Guy & Liz’s guidebook

Guy & Liz
Guy & Liz’s guidebook

National trust

An awe-inspiring Victorian country house, Lanhydrock was mostly reconstructed following a fire in 1881. There are elements from the building that had stood here since the 1620s, like the 35-metre Long Gallery (see the Steinway piano and plasterwork on the ceiling), the front porch and the gatehouse. One of many reasons to fall in love with Lanhydrock is in the contrast between “Upstairs and Downstairs”, where you can browse the preserved kitchens and servants’ quarters, as well as well as the grander family home and its tasteful dining room and bedrooms. The estate covers 1,000 acres, with landscaped parkland, woods and paths beside streams and the River Fowey. You may be caught off guard by the heartrending views of the valley landscape. In spring the garden is awash with the blooms of cream and white magnolias, numbering 120 different species.
119 現地メンバーのおすすめ
ランハイドロック・ハウス&ガーデン
Treffry Lane
119 現地メンバーのおすすめ
An awe-inspiring Victorian country house, Lanhydrock was mostly reconstructed following a fire in 1881. There are elements from the building that had stood here since the 1620s, like the 35-metre Long Gallery (see the Steinway piano and plasterwork on the ceiling), the front porch and the gatehouse. One of many reasons to fall in love with Lanhydrock is in the contrast between “Upstairs and Downstairs”, where you can browse the preserved kitchens and servants’ quarters, as well as well as the grander family home and its tasteful dining room and bedrooms. The estate covers 1,000 acres, with landscaped parkland, woods and paths beside streams and the River Fowey. You may be caught off guard by the heartrending views of the valley landscape. In spring the garden is awash with the blooms of cream and white magnolias, numbering 120 different species.

Sightseeing

Still a menacing sight nearly a century after it closed, Bodmin Jail throws you into the life of a Victorian prisoner. The jail was built in 1779 during the reign of King George III, using 20,000 tons of granite from the Cuckoo Quarry on Bodmin Moor. And although the building looks forbidding from the outside, it came with a sophisticated heating and cooling system, while the wood-panelled Old Chapel (now a restaurant) feels very refined. Bodmin Jail was secure enough to safeguard state papers, the Domesday Book and the Crown Jewels during the First World War. You can make your way across six levels, entering the desolate cells and imagining the grim life of a prisoner in the 1800s. It gets even grislier in the Execution Shed and hanging pit. There’s no spookier place than Bodmin Jail to watch a scary movie, which you can do on Thursday nights, combined with a late-night tour of the passageways with a “medium”.
95 現地メンバーのおすすめ
ボドミン刑務所
Berrycoombe Road
95 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Still a menacing sight nearly a century after it closed, Bodmin Jail throws you into the life of a Victorian prisoner. The jail was built in 1779 during the reign of King George III, using 20,000 tons of granite from the Cuckoo Quarry on Bodmin Moor. And although the building looks forbidding from the outside, it came with a sophisticated heating and cooling system, while the wood-panelled Old Chapel (now a restaurant) feels very refined. Bodmin Jail was secure enough to safeguard state papers, the Domesday Book and the Crown Jewels during the First World War. You can make your way across six levels, entering the desolate cells and imagining the grim life of a prisoner in the 1800s. It gets even grislier in the Execution Shed and hanging pit. There’s no spookier place than Bodmin Jail to watch a scary movie, which you can do on Thursday nights, combined with a late-night tour of the passageways with a “medium”.
The Keep (1827) at Bodmin’s old Victoria Barracks has hosted the Cornwall Regimental Museum since 1929. This charts the 300-year history of The Light Infantry, the Duke of Cornwall’s light infantry (separate concepts) and volunteer militia. One member of the regiment was Harry Patch (d. 2009), the longest-surviving combat soldier of World War I, who has a small exhibition in his honour. There’s an exciting collection of weapons and more than 80 uniforms, all going back to the Napoleonic Wars. One piece of special interest at the museum is the Washington Bible, printed in 1712 and used by George Washington at a Masonic ceremony.
Cornwall's Regimental Museum
The Keep (1827) at Bodmin’s old Victoria Barracks has hosted the Cornwall Regimental Museum since 1929. This charts the 300-year history of The Light Infantry, the Duke of Cornwall’s light infantry (separate concepts) and volunteer militia. One member of the regiment was Harry Patch (d. 2009), the longest-surviving combat soldier of World War I, who has a small exhibition in his honour. There’s an exciting collection of weapons and more than 80 uniforms, all going back to the Napoleonic Wars. One piece of special interest at the museum is the Washington Bible, printed in 1712 and used by George Washington at a Masonic ceremony.
