Category: wallfish

The WFJ’s spring/summer 2022 food guide [WFJ #11]

13 local festivals, feasts, tastings, open days and cooking workshops to sink yer teeth into 

Hugh ThomasApr 20

On the cusp of festival season, consider this a digest of local food and drink-related things you’ll be seeing, doing, and – quite possibly – missing out on this spring and summer.

Yes the usuals, like the fine array of traders at The Frome Independent, and monthly Somerset Farmers’ Markets inside the Cheese & Grain, aren’t present on this list. The following are, rather, the one-offs and remixes: those that come about once a year, or once in a while. 

Some require a short tinkle into town; some need a drive, bus journey, or long walk. All, however, should be worth the trip.

Learn to Cook

Tuesday, April 26th // Holy Trinity Church, BA11 3DE // Free // sslcourses.co.uk

For those uncontent with ready meals and, perhaps, their own abilities in the kitchen, join Amber (a veg grower and pro chef of plant-based food) as she hosts a free workshop on how to inexpensively cook your supper from scratch. 

Open Garden at Root Connections

Saturday, April 30th // Manor Farm, BA3 9QF // Free // rootconnections.co.uk

Root Connections is, primarily, a social enterprise tackling rural homelessness and, secondarily, a farm delivering agrochemical-free veg and flowers to local homes. For one day in April, they open their doors for the public to explore how their food and flowers are grown, and what the project’s doing to help end homelessness.wearerootconnectionsA post shared by Root Connections (@wearerootconnections)

Frome Field 2 Fork Open Day

Sunday, May 15th // Oak Tree Paddock, BA11 4EU // Free // To book your space, ring or text 0785 7437 608, message via Facebook, or email fromefield2fork@gmail

The community-oriented permaculture site Frome Field 2 Fork, a short walk and even shorter cycle from the West side of town, puts on a day of horticultural activities, including a Green Gym in the morning, and tours of the market garden project in the afternoon. Families welcome; booking essential. 

Beer & Cheese Festival

Saturday, May 21st // Westcombe Farm, BA4 6ER // £10 // wildbeerco.com

Wild Beer Co. and Westcombe Dairy – one of the foremost names in UK craft beer and UK cheese respectively – happen to be neighbours. Naturally, that means putting on one big party dedicated to their specialities (note: there will also be gin). Designated drivers aren’t necessarily required to attend, as minibuses will run between Frome and the venue. Just make sure you book a seat well in advance. 

Bradford on Avon Food & Drink Festival

June 11th-12th // Victory Field, BA15 1LE // £8 // scrumptiousfoodfestivals.co.uk

Sleb chef demos, street food, artisanal producers, live music, plus plenty to keep the kids entertained – you name it, it’s all happening in Wiltshire’s twee-est town. A short ride on the X69 will help you make full use of the festival bar. pubintheparkA post shared by Pub in the Park (@pubinthepark)

Pub in the Park

June 17th-19th // Royal Victoria Park, Bath // From £55 // pubintheparkuk.com

The UK’s biggest food and music tour stops off for a weekender in Bath. Tom Kerridge curates a chef line-up including Atul Kochhar, Andi Oliver, and Steve Horrell from local favourite Roth Bar, while some of the UK’s best food-led pubs like The Cadogan Arms and The Star Inn handle the feasting menus.

Gardener & Chef 

June 23rd, July 21st, August 18th, September 15th // The Newt, BA7 7NG // £125 // thenewtinsomerset.com

If eating your lunch at the UK’s top country house (as deemed by the World Travel Awards) wasn’t quite enough for you, how about going forth to harvest it as well? Under the wings of The Newt’s head chef and gardener, spend a few hours picking from the estate’s Market Garden before cooking your haul over a fire as part of a wildflower meadow picnic. Bonnets and wicker baskets not included. 

Forage and Feast with Dave Hamilton

Wednesday, June 29th // Nesta, BA11 4LJ // £75 // davehamilton.co.uk

As confirmed by The Guardian, Nesta’s among the campsites doing the best job of mimicking those summer festival vibes. Here, one of Frome’s resident foragers joins forces with Nesta to lead a group seeking out the best of nature’s midsummer bounty, topped off with a wild buffet put on by the campsite’s cooks. nesta.camping.fromeA post shared by Nesta Camping (@nesta.camping.frome)

The Unusual Suspects

Monday, July 4th // Eight Stony Street, BA11 1BU // £28 // eightstonystreet.com

Bordeaux, Marlborough, Piemont: wines from these sorts of regions just get all the attention. More recently though, the likes of Slovakia, Poland, and Morocco are making more and more a name for themselves. Full of character, and often cheaper than the bigger names, join in this tasting sesh to see what’s to like about wines from the oenophile’s lesser-known parts of the world.

