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Posts Tagged ‘Food and drink’

Oct 25, 1955: Time to Nuke Dinner

1955: The first domestic microwave oven is introduced.
Walk into almost any American kitchen today and there’s one appliance that is likely to be sitting on the counter somewhere — a microwave oven.
The microwave oven didn’t come from humble beginnings. It’s an appliance born of the radar systems used in World War II — [...]

Sept. 20, 1842: Dewar’s Fortune Is Scotched

1842: Sir James Dewar is born, but not into a vacuum. He will invent a vessel designed to make research into gases at extreme low temperatures easier, and it does. But the Dewar Flask also becomes the thermos bottle we use to this day, and — in a cruel twist of fate — its inventor [...]

Sept. 13, 1833: Imported Ice Chills, Thrills India

1833: Nearly 100 tons of ice, cut in blocks from frozen New England lakes earlier in the year, arrives in Calcutta. The first shipment of ice imported to India soon fires up a market for cold drinks in a country unaccustomed to such a chilly luxury.
The transoceanic operation, undertaken by the Tudor Ice Co., began [...]

July 7, 1550: Europeans Discover Chocolate

1550: Chocolate is introduced in Europe, and the Mexican drink creates a passion that endures after nearly half a millennium.
Europe came late to the joys of chocolate. Native to Mexico, Central and South America, cacao cultivation dates to at least 1250 B.C., according to archaeologists.
Mayans grew cacao trees in their backyards and used the seeds [...]

July 1, 1910: Give Us This Day Our Automated Bread

1910: Ward Baking Company puts a fully automated bread factory into operation. The mechanized factory in Chicago churns out hundreds of perfect loaves a day, untouched by human hands.
Is this century-old achievement the greatest thing since sliced bread? Not quite. Read on.
Perhaps nothing is a more basic food staple in Western culture than bread, entwined [...]

June 9, 1902: Put a Nickel In, Take Your Food Out

1902: Joe Horn and Frank Hardart open the Automat at 818 Chestnut St. in Philadelphia. It’s America’s first coin-operated cafeteria.
Customers would put nickels into slots, turn a knob and open a little glass door to get their food. Horn and Hardart used Swedish-patented equipment they’d imported from Berlin, which already sported a successful “waiterless restaurant.”

See [...]

June 1, 1495: King James Will Have a Scotch, Good Sir

1495: The Scottish government records it has commissioned Friar Jon Cor to make Scotch whisky — the first mention in print of an elixir which has since brought down many a government, made friends of enemies and enemies of friends, lubricated good, great and bad writing, and … well, suffice it to say a touch [...]

April 23, 1516: Bavaria Cracks Down on Beer Brewers

1516: Two Bavarian dukes issue a decree that limits the ingredients used in brewing beer to barley, water and hops.
Referred to today as the Reinheitsgebot (purity ordinance), the decree has come to be known as a beer-purity law that was intended to keep undesirable or unhealthy ingredients out of beer. But the original text doesn’t [...]

Forget the ferry

There’s something special about escaping to an island – even if you don’t need a boat to get there. Annabelle Thorpe picks a dozen British gems that you can reach by car or on foot – perfect for a day trip or a summer weekend away

1 Burgh Island, Devon

Despite its isolation, this island is all about glamour – 1930s glamour, to be precise, evoked by the art-deco hotel of the same name. Cars can’t reach the island at all but you can walk there at low tide or hitch a lift by sea tractor at other times. The island lies 250m off the south coast of Devon, close to the seaside town of Bigbury. There is an extensive network of footpaths across the island and a pub, the Pilchard Inn, as well as the hotel, which is most famous for its links to Agatha Christie, who used the setting for two of her books, Evil Under the Sun and And Then There Were None. It’s dressy and fun but very pricey, with doubles from £280.

• 01548 810514; burghisland.com

2 Isle of Sheppey, Kent

Twitchers and those in search of old-fashioned bucket-and-spade pleasures should head to the Isle of Sheppey, which combines long stretches of shingle beach with tranquil marshland. Avocets, owls and flocks of curlews and plovers are all easily spotted at the RSPB-managed Elmley Marshes, while families will enjoy Leysdown, which boasts safe shallow beaches. It’s ideal day-trip territory, but to make a weekend of it, the best bet is the Abbey Hotel (01795 872873; abbey-hotel.net), just outside Sheerness.

• tourism.swale.gov.uk

3 Hilbre Island, Cheshire

Take a picnic and a flask of coffee and settle in for a day of serious birdwatching on Hilbre Island, a Site of Special Scientific Interest in the middle of the Dee estuary. It’s worth the mile-long trek at low tide to see the grey seals, curlews and oystercatchers that call the island home. Hilbre is renowned as one of the best places in the country to see storm petrels, and in late summer the rocky landscape teems with terns, who come to the island to breed. There are no facilities on the island, although the Hilbre Telegraph Lookout Station has been renovated, and is open on selected dates.

deeestuary.co.uk/hilbre

4 Walney Island, Cumbria

Most islands have something of an old-fashioned atmosphere, and Walney feels as if it hasn’t changed in decades. Linked to Cumbria by a road bridge, it lies just half a mile from the town of Barrow-in-Furness and is home to two nature reserves, with more than 250 types of bird and 400 species of moth and butterfly. There are good coastal walking routes, and some of the best spots in the UK for kite-surfing. The best place to stay on the island is the Browhead Hotel (01229 473600; browheadhotel.co.uk), which offers comfortable, family-run accommodation.

walney-island.com

5 Anglesey

It’s worth the drive to get to Anglesey; latticed with cycling paths and walking routes, edged with gorgeous sandy beaches and home to several renowned gastropubs and boutique hotels, it’s ideal for a romantic weekend away. The picturesque town of Beaumaris makes a great base, and is home to a dramatic medieval castle and Victorian pier, as well as one of the island’s most famous pubs, Ye Old Bulls Head Inn (01248 810329; bullsheadinn.co.uk). Alternatively, hole up at the rurally located Neuadd Lwyd (01248 715005; neuaddlwyd.co.uk), a luxurious country house B&B that also offers fantastic suppers, and has breathtaking views across to the mountains of Snowdonia.

visitanglesey.co.uk

6 Nags Head Island, Abingdon, Oxforshire

Ideal for a waterside pint, this island in the Thames consists of a pub (named after the island and dating back to the 19th century), plus a few ship’s chandlers and boat hire firms. It is linked to the mainland by two bridges and accessible by car – there is a large car park at the pub and plenty of picnic space on the island. Daily boat trips run to and from Oxford.

• Nags Head pub: 01235 536645

7 Isle of Skye

Towering peaks, lush valleys, long white beaches; Skye is all about natural drama – although the hearty outdoorsy vibe is mixed with a clutch of reassuringly indulgent restaurants and luxury hotels. There are challenging walking and cycling routes that traverse the peaks, while the bustling town of Portree makes a relaxing base, with galleries and boutiques to explore. Stop for a legendary haggis toastie at The Stein Inn at Waternish (01470 592 362; stein-inn.co.uk), and book into the Ullinish Country Lodge (01470 572214; theisleofskye.co.uk) in Struan, which serves spectacular seafood and has opulent bedrooms to match.

skye.co.uk

8 Canvey Island, Essex

Lying in the Thames Estuary and reached by road bridge from Benflett, Canvey Island has faded a little since its glory days in the early 20th century, when it became the fastest-growing seaside resort in the UK, but it still has a kitschly fun feel. Head to the Labworth Cafe (01268 683209) on the seafront, a 1930s design classic by Ove Arup revamped as a bistro, or head to West Canvey for birdwatching and a stroll across what is set to become a new RSPB nature reserve, after the charity purchased the land in 2006.

canveyisland.org

9 Holy Island, Northumberland

Steeped in myth and legend, Lindisfarne attracts an odd mix of new-agers and twitchers drawn, respectively, by the eighth-century monastery and ruined priory, and the tranquil nature reserve that is home to spectacular colonies of wintering birds. The island is famous for the Lindisfarne gospels – an illuminated manuscript dating back to the eighth century, now in the British Library – but the beaches are an equally big draw; long stretches of wild, unspoilt shoreline backed by dunes that are often surprisingly quiet. You can drive to the island, but only at low tide. Try the Crown and Anchor (01289 389215; holyislandcrown.co.uk), a welcoming pub with rooms.

lindisfarne.org.uk

10 Foulness Island, Essex

You’ve got to really want to get to Foulness, located along the Essex coast a few miles east of Southend-on-Sea. Home to just 200 residents, it is owned by the Ministry of Defence, and there are only two ways for the public to gain access to the island. The Heritage Centre opens from noon-4pm every Sunday between April and October, when the public have free access. At other times it’s necessary to call and make a reservation to eat at the George & Dragon pub on the island (01702 219460), which will take down your details, to be checked later by an MoD official at the checkpoint. It’s a desolate kind of place, with long stretches of empty beach and marshland, though rich in wildlife.

visitessex.com

Mersea Island, Essex

There’s an increasing “scene” on Mersea, reached by road bridge; the clean, sandy beaches have long been a draw for windsurfers and kite-boarders, but the growing number of good restaurants on the island, plus a clutch of diverse accommodation options mean it’s become a great place for an eccentric weekend away. There are ancient Roman sites to explore, a beautiful country park and as much seafood as you can eat: try the Mersea Oyster Bar (01206 381600) or the Company Shed (01206 382700), both of which offer fresh fish and oysters brought in by the local fleet each day. Follow it with a tasting at the Mersea Island Vineyard (01206 385900; merseawine.com), which offers beers from its microbrewery as well as wines to sample, and also has simple but comfortable B&B rooms.

mersea-island.com

12 Hayling Island, Hampshire

There are those on Hayling who claim that windsurfing was invented on the island, and it’s a great choice for a weekend break with teenagers; sailing, windsurfing and kite surfing are all on offer at the well-equipped watersports centre, and there’s an impressive skate park right on the seafront. Younger children are well catered for too, with an all-year funfair and a narrow gauge railway, and adults will appreciate the well-marked network of footpaths and cycleways as well as the long stretches of shingle beach. You can drive onto the island via a bridge, which can become congested in summer; stay at the Cockle Warren Cottage Hotel (02392 464961; cocklewarren.co.uk) for cosy rooms and lots of local knowledge.

hayling.co.uk

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Sushi, and beyond

‘A must for for all lovers of Japanese cuisine. Where else can an English-speaking foodie learn … how to make a chanko nabe hot-pot good enough to please a sumo wrestler?’

Japan and the Japanese dropped from the sky. The archipelago of 3,000 islands and its people were created by the deities Izanagi and Izanami, according to sacred Shinto texts. The divine brother and sister joined “their majestic parts in a majestic union” and made a new world.

From its ancient creation myths to Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner, the otherness of Japanese culture has fascinated the Western mind – at least every mind except that of the English travel and food writer Michael Booth. To Michael – described by a Japanese friend as a “no-brain-whitey-gaijn” – the country seemed to be a dull place. Its food was all about appearance, not flavour. Every dish was fat-free and drowned in soy sauce. Its recipes came from Thailand, China and the Portuguese. Booth believed, “All you need to make good Japanese food is a sharp knife and a good fishmonger.” How wrong he proved himself to be.

Intrigued by Oriental longevity, and worried about his own expanding Western waistline, Booth decided to travel across Japan, discovering “methodically, greedily” the secrets of its national cuisine. Over a period of three months, he lunched with Sumo wrestlers, massaged the world’s most expensive cows and visited a dog café. He met celebrity rock star chefs. He learnt about the sake crisis and MSG. He dropped by a parasite museum and the world’s largest cookery school. He shopped at the Tsukiji fish market (which shifts two million kilos of seafood every day from “chunks of vampish red whale meat to tiny brown shrimps the size of an eyelash”). He even risked a serving of notorious fugu puffer fish (chefs who prepare the potentially-deadly dish need two years’ training and a licence).

Booth made his journey in the company of his wife Lissen and sons Ansger, six, and Emil, four; fussy eaters who prefer “potato-based food stuffs shaped like dinosaurs”. Their presence provided diverting entertainment. But his more important fellow-traveller was Shizuo Tsuji’s seminal book Japanese Cooking: A Simple Art. Through its pages Booth began to appreciate Japanese philosophy and the delicate pageantry of its cuisine. He came to understand the fundamental importance of the seasons in its food, the obsession with freshness and simplicity, even the spiritual meaning of rice.