Near the village of Lostwithiel there’s a Medieval castle with a perfectly circular layout. Restormel Castle is on a spur over the River Fowey. Although it has been a ruin since the 16th century the castle’s 13th-century circular shell keep still encloses the remains of its principal rooms. In the 14th century this was a luxurious property and was twice visited by the Black Prince, the son of Edward III. One of the best things about Restormel Castle is the Wall Walk. This takes you around the battlements for a guard’s perspective of the Fowey Valley, as you ponder what castle life might have been like in the in courtyard below. The castle mound is a joy in spring when the daffodils and primroses in flower.
46 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Restormel Castle
Restormel Road
46 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Near the village of Lostwithiel there’s a Medieval castle with a perfectly circular layout. Restormel Castle is on a spur over the River Fowey. Although it has been a ruin since the 16th century the castle’s 13th-century circular shell keep still encloses the remains of its principal rooms. In the 14th century this was a luxurious property and was twice visited by the Black Prince, the son of Edward III. One of the best things about Restormel Castle is the Wall Walk. This takes you around the battlements for a guard’s perspective of the Fowey Valley, as you ponder what castle life might have been like in the in courtyard below. The castle mound is a joy in spring when the daffodils and primroses in flower.
The Eden Project is a popular visitor attraction in Cornwall, England, UK. Inside the two biomes are plants that are collected from many diverse climates and environments. The project is located in a reclaimed china clay pit, located 2 km from the town of St Blazey and 5 km from the larger town of St Austell.
1111 現地メンバーのおすすめ
エデン・プロジェクト
1111 現地メンバーのおすすめ
The Eden Project is a popular visitor attraction in Cornwall, England, UK. Inside the two biomes are plants that are collected from many diverse climates and environments. The project is located in a reclaimed china clay pit, located 2 km from the town of St Blazey and 5 km from the larger town of St Austell.

Interest

Cornwall’s largest parish church is also one of its oldest. St Petroc’s dates from the turn of the 1470s, but includes architecture from an older Norman building like the tower on the north side. Inside, the highly decorative baptismal font was fashioned in the 12th century. There’s also a tremendous degree of workmanship visible in the 15th-century woodwork found at the pulpit, reredos, wall panelling and chancel screen. At some point, the misericords from the same period were removed from the choir stalls and fixed to the lectern. In one of the images there’s a man with five fingers and a thumb!
St. Petroc's Church
Priory Road
Cornwall’s largest parish church is also one of its oldest. St Petroc’s dates from the turn of the 1470s, but includes architecture from an older Norman building like the tower on the north side. Inside, the highly decorative baptismal font was fashioned in the 12th century. There’s also a tremendous degree of workmanship visible in the 15th-century woodwork found at the pulpit, reredos, wall panelling and chancel screen. At some point, the misericords from the same period were removed from the choir stalls and fixed to the lectern. In one of the images there’s a man with five fingers and a thumb!
You can’t talk about Bodmin without bringing up the 80-square-mile granite moorland in the town’s back garden. Bodmin Moor contains Cornwall’s two highest peaks, Brown Willy (420m) and Rough Tor (400m), looming above moody sweeps of heather and marshes. This stark, rugged environment has been used as a shooting location for BBC’s Poldark TV series and is peppered with prehistoric moments like standing stones and the remnants of Iron Age settlements. King Arthur’s Hall is a Neolithic or Bronze Age ceremonial site made up of 56 stones in a rectangle bordered by an earthwork bank. Some sites around the moor have UNESCO World Heritage status as they relate to a mining industry that goes back 4,000 years, while the absence of light pollution makes for crystal clear night skies.
150 現地メンバーのおすすめ
ボドミン・ムーア
150 現地メンバーのおすすめ
You can’t talk about Bodmin without bringing up the 80-square-mile granite moorland in the town’s back garden. Bodmin Moor contains Cornwall’s two highest peaks, Brown Willy (420m) and Rough Tor (400m), looming above moody sweeps of heather and marshes. This stark, rugged environment has been used as a shooting location for BBC’s Poldark TV series and is peppered with prehistoric moments like standing stones and the remnants of Iron Age settlements. King Arthur’s Hall is a Neolithic or Bronze Age ceremonial site made up of 56 stones in a rectangle bordered by an earthwork bank. Some sites around the moor have UNESCO World Heritage status as they relate to a mining industry that goes back 4,000 years, while the absence of light pollution makes for crystal clear night skies.
