EDitorial ± 29-Apr-2008
All The Cake You Can Eat
Sunday chores: dump dead dance mat, recycle green glass, reaffix homespun
latch to gate, fail to fix loo seat that won't stay up, and walk
dog The Boy & his friend. Fire up some Particle Man in
the motor and point the wheels at Woodbridge. specifically Kingston Field,
home to
The Pavilion.
Competitive Dad guides young 'uns to the mini five-a-side pitch for (i) a penalty shoot-out, casting himself as Laurie Sivell from the 1975/76 Topps sticker collection, then (ii) corner practice, encouraging the chaps to "hit it first time". Lionel Messi started out this way, almost certainly.
Just gone twenty to five -- Battle Of Edgehill time, if you like -- dragged 'em back to their seat belts for the short drive into town. One thought is dominant: Dad Needs A Cup Of Coffee. Before the outbreak of the Great Northern War, gotta reach the chain coffee shop whose name is an anagram of:
- a Puccini opera,
- a Berkshire racecourse,
- and a place in Pratt County, Kansas
Drove, parked, sprinted into Costa to find girl mopping floor and nearly all chairs on tables. Aaargh! Fear not, she reassures, we're still open. Fur-yew. No free shot today but the serving area is bedecked with cakes. I tentatively ask: are these going spare? Er, yep, she says: what would you like?
Agog, awestruck, gobsmacked, I meekly point to a triple chocolate muffin each
for The Boys, and a slice of carrot cake -- make that two slices! -- for me,
ta very much. Patisserie paydirt.
EDitorial ± 28-Apr-2008
Felixstowe Coffee Shops
Following closely on from our 2007 tour of Woodbridge coffee shops, we reprogrammed the SatNav -- Grenvyle's red Rover -- to Felixstowe. Danger UXB! They've got sea, they've got stones and they've got stacks of all-day breakfast sarnies.
Andy's done his best to maintain his official map of Felixstowe cafes.
To date reviews are as listed:
- The Alex
- Anchor Bakery, High Road East
- All Things Nice, Hamilton Road
- Angel Inn Coffee House, Walton
- Bakers Oven
Bloomers-- gone 2010, replaced by Anchor Bakery- blue & berry
- The Boardwalk, The Pier
Bonnet Cafe & Chocolaterie-- gone 2012, replaced by Crafty Coffee- Cafe 7, Beach Station Road
- Cafe Bencotto
Cafe Kitsch-- gone 2013- Cafe Libra
- Cafe On The Corner
- Caffe Nero
- Cliff Top Tea Rooms
- Coffeelink
- Coffee Shop in the station
Comptons-- gone 2014, replaced by Lillie's, Orwell Road- Corner House Cafe, Undercliff Road West
- The Conservatory, Undercliff Road West
Crafty Coffee-- gone 2020, replaced by Nutshells By-The-Sea, Hamilton Road- Crescent Cafe, Crescent Road
Crow's Nest-- gone 2012, replaced by the View Point Cafe- Cuppa, High Road West
- The Dip, Cliff Road
- Dock Services
East Coast Quilting-- gone 2011- Family Cafe
- Ferry Cafe
- Fish Dish, Undercliff Road West
Froffee Coffee-- gone winter 2008, replaced byThe Triangle-- gone 2016, replaced by blue & berry- Fludyer Arms
- Goslings Garden Cafe, Trimley St Martin
- Greenhouse Cafe, Orwell Road
- Gulliver's Wife, Undercliff Road West
- Hamiltons
- Jack's, Beach Station Road
- Jackie's Coffee Shop
Joe Crowley's-- gone 2013- Laydens Community Cafe, Langley Avenue
- Leisure Centre Cafe
- The Little Ice Cream Co., Undercliff Road West
- Lillie's, Orwell Road
The Mad House, Crescent Road -- gone 2020, replaced by Crescent Cafe, Crescent Road- McDonald's
Mrs Simpson's Tea Rooms-- gone 2015- North Kiosk, Martello Park
- Nutshells By-The-Sea, Hamilton Road
Oaks Tea Room-- gone 2018, replaced by Scribble- Orwell Fisheries
- Regal
River Of Life-- gone 2016- Ruby's, Bent Hill
- The Sands
Sangha-- gone 2012- Sally Jane's Pie and Mash
- Scribble, Crescent Road
Silks-- gone winter 2008- Spa Pavilion and Terrace
- Spud Hut, Hamilton Road
Tchibo-- gone Autumn 2008- Tea & Antiques
The Triangle-- gone 2016, replaced by blue & berry- The Turtle and The Bear, Langer Road
- View Point Cafe
Walton Coffee House-- gone 2017- Wimpy
- Winkles At The Ferry
Winnies Cafe-- gone 2017- Wool Baa, Hamilton Road
EDitorial ± 25-Apr-2008
Light Lunches: Wyevale, Woodbridge
It's a sure sign you're turning into your parents when you find yourself
having a spot of light lunch at the local garden centre; and with the
Felixstowe eateries all but done, a trip to the skirts of Woodbridge seemed
in order. Welcome to Wyevale, one of only ... er, 100 or so such
places in the country. Practically unique (i.e. one of seven) within the
greater East Anglia area.