This transformation is the most moving part of Sushi and Beyond. For example, long after the roving family had left Hokkaido, Booth found himself haunted by the elusive flavour of Sapporo crabs (“sensuous to the point of perversion”). He grew to appreciate the vast range of ramen noodles (while learning to slurp in appreciation). Above all, he was transformed by his meal at Mibu, Japan’s finest restaurant which guests may attend only on invitation from the owner. The “transcendent” meal at Mibu was “a seismic moment in my life as an eater”, he wrote, where he enjoyed the best sashimi, aubergine, eel and dashi he’d ever tasted. The flavours and aroma literally made him shudder with pleasure “like a mini-orgasm”.

On his trip, Booth also came to appreciate the difference between European and Japanese cooks. He learned that in France, for example, chefs want to change the ingredients they cook, putting their individual mark on them, while in Japan the ingredients are considered a gift from God that should not be altered too much. “In other words, in Japan the chefs work with what God provides, in France the chefs think they are God.”

Booth’s descriptions of food made my mouth water: a miso soup was served with “a crispy-sweet, raggedy fritter of scallops each the size of Emil’s fingernail”, tempura was made with “crunchy, gnarled batter”. But his book could have been much, much stronger with hard editing. No travel narrative is enhanced by details of delayed flights or the admission that the author browses through tourist brochures. Readers won’t respect the confession that his Japanese fixer “somehow knows what I wanted to see, even when I didn’t really know it myself”. And a number of journalistic interviews could have been omitted altogether. The extraneous material blurs the book’s focus, giving it a casualness which undermines the profundity of Booth’s journey. Like good soya sauce, Sushi and Beyond needed a longer distillation period to achieve its true potential.

That said, this book is a must for all lovers of Japanese cuisine. Where else can an English-speaking foodie learn about tako yaki octopus doughnuts, floral-flavoured Okinawan sweet potato ice cream (part of the reason why Okinawans live longer than anyone else on the planet) and how to make a chanko nabe hot-pot good enough to please a sumo wrestler?

• Rory MacLean‘s latest book Magic Bus: On the Hippie Trail from Istanbul to India is published by Penguin in the UK and by IG Publishing in the States. His UK top tens Stalin’s Nose and Under the Dragon are available in Tauris Parke Paperbacks.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Crustacean nation: the crab pasty

If you’re heading to the British seaside in the next few weeks, you may find yourself converted to the crab pasty cause

If you followed last week’s post on crab damaging, you’re probably staring at something that looks like the aftermath of Lt Ripley’s meeting with a facehugger and saying to yourself, OK, what next? Well, I promised you a couple of suggestions for crabmeat but this one is a little more than just a recipe. It’s more like a call to arms.

In spite of years of trying, we’ve been pretty much unable to agree on a national dish. Sunday lunch has been suggested but we’re never going to get anyone to agree about the Yorkshire puddings. You could assemble a reasonably watertight argument for the fried breakfast but then some fool would include baked beans and reasonable people would want them killed. Somebody’s suggested chicken tikka masala but I’m not going to stand for that – our nation’s cuisine is represented by something 99% of the population ‘cook’ by piercing the film with a fag end and nuking it ’til it pings? No thank you. Instead, I’d like to make the case for the crab pasty.

At the moment I only know two places in the UK you can get one of these beauties. The first is quite a journey (how far you have to travel depends on where you live, of course – but it’s still quite a journey). Head to the Isle of Wight – an idyll separated from the mainland by a mere half a mile of water and about 60 years – and meander the circuitous and poorly signposted tracks to Ventnor. There’s about 70 yards of blighted prom, a couple of ice-cream shacks and an old couple on a bench that died on the way back from casting their votes for Attlee. They’ve been left to mummify because that’s what people are like in Ventor – they mind their own business. You might be forgiven for thinking that here, you’d reached the remotest part of the country. But you’d be wrong.

About a mile west of the ‘town’, accessible only by means of a stiff hike along the prom, is Steephill Cove, a picturesque inlet comprising a couple of houses and some beach shacks. Here, by long tradition, families of ‘longshoremen’ fish lines of crab pots in return for protecting and maintaining the beach. The Cawes family have been longshoremen for generations, and every morning they boil up a mountain of fresh crab which they bake into turnover pasties and serve from a hatch in their kitchen, straight into the hands of the gasping crab lovers queuing outside.

Can you imagine? This is happening here, in our country. If I told you it was Italy there’d be a solid line of Volvos from here to the Adriatic coast and the locals would slap an appellation on the damn things faster than you could say Champagne(TM). But no. It’s Ventnor. Hell, you could be there in a matter of hours.

I’m told that the other place you can get a crab pasty is one Rick Stein’s patisserie in Padstow. That’s as it should be from our foremost fish booster – but dammit, it’s not good enough.

We have fantastic crabs right round our coast. You just have to chuck a pot in the sea and they come leaping out, begging to be eaten. Anyone can knock up pastry. Four-year-olds with rudimentary Play-Doh skills can form a pasty. This is not, as they say, rocket science or even molecular gastronomy, and I swear, once you have eaten one of these things, you will ignore whatever fish and chips, Cornish pasties, kippers, winkles, laver bread, stottie, barmbrack, chacky pig or Hindle wakes you’ve previously sworn by. You will fling these impostors from you with petulant force and take to the streets, praising the crab pasty with ‘British cheers and loud’.

The recipe, such as it is, is so blindingly simple, so utterly right, that it almost constitutes a meme.

Roll some pastry. Cut a circle. Put some crabmeat on one side, season, fold over the top and bake until nicely browned.

The Cawes family, from what I’ve been able to divine with a joy-addled palate, add sweated shredded leeks and maybe some turmeric, and use puff pastry. Rick Stein adds a dab of clotted cream and perhaps some vermouth. I use a thread of saffron in mine.

But this is the whole point. Whether with shortcrust, added potato, white pepper, mace, more brown meat, more white, a shot of Pernod or a twist of tarragon, the variations are as endless as the regions of our nation. We can maintain our bitter local rivalries, our hard-won, treasured prejudices, our ridiculous internecine bitchery while uniting behind a dish that tastes phenomenal whatever you do to it and is utterly unique to us.

Before you head off for your credit crunch British seaside holiday this year, print out this post. As soon as you’ve dropped the cases in the B&B and the kids have stopped vomiting, proceed directly to the prom and hand it to the first slop-merchant in the nearest caravan, stall or shopfront. If there’s any justice in the world they will slap their heads in wonder at the blinding simplicity of the idea. They’ll embrace it as the Wonder of the Age and devote the rest of their lives to the creation of a better, more wonderfully delicious, more British crab pasty.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Crustacean nation: the crab pasty

If you’re heading to the British seaside in the next few weeks, you may find yourself converted to the crab pasty cause

If you followed last week’s post on crab damaging, you’re probably staring at something that looks like the aftermath of Lt Ripley’s meeting with a facehugger and saying to yourself, OK, what next? Well, I promised you a couple of suggestions for crabmeat but this one is a little more than just a recipe. It’s more like a call to arms.

In spite of years of trying, we’ve been pretty much unable to agree on a national dish. Sunday lunch has been suggested but we’re never going to get anyone to agree about the Yorkshire puddings. You could assemble a reasonably watertight argument for the fried breakfast but then some fool would include baked beans and reasonable people would want them killed. Somebody’s suggested chicken tikka masala but I’m not going to stand for that – our nation’s cuisine is represented by something 99% of the population ‘cook’ by piercing the film with a fag end and nuking it ’til it pings? No thank you. Instead, I’d like to make the case for the crab pasty.

At the moment I only know two places in the UK you can get one of these beauties. The first is quite a journey (how far you have to travel depends on where you live, of course – but it’s still quite a journey). Head to the Isle of Wight – an idyll separated from the mainland by a mere half a mile of water and about 60 years – and meander the circuitous and poorly signposted tracks to Ventnor. There’s about 70 yards of blighted prom, a couple of ice-cream shacks and an old couple on a bench that died on the way back from casting their votes for Attlee. They’ve been left to mummify because that’s what people are like in Ventor – they mind their own business. You might be forgiven for thinking that here, you’d reached the remotest part of the country. But you’d be wrong.

About a mile west of the ‘town’, accessible only by means of a stiff hike along the prom, is Steephill Cove, a picturesque inlet comprising a couple of houses and some beach shacks. Here, by long tradition, families of ‘longshoremen’ fish lines of crab pots in return for protecting and maintaining the beach. The Cawes family have been longshoremen for generations, and every morning they boil up a mountain of fresh crab which they bake into turnover pasties and serve from a hatch in their kitchen, straight into the hands of the gasping crab lovers queuing outside.

Can you imagine? This is happening here, in our country. If I told you it was Italy there’d be a solid line of Volvos from here to the Adriatic coast and the locals would slap an appellation on the damn things faster than you could say Champagne(TM). But no. It’s Ventnor. Hell, you could be there in a matter of hours.

I’m told that the other place you can get a crab pasty is one Rick Stein’s patisserie in Padstow. That’s as it should be from our foremost fish booster – but dammit, it’s not good enough.

We have fantastic crabs right round our coast. You just have to chuck a pot in the sea and they come leaping out, begging to be eaten. Anyone can knock up pastry. Four-year-olds with rudimentary Play-Doh skills can form a pasty. This is not, as they say, rocket science or even molecular gastronomy, and I swear, once you have eaten one of these things, you will ignore whatever fish and chips, Cornish pasties, kippers, winkles, laver bread, stottie, barmbrack, chacky pig or Hindle wakes you’ve previously sworn by. You will fling these impostors from you with petulant force and take to the streets, praising the crab pasty with ‘British cheers and loud’.

The recipe, such as it is, is so blindingly simple, so utterly right, that it almost constitutes a meme.

Roll some pastry. Cut a circle. Put some crabmeat on one side, season, fold over the top and bake until nicely browned.

The Cawes family, from what I’ve been able to divine with a joy-addled palate, add sweated shredded leeks and maybe some turmeric, and use puff pastry. Rick Stein adds a dab of clotted cream and perhaps some vermouth. I use a thread of saffron in mine.

But this is the whole point. Whether with shortcrust, added potato, white pepper, mace, more brown meat, more white, a shot of Pernod or a twist of tarragon, the variations are as endless as the regions of our nation. We can maintain our bitter local rivalries, our hard-won, treasured prejudices, our ridiculous internecine bitchery while uniting behind a dish that tastes phenomenal whatever you do to it and is utterly unique to us.

Before you head off for your credit crunch British seaside holiday this year, print out this post. As soon as you’ve dropped the cases in the B&B and the kids have stopped vomiting, proceed directly to the prom and hand it to the first slop-merchant in the nearest caravan, stall or shopfront. If there’s any justice in the world they will slap their heads in wonder at the blinding simplicity of the idea. They’ll embrace it as the Wonder of the Age and devote the rest of their lives to the creation of a better, more wonderfully delicious, more British crab pasty.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Asturias: the secret I have to share

Acclaimed food writer Paul Richardson lives in southern Spain but it is the northern region of Asturias with its fertile valleys and stunning coast – and distinctive food and drink – that he tells his friends to explore before it’s too late

Don’t get me started about Asturias. I could go on and on about this inexplicably little-visited region wedged between Galicia and Cantabria along the north coast of Spain. I have been known to get very boring about its dramatic landscapes, its superb beaches, its excellent food, its unique pre-Romanesque architecture, its affable locals, and the strange fact that, as yet, few people seem to share my unbridled enthusiasm for the place.

Asturias is very Spanish in some ways, and surprisingly unlike the rest of the country in many others. Its Celtic, Atlantic culture is the polar opposite of the indolent, sherry-sipping, sun-lounging outdoor life of the Mediterranean.

