies
03/08/2016 .Travel Guide to Exploring Angers
01/08/2016 .There is a buzzing exhilaration about exploring Angers, a bright modernity underpinned by a unique and fascinating heritage. This lively city of noteworthy architecture, rainbow-coloured trams and more than 150,000 souls is highly regarded as urban friendly, full of fun, lively with festivals and street theatre – such as the Anjou Festival, the second biggest outdoor theatre event in France – and, with more than 1,500 acres of parks and green spaces, worthy of its accolade as one of the greenest cities in France.
Read the full story hereNorthcote Restaurant
25/07/2016 .Not for the first time, my wife and I ventured to Northcote restaurant in the delightful Ribble valley, just twenty minutes from our home. Chef-patron Nigel Haworth, has held a Michelin star for many years for, as the Michelin guide says, ‘Refined, sophisticated cooking [that] shows depth of flavour and a lightness of touch’.
Read the full story hereNorthcote Gourmet Break
25/07/2016 .Terry Marsh samples accommodation and cuisine of the Northcote Gourmet Break.
Given the current vogue for ‘eating out’, mini breaks and an increasing emphasis on food generally, perhaps it shouldn’t be surprising to find restaurants that have already earned a worthy and enviable reputation in the dark arts of cuisine also expanding into the realms of the accommodation provision: wine, dine, cognac, sleep it off in lush comfort, and wake up in the morning wondering how much wine you had to drink.
It’s the new zeitgeist, an extravagance, an indulgence; one that creates an elaborate, if evanescent, illusion of freedom from the mundane, of time cocooned in a different world.
That’s exactly how it felt when my wife and I returned to Northcote – our regular birthdays, anniversaries and ‘any other plausible excuse’ cocoon – intent for the first time on spending a night in the extended vision of chef-patron Nigel Haworth’s Michelin restaurant, set not far from the charming town of Whalley in Lancashire’s beautiful but hugely under-appreciated Ribble valley.
Within minutes we were whisked to the sumptuous embrace of a Garden Lodge Deluxe room, designed exclusively for Northcote by Jill Holst co-founding director of Ward Robinson from Newcastle upon Tyne.
I had the chance to view other rooms, too, and all exude a highly distinctive appeal that combines luxury and plush furnishings with sophisticated lighting, and all the amenities you would expect of a quality hotel including access to a complimentary DVD library – no doubt for those who arrive on a Saturday, when there’s little of interest on television.
Our balcony has a great view of Longridge Fell, the casual armchairs and the sofa are actually comfortable rather than decorative, the air conditioning does what it’s told, while the bathroom with its double shower, twin washbasins and huge bath is a world of luxury of its own, you could bubble and squeak in there for hours, if you have a mind to.
I wasn’t surprised to hear that two elderly sisters from just an hour’s drive away, annually stay here for more than two weeks, enjoying everything Northcote has to offer, and dining well each evening. And while local patronage is the well of good fortune for Northcote, word is spreading far and wide to bring discerning winers and diners to the green folds of Lancashire.
Originally built in 1880 as a private dwelling, Northcote became a modest 4-bedroom hotel with 50-seat restaurant in 1979. Now, after a manic period of development and re-building there are 26 individually styled rooms shared between the original manor house and the new garden lodge with just 8 rooms, including a sumptuous master suite.
The Victorian red brick manor house from a distance has a hint of Germanic autocracy about it. In the lounge three guests, relaxing after lunch or diving into afternoon tea, looked remarkably content and chilled; another group gathered with wine on the terrace soaking up the vitamin D and indulging in the sort of idle chat that everyday life tends to preclude.
We had not travelled far, but should you need refreshing after a long drive, then there can be nothing better than the lush view of the Ribble valley pastures, and a seemingly contented group of gardeners pottering in the restaurant’s potager, a young chef in pristine whites is out in it gathering herbs. It’s like another world, one in which everything is in harmony, and the evils of the world are a million miles away.
Attention to detail is the key at Northcote, from the Temple Spa ‘condiments’ in the bathroom to the welcoming sound of Chill Jazz on the RuarkAudio sound system at the side of the bed. Then there’s Wi-Fi that works, when many top hotels still fall short in that department; the umbrella in the wardrobe; the plug adapter; the night light in the bathroom; the mini torch on the key fob, and the Scrabble and backgammon/chess/dominoes set tucked away in one of the drawers; now if that’s not attention to detail, I don’t know what is!
We were booked in for a Northcote Gourmet Break, the dining element of which comprises a 5-course gourmet menu, and a half bottle of Louis Roederer Brut Premier champagne to kick the evening off. At least here we were on familiar ground, and, as ever, we were not disappointed; this is Michelin-starred dining after all.
But one thing was certain, after dinner with the paired wines selection, and a little Calvados as a digestif, Scrabble was the last thing on my mind as we zigzagged contentedly back to our room.
As for breakfast…well, there was no scrum fighting over the remnants of a slowly dying buffet selection so frequently offered by many hotels. Instead, a friendly and efficient table service faced us with an extensive choice from ‘refreshers’ of orange or cranberry juice, to the full English…any or all of Home-cured Back and Streaky Local Bacon, Thin Link Cumberland Sausages, Fried Mushrooms and Grilled Tomato, White Bread Fried in Bacon Fat, Black Pudding and Bowland Free Range Eggs.
As an alternative, the choice includes Lancaster Smokehouse Juniper and Beech Smoked Salmon thinly carved with free-range scrambled eggs; naturally smoked Finnan Haddock and poached egg, or Mrs Kirkham’s Melting Lancashire Cheese Soufflé served with a grilled tomato.
With home-made breads and jams, and a pot of tea, you really can’t go wrong…even the bread soldiers served with the boiled eggs were cut with military precision. Sure, in the scale of things, it’s no big deal if your bread’s a bit wonky, but it all goes to highlight that attention to detail that hallmarks everything at Northcote, and sends you on your way in a happy frame of mind.
Tell me more about a Northcote Gourmet Break
Northcote, Northcote Road, Langho, Blackburn, Lancashire BB6 8BE. Tel: 01254 240 555; reception@northcote.com;
A Northcote Gourmet Break starts from £340 per couple, depending on choice of room.
The hotel is just 10 minutes from Junction 31 on the M6, in the heart of Lancashire’s beautiful Ribble valley.
Read the full story hereRestaurant Favre d’Anne. Angers
25/07/2016 .Terry Marsh reviews Restaurant Favre d’Anne
Read the full story hereHotel d’Anjou
25/07/2016 .Set on the boulevard Maréchal Foch, the Hotel d’Anjou is a perfect base from which to explore the city of Angers. Each of the 53 rooms has individual style with historical furniture, not that far from the original design of 1865.
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