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Thursday 26 January 2012

A Grand Dining Experience at Victoria Station

Railway stations always used to be places of grandeur. The St Pancras hotel has done a lot to bring back those good old days, but now London has the Grand Imperial. Walking through an unassuming door from Victoria station into the high ceilinged interior of this aptly restaurant is a magical, Narnia like experience.

The Grand Imperial has recently won two rosettes and was finalist in Tsingtao Legacy of Taste awards for Best UK Chinese restaurant, so I knew the food was likely to be excellent. What I hadn’t expected was the sheer opulence of the place and the hushed atmosphere that hit me like a blast of cold air after the frenetic activity of the station.
We arrive for a weekday supper, but the Grand Imperial offers a whole range of eating and drinking possibilities suitable for almost any time of the week. My dining companion, J, had visited just a couple of days before for an afternoon tea with colleagues. As well as the a la carte menu, dim sum is on offer seven days a week, with an express weekday dim sum menu (just £20 for two) perfect for a light lunch while waiting for a train.

We are seated underneath a huge, dripping chandelier at a black lacquered table covered with a satin tablecloth. The room is dotted with hulking brown marbled pillars, decorative orchids and bonsai trees, with original artwork and calligraphy hanging on the walls.
The Grand Imperial is Chef Rand Cheung’s first venture in London and he offers a welcome contemporary take on classic dishes without trying too hard. The pared down menu of Hong Kong Cantonese cuisine is easy to order from and the wine list is easy to negotiate too, with white wines, for example, helpfully divided into ‘aromatic’, ‘crisp’ or ‘savoury’, although I imagine this could annoy a wine connoisseur.

J and I shared a number of superb dishes. Marinated baby octopus in sesame peanut sauce was a delightful combination prettily served with orange and a whole raspberry in the middle. The duck salad melted suitably in the mouth and came with an innovative sprinkling of pomegranate alongside sticks of cucumber and shredded cabbage. Sautéed chicken with sweet basil, spring onion and chilli was more classic, but was no less perfect in its balance of flavours, and the sweet, melting baked black cod with pepper honey sauce a definite highlight.

It was altogether a soothing experience, aided partly by the spaciously spaced tables – a real rarity in London restaurants, the calming interior with Feng-shui design and our sweet waiter, Ming. ‘People may think its pricey for a Chinese at a railway station’ J commented, ‘but this is no ordinary Chinese.’

We finished with a buttery milk oolong and delicately flavoured San Hao Pu-Er tea from the impressive tea menu. It was only when I got home (quickly, as we were already at the station) that I kicked myself. I had forgotten to sample one of the raved about boba cocktails, a version of bubble tea that pop in your mouth. I had my eye on a LingLing, a sake, lychee and egg white created in honour of the restaurant’s dim sum chef. I would just have to go back.
101 Buckingham Palace Road

London
SW1W 0SJ
T: 020 7821 8898
www.grandimperiallondon.com

Sunday 22 January 2012

All Senses and The Healing Power of Ancient Greece

‘In life you have five senses. In your dreams you have a hundred. Freedom knows no boundaries,’ the delightful yoga teacher tells us. The quote is from Kambanelis, the Greek author and playwright and the inspiration for the name of the exquisite boutique hotel, Ekies All Senses.

Ekies aims to create a seamless and harmonious mix of ancient Greek traditions and a modern approach to health and wellbeing that engages all senses: and it lives up to this billing. As I swing in the hammock above the waters, the calm is palpable. The only sounds are the gentle lap of waves against the shore and the barely audible hum of a motor boat in the distance.

The beach isn’t actually private – it’s not possible in Greek law – but might as well be. From the sands, I contemplate the simple, but beautiful design of the hotel – the creation of three different architects and fusing natural wood with local Greek grey marble. Terraces and balconies of each of the unique rooms overlook either the sea, garden or forest; the result is a contemporary building that is perfectly integrated with its environment.The modern Greek fusion menu is another example of the hotel’s balanced approach. I love the fact that you can have ‘lunch’ at any time of day, and even anywhere in the hotel. The reasonably priced organic offerings (salads and appetisers hover around 9, with mains priced at a very reasonable 10 to 12) include delights such as watermelon and feta cheese and tabouleh salad and prawn with Arabian bread.