The greenness of Asturias is astounding, especially if you’re coming from the parched plains of the Spanish south. You might also argue that the region is a microcosm of Spain as a whole, cramming into its borders everything from snowy mountains to sandy beaches, humble tapas bars to avant-garde restaurants, and from raucous local fiestas to silent valleys where bears and wolves still roam. The community has no fewer than 24 nature reserves, including one parque nacional and three of Spain’s largest parques naturales

Where I live, in the Spanish south, three months of spring had gone by without a drop of rain, and the countryside bore a withered, desperate look. Tired of dust and unseasonal heats, I wanted greenness and pleasantness, mountain streams and ocean views. So I worked up a trip, my fourth or fifth to the region, that would take in a little of each of the things I love about Asturias: the rural essences, the modest urban pleasures, the beaches and the wild interior, the simple traditional food and the fab contemporary cuisine.

I’d start out in Oviedo, the delightful capital, counterpoint to the rough-and-tumble harbour town of Gijón, which is the region’s second city. I’d then devote a day to cider, another to cheese – because Asturias is the uncontested cheese HQ of Spain – a day to the Alpine landscapes of the Picos de Europa, and another to the coast. I drove north through Castile, taking the motorway that powers through high mountain passes, past lakes and staggering peaks, before turning downhill into a suddenly green world of chestnut woods and rich pastures, and depositing you eventually in Oviedo.

History and geography dictate the way a place looks, feels and tastes. Asturias was a nation and kingdom seven centuries before Fernando and Isabella invented Spain, and it formed the cradle of the reconquista, by which the rest of the peninsula was eventually won back from the Moors. (Indeed, a popular saying has it that “Asturias is Spain – the rest is conquered territory”.)

The geographical barrier of the Picos de Europa, cutting off access from the south, made Asturias the most isolated part of the country. Hence, perhaps, the idiosyncrasy. And the omnipresent reek of history. Oviedo has some of Spain’s most venerable buildings – such as Santa María del Naranco, an exquisite pre-Romanesque church set in green pastures above the city, built for the Asturian king Ramiro I in the mid-ninth century. San Julián de los Prados, dating from the early ninth century, is a tiny and magical church whose richly painted interior reminds you what a debt Christianity owes to the Orient.

If Asturias is a series of pleasant surprises, Oviedo often comes as the first of them. It’s a compact, handsome little city, charmingly buttoned-up, with a provincial and bourgeois air, where people stop on street corners and the women wear their hair in perms. It says something about the fastidious character of Oviedo that here, uniquely for Spain, rubbish collection happens on a daily basis. (It routinely wins awards for Europe’s cleanest city.)

Oviedo had star billing along with Barcelona in Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona. Woody is a huge fan of the city, which has responded by putting up a bronze statue of him in the street. There is a lively cultural life here (the Campoamor opera house is a classic 19th-century chocolate-box theatre, where Plácido Domingo and Montserrat Caballé have sung), a superb produce market, some wonderful old pastry shops (Camilo de Blas, Rialto, Peñalba), and two or three of the country’s best restaurants. On that first day I had lunch at Casa Fermín, where the day’s menu included sea bass with clams, wild local salmon from the Sella river with yogurt and vanilla, and hand-caught octopus with potato cream and parsley oil.

Asturias shares the Spanish passion for food. Traditional cocina asturiana is wonderful in its plainness, honesty, and heartiness. Uncontested monarch of local dishes is the fabada asturiana, a take-no-prisoners stew of fabas (big white beans) with a compendium of smoked meats and sausages. Thereafter comes the rest of the repertoire: fritos de pixín (deep-fried monkfish pieces), vegetable menestra (stew), empanada (a flat savoury pie with a thick crust), torto de maíz (maize-flour flatbread, fried until it puffs up, with various accompaniments) …

Cheese is a very big deal. Asturian cheeses are many and various, the best of them (like Cabrales, Gamoneu, Afuega’l Pitu, Los Beyos) reflecting in their intense flavours all the verdant richness of the countryside. The seafood, landed at the busy fishing ports of Gijón, Lastres and Avilés, is second to none. Beside the Fontán market in Oviedo I saw a restaurant menu announcing that all its fish was both wild and local – a luxury inconceivable in the fished-out Mediterranean.

There is very little wine made in these northerly latitudes, so what tends to go with all this Asturian food is the Asturian drink by definition: cider. From Oviedo I drove to Nava, cider capital of the region, where José María Osorio, president of the local cidermakers’ guild, took me to see a traditional sidrería, the Estrada, which not only makes cider from the fruit of its own apple-trees, but serves it in an oak-lined cider-house, along with plates of cheese and chorizo. The cider was drawn in a powerful jet from a giant chestnut barrel in a gloomy cellar; it was woody and spicy and palate-scouringly dry. Asturias has almost 250 varieties of apple, José María told me, the great majority of which are quickly moving towards extinction. At Valveran, another sidrería, I tasted ciders of the new generation (known as de nueva expresión) which can be served in posh restaurants without anybody raising an eyebrow, and sweet dessert ciders and sparkling ciders and cider brandy, Asturias’s answer to Calvados.

The cider-house rules can be a puzzle at first, but they are easily understood with a little observation. Cider in Asturias is always served escanciada, which means the cider is poured into the glass from a great height, the oxygen it acquires on the way down giving the drink an essential kick of freshness. The cider is downed in one, but a little is always left at the bottom of the glass, custom dictating that this must be chucked out onto the floor. The reason for this practice is a mystery, though it seems likely to date back to a Celtic belief in returning to the earth a part of what it gave you.

On a fresh May morning after a rainshower, the sun shone on fields of apple trees loaded with blossom. I turned off the main road and drove inland; to left and right were villages of stone houses with slate roofs and the pagoda-like forms of the hórreos, wooden granaries raised on stone pillars to keep out the rats. Above the villages were hillsides densely wooded with chestnut, pine, and eucalyptus. And in the distance stood a line of mountains sugar-iced with snow: the famous Picos de Europa, so-called because these peaks were the first things mariners saw of the continent when returning from their long expeditions to distant seas.

In the fields round about, brown cows grazed indolently on an ensalada verde of the lushest pasture I had ever seen. Asturias is dairy central. In a country not traditionally fond of dairy products, this is one region that loves them unashamedly. An estimated 40 different cheeses are produced within its borders, three of which have Denominación de Origen status. Few places in the world – even in France – can boast such cheesy variety over such a modest surface area.

The Cotera Diaz family have their home and dairy in the village of Arenas de Cabrales, but keep their 28 cows in a stable beside the Cares river. When I visited, the husband and wife were busy milking, the rattle of a generator mingling with the roar of a mountain river swollen with ice-melt from the high sierra. (Its waters were blue-grey, and crystal clear.) The family specialise in Cabrales, a blue cheese which is one of Spain’s finest and a worthy rival to both Stilton and Roquefort. It packs a powerful punch, and often benefits from a good draught of cider to soften its piquant aftertaste.

While the parents worked, their son explained to me the family’s traditional routine, common among cheese-making families hereabouts. As soon as school closes in June, the family goes up into the high pastures of the Picos, where they spend the whole summer with the herd, making cheeses which will be brought down in September to cure in special caves.

The custom of transhumance has declined, but the caves are still an irreplaceable element in the making of both Cabrales and the other great Asturian blue cheese, Gamonedo. After a simple but highly calorific lunch at Casa Morán in Benia de Onis (fabada followed by arroz con leche, number one Asturian dessert and a rice pudding to conjure with), I visited the Cotera Diaz family cave, a dripping corridor bored into the mountainside, with the maturing Cabrales laid out on wooden shelves. Inside it was damp and dark and musty, with a powerful stink in the oxygen-deprived atmosphere that would send claustrophics and cheese-haters screaming into the fresh air.

Next day I met up with Guillermo Mañana, a retired doctor whose overriding passion is the Asturian mountain landscape. Guillermo has spent most of his life exploring every nook and cranny, every peak and valley of the Somiedo and Redes nature reserves, the primordial woodlands of Muñiellos, and his greatest love, the magic mountains of Picos de Europa. He proposed a simple half-day trek following the river Cares from its birthplace in the heights of the sierra down a narrow mountain gorge, the Desfiladero del Rio Cares.

We began in the village of Caín, for centuries cut off entirely from the outside world and, as its name might suggest, regarded by outsiders as a village of the damned. From there we entered the gorge, a dark canyon of Tolkien-esque proportions, with a path carved out of the rock face skirting the cliffs. From far below us came the muffled thunder of the river. Far above, in the gap between the cliffs, if you strained your neck and watched your footsteps, you could just see the snow-capped peaks, sparkling in the sun.

It was an unforgettable walk, and the lunch at the end of it wasn’t bad either: 11 courses of menú degustación at the Michelin-starred Casa Marcial in Arriondas, which along with Casa Gerardo in Prendes, is the most important showcase for the new Asturian cuisine. Nacho Manzano, chef at Casa Marcial, cooks and lives in the village house where he was born and grew up, and where his parents had a small shop that sold everything from socks and shoes to tinned sardines. There was a dance hall on the first floor, a cider press in the basement.

Over the years Nacho has brought his modernisation of cocina asturiana to a high pitch of refinement: his torto de maíz is as light as feather, his arroz con pitu de caleya (a rice dish made with the meat of a free-range cockerel) is densely flavoured and accompanied by a scallop somehow deliciously aromatised with fresh cucumber and green pepper.

As night fell a cold dank mist rolled down from the mountains. My luck had run out, I told myself: the rain, regular protagonist of the Asturian climate, was back. By the morning, however, it had cleared again and the atmosphere was uncannily bright, like when you turned up the contrast and colour on an old TV set. Perfect weather for beach-hunting. I turned back towards Oviedo on the E70 and drove from west to east along the Asturian coast – rebaptised for the incipient tourist market as the Costa Verde.

For years I have been saying to anyone who’d listen that some of the best beaches in the country are to be found along this stretch of coast. At Barayo, for instance, a pristine valley protected from all possible development, inhabited only by otters, the river reaches the sea in a majestic arc of sand. Or Playa del Silencio, aptly named, where dramatic rock formations encircle a lonely beach; or, loveliest of all, Torimbia, a mouthwateringly beautiful sandy bay, utterly unspoilt, which like all the world’s best beaches, can only be reached on foot. On this May morning at Torimbia there wasn’t a soul to be seen; the water was as calm as a mirror, and an appetising, if misleading shade of glassy blue. (Misleading, because the Atlantic is not the Med, and only in the months of July and August would most people think it wise to immerse themselves in it.)

So the Costa Verde has unspoilt beaches; it also has a series of unspoilt harbour towns strung along the coast like a pearl necklace. Ribadesella – once the summer stamping-ground of the Princess Letizia, wife of Prince Felipe, heir to the Spanish throne – and Cudillero, picturesque yet genuine. Lastres is a proper fishing village with winding cobbled streets – you could be in Cornwall. At Llanes, in the far east, a long thin harbour winds up from the sea into a medieval quarter with crumbly palaces, and the sculptor Agustín Ibarrola has painted the concrete cubes of the harbour wall in dazzling colours and madcap designs.

Outside Llanes, easternmost of Asturian coastal towns, is where the idyll ends. I was shocked to see the building going on in the strip of land between the mountains and the sea, the rash of ugly urbanizaciones built mostly as second homes for holidaymakers from the Basque country, and the wide swathe of brand-new motorway, built to give them easier access to what is increasingly a colony of Bilbao. Sad to say, no lessons have been learned from the destruction of Spain’s other costas, and it seems that even this pristine coastline is on the way to being ruined, and that there is nothing you or I can do about it.

Perhaps the only solution is for you and me to get there while there’s still time, and to tell our friends. I always tell mine that the coast of Asturias – along with the mountains, the architecture, the people, and the food – is almost certainly one of Spain’s last great unknown treasures. But then I would say that.

How to get to the heart of the Asturias

Getting there

Easyjet (0905 821 0905; easyjet.com) has daily flights from Stansted to Asturias airport in Ranón, half an hour by car or bus from Oviedo, from £46 return; Ryanair (0871 246 0000; ryanair.com) flies from Stansted to Santander, two hours by car, bus or train from Oviedo, from £21 return. Brittany Ferries (0871 244 0439; brittany-ferries.co.uk) runs ferries from Portsmouth and Plymouth to Santander (20-24 hours) from £167 return for two adults and a car.