At Bodmin Parkway station you can board the Bodmin and Wenford Railway for an evocative 6.5-mile ride on a train pulled by a steam locomotive. The railway uses sections of the Great Western Railway branch line (1887) and a junction line that opened a year later to link with the Bodmin And Wadebridge Railway (1834). The principal station is further down the line at Bodmin General, and there are services from February to December, with train rides available every day of the week from May to October. When the trains are running you can go inside the old workshops at Bodmin General to check out the engines and carriages. The railway organises themed rides for children and grown-ups, and for something special you could board the luxury Cornish Belle coaches for one of the regular Cornish High Tea or dining services.
39 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Bodmin General Station
Harleigh Road
39 現地メンバーのおすすめ
At Bodmin Parkway station you can board the Bodmin and Wenford Railway for an evocative 6.5-mile ride on a train pulled by a steam locomotive. The railway uses sections of the Great Western Railway branch line (1887) and a junction line that opened a year later to link with the Bodmin And Wadebridge Railway (1834). The principal station is further down the line at Bodmin General, and there are services from February to December, with train rides available every day of the week from May to October. When the trains are running you can go inside the old workshops at Bodmin General to check out the engines and carriages. The railway organises themed rides for children and grown-ups, and for something special you could board the luxury Cornish Belle coaches for one of the regular Cornish High Tea or dining services.
Towering over Bodmin’s southern reaches there’s a 162-metre granite hill at the heart of a nature reserve. Presiding over the town from the top is the Beacon (1856), an obelisk 44 metres tall, commemorating the British Army officer Sir Walter Gilbert who spent nearly all of his career in India. After scaling the hill and gazing over Bodmin, you can ramble through the reserve’s meadows and newly planted community woodland.
Bodmin Beacon
Towering over Bodmin’s southern reaches there’s a 162-metre granite hill at the heart of a nature reserve. Presiding over the town from the top is the Beacon (1856), an obelisk 44 metres tall, commemorating the British Army officer Sir Walter Gilbert who spent nearly all of his career in India. After scaling the hill and gazing over Bodmin, you can ramble through the reserve’s meadows and newly planted community woodland.
The seat of the Molesworth family since the 16th century, Pencarrow is a splendid Palladian mansion in formal gardens on the cusp of Bodmin Moor. The approach to Pencarrow is pretty dramatic, along a mile-long drive leading you through an Iron Age hillfort. Tours are given of the house from Sunday to Thursday between March and September. There are lots of precious things to savour as you go, like paintings by Joshua Reynolds and Samuel Scott, Meissen, Worcester, Sèvres and Kangxi period porcelain. The finest piece of porcelain though has to be the Qianlong-era famille rose bowl. On top of all this there’s a set of glass pens from the Great Exhibition (1851), invaluable 18th-century furniture and displays of antique toys, costumes and a rare portable shower from 1840. The grounds are open seven days a week and have a sunken Italian garden, palm house, ice house, deep woodland and an early Medieval Cornish cross.
42 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Pencarrow House and Gardens
42 現地メンバーのおすすめ
The seat of the Molesworth family since the 16th century, Pencarrow is a splendid Palladian mansion in formal gardens on the cusp of Bodmin Moor. The approach to Pencarrow is pretty dramatic, along a mile-long drive leading you through an Iron Age hillfort. Tours are given of the house from Sunday to Thursday between March and September. There are lots of precious things to savour as you go, like paintings by Joshua Reynolds and Samuel Scott, Meissen, Worcester, Sèvres and Kangxi period porcelain. The finest piece of porcelain though has to be the Qianlong-era famille rose bowl. On top of all this there’s a set of glass pens from the Great Exhibition (1851), invaluable 18th-century furniture and displays of antique toys, costumes and a rare portable shower from 1840. The grounds are open seven days a week and have a sunken Italian garden, palm house, ice house, deep woodland and an early Medieval Cornish cross.
This vineyard on the tall south-facing slopes of the Camel Valley was first planted in 1989 and has gradually caught the world’s attention. In 2005 one of its wines won an International Wine Challenge Gold Medal, and in 2009 Camel Valley won best Traditional Method Sparkling Wine ahead of Bollinger and Roederer in Verona in 2010. On a sunny afternoon you can visit the terrace to sip Camel Valley’s wines, but there’s also a choice of two tours in summer. Monday to Friday you can take the “Guided Tour”, which explains the life of the vines in a year and how their grapes are turned into award-winning wines. The “Grand Tour” takes place on Wednesday evenings and is led by a winemaker, answering in-depth questions and leading a wine-tasting session. You’ll get to try at least five of Camel Valley’s wines, including its signature Cornwall Brut.
