March 2018 The Globe & Mail
(Ludlow,
Shropshire)
The Harp
Lane Deli has the look of the perfect English country-town foodshop. Its
location on the charming market square, the Union Jack bunting , the old bay windows bursting with the promise of
delicious local delicacies : all of these things say “food problems solved.” Everything about it is perfect.
Well,
everything but the “closed” sign.
To be fair,
we had left it late. The sun was setting in the western wilds out over Wales,
past the soft Shropshire hills. But we had driven all day, we were famished,
and we needed something to take to our rented cottage by the weir on the River
Teme. So we tried the door.
Luckily, it
still opened. Henry, the consummate deli
owner, had seen the likes of us before: hungry food pilgrims newly
arrived in Ludlow, much in need of help. Did he roll his eyes? Perhaps. But the
foodie in him couldn’t abide us starting our Ludlow stay with something
pre-packaged from Tesco. He set us up with a basket of great ingredients,
conferred at length with Katy about pasta proportions, and generously decanted
a custom amount of his best olive oil in return for a donation to a local
charity.
We soon
discovered that Henrys’ expertise, and
his eagerness to share it, are de rigueur
in Ludlow, the original English Food Town.
Its setting
doesn’t hurt. Ludlow dwells amongst the
verdant green waves of A.E.Housman’s
Shropshire hills on the edge of the Marches,
that ancient borderland between Wales and England . It’s a land that has seen
centuries of conflict, and Ludlow castle, an atmospheric ruin dating from 1086
and once the home of Henry VI, sits on its crag above a bend in the Teme,
looking out over the shadowed depths of Mortimer’s Forest. Ludlow, like York,
was once a seat of government in Tudor and Stewart England and its position at
this cross-roads of battling families , royal intrigue and heated cultural
exchange has been fuel for the town’s vigorous character for centuries.
Just far enough
from London to be special, yet close enough to be a weekend destination for
Londoners and the cognoscenti from nearby Birmingham, Ludlow has dodged
the bullet that has plagued many other English towns in recent years: a slow death at the hands of suburban super
stores and empty High Street shops. It thrives, as it always has, as a market
centre for a whole region with a healthy farming culture, great food and warm
hospitality, being “not so much
provincial,” as film maker Jonathan Meade says, “- it actually feels autonomous,
devolved, independent…like a de facto state.”
The Poet
Laureate, John Betjeman, went further, saying “Ludlow is probably the finest town in
England.” A large part of this is the impressive display of well-preserved
Tudor and Georgian buildings, almost 500
listed buildings in a town of 10,000 people, older ones in the
higgledy-piggeldy maze of Medieval lanes,
and a parade of textbook Georgian ones ranged along Broad Street, judged
by many to be the prettiest street in England. Looking like a location for a period drama (which it of course has
been) , the street is best seen from upstairs at the excellent Ludlow
Buttercross Museum, a little jewel of a local museum done right. Admission charge? One pound.
So, lovely
buildings : check. Great location, interesting history: check, check . But what
really sets Ludlow apart and makes it worth the drive is its foodie
credentials: its grounded connection to
the countryside, to local producers, specialty shops and great chefs.
The Ludlow
Food Festival is the longest running food celebration in Britain and has helped
put the town on the world culinary map. It attracts over 20,000 visitors every
fall for three days of tastings and demonstration by top chefs and events
including the famous Sausage Trail, last year a magnet for over 2000 lovers of
the British banger. Add to that the competition for Pork Pie of the Marches,
the Cake Competition and the Ale Trails and those three days seem very short
indeed. A spring festival joined the calendar ten years ago, running this year
on May 12 & 13 with an emphasis on real ales.
Thanks to
the festivals, hundreds of local producers are given a showcase for the best
independent food and drink. This is turn has spawned a rich variety of food shops,
restaurants and farm shops in Ludlow and the valleys close by. The connective
tissue is an emphasis on quality, a
connection to the land: terroir. Some of the food people I
talked to believe that a community’s food choices help maintain the landscape,
that the famous “Green and pleasant land” looks as it does because of food and
farming; we help support that, and the quality of life in this town, by the
food choices we make.
And those
choices are legion in Ludlow. The market sets up in the square several times a
week, and on “Local to Ludlow” days, muddy Landrovers disgorge a bewildering
array of goods, from just-laid eggs to delicate courgettes to scrumpy cider
brews. On surrounding streets, in addition to Henry’s Harp Lane Deli, a jolly gaggle of food shops congregate,
all within a few minutes’ stroll from the castle and each other. Myriad Organics, for example, shows just how diverse a truly local and organic product list can be. The Broad Bean,
on Broad Street, sells the best smoked
salmon I’ve ever tried and dozens of delicacies I’ll need to return for.