Where to eat

Casa Fermín, Oviedo (00 34 985 216452; casafermin.com); Casa Morán, Benia de Onis (00 34 985 844006); Casa Marcial, Arriondas (00 34 985 840991; casamarcial.com)

Where to stay

Hotel Fruela (00 34 985 208120; hotelfruela.com) is a friendly, simple hotel in the centre of Oviedo and good value at €70 for a double room.

Hotel Casona del Busto in Pravia near Aviles (00 34 985 822771; casonadelbusto.es) is an unpretentious three-star hotel in a 16th-century mansion frequented by the diarist and thinker Jovellanos. It’s minutes from the beach and 10km from Asturias airport. Doubles from €84.

Hotel Balcón de la Cuesta (00 34 985 417429; arceahoteles.com) is a chic and comfortable new hotel in the valley of Andrin, just outside Llanes. The 17 rooms are all suites, and cost from €90.

Palacio de Rubianes, Cereceda (00 34 985 707612; palacioderubianes.com), recently opened in a historic country house with magnificent views of the Sueve mountains and Picos de Europa. Doubles from €105.

• Find more information about the region at infoasturias.com

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Osaka: the world’s greatest food city

There are at least a dozen very good reasons why author and blogger Michael Booth rates Osaka number one. Which city would you rate your gourmet great?

Simple question: what’s the most greatest, most exciting, most dynamic food city in the world today, the culinary It City of our age?

Paris is past it (going to a restaurant shouldn’t be like going to church). London isn’t quite there yet (where’s the street food?). Hanoi, Bangkok, Hong Kong, Shanghai and most major Indian cities will all have their advocates, but is the refinement there? New York is always going to be in with a shout but its great strength is its immigrant cuisines: it lacks an indigenous food culture. Sydney is stuck in the 90s, Lyon in the 1890s, and, as far as I’m concerned, to be a real contender the food roots have to go deep, so that rules out places like Vegas and Cape Town. The market’s nice, but I’ve never had a good meal in Barcelona and though Copenhagen may be flavour of the month, a couple of good restaurants do not a global food capital make.

At the risk of alerting John Crace, I have a new book out, ‘Sushi and Beyond – What the Japanese Know About Food‘. So you’d probably expect me to go with a Japanese city, but it’s not Tokyo or Kyoto that I pine for on a daily basis, but Japan’s often overlooked third city, Osaka.

I originally went to Osaka on the recommendation of Anton Ego – the restaurant critic in Ratatouille (or rather François Simon of Le Figaro, on whom, rumour has it, Ego was based). I interviewed him a few years back for one of those ‘Can Paris Still Cut the Mustard?’ type pieces (answer – ‘no’) and was surprised to hear this most chauvinistic of food writers dismiss my adopted home city out of hand, and plump for Osaka instead.

I booked my flight soon after and found a city fit to burst with incredible places to eat, from the dazzling depichika basement food halls (the greatest food shows on earth), to the exuberant restaurant quarter of Dotonbori, to the top end places like Kahala, a tiny, exclusive counter restaurant beloved of Tetsuya Wakada.

This is a city entirely at ease with its culinary identity but open to foreign influences (in this case, largely Korean), with several unique dishes, and a population possessed of an admirable gluttony for life. They even have a word for their insatiable gluttony, ‘kuidaore’, meaning ‘eat until you burst / go bust’.

The city has an irresistible triumvirate of highly addictive, indigenous fast foods: okonomiyaki (thick, filled pancakes, made with yam flour batter, seafood, pork and kimchi); tako yaki (octopus doughnuts); and kushikatsu (deep fried, breaded skewers – invented at the restaurant Daruma, and much loved by Ferran Adrià, so the chef there told me), each of them slathered in a sweet, savoury, mahogany-coloured sauce. And let’s not forget that kaiten sushi and instant ramen noodles were both invented in the city in the same epochal year (1958 – the latter are rather better than Pot Noodles, I should add).

This is also where you’ll find the world’s greatest (largest, most expensive, best equipped, toughest etc) cooking school, the Tsuji Culinary Institute; and a fish and produce market to rival Tsukiji.

Beat that, Ludlow.

So, I’ve nailed my culinary colours to the mast. Which city would you rate your gourmet great?

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Osaka: the world’s greatest food city

There are at least a dozen very good reasons why author and blogger Michael Booth rates Osaka number one. Which city would you rate your gourmet great?

Simple question: what’s the most greatest, most exciting, most dynamic food city in the world today, the culinary It City of our age?

Paris is past it (going to a restaurant shouldn’t be like going to church). London isn’t quite there yet (where’s the street food?). Hanoi, Bangkok, Hong Kong, Shanghai and most major Indian cities will all have their advocates, but is the refinement there? New York is always going to be in with a shout but its great strength is its immigrant cuisines: it lacks an indigenous food culture. Sydney is stuck in the 90s, Lyon in the 1890s, and, as far as I’m concerned, to be a real contender the food roots have to go deep, so that rules out places like Vegas and Cape Town. The market’s nice, but I’ve never had a good meal in Barcelona and though Copenhagen may be flavour of the month, a couple of good restaurants do not a global food capital make.

At the risk of alerting John Crace, I have a new book out, ‘Sushi and Beyond – What the Japanese Know About Food‘. So you’d probably expect me to go with a Japanese city, but it’s not Tokyo or Kyoto that I pine for on a daily basis, but Japan’s often overlooked third city, Osaka.

I originally went to Osaka on the recommendation of Anton Ego – the restaurant critic in Ratatouille (or rather François Simon of Le Figaro, on whom, rumour has it, Ego was based). I interviewed him a few years back for one of those ‘Can Paris Still Cut the Mustard?’ type pieces (answer – ‘no’) and was surprised to hear this most chauvinistic of food writers dismiss my adopted home city out of hand, and plump for Osaka instead.

I booked my flight soon after and found a city fit to burst with incredible places to eat, from the dazzling depichika basement food halls (the greatest food shows on earth), to the exuberant restaurant quarter of Dotonbori, to the top end places like Kahala, a tiny, exclusive counter restaurant beloved of Tetsuya Wakada.

This is a city entirely at ease with its culinary identity but open to foreign influences (in this case, largely Korean), with several unique dishes, and a population possessed of an admirable gluttony for life. They even have a word for their insatiable gluttony, ‘kuidaore’, meaning ‘eat until you burst / go bust’.

The city has an irresistible triumvirate of highly addictive, indigenous fast foods: okonomiyaki (thick, filled pancakes, made with yam flour batter, seafood, pork and kimchi); tako yaki (octopus doughnuts); and kushikatsu (deep fried, breaded skewers – invented at the restaurant Daruma, and much loved by Ferran Adrià, so the chef there told me), each of them slathered in a sweet, savoury, mahogany-coloured sauce. And let’s not forget that kaiten sushi and instant ramen noodles were both invented in the city in the same epochal year (1958 – the latter are rather better than Pot Noodles, I should add).

This is also where you’ll find the world’s greatest (largest, most expensive, best equipped, toughest etc) cooking school, the Tsuji Culinary Institute; and a fish and produce market to rival Tsukiji.

Beat that, Ludlow.

So, I’ve nailed my culinary colours to the mast. Which city would you rate your gourmet great?

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Asturias: the secret I have to share

Acclaimed food writer Paul Richardson lives in southern Spain but it is the northern region of Asturias with its fertile valleys and stunning coast – and distinctive food and drink – that he tells his friends to explore before it’s too late

Don’t get me started about Asturias. I could go on and on about this inexplicably little-visited region wedged between Galicia and Cantabria along the north coast of Spain. I have been known to get very boring about its dramatic landscapes, its superb beaches, its excellent food, its unique pre-Romanesque architecture, its affable locals, and the strange fact that, as yet, few people seem to share my unbridled enthusiasm for the place.

Asturias is very Spanish in some ways, and surprisingly unlike the rest of the country in many others. Its Celtic, Atlantic culture is the polar opposite of the indolent, sherry-sipping, sun-lounging outdoor life of the Mediterranean.

The greenness of Asturias is astounding, especially if you’re coming from the parched plains of the Spanish south. You might also argue that the region is a microcosm of Spain as a whole, cramming into its borders everything from snowy mountains to sandy beaches, humble tapas bars to avant-garde restaurants, and from raucous local fiestas to silent valleys where bears and wolves still roam. The community has no fewer than 24 nature reserves, including one parque nacional and three of Spain’s largest parques naturales

Where I live, in the Spanish south, three months of spring had gone by without a drop of rain, and the countryside bore a withered, desperate look. Tired of dust and unseasonal heats, I wanted greenness and pleasantness, mountain streams and ocean views. So I worked up a trip, my fourth or fifth to the region, that would take in a little of each of the things I love about Asturias: the rural essences, the modest urban pleasures, the beaches and the wild interior, the simple traditional food and the fab contemporary cuisine.

I’d start out in Oviedo, the delightful capital, counterpoint to the rough-and-tumble harbour town of Gijón, which is the region’s second city. I’d then devote a day to cider, another to cheese – because Asturias is the uncontested cheese HQ of Spain – a day to the Alpine landscapes of the Picos de Europa, and another to the coast. I drove north through Castile, taking the motorway that powers through high mountain passes, past lakes and staggering peaks, before turning downhill into a suddenly green world of chestnut woods and rich pastures, and depositing you eventually in Oviedo.

History and geography dictate the way a place looks, feels and tastes. Asturias was a nation and kingdom seven centuries before Fernando and Isabella invented Spain, and it formed the cradle of the reconquista, by which the rest of the peninsula was eventually won back from the Moors. (Indeed, a popular saying has it that “Asturias is Spain – the rest is conquered territory”.)

The geographical barrier of the Picos de Europa, cutting off access from the south, made Asturias the most isolated part of the country. Hence, perhaps, the idiosyncrasy. And the omnipresent reek of history. Oviedo has some of Spain’s most venerable buildings – such as Santa María del Naranco, an exquisite pre-Romanesque church set in green pastures above the city, built for the Asturian king Ramiro I in the mid-ninth century. San Julián de los Prados, dating from the early ninth century, is a tiny and magical church whose richly painted interior reminds you what a debt Christianity owes to the Orient.

If Asturias is a series of pleasant surprises, Oviedo often comes as the first of them. It’s a compact, handsome little city, charmingly buttoned-up, with a provincial and bourgeois air, where people stop on street corners and the women wear their hair in perms. It says something about the fastidious character of Oviedo that here, uniquely for Spain, rubbish collection happens on a daily basis. (It routinely wins awards for Europe’s cleanest city.)

Oviedo had star billing along with Barcelona in Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona. Woody is a huge fan of the city, which has responded by putting up a bronze statue of him in the street. There is a lively cultural life here (the Campoamor opera house is a classic 19th-century chocolate-box theatre, where Plácido Domingo and Montserrat Caballé have sung), a superb produce market, some wonderful old pastry shops (Camilo de Blas, Rialto, Peñalba), and two or three of the country’s best restaurants. On that first day I had lunch at Casa Fermín, where the day’s menu included sea bass with clams, wild local salmon from the Sella river with yogurt and vanilla, and hand-caught octopus with potato cream and parsley oil.

Asturias shares the Spanish passion for food. Traditional cocina asturiana is wonderful in its plainness, honesty, and heartiness. Uncontested monarch of local dishes is the fabada asturiana, a take-no-prisoners stew of fabas (big white beans) with a compendium of smoked meats and sausages. Thereafter comes the rest of the repertoire: fritos de pixín (deep-fried monkfish pieces), vegetable menestra (stew), empanada (a flat savoury pie with a thick crust), torto de maíz (maize-flour flatbread, fried until it puffs up, with various accompaniments) …

Cheese is a very big deal. Asturian cheeses are many and various, the best of them (like Cabrales, Gamoneu, Afuega’l Pitu, Los Beyos) reflecting in their intense flavours all the verdant richness of the countryside. The seafood, landed at the busy fishing ports of Gijón, Lastres and Avilés, is second to none. Beside the Fontán market in Oviedo I saw a restaurant menu announcing that all its fish was both wild and local – a luxury inconceivable in the fished-out Mediterranean.