The delectable, natural, and of course Greek, Apivita product range graces the hotel bathrooms, as well as the Ekies spa, where you can choose from a range of innovative treatments, many drawing on Mediterranean traditions. My ‘basic elements of nature’ treatment involves a series of revitalising herbal inhalations followed by a sublime facial massage. My therapist tells me they try to take their visitors back to ancient Greece and the teachings of Hippocrates, who identified the need for balance within the four elements of nature – air, water, fire and earth.

In the spacious and serene reception room, I run into Petros, the kindly manager of Ekies. ‘Please have a sour cherry juice’, he entreats me gently, explaining that the drink is a traditional welcome in Greek homes. Beneath our feet is a handmade wool carpet that came from the owner’s own house. An enormous day bed made of natural coconut fibre and a giant dining table are both deliberately big enough for a large extended family, and Ekies is very keen that you feel part of theirs.

In fact there are daybeds everywhere – in the rooms, on the terraces, on the beach and even in the restaurant; they invite, almost command, day long lounging. But I do manage to rouse myself to make the recommended, and memorable boat trip to the nearby uninhabited islands. On a lovely little vessel with room for just four people, we visit a trio of aptly named locations: the deserted White Beach, the Blue Lagoon where the clear turquoise waters reveal the seabed far below, and a bay known as ‘The Hidden’, which was once a smugglers’ hideaway.

Our skipper is fond of quoting Pirates of the Caribbean but despite the regular calls of ‘Ship ahoy’ we only see one other boat all day. Lunch is not the simple picnic I was expecting but a linen table cloth and silver cutlery affair, with tender kebabs, fresh Greek salad, bottles of wine, and even meatballs hand made by the boatman’s wife. We sail past steep jagged cliffs that slide into the bay, dense pine forests and a lonely olive worker’s hut. The olives are harvested in October and November, dovetailing conveniently with the tourist season that drops off suddenly at the end of September to begin again in April.

Every morning and evening I and a small group of fellow guests practice yoga on the beach, in the garden, or in a dedicated room – which one German guest declares to be ‘magic’. The ensuing meditation is so powerful that at least one of us falls into a deep sleep during the class. Based on the Yoga Nidra, they incorporate visualisations during which we are led up to a white temple on a hill where we lie down and relax, or taken into ‘the cave that is our mind’, or imagine we were seeds lying in the warm earth buried by the soil.

The yoga course is excellent value at 299 for two people, including half board, a 30-minute massage and three yoga sessions. If you would prefer more flexibility, it is possible to book a room (my loft luxury suite costs from just 95) and join a (pre-booked) class at a rate of 20.

Ekies All Senses

Sithonia, Halkidiki,
 Vourvourou, 630 78

T: +30 23750 91000

F: +30 23750 91416

E: info@ekies.gr


Winter Office:

T: +30 2310 968 778

F: +30 2310 968 771

E: reservation@ekies.gr

www.ekies.gr

Monday 16 January 2012

Vila Vita Parc

I could have kissed Jolita, the guest relations director at Vila Vita Parc – in fact I did. The hotel – although that really doesn’t do it justice – has so much to offer that I really didn't know what to choose, but Jolita advised me with real patience and care.

‘Luxury’ doesn't fully describe the heavenly landscape of whitewashed buildings hidden among palm trees and pampas that seem to sprout out of the pristine lawns, gleaming cobbles and clear water fountains. The enormous resort – that is actually five resorts designed like individual villages – has a Disney like quality, where you feel as if someone has been shining the leaves just for you. Ducks and swans glide contentedly over the cool turquoise pools crossed by a humpback bridge, where as if to complete the scene, a wedding couple – an African prince and princess who have just been married in the grounds – appear.