80 現地メンバーのおすすめ
キャメル・バレー
80 現地メンバーのおすすめ
This vineyard on the tall south-facing slopes of the Camel Valley was first planted in 1989 and has gradually caught the world’s attention. In 2005 one of its wines won an International Wine Challenge Gold Medal, and in 2009 Camel Valley won best Traditional Method Sparkling Wine ahead of Bollinger and Roederer in Verona in 2010. On a sunny afternoon you can visit the terrace to sip Camel Valley’s wines, but there’s also a choice of two tours in summer. Monday to Friday you can take the “Guided Tour”, which explains the life of the vines in a year and how their grapes are turned into award-winning wines. The “Grand Tour” takes place on Wednesday evenings and is led by a winemaker, answering in-depth questions and leading a wine-tasting session. You’ll get to try at least five of Camel Valley’s wines, including its signature Cornwall Brut.
At the southwestern gateway to Bodmin Moor, Cardinham is a blissful mixed woodland, much loved by walkers, cyclists and people on horseback. There are four main waymarked trails, ushering you deep into the woods and up to viewpoints. The Lidcutt Valley Walk has a climb that will work your calves but reward you with vistas of the Lady Vale. The 1.5 mile Lady Vale Walk is less of a challenge, and brings you to the Lady Vale Bridge on the site of a 12th-century chapel. Finally, you can follow the Wheal Glynn Walk to find the ruins of an old lead and silver mine, where the engine house and chimney stack are still standing.
131 現地メンバーのおすすめ
カーディンハムの森
131 現地メンバーのおすすめ
At the southwestern gateway to Bodmin Moor, Cardinham is a blissful mixed woodland, much loved by walkers, cyclists and people on horseback. There are four main waymarked trails, ushering you deep into the woods and up to viewpoints. The Lidcutt Valley Walk has a climb that will work your calves but reward you with vistas of the Lady Vale. The 1.5 mile Lady Vale Walk is less of a challenge, and brings you to the Lady Vale Bridge on the site of a 12th-century chapel. Finally, you can follow the Wheal Glynn Walk to find the ruins of an old lead and silver mine, where the engine house and chimney stack are still standing.

Food Scene

A local and friendly Pub. Food is excellent and a must visit while you are here. It does get fully booked at weekends so you may have to pre-book in advance Tel: 01208 831212
17 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Lanivet Inn
Truro Road
17 現地メンバーのおすすめ
A local and friendly Pub. Food is excellent and a must visit while you are here. It does get fully booked at weekends so you may have to pre-book in advance Tel: 01208 831212
This is where it all began for Cornish empire builder Rick Stein, but more than 40 years down the line, his illustrious flagship is still “simply glorious” and “a real treasure”. Quality is the watchword here: the spacious white-walled interior (designed by Jill Stein) is bright, modern and artily decorated with a no-bookings cut-price seafood bar at its heart, while the kitchen majors on exemplary fish cookery driven by “super-fresh” daily supplies from nearby Padstow quay. Flavours from Stein’s travels dominate the show, so start with some local Porthilly oysters before cruising your way through the likes of sea bass ceviche with smoked chipotle chilli, black cuttlefish risotto or the famously messy Singapore chilli crab. You can also take the classic route by ordering a whole Dover sole, hake and chips or turbot with hollandaise, before rounding off with Mexican rice pudding or apple tart. The atmosphere can’t be faulted, staff are “fabulous” and the authoritative list is stuffed with seafood-friendly whites; the waterfront location is also a dream – especially if you’re staying over.
57 現地メンバーのおすすめ
The Seafood Restaurant
Riverside
57 現地メンバーのおすすめ
This is where it all began for Cornish empire builder Rick Stein, but more than 40 years down the line, his illustrious flagship is still “simply glorious” and “a real treasure”. Quality is the watchword here: the spacious white-walled interior (designed by Jill Stein) is bright, modern and artily decorated with a no-bookings cut-price seafood bar at its heart, while the kitchen majors on exemplary fish cookery driven by “super-fresh” daily supplies from nearby Padstow quay. Flavours from Stein’s travels dominate the show, so start with some local Porthilly oysters before cruising your way through the likes of sea bass ceviche with smoked chipotle chilli, black cuttlefish risotto or the famously messy Singapore chilli crab. You can also take the classic route by ordering a whole Dover sole, hake and chips or turbot with hollandaise, before rounding off with Mexican rice pudding or apple tart. The atmosphere can’t be faulted, staff are “fabulous” and the authoritative list is stuffed with seafood-friendly whites; the waterfront location is also a dream – especially if you’re staying over.