Somerset Food Trail

15-24th July // Locations vary // Prices vary // somersetfoodtrail.uk

For the first time since its inception in 2018, the Somerset Food Trail comes to Frome. Pubs and restaurants will localise their menus, nature-friendly farms will show you how your food’s grown or reared, while tastings and workshops abound. As of now, the calendar is still shaping up – check the SFT website closer to July for the full adenda. 

Sign up to the WFJ for a deep dive into the Somerset Food Trail programme when it goes live

Embers and Vine’s Wood-Fired Summer Feast

Saturday, July 30th // Little Jack Horner’s, Mells, BA11 3RH // £38 // eventbrite.co.uk

Frome Independent regulars Embers and Vine pop-up in Mells for a one-off wood-fired collab with sausage roll people and fellow local heroes Little Jack Horners. The centrepiece: Whole smoked chicken kebabs with fermented wild garlic. BYOB. 

Frome Agricultural & Cheese Show

Saturday, September 10th // West Woodlands Showground, BA11 5ES // From £18 // fromecheeseshow.co.uk

What puts Frome on the map? Is it its independent soul; its cobbled-street charm; its creative moxie? Or is it the local agricultural show, where falconry demonstrations rub shoulders with garden competitions and dog shows? Whatever, some go just for the cheese. All 1,500 exhibits of it, including various entrants – and winners – in the Global Cheese Awards.sturminstercheesefestA post shared by Stur Cheese Festival (@sturminstercheesefest)

Sturminster Newton Cheese Festival

September 10th-11th // Old Market Hill, DT10 1QU // Ticket price TBC // cheesefestival.co.uk

You might choose to ignore the above – some say Sturm, not Frome, is where the real cheese show’s at (‘exhibits’, for example, is not a word they’d use). Either way, cheese and cider will be the order of the day here, with more than 20 cheesemakers including local favourites Wootton Dairy, Felthams, and Bath Soft Cheese proving why the South West is the UK’s leading cheesemaking region.

What did I miss? Any other events, be sure to leave them in the comments.

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By Hugh Thomas  ·  Launched 3 months ago

A newsletter for the food-curious citizens of Frome. Published on Wednesday mornings by Hugh ThomasLikeCommentShare

Is this the best fish and chips in Frome? [WFJ #12] The first in a series profiling the town’s unmissable drinks, dishes, and other foodsHugh ThomasApr 2725

Why a locally-made sourdough loaf costs £4.50 [WFJ #4]Or rather, why a supermarket one costs £1.20Hugh ThomasFeb 2332

Butchers in the age of cheap meat [WFJ #6]More sustainable meat is readily available from the three butchers in Frome. But do we want it?Hugh ThomasMar 94See all 

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What does buying local food do for the economy? [WFJ #5]

What does buying local food do for the economy? [WFJ #5]

If going local is expensive or inconvenient, wait ’til you hear the alternative

Hugh ThomasMar 2
1

Not pictured: confused consumer automatons

Frome’s abound with sentiments to shop in independent neighbourhood stores because it helps the local economy. But, especially as the cost of living escalates, what the heck does that do for you and me?

Like the National Food Strategy put it, ‘No part of our economy matters more than food.’1 To a large extent, the trouble is how it’s sold and distributed. Around 95% of groceries sold in the UK is through the top nine multiples – think Sainsbury’s, Morrison’s, Tesco, Co-op, et al.

Arguments for increasing money spent in local, independent stores include better prices for producers; supply chain resilience; local employment; and supporting local amenities in general. Even spending a few quid in a local store rather than a national chain can make a big difference – Totnes in Devon found that, if people shifted 10% of their weekly food shop out of the supermarket and into local retail, it would result in an extra £2 million to the local economy. The more money circulating in this way, the more is invested into public assets like schools, libraries, and social services.