Vila Vita Parc attracts its fair share of the great and the good. As I was checking in Jacques Chirac was just checking out. This superbly run German hotel sees a staggering 40% repeat customers thanks to the setting, but also the service. ‘We have seven restaurants here (one of them is Michelin starred) so you don't ever have to leave the hotel. In fact, most people don't,’ Jolita tells me. It was good advice.

In the spa, I indulge in a Vital Maritim – a unique treatment described as a ‘maritime journey through the Algarve’. After an invigorating exfoliation with sea and salt algae, I am treated to a bath with marine micro alga, water lily extract and essential oils, which feels like being in a soothing blue lagoon. This is followed by a sleep inducing massage using fragrant marine algae flowers and relaxing lavender.

I dine on flavoursome prawns in garlic and piri piri and fresh codfish at the onsite Adega Portuguese restaurant and the magic continued in the aptly named Alladin bar. Although tempted to visit Vila Vita Parc’s impressive wine estate, Herdade dos Grous for an organic alfresco lunch washed down with award-winning wines surrounded by olive groves and vineyards but decide to stay put. I suggest you visit Vila Vita Parc; just don't leave.

Vila Vita Parc

Rua Anneliese Pohl, Alporchinhos

P-8400 - 450 Porches . Telephone: + 351 / 282 / 31 01 00

http://vilavitaparc.com

The Valley of the Olives: An Accommodating and Impressive Resort in the Algarve

Vale d’Oliveiras Quinta Resort & Spa

This upmarket, pristine resort is set within beautifully maintained landscaped gardens designed to preserve the indigenous plants, with manicured lawns and hedges. The mostly single story buildings include 22 rooms, 2 suites and 80 apartment-style ‘townhouses’ each with one or two rooms.

The staff – most of whom are local – are incredibly sweet natured and can't seem to do enough for me. On check in, the man behind the desk tells me his favourite ice cream parlour in the nearby fishing village of Carvoeiro. The hotel conveniently runs a shuttle here as well as to the pretty beaches of Praia dos Ceneiros, Praia Grande and Ferrgudo, but Nelson, the hotel driver offers to take me there himself.
He points out a chic little Ibizan style bar next to some impressive coastal caves before arriving at the beautiful little horseshoe of a bay with fine sand and a huddle of brightly painted fishing boats. Carvoeiro is a friendly spot with a local feel, although the shops and eateries – souvenir shops, ice cream outlets and even a Japanese restaurant – do cater to tourists.

The names of the various rooms ‘Valley of the Olives’ resort are each named after different species and are an education in olives. I am in ‘Manzanilla’ which is grown in Portugal as well as Spain and California, ‘Kalamata’ takes its name from the almond shaped variety, ‘Ponentine’ is a dark purple variety, ‘Serecena’ is Sicilian and ‘Atalanti’ an olive particular to Greece.

The excellent Olive Tree restaurant using ingredients from its own local quinta (farm) has an enticing menu featuring appealing dishes such as fish soup and carpaccio of scallops from the Algarve coast. The hotel offers cookery classes using local products to create regional dishes and a garden is currently being created so guests can pick their own food to cook in the self-catering accommodation – an imaginative and delightful idea.
Vale d’Oliveiras Quinta Resort & Spa boasts some extraordinary facilities. As well as access to a golf course on its doorstep, there is a superb spa set in a Zen Japanese garden where I was well looked after and had an excellent back massage using local products. Bikes are available to guests to take an appealing tour to the small village of Ferragugo and nearby lighthouse of Farol de Alfanzina, taking about an hour an a half, including three or four stops, with canoeing and even pottery painting courses on offer.
And then there is the gym.

During my total body conditioning session with the health club manager, Sérgio Tomás tells me that classes can be tailor made to suit guests’ requirements, whether it is to lose weight, get rid of cellulite or to tone muscles. My hour-long work out was thorough yet relaxed, and Sérgio was happy to let it run over the allotted slot. ‘We don't think of the time here’ he said, smiling, summing up the accommodating attitude at this impressive resort.