Within the seemingly ever-expanding green-fingered enclave, turn left past the half-price orchids and bargain books to enter The Conservatory. Woah, hold on there: isn't this Springles from the Ashes To Ashes era of Debenhams? Take a tray, slide it round the rails, hop the gaps, you get the picture. Obliged to mention the gamut of cold soft drinks, from Fruit Shoot to Luscombe to my bottlegreen blackcurrant & blueberry presse.
Food choice is nearly overwhelming: all bases covered from peckish sarnies to gutsy full roast meals. Dimly recalling that "light lunch" tag, I eventually chose a chicken & bacon granary bap. Freshly made and with a handful of leaves on the side. Tad overpriced at £4.79, IMHO, but the prices weren't deterring the polyester-clad punters from their plates of turkey & ham pie piled high with roasties and smothered with gravy.
Chop chop busy busy inside so out we went into a pleasant seating area to feel the warmth of the sun. Not quite as bright as the River Of Life though similarly urban what with the over-the-hedge A12. Briefly back in to purchase pudd in the guise of a pretty good scone -- love those little pots of jam -- and a frankly awful cuppa coffee. Evidently the nice girl had pressed the button labelled "lukewarm brown water". If you check out the Wyevale careers website, you too could soon be playing a vital role in a "high volume catering outlet".
If it was a car -- Volkswagen Sharan.
If they were passing by -- John Shuttleworth.
Update: 18-Sep-2015
Seven long years later and the 'Vale is vamped. Goodbye "the Conservatory", hello "Botanic Kitchen" and a Little Diggers play area. Dare say that a few quid is lining the pockets of catering creatives yet there's still that '80s department store feel.
They didn't have what Andy wanted. Nor his second choice. Nor his third choice. Meanwhile, for his sarnie, Kev was offered white bread only to hear the lady behind him given the option of granary. To wash down your £8 burger, why not splash out on a bottle of prosecco for £22 or some champers for £48? If you billed it, they will come.
In all florid fairness, my £3 slice of rhubard and custard cake was probably just
about worth it, and, unlike '08, the coffee kicks butt. Roll on the return visit in 2022.
EDitorial ± 18-Apr-2008
Felixstowe Light Lunches: Jackie's Coffee Shop
Collins? Stewart? Milburn? Chan? Who can say? At Jackie's Coffee Shop,
by their first name only shall ye know them.
Hadn't heard of this particular cafe until a tip-off from Kev, who I'm sure would have joined us had it not been for his intravenous drip: get well soon, KC. His Doc wouldn't advise it, but crane your neck here and you'll glimpse the dock cranes, plus the unlamented Anzani House. For Jackie's, as the menu says, is next to Morrison's.