Lodged in the old lifeboat house on Polkerris, this beachside outpost of the all-conquering Sam's empire is handy for post-swim snacks. Pizza is a speciality thanks to the homemade wood-fired oven, but there are big bowls of mussels, plates of prawns and seafood platters too. Sliding windows open up on sunny days to let the outside in.
117 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Sams On The Beach, Restaurant
117 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Lodged in the old lifeboat house on Polkerris, this beachside outpost of the all-conquering Sam's empire is handy for post-swim snacks. Pizza is a speciality thanks to the homemade wood-fired oven, but there are big bowls of mussels, plates of prawns and seafood platters too. Sliding windows open up on sunny days to let the outside in.
Paul Ainsworth and his team have something special here” notes a fan of No. 6 – a restaurant that challenges Rick Stein’s dominion over Padstow. This Georgian terraced house is an endearing charmer, from its composed, elegant interior to its “delicious, inventive and beautifully presented” food. The kitchen, which is headed up john Walton – an old friend and colleague of Paul himself, delivers wave after wave of inspired, fashionable dishes spanning everything from a smoked haddock ‘quiche Lorraine’ to ‘all the rabbit’ with grilled bread and damsons. After that, keep things diverse with, say, local hogget, red garlic ketchup and sweetbread fricassee or the fish of the day from Cornish waters – perhaps white crab with leeks royale and ‘jack shell gravy’. Whatever you pick you can trust the ingredients will have been handled with care for satisfyingly superior results. The British cheeseboard is well worth investigating too, while dessert could bring ewe’s milk cheesecake in puff pastry with bitter cocoa sorbet or Ainsworth’s famous reinvented ‘trifle Cornish’ flavoured with Tregothnan tea prunes and saffron. Visitors are treated to the warmest of welcomes, service is “top-notch” and the set lunch gets a big thumbs-up. During summer this weekly-changing deal uses the very best produce of the season and will set you back £30 for two courses, or £34 for three, perfect if there’s a crowd of you looking to enjoy high-end food without breaking the bank. Those wanting a sleepover should check out the Padstow Townhouse (also owned by Ainsworth and co). With a whole host of accolades, including a coveted Michelin star, Paul Ainswoth at No. 6 has become a must-try foodie mecca, and as such gets booked up well in advance. If you’re planning a trip to Cornwall, or live close by and fancy treating yourself, we suggested calling ahead to ensure you snag yourself a table.
73 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Paul Ainsworth at Number 6
6 Middle St
73 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Paul Ainsworth and his team have something special here” notes a fan of No. 6 – a restaurant that challenges Rick Stein’s dominion over Padstow. This Georgian terraced house is an endearing charmer, from its composed, elegant interior to its “delicious, inventive and beautifully presented” food. The kitchen, which is headed up john Walton – an old friend and colleague of Paul himself, delivers wave after wave of inspired, fashionable dishes spanning everything from a smoked haddock ‘quiche Lorraine’ to ‘all the rabbit’ with grilled bread and damsons. After that, keep things diverse with, say, local hogget, red garlic ketchup and sweetbread fricassee or the fish of the day from Cornish waters – perhaps white crab with leeks royale and ‘jack shell gravy’. Whatever you pick you can trust the ingredients will have been handled with care for satisfyingly superior results. The British cheeseboard is well worth investigating too, while dessert could bring ewe’s milk cheesecake in puff pastry with bitter cocoa sorbet or Ainsworth’s famous reinvented ‘trifle Cornish’ flavoured with Tregothnan tea prunes and saffron. Visitors are treated to the warmest of welcomes, service is “top-notch” and the set lunch gets a big thumbs-up. During summer this weekly-changing deal uses the very best produce of the season and will set you back £30 for two courses, or £34 for three, perfect if there’s a crowd of you looking to enjoy high-end food without breaking the bank. Those wanting a sleepover should check out the Padstow Townhouse (also owned by Ainsworth and co). With a whole host of accolades, including a coveted Michelin star, Paul Ainswoth at No. 6 has become a must-try foodie mecca, and as such gets booked up well in advance. If you’re planning a trip to Cornwall, or live close by and fancy treating yourself, we suggested calling ahead to ensure you snag yourself a table.