Barranco Fundo - Apartado 79
8401-904 Carvoeiro - Algarve
Portugal
tel. + 351 282 380 560
www.valedoliveirasresort.com

Sunday 15 January 2012

A New Year to Celebrate - Chinese Style

As London and much of the western world shakes off its collective New Year hangover, there is an altogether more exciting, colourful, and even spiritual celebration to look forward to.

Spectacular lion and dragon dances, giant puppets, leaping acrobats and ear-splitting firecrackers kick off the biggest Chinese New Year celebrations in the world outside Asia. Chinese New Year actually falls on 23 January in 2012, but a full day of festivities in central London on 29 January will see the 60th year that they have taken place in the UK.

Enthralling lion dances take place throughout the streets around Trafalgar Square accompanied by loud drums and cymbals that are believed to ward off bad luck. They are just part of a full programme of free events including a parade and musical and cultural performances. Visitors can graze at food stalls in the streets surrounding Leicester Square, slowly making their way to Chinatown for impromptu street parties and more eating and dancing.

Festivities continuing throughout February will welcome in the Year of the Dragon. In Chinese astrology, this special sign (the only one representing a mythical creature) signifies larger than life happenings and spectacular successes for the coming year. With the Olympics and the Diamond Jubilee and a host of spin off events taking place throughout the city this year, 2012 certainly looks set to be an auspicious year for London.

image © sheng-fa lin

Celebrations will be taking place across London, with Chinese restaurants offering special menus and the National Maritime Museum hosting a full programme of family activities, with a procession, workshop, performances and theatre on 18 February to usher in the Chinese New Year from a historical perspective.

The British Film Institute will mark Chinese New Year by putting on a quartet of films throughout February to offer a fascinating insight into the cultural history of China. Chosen to coincide with the start of Chinese New Year, the month-long film season will launch with a biopic of the legendary grandfather of Chinese Philosophy, Confucius on 4 February.

The £10-million blockbuster is one of a handful to have been backed by the Chinese government and the most expensive Chinese movie ever made. It’s screening will be followed by A Simple Life, an emotional account of the poignant theme of growing old, that swept the board at China’s version of the Oscars andUnseen China, a rarely shown documentary that sensitively examines the complexities of Chinese contemporary life. The BFI programme culminates in screening of the slightly more left field Woman Basketball PLayer No. 5. Dating back to 1957 and London’s Chinatown’s first flush of youth, when it caused a huge stir, the film documents the heartbreaking account of a coach who successfully inspires Shanghai’s female basketball team.

Shanghai Blues offers dancing and feasting on the night of 23rd January, with Rich Mix, one of London’s most exciting cultural venues, putting on a unique – and free – combination of performances, workshops and events as well as food stalls.

While the public New Year’s commemoration lasts for one day, traditional celebrations last as many as 15 days. During this time, with echoes of Hogmanay, the Chinese clean their houses and decorate them with red scrolls to banish bad luck. They may also get a new haircut and buy some new clothes. Food typically comprises of dumplings and vegetarian fare, with gifts of envelopes containing ‘good luck’ paper money.

A quarter of million people from around the world will join in the Chinese New Year celebrations in London this year. That is as many as the number that will visit London Eye on the Southbank and who witnessed the firework displays in the capital during the dog days of 2011. Millions more watch these events on television screens around the world.

London’s New Year’s Eve fireworks heralded the beginning of an exciting year for London. The Mayor has put his name to a full city wide programme of free events that will take place in the build up to the Olympic games. Look out for highlights such as SECRETS showcasing the city’s hidden locations, SHOWTIME, an outdoor arts festival. Full details and news will be announced throughout 2012 on a new website that was launched on 31 December www.molpresents.com

Sixty years ago Elizabeth II became Queen of the United Kingdom, the start of a reign that continues today, Agatha Christie’s Mousetrap opened in London, now the longest running stage show in the world, and a deadly fog engulfed London and the word smog was invented.