Don't wait for a waitress: in keeping with the Cliff Top, a sign shouts Counter Service Only. There's a lower-case dinnerladies feel to the place, and that's a good thing. Anne Reid took my order for ham 'n' double egg 'n' chips 'n' banana milkshake, then brought it out in double quick time. I'd barely had the time to register the many coffee sacks adorning the wall. Straight from Colombia to Felixstowe: I bet that name sounds dead exotic in Medellin. Must mention the free to browse newspapers. Best selection yet, from broadsheet to redtop to loo-cal news.
Tasty savoury (doused with sugar-free ketchup) dispatched, returned to browse the pudds. Trifle was tempting but lost out to an appealing super sponge coated with 100s of 100s & 1000s. Other lady -- Bren Furlong -- also did me proud in producing an off-the-menu white Americano: strong, no foam. And, despite being busy taking other orders, she took the time to check back with me that everything was in order. There's service for you.
If it was a car -- Renault Clio.
If they were passing by -- Duncan Preston.
EDitorial ± 17-Apr-2008
TT0708, Week 22
Well Arvind, I do believe we've done it. Way back on 20-Sep-2008, the Defiants TT-ers opened their division 3 account with a stonking 9-1 win. After which The Viper proposed that we should aim to win the league, finishing first "at least". Hands up who believed that we could do it? Hands down, Arvind.
We were aiming to go one better than Arsenal in 2003/2004: sure, be unbeaten, better still, win all our matches. Then Kev rang at 5pm from an ambulance pleading an unspecified head injury. With Andy on another continent, that meant losing three points straight away and turning up with only two players, one of whom was Grenvyle. Always good to face a challenge.
Supershaky start, G. going 2-0 down to The Kid, then saving several match points in a 15-13 fourth ender. Saved his luckiest until last with a net-scraping drop shot to win. Phew. Later, G. came unstuck against WW, going down in straight ends including an epic 17-19 middle game.
End of singles: 5-4 to us. Needed a doubles victory to claim our record.
Poor opening by the pair of us, and that was before I thwacked Grenvyle's hand
with the serrated edge of my crumbling bat. That's gotta hurt, and it did.
Defiant we stood, however, winning the next three ends on the bounce.
Game over.
EDitorial ± 12-Apr-2008
Love Thy Neighbour
Windows, we all know, can be a pain. Not so much the
blue screen of death this time,
more the dropped pane of doom. Car's passenger side electric window conked out
last weekend and, despite an entry on my list saying "fix car window", has yet
to be sorted. For shame.
Out this pm, alas, the glass glissandoed gently down until it had disappeared completely into the door. How low can you go? Low enough to be out of reach of the pliers. If we'd have listened hard, we might have heard a tiny tinny voice shrieking "I'm falling!"
Until the garage boys can do their stuff next week, not much option but to paint over the cracks. Plastic sheeting, scissors, masking tape, here we go. Then, from nowhere, a phone call: would I like to use a sheet of thin ply? 'Tis the street's very own Professor Branestawm on the line. In a flash, he's outside brandishing tools and materials.
If you find the time please come and stay a while
In my beautiful neighbourhood
— Space, Neighbourhood
We draw an outline and he's off with the saw, the noise of which attracts one of the Professor's gang, one of those people from the "odd" side of the street. He starts chipping in too, sagely advising the deployment of a bin liner. Heath, this is Robinson. Robinson, this is Heath.
Before you can say Ricky Butcher, out comes the Prof's wife and we're starring
in our very own Eastenders extended trailer. Number 21 finds a trestle table,
number 30 brings out a massive plate of chicken drumsticks while number 9
wires up overhead lights. How number 17 rolled out that upright piano, I
really couldn't say. Stoppers of crime and full to brimming with the Dunkirk
spirit, them's the neighbours, bless 'em.
EDitorial ± 11-Apr-2008
Felixstowe Light Lunches: Leisure Centre Cafe
With the Corner House Cafe remaining firmly shut on Fridays, we're starting
to wallow in the shallows of the 'Stowe light lunch list. Q: if you're sitting
in
The Conservatory,
The Little Ice Cream Co.
or
Joe Crowley's,
what's staring you in the face?
A: today's unlikely venue, the Leisure Centre Cafe.