This contrasts with the flow of money generated from food sales in a large proportion of instances, where low-paid workers generate obscene amounts of money that’s ultimately funnelled elsewhere.2 In fact, some of the biggest wealth disparities in the UK are found in grocery retail. Ocado paid its chief executive 2,600 times that of its average worker in 2019, while Co-op, the supermarket chain with the largest presence in Frome, gave its executives multi-million bonuses last year even after receiving £65 million in taxpayer-funded support during the pandemic.3

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Clearly the distribution of wealth needs to be reimagined, along with other assumptions that large business owners drive growth and prosperity from which their subordinates will, eventually, share the rewards. Rather, it’s purchasers who should realise their power, even on an individual level – The New Economics Foundation found that every £10 spent in a local food business is worth £25 to the local economy (compared to £14 at a supermarket), while research from the University of Gloucestershire revealed that for every £1 invested in local food, £6-£8 is returned in the form of social and economic benefits including health, wellbeing, and training.

This works even better when those businesses, and their staff, also spend their money locally. Burrito Boi restaurant, for instance, source their meat from Penleigh butchers, who source from small farms local to Frome. Even Burrito Boi’s stickers are made at Postscript; their signage from Frome Hardware. A 2019 review overseen by the House of Lords pointed out that local economic development should occur in these sorts of ways – locally driven from the ‘bottom-up’, supported by partnerships, collaboration, mutual support, self-help, and community leadership.

This is often best achieved within social, local economies. According to a report published in February, these social economies operate on a ‘reuse – share – repair – refurbish – remanufacture – recycle’ basis, rather than linear ones dependent on ‘take – make – dispose’. Closed loop systems by definition eliminate or minimise waste and surplus, because unlike linear models, they perceive waste and surplus to have value. Much like the way some local food shops in and around Frome turn food nearing the end of its shelf life into meals. Or the compost co-op Loop, which recycles nutrients from food waste back into the land to help grow more food.

The report also says food hubs – rather than supermarkets – are pivotal and well-placed to correct market failures like those relating to food waste, but also biodiversity loss, poor diets, and obesity. Not least in rural areas, where, ironically, it is common for people to be cut off from locally-produced food. County-level food partnerships – a network of food hubs, perhaps – can paste over these cracks, smoothing out the provision of food across a region.

Shall we start calling them ‘Wallfish Wednesdays’? No? Just me? Ok.

Bank branches, estate agents, bakery and cafe chains, and fast fashion outlets are contributing to high street homogenisation. Although some services are useful, like in providing far-flung produce (local should come first, but not always – no one wants to deprive anyone of bananas and chocolate), they not only strip uniquity from high streets, they have a tendency to deplete its social capital too. 

‘Strong local economies go much further than just providing ownership and distribution of money across local people,’ says Greg Barden, CEO and founder of Pixie, an app that rewards purchases in independents across Frome and other parts of Somerset. ‘They allow our communities to maintain or form an identity that we build a connection with. They provide common ground for people to come together to socialise and interact with each other to help maintain a human element to our everyday needs.’

Large, national chains are effectively mining local economies for capital extraction, which is stored or spent elsewhere. While the alternative is to spend money in independent stores that often don’t cost-cut, the rising cost of living is making it tougher to do so. But as Frome often shows, that money is more likely to benefit the local community. You also have to remember it’s not just us, but small business owners, also experiencing the squeeze.


Further reading / viewing:

The importance of food hubs in supplying towns with hyper-local produce [WFJ #1]

The rural social economy, community food hubs and the market

The Communeconomy: Joe Grafton at TEDxSomerville1

https://www.nationalfoodstrategy.org/2

*coughCaymanIslands*3

Supermarket labour is blighted with pitiful pay – on last count, 42% of supermarket workers were paid below the real Living Wage https://www.livingwage.org.uk/news/over-two-fifths-all-supermarket-workers-earn-below-real-living-wage

Butchers in the age of cheap meat [WFJ #6]

Butchers in the age of cheap meat [WFJ #6]

In 1990, there were 15,000 butcher’s shops across the UK. If the last count in 2019 still stands true, there are now fewer than 5,500. 

Rampant demand for cheap – but unsustainable – meat has not worked in the highstreet butcher’s favour. Recessions, foreign trade deals, and the current rising costs of living have not helped much either. 

The pandemic – when people had more time to cook from scratch and go out for their weekly shop – instigated a resurgence among local businesses. Spending on meat in British butchers rose by almost a third during lockdown, as butchers were regailed as ‘heroes’.