There is very little wine made in these northerly latitudes, so what tends to go with all this Asturian food is the Asturian drink by definition: cider. From Oviedo I drove to Nava, cider capital of the region, where José María Osorio, president of the local cidermakers’ guild, took me to see a traditional sidrería, the Estrada, which not only makes cider from the fruit of its own apple-trees, but serves it in an oak-lined cider-house, along with plates of cheese and chorizo. The cider was drawn in a powerful jet from a giant chestnut barrel in a gloomy cellar; it was woody and spicy and palate-scouringly dry. Asturias has almost 250 varieties of apple, José María told me, the great majority of which are quickly moving towards extinction. At Valveran, another sidrería, I tasted ciders of the new generation (known as de nueva expresión) which can be served in posh restaurants without anybody raising an eyebrow, and sweet dessert ciders and sparkling ciders and cider brandy, Asturias’s answer to Calvados.

The cider-house rules can be a puzzle at first, but they are easily understood with a little observation. Cider in Asturias is always served escanciada, which means the cider is poured into the glass from a great height, the oxygen it acquires on the way down giving the drink an essential kick of freshness. The cider is downed in one, but a little is always left at the bottom of the glass, custom dictating that this must be chucked out onto the floor. The reason for this practice is a mystery, though it seems likely to date back to a Celtic belief in returning to the earth a part of what it gave you.

On a fresh May morning after a rainshower, the sun shone on fields of apple trees loaded with blossom. I turned off the main road and drove inland; to left and right were villages of stone houses with slate roofs and the pagoda-like forms of the hórreos, wooden granaries raised on stone pillars to keep out the rats. Above the villages were hillsides densely wooded with chestnut, pine, and eucalyptus. And in the distance stood a line of mountains sugar-iced with snow: the famous Picos de Europa, so-called because these peaks were the first things mariners saw of the continent when returning from their long expeditions to distant seas.

In the fields round about, brown cows grazed indolently on an ensalada verde of the lushest pasture I had ever seen. Asturias is dairy central. In a country not traditionally fond of dairy products, this is one region that loves them unashamedly. An estimated 40 different cheeses are produced within its borders, three of which have Denominación de Origen status. Few places in the world – even in France – can boast such cheesy variety over such a modest surface area.

The Cotera Diaz family have their home and dairy in the village of Arenas de Cabrales, but keep their 28 cows in a stable beside the Cares river. When I visited, the husband and wife were busy milking, the rattle of a generator mingling with the roar of a mountain river swollen with ice-melt from the high sierra. (Its waters were blue-grey, and crystal clear.) The family specialise in Cabrales, a blue cheese which is one of Spain’s finest and a worthy rival to both Stilton and Roquefort. It packs a powerful punch, and often benefits from a good draught of cider to soften its piquant aftertaste.

While the parents worked, their son explained to me the family’s traditional routine, common among cheese-making families hereabouts. As soon as school closes in June, the family goes up into the high pastures of the Picos, where they spend the whole summer with the herd, making cheeses which will be brought down in September to cure in special caves.

The custom of transhumance has declined, but the caves are still an irreplaceable element in the making of both Cabrales and the other great Asturian blue cheese, Gamonedo. After a simple but highly calorific lunch at Casa Morán in Benia de Onis (fabada followed by arroz con leche, number one Asturian dessert and a rice pudding to conjure with), I visited the Cotera Diaz family cave, a dripping corridor bored into the mountainside, with the maturing Cabrales laid out on wooden shelves. Inside it was damp and dark and musty, with a powerful stink in the oxygen-deprived atmosphere that would send claustrophics and cheese-haters screaming into the fresh air.

Next day I met up with Guillermo Mañana, a retired doctor whose overriding passion is the Asturian mountain landscape. Guillermo has spent most of his life exploring every nook and cranny, every peak and valley of the Somiedo and Redes nature reserves, the primordial woodlands of Muñiellos, and his greatest love, the magic mountains of Picos de Europa. He proposed a simple half-day trek following the river Cares from its birthplace in the heights of the sierra down a narrow mountain gorge, the Desfiladero del Rio Cares.

We began in the village of Caín, for centuries cut off entirely from the outside world and, as its name might suggest, regarded by outsiders as a village of the damned. From there we entered the gorge, a dark canyon of Tolkien-esque proportions, with a path carved out of the rock face skirting the cliffs. From far below us came the muffled thunder of the river. Far above, in the gap between the cliffs, if you strained your neck and watched your footsteps, you could just see the snow-capped peaks, sparkling in the sun.

It was an unforgettable walk, and the lunch at the end of it wasn’t bad either: 11 courses of menú degustación at the Michelin-starred Casa Marcial in Arriondas, which along with Casa Gerardo in Prendes, is the most important showcase for the new Asturian cuisine. Nacho Manzano, chef at Casa Marcial, cooks and lives in the village house where he was born and grew up, and where his parents had a small shop that sold everything from socks and shoes to tinned sardines. There was a dance hall on the first floor, a cider press in the basement.

Over the years Nacho has brought his modernisation of cocina asturiana to a high pitch of refinement: his torto de maíz is as light as feather, his arroz con pitu de caleya (a rice dish made with the meat of a free-range cockerel) is densely flavoured and accompanied by a scallop somehow deliciously aromatised with fresh cucumber and green pepper.

As night fell a cold dank mist rolled down from the mountains. My luck had run out, I told myself: the rain, regular protagonist of the Asturian climate, was back. By the morning, however, it had cleared again and the atmosphere was uncannily bright, like when you turned up the contrast and colour on an old TV set. Perfect weather for beach-hunting. I turned back towards Oviedo on the E70 and drove from west to east along the Asturian coast – rebaptised for the incipient tourist market as the Costa Verde.

For years I have been saying to anyone who’d listen that some of the best beaches in the country are to be found along this stretch of coast. At Barayo, for instance, a pristine valley protected from all possible development, inhabited only by otters, the river reaches the sea in a majestic arc of sand. Or Playa del Silencio, aptly named, where dramatic rock formations encircle a lonely beach; or, loveliest of all, Torimbia, a mouthwateringly beautiful sandy bay, utterly unspoilt, which like all the world’s best beaches, can only be reached on foot. On this May morning at Torimbia there wasn’t a soul to be seen; the water was as calm as a mirror, and an appetising, if misleading shade of glassy blue. (Misleading, because the Atlantic is not the Med, and only in the months of July and August would most people think it wise to immerse themselves in it.)

So the Costa Verde has unspoilt beaches; it also has a series of unspoilt harbour towns strung along the coast like a pearl necklace. Ribadesella – once the summer stamping-ground of the Princess Letizia, wife of Prince Felipe, heir to the Spanish throne – and Cudillero, picturesque yet genuine. Lastres is a proper fishing village with winding cobbled streets – you could be in Cornwall. At Llanes, in the far east, a long thin harbour winds up from the sea into a medieval quarter with crumbly palaces, and the sculptor Agustín Ibarrola has painted the concrete cubes of the harbour wall in dazzling colours and madcap designs.

Outside Llanes, easternmost of Asturian coastal towns, is where the idyll ends. I was shocked to see the building going on in the strip of land between the mountains and the sea, the rash of ugly urbanizaciones built mostly as second homes for holidaymakers from the Basque country, and the wide swathe of brand-new motorway, built to give them easier access to what is increasingly a colony of Bilbao. Sad to say, no lessons have been learned from the destruction of Spain’s other costas, and it seems that even this pristine coastline is on the way to being ruined, and that there is nothing you or I can do about it.

Perhaps the only solution is for you and me to get there while there’s still time, and to tell our friends. I always tell mine that the coast of Asturias – along with the mountains, the architecture, the people, and the food – is almost certainly one of Spain’s last great unknown treasures. But then I would say that.

How to get to the heart of the Asturias

Getting there

Easyjet (0905 821 0905; easyjet.com) has daily flights from Stansted to Asturias airport in Ranón, half an hour by car or bus from Oviedo, from £46 return; Ryanair (0871 246 0000; ryanair.com) flies from Stansted to Santander, two hours by car, bus or train from Oviedo, from £21 return. Brittany Ferries (0871 244 0439; brittany-ferries.co.uk) runs ferries from Portsmouth and Plymouth to Santander (20-24 hours) from £167 return for two adults and a car.

Where to eat

Casa Fermín, Oviedo (00 34 985 216452; casafermin.com); Casa Morán, Benia de Onis (00 34 985 844006); Casa Marcial, Arriondas (00 34 985 840991; casamarcial.com)

Where to stay

Hotel Fruela (00 34 985 208120; hotelfruela.com) is a friendly, simple hotel in the centre of Oviedo and good value at €70 for a double room.

Hotel Casona del Busto in Pravia near Aviles (00 34 985 822771; casonadelbusto.es) is an unpretentious three-star hotel in a 16th-century mansion frequented by the diarist and thinker Jovellanos. It’s minutes from the beach and 10km from Asturias airport. Doubles from €84.

Hotel Balcón de la Cuesta (00 34 985 417429; arceahoteles.com) is a chic and comfortable new hotel in the valley of Andrin, just outside Llanes. The 17 rooms are all suites, and cost from €90.

Palacio de Rubianes, Cereceda (00 34 985 707612; palacioderubianes.com), recently opened in a historic country house with magnificent views of the Sueve mountains and Picos de Europa. Doubles from €105.

• Find more information about the region at infoasturias.com

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Asturias: the secret I have to share

Acclaimed food writer Paul Richardson lives in southern Spain but it is the northern region of Asturias with its fertile valleys and stunning coast – and distinctive food and drink – that he tells his friends to explore before it’s too late

Don’t get me started about Asturias. I could go on and on about this inexplicably little-visited region wedged between Galicia and Cantabria along the north coast of Spain. I have been known to get very boring about its dramatic landscapes, its superb beaches, its excellent food, its unique pre-Romanesque architecture, its affable locals, and the strange fact that, as yet, few people seem to share my unbridled enthusiasm for the place.

Asturias is very Spanish in some ways, and surprisingly unlike the rest of the country in many others. Its Celtic, Atlantic culture is the polar opposite of the indolent, sherry-sipping, sun-lounging outdoor life of the Mediterranean.

The greenness of Asturias is astounding, especially if you’re coming from the parched plains of the Spanish south. You might also argue that the region is a microcosm of Spain as a whole, cramming into its borders everything from snowy mountains to sandy beaches, humble tapas bars to avant-garde restaurants, and from raucous local fiestas to silent valleys where bears and wolves still roam. The community has no fewer than 24 nature reserves, including one parque nacional and three of Spain’s largest parques naturales

Where I live, in the Spanish south, three months of spring had gone by without a drop of rain, and the countryside bore a withered, desperate look. Tired of dust and unseasonal heats, I wanted greenness and pleasantness, mountain streams and ocean views. So I worked up a trip, my fourth or fifth to the region, that would take in a little of each of the things I love about Asturias: the rural essences, the modest urban pleasures, the beaches and the wild interior, the simple traditional food and the fab contemporary cuisine.

I’d start out in Oviedo, the delightful capital, counterpoint to the rough-and-tumble harbour town of Gijón, which is the region’s second city. I’d then devote a day to cider, another to cheese – because Asturias is the uncontested cheese HQ of Spain – a day to the Alpine landscapes of the Picos de Europa, and another to the coast. I drove north through Castile, taking the motorway that powers through high mountain passes, past lakes and staggering peaks, before turning downhill into a suddenly green world of chestnut woods and rich pastures, and depositing you eventually in Oviedo.

History and geography dictate the way a place looks, feels and tastes. Asturias was a nation and kingdom seven centuries before Fernando and Isabella invented Spain, and it formed the cradle of the reconquista, by which the rest of the peninsula was eventually won back from the Moors. (Indeed, a popular saying has it that “Asturias is Spain – the rest is conquered territory”.)

The geographical barrier of the Picos de Europa, cutting off access from the south, made Asturias the most isolated part of the country. Hence, perhaps, the idiosyncrasy. And the omnipresent reek of history. Oviedo has some of Spain’s most venerable buildings – such as Santa María del Naranco, an exquisite pre-Romanesque church set in green pastures above the city, built for the Asturian king Ramiro I in the mid-ninth century. San Julián de los Prados, dating from the early ninth century, is a tiny and magical church whose richly painted interior reminds you what a debt Christianity owes to the Orient.