Following hot on the heels of the Chinese New Year celebrations is Maslenitsa, the Russian Sun Festival on 26 February, a free event in Trafalgar Square. It is just the second time this unique celebration of the end of the chill of winter and the beginning of the warm start of spring will take place in London. The world has a bright future of events to look forward to in London over the coming months and ‘A summer like no other’ as it is being billed.


A little bit of history

We may all know that London’s Chinatown has been a cornerstone of city life since the 1950s, but who knew that the colourful quarter was originally in the East End? Chinese sailors first landed in the Docklands during the Napoleonic Wars (1803–1815) and a hundred years later a small Chinese community had developed around Limehouse.

The Blitz and the near decimation of the British shipping industry meant it was almost impossible for the Chinese to find work on the ships. But one happy result of the war meant that British soldiers had developed a new found love of Chinese food, and Chinatown’s restaurants were born in an area once known for its cheap rent and exciting nightlife.

Monday 9 January 2012

Jane Egginton Finds Love in Chestnut Country

A place where fast-flowing rivers have carved scenic gorges from dramatic escarpments, the Ardèche in the south east of France has attracted white water rafters, hikers and campers from throughout Europe since the 70s. The French have long had a long love affair with this rugged and scenic region, but with no motorways, no trains and no airports of its own, this little corner of rural France remains a mystery to most of us.
I was keen to find out more: my starter for ten was that half of all French chestnuts originate in the Ardèche, so while I expected a nut-centric trip, I was still surprised to find a society that retains an-old fashioned respect for nature’s bounty and has built on it to create a heart warming community spirit.

My trip was timed to coincide with the series of castagnades (local chestnut festivals) that take place every autumn across the Ardèche. Each castagnade has its own unique atmosphere and activities, but central to all is the opportunity for the dispersed rural residents to come together in the nearest town or village. Pop-up street markets are filled with local producers and artisans, renewing old acquaintances with customers and fellow producers, and the celebrations encompass eating, drinking, dancing and socialising that wouldn’t look out of place during Hogmanay in Scotland.

Immediately to the east of the little department of Ardèche is the fertile Rhône valley, while its western flank is dominated by the craggy limestone and granite mountains of the Massif Central. To the south is the perennially popular region of Provence, well known to international visitors. I arrived in Nîmes, and saying goodbye to most of my fellow Brits heading for Provence, I made my way north along the Rhône to Privas, the ‘capital’ of the Ardèche.

In Privas, the production and subsequent devouring of a giant chestnut roast (France’s biggest I’m told) is the focus of the annual festivities. It’s very much a community event; 900 kilos of chestnuts are collected from local producers then distributed to volunteer bakers for a preliminary slow roasting in their bread ovens. In the tree-lined town square the impressive open-air chestnut roaster takes pride of place, five metres long and with three roaring fires below it. When the chestnuts arrive from the bakers, it is to the delight of the assembled 1,000 strong crowd, kept just far enough back from the intense heat. The nuts are piled high onto the roaster for a final al-fresco blast from the fire, before cones of steaming chestnuts and cups of red wine are liberally distributed to all present. A forty-strong bass band – in traditional dress of navy smocks, red neckchiefs and black felt hats – strikes up a rousing tune, while on the site of the old cattle market, the results of a chestnut cooking competition are announced.

As I take it all in from the steps of the town hall, Betty Berthon of the local council gives me her enthusiastic take on the festival: ‘Chestnuts really are a deep part of our local culture, and this is a chance for all generations to come together. It’s one of the most important events in Privas. Everyone in the town from the very oldest to the very youngest joins in le marquage (the cutting of the chestnut).’ Listening in is rosy-cheeked campsite owner Nathalie Ray, her eyes lighting up as she adds: ‘Privas lives for this weekend. It’s great fun. It's the beginning of the winter but it’s still sunny and we are celebrating outside. If you think about the chestnut it is about gathering around the fireplace, sharing stories, getting warm, all the community sharing their stories as we share the chestnuts.’