Four
family-owned butchers do a roaring trade. We visited Andrew Francis on our
second night in town intent on some local partridge or grouse. “Sorry, no,” said the friendly red-cheeked
butcher, his trilby hat pushed back on his head. “No, you don’t want that.
Partridge isn’t open until next week. What you’ll be wanting is a nice a haunch
of our Venison. How many are you feeding?” He wasn’t going to sell game birds if
they hadn’t been freshly sourced from the bushes of a nearby estate. We (and
the birds) were fine with that. We traded him stories about eating bear roast
and moose tenderloin. “O Canada!” he said, grinning. And the venison was lovely.
The Mousetrap,
a dedicated cheese shop barely the size of our rental car, filled out our “Local
to Ludlow” jute bag. With over 150 varieties creating a smell that only a
cheese aficionado could love, selection involved lots of furrowed-brow sampling. With expert help we settled
on a wedge of Shropshire Blue and three others. (Okay, maybe six.)
The cheese
people in turn directed us to a green grocers for some of the freshest,
plumpest produce I’d ever seen: Swedes, carrots, dozens of potatoe varieties,
leeks, bewildering arrays of mushrooms - all liberally caked with black topsoil
from nearby farm fields that can be glimpsed at the end of many of the streets
in town, lush green with the frequent rains of the Marches.
Freshness
and simplicity are at the heart of everything in this town, an original player
in the Slow Food movement in England. And the restaurants are largely no different:
fewer ingredients, quality rather than complexity – no molecular gastronomy
here. This is ‘hike-the-hills-then-sit-by-the-log-fire’ food. Not a test tube
in sight.
To start the
day, a street-side table in front of Chichettis is hard to beat. An authentic
wake-me-up Macchiato and avocado on toast was a great kick-off. The lamb
fleeces on the outdoor chairs were a nice touch, prompting a longer stay and
refills. For tea and a fresh scone, the contemporary Castle Tea Room, ingeniously
inserted in the castle wall, comes with a complimentary medieval courtyard
view, sometimes with a bonus falconry demo.
Mortimers on Corve Street, run by chef Wayne
Smith, (who has cooked for Michael Jackson, Will Smith and a host of Premier
League footballers) carries the flag for the many fine restaurants in town. In
the former premises of Claude Bosi’s two Michelin-starred Hibiscus (now moved
to London), there is some weight of culinary stardom to live up to. And he does
so with straightforward food that is all about provenance, flavor and freshness.
Try the strip of Hereford beef sirloin served with roasted shallots
and baby leeks. Book very early,
(but don’t ask for an autograph.) Next
to the castle, Elliot’s, a French bistro run by Olivier Bossut in the elegant
Dinham Dall Hotel, provided us with a great evening out as well. The cassoulet
Toulosain was excellent. Elegant dining in
a classic Georgian House: My inner Mr.Darcy approved.
Depth and
new talent bodes well for the future. David Chantler, vice chair of the Food
Festival says: “The three local,
and as it happens young chefs who, for me best represent the trend might be
Josh Crouch at "CSons at the Green Cafe”, Andy Link at the “Riverside” and
Karl Martin at "Old Downton Lodge". The restaurant story continues to
develop.
Finishing off with a celebratory libation might be fitting, and in this regard, “Ludders” continues to punch above its weight. You could visit the tiny parlour pub “The Dog Hangs Well” in Corve street and try that day’s local ale. (No sign, but you’ll know its open if the antique street light is burning outside.) You could try one of the many thriving traditional pubs, like The Wheatsheaf which is built into the walls beside the town’s only remaining mediaeval gate or wend your way down the narrow alleyway that leads to the Rose and Crown Inn, one of England’s oldest, plying its trade for over 600 years. Or maybe take the advice of Monty Lowe, the historian and author we met in the Buttercross Museum. “Try the back rooms at The Feathers for a glass of wine. Classic.” Classic indeed. Built in 1619 and converted into an inn in 1670, The Feathers Hotel is one of the most famous (and ostentatious) half-timbered Jacobean masterpieces in the country. The interior rooms maintain their original proportions, ancient beams and plasterwork darkened with age.
Lucien
Bonaparte, Napoleons’ brother, would have known it well. He lived in “open
confinement” a few streets over in Dinham House in 1811 while his brother was
prancing around Europe conquering people. Used now for what must surely be the world’s
loveliest wood-stove showroom, Dinham House is a Georgian masterpiece of
stately symmetry. Lucien may have been “a guest of the King” but he had a
retinue of servants and, no doubt, a steady supply of very fine Ludlow
foodstuffs.
He knew it,
the Tudors and Stewarts before him knew it, and anyone who visits today will
soon learn: Ludlow is a fine town to be confined in for a few days, or better
yet a week. Eating well definitely won’t be a problem.
Just make
sure you get to the Deli before closing time.
-
David
Gillett https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/travel/activities-and-interests/in-ludlow-england-foodie-heavenawaits/article38352636/