If Asturias is a series of pleasant surprises, Oviedo often comes as the first of them. It’s a compact, handsome little city, charmingly buttoned-up, with a provincial and bourgeois air, where people stop on street corners and the women wear their hair in perms. It says something about the fastidious character of Oviedo that here, uniquely for Spain, rubbish collection happens on a daily basis. (It routinely wins awards for Europe’s cleanest city.)

Oviedo had star billing along with Barcelona in Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona. Woody is a huge fan of the city, which has responded by putting up a bronze statue of him in the street. There is a lively cultural life here (the Campoamor opera house is a classic 19th-century chocolate-box theatre, where Plácido Domingo and Montserrat Caballé have sung), a superb produce market, some wonderful old pastry shops (Camilo de Blas, Rialto, Peñalba), and two or three of the country’s best restaurants. On that first day I had lunch at Casa Fermín, where the day’s menu included sea bass with clams, wild local salmon from the Sella river with yogurt and vanilla, and hand-caught octopus with potato cream and parsley oil.

Asturias shares the Spanish passion for food. Traditional cocina asturiana is wonderful in its plainness, honesty, and heartiness. Uncontested monarch of local dishes is the fabada asturiana, a take-no-prisoners stew of fabas (big white beans) with a compendium of smoked meats and sausages. Thereafter comes the rest of the repertoire: fritos de pixín (deep-fried monkfish pieces), vegetable menestra (stew), empanada (a flat savoury pie with a thick crust), torto de maíz (maize-flour flatbread, fried until it puffs up, with various accompaniments) …

Cheese is a very big deal. Asturian cheeses are many and various, the best of them (like Cabrales, Gamoneu, Afuega’l Pitu, Los Beyos) reflecting in their intense flavours all the verdant richness of the countryside. The seafood, landed at the busy fishing ports of Gijón, Lastres and Avilés, is second to none. Beside the Fontán market in Oviedo I saw a restaurant menu announcing that all its fish was both wild and local – a luxury inconceivable in the fished-out Mediterranean.

There is very little wine made in these northerly latitudes, so what tends to go with all this Asturian food is the Asturian drink by definition: cider. From Oviedo I drove to Nava, cider capital of the region, where José María Osorio, president of the local cidermakers’ guild, took me to see a traditional sidrería, the Estrada, which not only makes cider from the fruit of its own apple-trees, but serves it in an oak-lined cider-house, along with plates of cheese and chorizo. The cider was drawn in a powerful jet from a giant chestnut barrel in a gloomy cellar; it was woody and spicy and palate-scouringly dry. Asturias has almost 250 varieties of apple, José María told me, the great majority of which are quickly moving towards extinction. At Valveran, another sidrería, I tasted ciders of the new generation (known as de nueva expresión) which can be served in posh restaurants without anybody raising an eyebrow, and sweet dessert ciders and sparkling ciders and cider brandy, Asturias’s answer to Calvados.

The cider-house rules can be a puzzle at first, but they are easily understood with a little observation. Cider in Asturias is always served escanciada, which means the cider is poured into the glass from a great height, the oxygen it acquires on the way down giving the drink an essential kick of freshness. The cider is downed in one, but a little is always left at the bottom of the glass, custom dictating that this must be chucked out onto the floor. The reason for this practice is a mystery, though it seems likely to date back to a Celtic belief in returning to the earth a part of what it gave you.

On a fresh May morning after a rainshower, the sun shone on fields of apple trees loaded with blossom. I turned off the main road and drove inland; to left and right were villages of stone houses with slate roofs and the pagoda-like forms of the hórreos, wooden granaries raised on stone pillars to keep out the rats. Above the villages were hillsides densely wooded with chestnut, pine, and eucalyptus. And in the distance stood a line of mountains sugar-iced with snow: the famous Picos de Europa, so-called because these peaks were the first things mariners saw of the continent when returning from their long expeditions to distant seas.

In the fields round about, brown cows grazed indolently on an ensalada verde of the lushest pasture I had ever seen. Asturias is dairy central. In a country not traditionally fond of dairy products, this is one region that loves them unashamedly. An estimated 40 different cheeses are produced within its borders, three of which have Denominación de Origen status. Few places in the world – even in France – can boast such cheesy variety over such a modest surface area.

The Cotera Diaz family have their home and dairy in the village of Arenas de Cabrales, but keep their 28 cows in a stable beside the Cares river. When I visited, the husband and wife were busy milking, the rattle of a generator mingling with the roar of a mountain river swollen with ice-melt from the high sierra. (Its waters were blue-grey, and crystal clear.) The family specialise in Cabrales, a blue cheese which is one of Spain’s finest and a worthy rival to both Stilton and Roquefort. It packs a powerful punch, and often benefits from a good draught of cider to soften its piquant aftertaste.

While the parents worked, their son explained to me the family’s traditional routine, common among cheese-making families hereabouts. As soon as school closes in June, the family goes up into the high pastures of the Picos, where they spend the whole summer with the herd, making cheeses which will be brought down in September to cure in special caves.

The custom of transhumance has declined, but the caves are still an irreplaceable element in the making of both Cabrales and the other great Asturian blue cheese, Gamonedo. After a simple but highly calorific lunch at Casa Morán in Benia de Onis (fabada followed by arroz con leche, number one Asturian dessert and a rice pudding to conjure with), I visited the Cotera Diaz family cave, a dripping corridor bored into the mountainside, with the maturing Cabrales laid out on wooden shelves. Inside it was damp and dark and musty, with a powerful stink in the oxygen-deprived atmosphere that would send claustrophics and cheese-haters screaming into the fresh air.

Next day I met up with Guillermo Mañana, a retired doctor whose overriding passion is the Asturian mountain landscape. Guillermo has spent most of his life exploring every nook and cranny, every peak and valley of the Somiedo and Redes nature reserves, the primordial woodlands of Muñiellos, and his greatest love, the magic mountains of Picos de Europa. He proposed a simple half-day trek following the river Cares from its birthplace in the heights of the sierra down a narrow mountain gorge, the Desfiladero del Rio Cares.

We began in the village of Caín, for centuries cut off entirely from the outside world and, as its name might suggest, regarded by outsiders as a village of the damned. From there we entered the gorge, a dark canyon of Tolkien-esque proportions, with a path carved out of the rock face skirting the cliffs. From far below us came the muffled thunder of the river. Far above, in the gap between the cliffs, if you strained your neck and watched your footsteps, you could just see the snow-capped peaks, sparkling in the sun.

It was an unforgettable walk, and the lunch at the end of it wasn’t bad either: 11 courses of menú degustación at the Michelin-starred Casa Marcial in Arriondas, which along with Casa Gerardo in Prendes, is the most important showcase for the new Asturian cuisine. Nacho Manzano, chef at Casa Marcial, cooks and lives in the village house where he was born and grew up, and where his parents had a small shop that sold everything from socks and shoes to tinned sardines. There was a dance hall on the first floor, a cider press in the basement.

Over the years Nacho has brought his modernisation of cocina asturiana to a high pitch of refinement: his torto de maíz is as light as feather, his arroz con pitu de caleya (a rice dish made with the meat of a free-range cockerel) is densely flavoured and accompanied by a scallop somehow deliciously aromatised with fresh cucumber and green pepper.

As night fell a cold dank mist rolled down from the mountains. My luck had run out, I told myself: the rain, regular protagonist of the Asturian climate, was back. By the morning, however, it had cleared again and the atmosphere was uncannily bright, like when you turned up the contrast and colour on an old TV set. Perfect weather for beach-hunting. I turned back towards Oviedo on the E70 and drove from west to east along the Asturian coast – rebaptised for the incipient tourist market as the Costa Verde.

For years I have been saying to anyone who’d listen that some of the best beaches in the country are to be found along this stretch of coast. At Barayo, for instance, a pristine valley protected from all possible development, inhabited only by otters, the river reaches the sea in a majestic arc of sand. Or Playa del Silencio, aptly named, where dramatic rock formations encircle a lonely beach; or, loveliest of all, Torimbia, a mouthwateringly beautiful sandy bay, utterly unspoilt, which like all the world’s best beaches, can only be reached on foot. On this May morning at Torimbia there wasn’t a soul to be seen; the water was as calm as a mirror, and an appetising, if misleading shade of glassy blue. (Misleading, because the Atlantic is not the Med, and only in the months of July and August would most people think it wise to immerse themselves in it.)

So the Costa Verde has unspoilt beaches; it also has a series of unspoilt harbour towns strung along the coast like a pearl necklace. Ribadesella – once the summer stamping-ground of the Princess Letizia, wife of Prince Felipe, heir to the Spanish throne – and Cudillero, picturesque yet genuine. Lastres is a proper fishing village with winding cobbled streets – you could be in Cornwall. At Llanes, in the far east, a long thin harbour winds up from the sea into a medieval quarter with crumbly palaces, and the sculptor Agustín Ibarrola has painted the concrete cubes of the harbour wall in dazzling colours and madcap designs.

Outside Llanes, easternmost of Asturian coastal towns, is where the idyll ends. I was shocked to see the building going on in the strip of land between the mountains and the sea, the rash of ugly urbanizaciones built mostly as second homes for holidaymakers from the Basque country, and the wide swathe of brand-new motorway, built to give them easier access to what is increasingly a colony of Bilbao. Sad to say, no lessons have been learned from the destruction of Spain’s other costas, and it seems that even this pristine coastline is on the way to being ruined, and that there is nothing you or I can do about it.

Perhaps the only solution is for you and me to get there while there’s still time, and to tell our friends. I always tell mine that the coast of Asturias – along with the mountains, the architecture, the people, and the food – is almost certainly one of Spain’s last great unknown treasures. But then I would say that.

How to get to the heart of the Asturias

Getting there

Easyjet (0905 821 0905; easyjet.com) has daily flights from Stansted to Asturias airport in Ranón, half an hour by car or bus from Oviedo, from £46 return; Ryanair (0871 246 0000; ryanair.com) flies from Stansted to Santander, two hours by car, bus or train from Oviedo, from £21 return. Brittany Ferries (0871 244 0439; brittany-ferries.co.uk) runs ferries from Portsmouth and Plymouth to Santander (20-24 hours) from £167 return for two adults and a car.

Where to eat

Casa Fermín, Oviedo (00 34 985 216452; casafermin.com); Casa Morán, Benia de Onis (00 34 985 844006); Casa Marcial, Arriondas (00 34 985 840991; casamarcial.com)

Where to stay

Hotel Fruela (00 34 985 208120; hotelfruela.com) is a friendly, simple hotel in the centre of Oviedo and good value at €70 for a double room.

Hotel Casona del Busto in Pravia near Aviles (00 34 985 822771; casonadelbusto.es) is an unpretentious three-star hotel in a 16th-century mansion frequented by the diarist and thinker Jovellanos. It’s minutes from the beach and 10km from Asturias airport. Doubles from €84.

Hotel Balcón de la Cuesta (00 34 985 417429; arceahoteles.com) is a chic and comfortable new hotel in the valley of Andrin, just outside Llanes. The 17 rooms are all suites, and cost from €90.

Palacio de Rubianes, Cereceda (00 34 985 707612; palacioderubianes.com), recently opened in a historic country house with magnificent views of the Sueve mountains and Picos de Europa. Doubles from €105.

• Find more information about the region at infoasturias.com

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Top 10 budget Birmingham eateries

The Taste of Birmingham food festival starts tomorrow, so we sent Tony Naylor to track down the city’s best value scoffs.

Share your Brum eating tips on our Word of Mouth blog

1. Urban Pie

How far would you walk for a good pie? It’s a pertinent question, because, while a visitor may struggle to find this place in the bewildering maze that is the Bullring Shopping Centre, its pies are certainly worth the hassle. Generous, handmade, all-butter-pastry creations, the Guardian’s steak and mushroom sampler was packed with good, chunky meat in a hearty gravy. You can get mash, beans or superb, fresh mushy peas on-the-side (all served in a cleverly designed box which folds flat, like a plate), to takeaway or eat at communal counters in the warm, woody store. Fresh, honest fast food and neat packaging to boot, this could catch on. Bargain hunters note: 5pm-8pm Mon-Fri, all pies are half-price.