Half an hour’s drive from Privas takes me almost to the geographical centre of the Ardèche – a small town called Aubenas where the 100-year-old Sabaton factory could be called Chestnut Central. It buys thousands of tonnes of raw chestnuts from cooperatives throughout the region, and packages them up for supply to confectioners, pastry cooks, chocolate makers and restaurants throughout France, not to mention exports to 30 countries across the world, among which, surprisingly, Japan is the biggest buyer.
As well as swallowing up a fair proportion of the Ardèche’s output, factory director Christophe Sabaton (the third generation in this family-run business) imports raw chestnuts from Spain and Italy whenever bad weather hits the local harvest. Sabaton is, he explains, an industrial scale chestnut producer, but one that relies on traditional methods.

In the Sabaton shop, a box of elegantly wrapped marron glacés (glazed chestnuts) gleams like a chest full of jewels. At first, I balk at the 260-Euro price tag, but then I am given a tour of the painstaking production procedure. The chestnuts are first of all sieved and brushed to remove the skin. Then a cross-shaped incision is cut, by hand, in each individual chestnut. Nuts that are too hard or too soft are cast aside as are any that have a blemish. It is a meticulous process and mountains of discarded chestnuts that didn’t make the cut are testament to this.

The 20-stage production process is nothing less than a labour of love. After the fragile chestnuts are shelled and their bitter skins removed, workers carefully place them into dipping nets to be slowly soaked in syrup for two or three days. Then each individual nut is swathed in shiny gold wrapping paper for despatch to market. With a broad, beaming smile that reminds me of a proud new mum, the production manager tells me ‘It is a very long, delicate and difficult process but in the end we have a chestnut that is splendid and perfect.’

In medieval Joyeuse, 25km south of Aubenas, I’m introduced to local nut expert Ulla Falke. Appropraiately sporting a handsome head of chestnut coloured hair, Ulla tells me, ‘Chestnuts are not indigenous to the Ardèche but they have been cultivated here since the 10th century. Cereals didn't fare well on our steep, infertile terraces so the chestnut became a staple and was known as the “bread tree” – we simply would not have survived without it. Like squirrels in winter, every family had its stock of dried chestnuts to see them through when crops failed.’
Ulla runs the delightful Chestnut Museum in Joyeuse, in a former monastic school that was built in the 17th century. The tiny rooms of the fairy-tale building offer an education in the pivotal role that the versatile chestnut played in this region’s history.

Today, the chestnut remains a key strand in the fabric of local life. Nutshells are pounded into manure, the tree’s trunks become timber, its leaves make bedding for pigs and the branches are woven into baskets. Breakfast comes with bread made from chestnut flour and lunch is often a velvety chestnut soup. At supper time the nutrient-rich and low-in-fat chestnut finds its way into traditional stews and puree side dishes. The versatile nut turns up in desserts, in cakes and in jams, and a meal isn’t complete unless it’s washed down with a bottle of chestnut beer from the local craft brewery.


It’s festival time in Joyeuse. On the cobbled and pedestrianised Grand Rue, street stalls hand out free mulled wine and chestnut soup in front of charming little artisans’ shops. On the pretty main square, the air is filled with the strains of a barrel organ and smoke from local chestnut sellers hawking two-euro cornets. One of the organisers is Monsieur Perez, the local shoemaker. I imagine he’s fairly jolly for most of the year, but tonight he’s especially passionate: ‘This is a wonderful opportunity for cheese, wine and chestnut producers to showcase the mélange of products. Perez sums up the deep affection this and other chestnut festivals throughout the region inspire: ‘It is a unique opportunity for different generations from the farming and artistic families to come together, creating an invaluable social link between different communities.’

* www.visit-southern-france.com
* Ardeche Tourist Board: www.ardeche-guide.com