Eating Out
| NORTH YORKSHIRE |  | | | CLEVELAND |  | | | COUNTY DURHAM |  | |
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Mainsgill Tea Room
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| ON ROUTE 66: The tea room at Mainsgill Farm Shop, below |
ACALLER to the D&S office
recently had a very good
point to make about one
aspect of our reviews.
We do tend to write about meals
eaten in the evening, because
most of us are at work during the
day and the legendary era of the
journalist's mostly liquid lunch is
long, long, gone.
But as the caller pointed out, a
good proportion of readers never
eat out in the evening for reasons
of digestive comfort. Many find
heavy meals late in the day
difficult to deal with, so
chose to eat out at lunchtime
instead.
Although your reviewer
wouldn't consider himself elderly
as yet, he has got to
that stage in life where he is
less able to eat, say, a spicy
curry late in the evening and feel
like a fully-functioning human
being the next morning.
So we had sympathy with the
caller's point and, suitably chastened,
vowed to do more lunches,
starting last Saturday at the Mainsgill
Farm Shop and Tea Room just
off the A66 near East Layton - five
miles from Scotch Corner.
Mainsgill was opened by Anthony
and Maria Henshaw as a farm diversification
exercise almost seven
years ago and, after a tough early
period dealing with the impact of
foot-and-mouth disease in the
area, it has gone from strength-tostrength
offering an ever-widening
range of goods. The tea room has
built up a clientele of customers
from the shop, combined with
travellers who find it a welcome
change from the usual roadside
fare on the motorway network.
There's also a managerie of exotic
animals to keep visitors amused.
We had been before some five
years ago and recalled a pleasant
enough sandwich and sore temptation
in the farm shop which you
have to pass through to reach the
tea room.
That's still the case. There's a veritable
cornucopia of local produce
on display and, as it happens, a
particularly fine weekly newspaper.
So I gently coaxed Sylvia past
the meats, cheeses, preserves,
cakes and breads to the tea room
counter to order watercress soup,
beef stew and a baked potato.
Finding a table proved tricky
because the place was heaving,
which we understand is
generally the case at weekends.
Successful eventually,
we settled down to enjoy the
fine views across Holmedale
to the Yorkshire Dales beyond
and, rather closer, the rheas (ostrich-
like birds) in the nearby field.
The long-necked rheas seemed to
have a spring in their step and my
watercress soup was certainly an
early taste of summer, being beautifully
fresh and fragrant. It came
with an equally fresh brown bread
roll and creamy butter.
This was followed by a blast of
winter. As a brief wintry shower
sent the rheas scattering, almost as
if on cue, my beef stew with
dumplings arrived. The beef, from
the farm's own herd, was flakily
tender and had been cooked very
slowly with the usual winter vegetables.
The two dumplings were
perfect mounds of gravy-absorbing
suet but surprisingly light.
Sylvia's baked potato was very
good, which might not seem much
an achievement but we are constantly
amazed by some establishments'
ability to ruin them, either
by cooking them in a microwave,
burning them, or keeping them
warm for hours until they resemble
shrivelled ancient meteorites.
This one was perfect and topped
with plenty of good quality grated
cheddar cheese and a side salad.
Mainsgill also provides a range of
sandwiches and quiches and
home-made desserts, one of
which - a rather sumptuous-looking
rhubarb pie and ice cream -
we spotted being carefully shared
by a couple (well, clearly good
friends) at the next table.
Severely tempted, we abstained
only to be well and truly mugged
by the array of goodies in the shop
so that our lunch bill of £13 was
dwarfed by what we spent on the
home-reared lamb, bacon and
free-range poultry.
Oh well, the fridge freezer is well
stocked with first-rate meat and
other goodies, a lasting reminder
of a trip along route 66.
1:49pm Friday 7th March 2008
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