Can't be too many eating establishments which demand an entrance fee. We pooled our resources and each splashed out a 75p "spectator fee" to gain admittance. Good news is that it's refundable against your food & drink, thus turning a 95p cup of tea into a 20p cuppa, if Grenvyle is to be believed.
Baguettes / burgers / salads on offer. Oh, and handmade birthday cards, unnaturally. Tick for including a children's menu. You could have a jacket though it's already plenty warm enough in here. Seating is either (a) behind the glass, protected from droplets, or (b) through the looking glass, enjoying Maureen's chlorine. We went waterside.
Short wait for my chicken burger -- pure breaststroke -- with untouchably hot chips and thirst-quenchin' Pepsi. Welcome burst of colour from the small side salad medley, featuring a nano-thin red onion slice of a rather Goodhew. Driver enjoyed his pot of tea plus Ginsters prepacked prawn sarnie, then found enough flume for a cheese & ham toastie.
Recalled how I felt after overdoing it at the Cliff Top Tea Rooms -- since last week, my knowledge of what my stomach can stand has deep end -- and so ignored the various prewrapped muffins and choccy bars crying out to me. No handmade sponges obviously on show, not even a butterfly bun.
If it was a car -- Rinspeed sQuba.
If they were passing by -- David Wilkie.
EDitorial ± 8-Apr-2008
In A Kent Churchyard
I see dead people. It's late one Sunday afternoon, not long after Easter,
and we're in the garden of England ... in a graveyard. Specifically this
belongs to the church of St Peter & St Paul in the village of
Boughton-under-Blean. Near Faversham, if that helps.
Happened that the in-laws had hired a cottage for the week not far from Canterbury. On the way to our holiday pad, I'd suggested -- well, insisted -- that we take a minor detour through Boughton. Never been there before, but my dad's uncle (grandmother's younger brother) used to live there in the late 1940s. I had the exact address and wanted to check it out.
Which we did. There stood the tidy row of tiny Church Cottages on South Street: my great uncle Stanley Freston (!) inhabited number 2. He'd served in the war, been a PoW in Singapore, and gone into the fire service afterwards. Sadly he'd died young-ish in 1951, maybe in a car crash, leaving a wife, Jessie, and no children.
Decided later that couldn't leave Kent without a traipse around the churchyard, a mere pebble's throw from the cottages. 'Cos you never know, and there's the slim chance he might be buried there.
Fair few graves here, from new to old, from unreadable to overgrown. Was
about to admit defeat -- this was a longshot from the off -- when I looked
down to my right. There was the final resting place of Stanley Frank Freston,
died 1st July 1951, and his wife Jessie Florence Freston, died 18th March 1998.
It was as if he'd been calling out from way beyond. RIP Stan & Jessie.
EDitorial ± 4-Apr-2008
Felixstowe Light Lunches: Cliff Top Tea Rooms
As anyone with a faultless memory will recall, twelve weeks back saw us visit
The Spa:
we'd intended to alight for lunch at today's venue only to find it closed.
Though, to our credit, we did indeed find it, which ain't that easy. Locals
will know that the nearest entrance by road
(see map)
is opposite the Bartlet(t) Hospital. Is that one T or two? Even the BBC
website isn't sure. Any Undercliff Road up. Made it, at last, to the
Cliff Top Tea Rooms.
Through the door and you'll find what appears to be a hotel dining room, albeit one with a NAAFI-style serving area. Helps to know that the Clifftop Tearooms, as their business card has it, occupy Cliff House, once an annexe for the grand Cotman-designed Felix Hotel (now remodelled as Harvest House). Sign on the wall says "Counter Service", so we secured a table, chose our grub and ordered.
Bags of time to admire (a) the for-sale paintings adorning the wall and (b) the impressive garden stroke sea views, rivalling The Spa and Mrs Simpson's. Seems like we'd turned up at the tail end of the lunchtime rush, and joined the end of a long queue. Could have eaten a seahorse by the time our food arrived. Thankfully my large plate of two eggs & sausage & saute pots & bacon & fried bread & toms & toast & beans was worth it, and arguably the best all day breakfast yet. G's fish pie floated his boat too.