• Pies £3.95. 124 The Bullring Shopping Centre, +44 (0)121 643 0040; urbanpie.co.uk

2. Great British Eatery

It looks very sharp and modern, but, in one crucial area, this new-wave chip shop is ultra traditional. In time honoured fashion, and in sharp contrast to those chip shops which cook in bulk and then leave their fish to sit around going limp, everything is cooked-to-order in beef dripping at very high temperatures. The effect is dramatic. The fish is first-rate – properly steamed within its crisp, golden batter casing – as are the dense, fluffy chips. Wash it all down with a Freedom lager (from £2.20) or a beer from local brewery, Holden’s.

• Meals from £2.50, cod and chips £6. 13 Broadway Plaza, Francis Road, +44 (0)121 456 5955; greatbritisheatery.co.uk

3. Opus

Good value doesn’t necessarily mean dirt cheap. For instance, the £17 two-course lunch menu at Michelin-starred Purnells (55 Cornwall Street, +44 (0)121 212 9799; purnellsrestaurant.com) is arguably Birmingham’s best bargain. Just across the road – this is the business district, hence this cluster of high-end restaurants – Opus has won much praise for its rigorous seasonal British cooking. At lunch, price-sensitive gourmets can join the suits, and enjoy one of the daily market specials, such as warm quail, crispy bacon and carrot risotto, or rabbit and wild mushroom broth.

• Specials from £8.50. 54 Cornwall Street, +44 (0)121 200 2323; opusrestaurant.co.uk

4.Handmade Burger Co

You’ll find an in-depth essay on each table, which explains the key tenets of the Handmade Burger Co’s philosophy. Beef comes from traceable, traditionally reared cows, all food is cooked fresh. The wisdom of all this is born out by their creditable burgers: thick, tasty chargrilled hunks, served on substantial sourdough buns with fresh salad, mayo, and an interesting raisin chutney.

• Burgers from £5.55. 14 The Water’s Edge, Brindleyplace, +44 (0)121 665 6542; handmadeburger.co.uk

5. Asha’s

This is a serious Indian restaurant, but don’t be put off by that 2009 Michelin guide sticker in the window, or the swish interior. Certainly at lunchtime (curry, rice, raita and soft drink, £5.95), you can still afford to eat here. The simple choice is between unspecified chicken, lamb or vegetable curries, but the quality is high. A sensitively spiced, tomato-based curry is packed with vegetables, and arrives with a veritable mound of perfectly cooked white rice, and a pot of zingy, thick sour cream.

• Evening mains from £10. Edmund House, 12-22 Newhall Street, +44 (0)121 200 2767; ashasuk.co.uk

6. Canalside Cafe

Going by its herby, homemade vegetable soup (£3.95), the food at this semi-veggie daytime cafe is serviceable, but it’s the place itself that’s inspirational. All clutter, character and mismatched furniture, this whitewashed former lock-keeper’s cottage is an idiosyncratic refuge from the chain hell that is nearby Broad Street. Sat outside, nursing a pint of Pardoe’s Entire (£2.80), watching the barges putter past, it feels like the place to be.

• Meals from £3.95. Canalside Cottage, 35 Worcester Bar, Gas Street Basin, off Gas Street.

7. Cafe Ikon

It’s part of the Ikon contemporary art gallery, but this cafe enjoys a strong reputation in its own right. The Good Food Guide, among others, has praised a Spanish menu that takes in a broad swathe of tapas and larger raciones dishes. However, the budget traveller may be better going for one of the toasted bocadillos – tortilla with tomato salsa perhaps; or Serrano ham with Manchego cheese.

• Bocadillos £4.45; main tapas from £2.25. 1 Oozells Square, Brindleyplace, +44 (0)121 248 3226; ikon-gallery.co.uk

8. The Warehouse Cafe

Yes, Allison Street looks drab and (light) industrial, but press on, and you’ll come across the Birmingham Friends of the Earth HQ, a prettily painted building that houses several “green” businesses, including this casual vegetarian restaurant. A bright, open-plan space, it’s popular with everyone from new mums to creative types from the nearby Custard Factory complex. Mains, like vegetable balti or goat’s cheese arancini with pea puree, sugar snaps and parmesan crisps, hover around the eight quid mark, but the Warehouse also does cheap, filling “light meals”. The falafel is recommended: delicately spiced with a good “nutty” texture, they’re served with decent tabbouleh, pitta bread, tahini and cumin-dressed carrots. Drink tap water: it’s free and green.

• Meals from £5.50. 54-57 Allison Street, +44 (0)121 633 0261; thewarehousecafe.com

9. The Lord Clifden

One of the Jewellery Quarter’s real gems, the Lord Clifden is best known for its collection of urban art, including pieces by Banksy, Blek and D*Face. However, there is much more to this contemporary boozer than stencils and paint. Its real ales (six in all, four guests) have won it CAMRA approval; its music events run the gamut from indie to jazz; and its beer garden – complete with table football, all-weather table tennis and bright pink post box – is one of the best in Brum. As for food, the brunch and “quickie” menus offer sandwiches and jacket spuds from £1.75, while the main menu features dishes of surprising sophistication. A salad of bacon and wood pigeon (£4.95) is fantastic. The sweet-tart flavours of the marmalade dressing are beautifully restrained, and the yielding, gamey pigeon is cooked to a precise, perfect dark ruby.

• The Lord Clifden, 34 Great Hampton Street, Hockley, +44 (0)121 523 7515; thelordclifden.com

10. The Balti Triangle

A cooking style, rather than a dish, balti, Birmingham’s best known culinary export, was created by Pakistani Kashmiri chefs in the Sparkbrook area of the city in the mid-1970s. Rather than cooking large batches of curry, en masse, using lots of ghee and pre-mixed curry pastes, balti chefs started to cook and serve their curries, individually, in thin, pressed-steel balti pans. Onions or tomatoes are cooked quickly over a high heat, with a little vegetable oil. Meat is then added, and, finally, fresh herbs and whole spices (cardamom, cassia bark, cloves etc.) to season the dish. A good balti-style curry should be flavourful rather than hot, and is traditionally served with naan bread, not rice.

There are over 50 restaurants in the Balti Triangle, but, among aficionados, two names crop up again and again. Adil (353-355 Ladypool Road, +44 (0)121 449 0335; adilbalti.co.uk) is well into its fourth decade, and claims to be the original Birmingham balti house; while relative newcomer, Al Frash (186 Ladypool Road, +44 (0)121 753 3120; alfrash.com) – a slick, minimalist space compared to many restaurants in the Triangle – is renowned for its vibrant, authentic balti cooking. Main dishes from around £5 at both.

• Share your Brum eating tips on our Word of Mouth blog

• The Taste of Birmingham festival, 9-12 July, Cannon Hill Park. See taste.visitbirmingham.com for details. Standard tickets cost £10

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Food writing on the hoof

What do you look for in food and travel writing, and which books demonstrate it best?

I imagine that for many of us WoM-ers, an essential consideration when planning a holiday is the gastronomic experiences it may provide. When I go away my choice of destination is informed by exhaustive reading and I arrive eager to sample the local cuisine via markets, producers, and restaurants. I may be on holiday, but my taste buds will be hard at work experiencing as many new flavours and dishes as possible.

The food writing that I enjoy the most transports the reader from the humdrum to somewhere altogether more exciting – it also enhances my experience if I’m lucky enough to go there for real. The books I read if I do actually visit fall into two broad categories – those which have already whetted my appetite, and those I seek out while I’m there.

So it stands to reason that my holiday preparations consist of lots of browsing of bookshelves and little else. Luggage allowances being what they are, each book I take has to fulfil several criteria.

Primarily, they need to make me hungry. I want information, so the writer has to be knowledgeable and authoritative. The atmosphere of the place should jump off every page through personal anecdote but also through the history and culture of the food and dishes described. I want to be drawn into the author’s gastronomic journey as this will hopefully enable me to eat much more like a local when I arrive (of course, I will try to talk to as many local people as possible too, but a little extra knowledge is no bad thing and besides, I am often hampered by my atrocious lack of languages). I want poetry: a market description should make me greedy to experience the scents and the vibrancy of colours for myself. The inclusion of recipes is a bonus, especially if I’m self catering – always my preference as it can be so frustrating seeing so much wonderful food on offer but with no way to cook it.

One of the best examples I can give which does all of the above in spades is the Guardian – and Word of Mouth’s – very own Matthew Fort’s Eating Up Italy in which, despite his failing to pass his test in the UK for “failing to maintain sufficient forward momentum”, sees Matthew take an epic road trip on a Vespa from the south to the north of Italy. The pages groan with glorious descriptions of the food he eats along the way, and his numerous encounters provide endless scope for wit and insights into the traditions of Italian cuisine.

A recent discovery also fits the bill perfectly – I had already come across Paul Richardson via Indulgence: One Man’s Selfless Search for the Best Chocolate in the World which is a wonderful book, particularly if you are anywhere tropical. His A Late Dinner: Discovering the Food of Spain is a disparate and delicious read – on one page he is laughing with childish delight at the theatricality of a 30 course extravaganza at El Bulli, on the next he’s elbow deep in blood, taking part in a pig slaughter. It doesn’t matter to me that I’m unlikely to experience either – my own culinary adventures will still be enhanced by learning about modern Spanish gastronomy on the one hand and going right back to basics by gaining an understanding of the traditional relationship with the pig on the other.

I also have a fondness for obsessive and eccentric histories of single ingredients, dramatic voyages of discovery with food at the centre. Giles Milton’s Nathaniel’s Nutmeg is one such epic. The food memoir offers more of the same from a more personal view, especially if you steer clear of the saccharine A Year in Provence variety. Finally, even fiction has a part to play, although a sense of place and its atmosphere is probably more important than the food. Nevertheless there is still plenty of scope – have you ever read Joanne Harris in France, or Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s series about bon vivant detective Pepe Carvalho in Spain or Argentina?

Travelling also provides an opportunity to add to the food book collection. On one hand are the restaurant cookery books – some with perfectly usable recipes, and some, such as Anne-Sophie Pic’s book (Hotel Pic, Valence), with daunting and unattainable dishes, but are exquisite souvenir of unforgettable meals nonetheless. At the other end of the scale are the cheap books often put together by local women’s groups for charity. I have a particular soft spot for these and own many, mainly from the US and Caribbean, like a pair I picked up in in San Antonio, one was devoted to beans, the other to chillies – perfect! Such simple, practical books give you a real sense of the everyday cooking of a region – the Caribbean ones, for example, have proper recipes for mannish water, pudding ‘n souse (black pudding with pig’s head meat pickled in lime juice), and cow heel soup.

So, when contemplating a holiday, what sort of food writers do you turn to for inspiration and guidance? Judging by the cries for help coming from our editor Susan Smillie in the past week, I’m thinking she is firmly in my camp. Suse is abandoning ship to travel round France, Italy and Spain for six weeks in a camper van. She will, of course, be tasting, sampling, imbibing and no doubt gorging herself throughout, so if anyone has any book recommendations to help her on her way, please shout. Although, please, don’t limit your recommendations to Europe – I at least am always hungry for more.

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High on the hog in the Languedoc

It’s a new holiday village but the architecture is traditional, as are the activities. Ian Belcher tries winemaking, trout tickling – and a spot of boar hunting

Club Med, eat your heart out. Mark Warner, look away now. I’ve seen the future of holiday villages and it involves taking pot shots at wild boar, treading Corbières grapes, and – if you’re feeling reckless – tickling speckled trout. Wind surfing and sailing lessons? They’re just so last season, chéri.

Les Jardins de Saint Benoît, tucked into the widescreen panoramic drama of the French Languedoc, is aiming to rewrite the holiday village rulebook. Harnessing the passion, traditions and skill of local Occitane winegrowers and artisans, it offers a practical, herb-infused taste of Mediterranean rural life – a natural high-de-hi.

But the opening revelation comes well before you snaffle a first truffle: Les Jardins has interpreted “village” quite literally – it bulges out from the (real) medieval Saint-Laurent de la Cabrerisse like an ochre hernia. It opened last month, several centuries after its host, but old and new blur into a seamless splatter of terracotta tiles and limestone walls.