Rick and his wife Katie opened TPOTL in London’s Islington. Since they were sourcing their superb fish from Devon and Cornwall, the Padstow outpost was a logical next step, so now they also have a frequently changing menu there that includes both small plates of local fish pepped up with international influences such as n’duja, Szechuan pepper or Thai basil and whole fish, crab or lobster for the table. They also have an outstanding wine list that ranges from Cornwall to Australia and includes Manzanilla, the dry, salty sherry made beside the Andalusian coast that’s tear-inducingly good with prawns.
52 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Prawn on the Lawn
11 Duke St
52 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Rick and his wife Katie opened TPOTL in London’s Islington. Since they were sourcing their superb fish from Devon and Cornwall, the Padstow outpost was a logical next step, so now they also have a frequently changing menu there that includes both small plates of local fish pepped up with international influences such as n’duja, Szechuan pepper or Thai basil and whole fish, crab or lobster for the table. They also have an outstanding wine list that ranges from Cornwall to Australia and includes Manzanilla, the dry, salty sherry made beside the Andalusian coast that’s tear-inducingly good with prawns.
This beautiful pub is in the village of St Tudy – inland but not far from Rock, Port Isaac and Polzeath. The chef/owner is the brilliant and lovely Emily Scott, who recently made her TV debut on the Great British Menu. Her cooking treats ingredients with respect and I’d describe the flavours as modern British with French and Italian influences. A great menu is on offer including cooked fish and a wonderful risotto Milanese.
29 現地メンバーのおすすめ
St Tudy Inn
29 現地メンバーのおすすめ
This beautiful pub is in the village of St Tudy – inland but not far from Rock, Port Isaac and Polzeath. The chef/owner is the brilliant and lovely Emily Scott, who recently made her TV debut on the Great British Menu. Her cooking treats ingredients with respect and I’d describe the flavours as modern British with French and Italian influences. A great menu is on offer including cooked fish and a wonderful risotto Milanese.
A high quality, elegant and welcoming environment over three floors, Flory offers a cafe and courtyard ambience downstairs, with the main restaurant on the first floor and a private dining room on the second floor. Offering breakfast and light lunches downstairs, restaurant lunches upstairs, and our a la carte evening menu in the restaurant, private dining-room or ground floor 'Red Room' (convenient for wheelchair users), our attentive front of house team will ensure that you receive excellent service whilst remaining discreet and unobtrusive.
Flory Restaurant and Cafe
4 Mount Folly Square
A high quality, elegant and welcoming environment over three floors, Flory offers a cafe and courtyard ambience downstairs, with the main restaurant on the first floor and a private dining room on the second floor. Offering breakfast and light lunches downstairs, restaurant lunches upstairs, and our a la carte evening menu in the restaurant, private dining-room or ground floor 'Red Room' (convenient for wheelchair users), our attentive front of house team will ensure that you receive excellent service whilst remaining discreet and unobtrusive.
You can always expect seasonal, local food and a warm welcome at our wonderful restaurant. Now in its incredibly successful third year, Edie’s is run by acclaimed chef, Nigel Brown, returning to his home county of Cornwall after an international career as a chef, to open Edie’s Kitchen, a family restaurant with local produce, high quality food and great service at its heart. After twenty years spent working with culinary luminaries such as Raymond Blanc at Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons and Bill Granger at his eponymous Sydney restaurant, Nigel has brought his well-honed skills and food flair to the beautiful Cornish setting of Carlyon Bay, Cornwall.
20 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Edie's Kitchen
10 Beach Rd
20 現地メンバーのおすすめ
You can always expect seasonal, local food and a warm welcome at our wonderful restaurant. Now in its incredibly successful third year, Edie’s is run by acclaimed chef, Nigel Brown, returning to his home county of Cornwall after an international career as a chef, to open Edie’s Kitchen, a family restaurant with local produce, high quality food and great service at its heart. After twenty years spent working with culinary luminaries such as Raymond Blanc at Le Manoir aux Quat’ Saisons and Bill Granger at his eponymous Sydney restaurant, Nigel has brought his well-honed skills and food flair to the beautiful Cornish setting of Carlyon Bay, Cornwall.
Steakhouse and seafood restaurant located near the beautiful Charlestown harbour.
71 現地メンバーのおすすめ
The Longstore
Charlestown Harbour
71 現地メンバーのおすすめ
Steakhouse and seafood restaurant located near the beautiful Charlestown harbour.