Tock ticking along but we demand pudd. One of the old-fashioned desserts caught G's old-fashioned eye, the apple & raspberry crumble with custard, ideal for a wintry day. My individual cafetiere would have been far too wet without cakestuff, hence my brick of chocolate biscuit cake. Had I been out with the kids, we'd have shared it and all had ample. As it was, I scoffed the lot. And so, despite the near-freezing climate, I was grateful to gulp down some oxygen outside.
If it was a car -- Bristol Blenheim 3.
If they were passing by -- Connie Booth.
EDitorial ± 3-Apr-2008
Dolmio, March 2008
When oh when will WiFi be free? Not for home use -- that'll take a while, even
for the Google machine -- but in my locale of choice, the coffee shop. Sure,
some are leading the way (step forward Woodbridge's very own
Tea Hut
and
Browsers),
with kudos to the megalithic McDonald's for showing the others how to do it.
Seriously, come on, Caffe Nero. Sort yourself out, Starbucks. Get a grip,
Costa. Here endeth the rant to make room for
last month's
Dolmio (Doings Of Last Month Innoparticular Order).
That is to say, an attempt to capture past(a) events before they
slip... my... mind.
March 2008 was spent:
- catching up with the fab Gavin And Stacey: all six series 1 episodes over three nights, then each series 2 episode as it happens
- schooling the boy in his 3 times table, handily up on the kitchen wall
- being drawn in to Michael Chabon's brilliant Amazing Adventures Of Kavalier & Clay
- playing ping-pong in Boyton village hall
- taking the Kent & East Sussex Railway from Tenterden to Bodiam
- introducing the kids to the first three Indiana Jones films in preparation for this summer's fourth
- setting up the garden basketball hoop
- collecting Dr Who DVDs from, ahem, The Sun
- switching the Tuesday footy from the closed multicourt to the wide open spaces of Martlesham Heath
EDitorial ± 1-Apr-2008
IKEA To Open Ipswich Town Centre Store
IKEA is delighted to confirm that today, 1st April 2008, we have submitted a
planning application for a new store in Ipswich town centre. We intend to
build the new IKEA Ipswich
on Upper Brook Street in the former Gold & Silver
Discount Centre between Joywheel Amusements and the Can Can bag emporium.
Instead of yet another waterfront-style skyscraper, IKEA Ipswich will take a revolutionary approach to city centre development: we will not be aiming higher, but lower and deeper. To meet guidelines set by the town's civic society, our innovative store will go a full 20 floors underground. For adults, access to & from lower floors will be provided by paternoster lift, reclaimed from Civic Centre, while children will use a brightly coloured Tate Modernesque tubular slide.
By digging deeper, IKEA Ipswich will accommodate up to 78 furnished room layouts within its 38,010 square metres of floor space. Our subterranean approach will also enable us to install a Greyfriars-inspired travelator direct to the existing underground spiral car park on Civic Drive. In addition, to emphasise our commitment to public transport, we aim to build the first new station on the Ipswich Underground Railway for over 50 years.
Such significant engineering works in a confined site will require the widening or possible demolition of St Stephens Lane to allow for the use of a 120-tonne Tibbott Class 3 telescopic crane.
Benito Rubinan, IKEA area representative, said: "Ever since sampling a Portman Road Pukka pie in 2001 as a visiting Helsingborg supporter, it has been no secret that we have been trying to find a suitable location in your ancient yet go-ahead town. And when we heard that both Waitrose and John Lewis had all but booked their slots, we had to act fast. We're very keen to form a sizeable fraction of the Mint Quarter, perhaps as much as five-eighths."
Councillor Peter Morris from Ipswich Borough Council added: "This is
terrific news for everyone in our fine university town who needs a pack of
tealights. Our design team is already working closely with IKEA on a new
range of shelving units to be called the Viljoen, the Thijssen and the
Osbjorne. I'm confident that this giant Scandinavian hardware shop will more
than fill the gap left by Martin & Newby."