But, while anxieties surrounding the pandemic subside, those habits are curtailing, and shoppers are being lured elsewhere. One butcher local to Frome recently told me his business has dropped to “appalling” levels.

Perhaps this is just Darwinism in motion, or the way the free market works. If other options allow for meat that’s cheaper and more convenient to everyone, why should we bother visiting a butcher ever again?

It sounds counterintuitive, but a good high street butcher wants you to buy less meat. Overall meat consumption is at the point of excess, and as such large proportions of it are farmed in irresponsible ways, it’s driving the planet ever closer to disaster.1

“If you’re eating local meat from traditional mixed farming, without the industrialisation, that isn’t the issue,” says Owen Singer, who owns Penleigh butchers on Stony Street. “If you are coming to a local butcher, chances are their meat isn’t not going to be mass-produced – the carbon footprint is gonna be a lot less.” 

Butchers also appreciate that, in Adrian Cayford’s own words, “meat is expensive.” Adrian’s family has had the butcher’s shop on Catherine Street for 60 years. “When I started 30 years ago, people would eat it everyday. And then we got customers who’re not going to shop at the supermarket. They’re wanting to eat meat twice a week, and they’re going to eat better quality. And that’s where myself, Owen [Penleigh], and Nigel [H.E. Williams & Sons] get a score over the supermarket.”

Nige (H.E. Williams Facebook)

Meat, for what it’s worth

Supermarkets will win some battles for your wallet (whole chicken and steak cuts can come out half the cost, or even less, of what you’d spend in a butcher). But not all of them – chicken wings go for almost nothing in a butcher’s shop, thighs are cheap, and while the best sausages on a supermarket shelf will cost a few quid less, a fiver for eight sausages might not seem too steep when they’re made by the man who sold them to you, and from his own pigs (as is the case with Penleigh). 

Going for so-called ‘lesser’ cuts is also a good way to shave costs off the food bill. These cuts are typically from parts of the animal that, while they’ve seen more exercise and thus take longer to cook, arguably yield more flavour than premium cuts like sirloin, chops, or T-bone. “Beef skirt for frying steaks used to be the cheapest,” says Owen. “But chuck [£11.59/kg], slow roasting joints [£17/kg], and brisket [£10/kg] are relatively cheap. Even more so in the summer.”

As for lamb, breast (£9/kg) and neck are the cheapest parts of the animal, though the cost of lamb is currently at heights many working in the industry have never seen. “If you generally want cheaper meat, go for chicken or pork,” says Owen.

Though some prices can be high, butchers aren’t making a huge profit here – in most cases it’s about establishing a fairer price for the farmer, processors, themselves, and of course the customer. This means accommodating where accommodating is needed. “It’s all right if you’ve got the price per kilo labelled on your ribeye,” says Owen, “but if you don’t know how big your ribeye is going to be, it can be a bit of a shock when it hits the scales. If you haven’t got a lot of money in your pocket, I can see that as intimidating.

“The thing is, if someone asks for something and I know it’s going to end up expensive, I’ll tell them. If someone says it’s a bit too much for them, I’ll say we can cut it smaller, or we can move from ribeye to sirloin or rump. Someone might come in and point to a leg of pork and say, ‘but I don’t want all of that.’ and I’ll say, “It’s alright, I’ve got a knife. This is what a butcher’s shop does.’”

Owen on his farm (Penleigh Facebook)

(Not) going the extra miles

No one behind a butcher’s counter at the supermarket is able to tell you where their lamb was grazed, or the name of the farmer who produces their beef. If you want local meat, one of the few ways to get it is through a local high street butcher. 

“It’s a priority for us,” says Adrian. “We like that we can tell a customer exactly where it comes from. Our chicken’s from Castlemead – he’s the most local at Radstock. Our lambs come from John Gould at Withywood Farm in Cranmore. Our beef is from Howard and Sons at Manor Farm near Devizes. Our pigs come from a guy called Chris Hill at Wessex Pork. He’s our furthest away – he comes from the other side of Taunton. His abattoir is only three or four miles from his farm.”

That’s nothing considering the supply chains supermarkets use, where animals are often lorried up the country, then slaughtered, for their carcasses to be transported all the way back again.2 This impacts the welfare of livestock, where the longer the journey they have to take in a packed lorry or trailer, the more stress they’re likely to experience. This is why more smaller, local, abattoirs (which are dying out at a faster rate than butchers) are essential to obtaining local meat, and in supporting other local businesses – such as farms and butchers – that use them.