It’s a deliberate deception. Three years’ construction, £55m and 15 rewrites of the heritage master plan have captured the details and textures of original village buildings, albeit with modern tweaks such as pergola-shaded gardens. With its grid of stone-paved, car-free streets lined with Victorian copper lamps, it would bring a rosy flush to the Prince of Wales’s cheek. The Gallic Poundbury’s 171 self-catering houses, kissing a stonking restaurant, spa and swimming pool, have state-of-the-art kitchens and bathrooms but display a style dubbed chic rustique: all earth tones, artfully distressed southern French furniture and pastel shutters.

Occupying the site of a ruined 12th-century abbey, Les Jardins is laced with freshly planted olive trees, lavender bushes and roses. If, understandably, it feels rather new, there’s also an original maze of medieval walled gardens, shared with the villagers. These drip with fruit, vegetables and herbs, bordered by well-established organic vineyards, which lead down to the Nielle river.

But the unique heritage architecture is just a soupçon of its integration with Languedoc life. There’s also employment – nearly all the staff live nearby – and a groundbreaking array of guest activities that involve the area’s farmers, chefs and artisans, from cheese makers to beekeepers. “We’re building a bridge between locals and tourists,” says Miguel Espada, president of Garrigae, the resort operator behind Les Jardins. “At Club Med or Mark Warner everyone stays within the complex, but we’re completely open to the community. We want guests to get back to nature, to sample the Mediterranean joie de vivre, to experience totally new things.”

You can say that again, Miguel: it’s the first time sanglier (wild boar) hunting has appeared on my holiday itinerary. But just hours after arriving, I’m crossing Garrigae’s metaphorical bridge with two locals: Daniel Esparza, Saint-Laurent’s former mayor, and his beefy son, Ludo, who are planning to bag a sanglier they spotted scoffing their grapes.

We climb through pine forests, passing an outcrop where witches once danced on the summer solstice, and the promised joie de vivre arrives in the shape of food. Astounding food. Food eaten alfresco yards from the hilltop garden where it was grown: mushrooms with wine and rosemary, lamb shank with creamy aubergine, and cheek-tingling lemon pie. Under dappled sunlight, we wash the meal down with marquisette – white wine with lemon – and bottles of rosé “from those vines over there”. It’s like a Magners commercial only with better booze.

As I gorge, my hosts talk about the dangerous, sly wild boar. Languedoc’s boar population has exploded as new highways have blocked their old foraging routes. The critters have stayed put, gorging on farmers’ crops and producing super-sized litters. “They eat everything,” exclaims Esparza. “Grapes, potatoes, small rabbits. They are pigs.” Which is accurate, if a little harsh.

“It’s not about killing,” he stresses. “It’s about eating. We’re respecting the natural balance of nature. We don’t give boys PlayStations here; we give them guns. I’ve passed on my knowledge of nature to Ludo since he was young.”

Ludo – who says he sometimes smears himself with boar shit to creep close to his prey – seems a good man to hide behind. At midnight, after a final “savage cherry” liqueur that renders accurate shooting impossible, I climb into his battered van. Ludo makes a strangling noise, hinting at the animal’s fate, asks if I’m “ready for adventure”, and then, bar the odd grunt, doesn’t speak for two hours. I’m boar hunting with Obelix.

The former mayor is in another car, leaning out the window. His loaded shotgun rests on the wing mirror – something Boris Johnson hasn’t tried in Chiswick. Yet. We rip across country, up and down rutted tracks, occasionally zipping past village cafés where regulars sit outside sipping late-night digestifs. Grass and vines tower above the van. Every so often Ludo screeches to a stop, listens intently for evidence of wild boar mainlining grapes, grunts, and accelerates. We perform a high-speed swerve to chase a rabbit. If we hit something, death will be sudden and brutal – and the boar may be a little sore as well.

Yesterday Daniel spotted 23 sangliers, but tonight they have stage fright. Or a crystal ball. After two hours we’re still boar-less. It’s an intoxicating rush, but I have rising indigestion and falling bloodlust. We are packed off home, awaiting a dawn call should they spot one.

Late next morning I’m staring straight into the eyes of a dead sanglier. His whiskers drip pathos, his tusks retribution. Don’t fret. No wildlife was harmed in the making of this article. He was shot years ago by vigneron Jean-Pierre Mazard, and his stuffed head now decorates an atmospheric beamed room at Jean-Pierre’s winery, alongside a stuffed owl and some sepia photographs.

I am here to blend Chateau Belcher 2009. Forget straightforward wine-tasting; this is an advanced vino-experience. “It’s a science,” says Jean-Pierre, “a complex art.”

Oenotourism will be central to Les Jardins. Swaddled by the legendary Corbières wine region, the resort aims to immerse guests in its production. You can even lease a strip of vines and, helped by local farmers, make multiple visits to tend and harvest your grapes, before bottling a bespoke mini vintage.

Most of the activities are highly seasonal – November means picking and pressing olives; January is for hunting truffles – but I’m here in a quiet spell. So Jean-Pierre and wine technician Matthieu Dubernet show me how to mix my own rocket fuel from three classic Languedoc grapes harvested last year: Syrah, Grenache and Carignan. Individually, they’re unbalanced mono-wines, but together they make sweet music.

We start by sampling an acclaimed blend: Jean-Pierre’s 2004 Cuvée Annie, with its scent of cherries, olives and menthol. It’s done in a friendly, unintimidating atmosphere. You don’t have to be an expert, just find a blend you like.

We move on to the mono wines. Carignan is a bit “animaux” and Grenache is “sweeter, bigger, smoother”. But I can’t make a single intelligent observation on Syrah. “Turkish delight?” I hazard. Jean-Pierre, the 12th generation of Mazard winemakers, diplomatically raises the tone, explaining that Syrah is complex, with hints of garrigues, thyme, rosemary and blackcurrant.

Just like Turkish delight. Thank you.

Things then turn scientific, with glass measuring jars and a calculator. It’s seriously absorbing. Minor blend changes carry major clout. Cuvée Annie is 65% Syrah and 35% Carignan and Grenache. But reduce the Syrah, up the Grenache and it becomes “fruity, easy-drinking”.

It’s like playing with a gourmet chemistry kit. We reintroduce a little Syrah, apparently making it more “terroir”, but my first solo tweak turns this to “absolute pants” – my verdict, not Jean-Pierre’s – with astringent tannins. After two more changes, I’ve created Chateau Belcher: 15% Carignan, 30% Grenache, 55% Syrah. It’s declared “very drinkable” but, frankly, it’s basic polyester compared with the velvety Serres-Mazard 2004 I depart with.

Along with other activities – Les Jardins plans to start a weekly market – winemaking is part of Garrigae’s drive to champion local produce. “We want to be a locomotive for the region,” says Espada. “Local producers are passionate, but they know virtually nothing about marketing.”

This is personal. The charismatic Espada, who made his fortune through an internet start-up, is committed to promoting his home region. “I grew up 15km from here and feel a real social responsibility,” he says. “If this wasn’t good, my family would kill me.”

Kids’ activities reflect his Languedoc childhood, whether it’s pottering on the resort farm or harvesting wild figs to make jam. I sample an option you won’t find in Balham: trout tickling. It sounds like an MP’s expenses claim, and is suitably slimy. First we feel under a flat rock in the Nielle, where fish doze in the shallows. Then we sedate them by caressing their bellies, before attempting a lightning grab.

It’s glorious Enid Blyton-esque fun, but it would be a shame to leave surrounding Languedoc unexplored. I drive through a vast landscape marked by vineyards, hamlets and vertiginous switchback roads en route to the giddyingly high Cathar stronghold of Quéribus – a perfect goal for cycling masochists.

Back at Les Jardins I’m paralysed by heat and the range of activities. Perhaps I need a grapeseed oil and herb massage among the vines? Or maybe something more mainstream, like tennis? I’m contemplating whether I’m too old for the kids’ club – Circus Training with Denis la Rue followed by Smell Lotto sounds sensational – when I meet Mark and Jenny from north Lincolnshire. They stumbled across Les Jardins on the web, caught a Ryanair flight to Carcassonne, and appear happily bemused. “I never thought I’d be grouting a mosaic on my holidays,” says Jenny. “It’s quirky, but also very upmarket. ‘Holiday Village’ doesn’t do it justice – it’s far more stylish shabby-chic than most coastal resorts.”

Strangely, I also have no experience of holiday mosaic grouting. It’s tempting, but I plump for something perhaps equally bizarre: goat herding. I’m visiting Guillaume Portal, a laconic, roll-up smoking producer of award-winning cheeses. But you, or more likely your children, can help lead the goats out from the steep pastures for milking – the fuel for Guillaume’s fabulous fromage.

It’s a schizophrenic world. One minute I’m in the goat shed, with more flies than the Aussie outback, the next I’m wearing a plastic coat and shoe covers, standing in a startlingly hygienic production plant, learning about intestinal enzymes. It is, however, safe to say few people return from holiday knowing how to stimulate a mushroom crust on a three-kilogramme goat’s cheese.

Later I’m using the stuff to make Languedoc tapas. Dany from Saint-Laurent demonstrates, while her winemaker son provides translation, tasty vino and a heartfelt testimony to Les Jardins. “It has the spirit of our village,” Arnaud says. “It’s good for my generation’s future.”

That will be music to Espada’s ears. Les Jardins, Garrigae’s third opening, has attracted large regional government subsidies, and massive interest from the French press. “We really believe we’re pioneering a unique model of sustainable tourism,” he says. “This will become the norm in a few years. Who knows, maybe one day we’ll end up buying all those traditional holiday villages.”

Essentials

A one-bedroom house (sleeping two) at Les Jardins de Saint Benoît (0871 2187066; garrigaeresorts.com) costs from £145 a night (seven-night stays from £716). Larger houses available. Activities cost extra: cheesemaking and goatherding €26, trout tickling €43, wine blending €34, and a full-scale boar hunt €128. Rail Europe (0844 8484070; raileurope.co.uk) has returns to Narbonne from £105. Avis (08445 818181; avis.co.uk) offers seven days’ car hire from £242.

More ways to enjoy the best of rural France

Walking in Corcsica

There’s no better way to experience Corsica than on foot. Headwater (01606 720199; headwater.com) offers an eight-day “Contrasts of Corsica” independent walking holiday, which starts in Piana and takes in stunning coastal paths, lemon groves, pine-clad forests and mountain streams. Two nights are spent in Corte, the historic old capital in the mountainous heart of the island, famous for its spectacular citadel, which is perched precariously on a large craggy outcrop.

• From £869 in August, including five hotels, most meals, route notes and luggage transfers. Fly from Gatwick to Ajaccio in Corsica with Easyjet (easyjet.com).

Lavender Festival in Montelimar

From next Saturday, the town of Montélimar in the Rhône-Alpes region is holding its annual two-day lavender festival (montelimar-tourisme.com). There’ll be flower arranging, traditional lavender distilling, flower-decorated horse-drawn carriages and the chance to stock up on lavender byproducts, such as honey and candles.

• Fly Gatwick-Marseille with Easyjet (easyjet.com) and hire a car through Auto Europe (auto-europe.co.uk) for the 170km drive to Montélimar. For places to stay visit montelimar-tourisme.com.

A chalet in the Alps

Summer is a great time to visit an Alpine ski resort: the crowds have gone and the pistes are transformed into glorious green hills. Just France (020 8780 4463; justfrance.co.uk) offers chalet holidays throughout the French Alps. The Chalet Chavannes, just above the resort of Les Gets, sleeps six and has an open garden with a stream running through it and a large balcony with a sauna and relaxation area. Visit the adventure park and lake just 15 minutes’ walk away, and Lake Geneva and the spa towns of Evian and Thonon-les-Bains are a short drive away.

• From £784 for a seven-night stay for six people in July/August, including return ferry crossing from Dover to Calais.

Wine & canal cruise in the Loire Valley

Sample your way through the Loire Valley on Le Boat’s Wine Lovers’ Cruise (0844 463 3577; leboat.co.uk). The round-trip cruise departs from Chatillon-sur-Loire and takes in Nevers and Sancerre, where you can learn all about the region’s vineyards at the Maison des Sancerre, a 15th-century house dedicated to the art of wine-making.

• A seven-night tour for up to eight people in August costs from £2,255. Fuel costs extra. Fly to Paris with Easyjet (as before), then take the train (one-and-a-half hours) to Chatillon-sur-Loire.

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