“The whole local thing is massive for me,” says Owen, who raises his pigs on his farm near Westbury. “We use Stiles at Bromham, and Stillmans at Taunton. The reason we use Stillmans is because the quality’s always very good, and the delivery times. The food miles may have crept up a little bit for us recently, but it’s still ridiculously low. It’s still all Somerset.”

As for Nigel at H.E. Williams & Sons, he mostly uses Creedy Carver just outside Exeter, and Stillmans and Prestige Pork in the Taunton area.

Popular restaurants a butcher makes

Do you dream of The Griffin’s fried chicken? Burrito Boi’s signature dish? Or maybe Hamper’s salt beef bagel? All that meat comes through Penleigh, and is virtually the same as what you’d buy from the Stony Street shop.

Penleigh is a rare example in that, when talking about farming pigs, they control every part of the process except the slaughter. This can have a markedly different effect on the final product, especially on taste. “When we went into keeping pigs, we started processing them ourselves and trying our own products,” says Owen. “As soon as I tasted it, I knew instantaneously it was better.

“Differences in flavour become really really really evident in pork. Because mainstream pork is whatever hybrid breed comes through. Whereas if you went breed specific – say, Middlewhite, Tamworth, or Gloucester Old Spot – they have a higher fat content, the meat is darker, and has more flavour. Any rare breed of pig like that has been bred for flavour over hundreds of years. Where, usually, it’s not about flavour – it’s about how quickly can you make it grow, or how little can you feed it.griffinfromeA post shared by The Griffin Frome Craft Pub (@griffinfrome)

“It’s the same with cattle – we found that meat from Hereford and Angus beef, from heifers [a cow that hasn’t calved] rather than steers or bulls, produce a nice marbling. These breeds don’t make you enough money because they don’t grow fast enough. But a lot of our customers have come to the conclusion that when the fat emulsifies, the flavour is incredible.”

Adrian, meanwhile, wants customers to be more inquisitive about quality and provenance. “Where we’re different from other butchers is we buy direct from farmers, so we know exactly what’s coming in. If you really wanted to go to town, we could tell you what breed of animal it was. But no one really asks.”

Where they’re often similar is in chicken – like Cayford, Penleigh sources from Castlemead, who rear their hens outdoors, foraging on insects and seeds in supplement to their feed. It means you end up spending the best part of £10 on a whole bird, but few other producers can compete on flavour and welfare, as only about 5% of chicken is produced this way. 

You could say Nigel goes one further. He gets his poultry from Creedy Carver, which is another farm that allows its hens to roam the outdoors, and a name proudly written into high-ranking restaurant menus. The likes of Angela Hartnett and Tom Kerridge swear by it.

In the words of YouTubers around the world, don’t forget to likecommentandsubscribe!!

Know your chicken

In an ideal world, where even trust cannot be understated, we’d all personally know the farmers we buy meat from. The closest many of us can get to that is with a butcher – especially one like Owen, who raises his own pigs. Failing that, it’s a matter of finding the butcher whose values you most closely align with: be it price, quality, traceability, or welfare.

If you were to ask me, go to Cayford when you want to know the name of the farmer who supplied your beef. Go to Penleigh for pork and other piggy bits, like their sausage rolls and award-winning black pudding. And go to Nigel’s for Creedy Carver chicken and bones – which he collects until the end of the week – for stock.3 4

Just don’t queue up at Sainsbury’s meat counter expecting the same kind of service.


Further reading

What does buying local food do for the economy? [WFJ #5]

A butcher’s guide to beef cuts

The meat of the matter: Britain’s small abatoirs – ergo sustainable meat – are in peril1

This is purposely underelabourated, as the topic of livestock emissions requires a lot of explanation. Explanation that, at some point, will be incluided in a later issue of the WFJ…2

Admittedly, at the moment this is somewhat speculative, as there is no public record of where livestock is picked up and where it is slaughtered, but it does fit in with the scattered nature in which the supermarket supply chain is interconnected.3

If you ask for chicken bones or carcass, and if they have them available, butchers will usually give you them for free (especially if you’re visiting not to simply freeload, and want to buy at least one other item). 4

Any other ‘hacks’? Please let the rest of us know in the comments.