Midleton Food Festival 10.09.11. Click on image to enlarge. Post to follow... |
MIDLETON FOOD FESTIVAL
Had really been looking forward to this year’s Midleton
Food Festival and neither the food on offer nor the people offering it let me
down in any way. A stroll down (and up, and down and up again) the main street this
Saturday morning was a foodie pleasure.
Enjoyed my chat with Claire of Amandine who make sweet temptations from the most gorgeous French style pastries
to personalised birthday cakes. Two of her pastries, Pear & Almond and
Lemon Meringue Tarts, have been shortlisted for the 2011 Irish Food Awards in Dingle
and they were the two we bought.
One of the pleasures of these festivals, especially
if you go early, is the opportunity to chat with the stallholders and we
compared notes with Claire on Provence (where she is from and where we, and
she, holidayed this year). Bonne chance in Dingle, Claire.
Also had a chat with Jon Ward and Kevin Aherne from the
inventive Sage Restaurant who played a big part in the festival with a few stands out on the street
as well as one in the courtyard.
Also called to the regular Farmers Market which was also running and delighted here to meet up with Noreen and son Henry
from Woodside Farm and also the busy and ever inventive Deirdre Hilliard of Cobh’s Just Food
.
Back to the food now. Let’s start with the bread, a
lovely sourdough (already tested) from the Granary who have a pleasant permanent
position just off the main street. Three lots of cheese came back to the city:
two from the Old Irish Creamery and
one from Ardsallagh .
Isabelle Sheridan was manning the On the Pig’s Back stand
and here we helped ourselves to some Chicken liver pate and to a slab of Venison
Terrine. Also a box of Victoria plums from the Rose Cottage Fruit farm .
At the Farmers Market, we bought the veg from Ballycurraginny
Farm (regulars at Mahon Point), got some Pork and Apple Burgers from Woodside
and a Muesli and pot of Ratatouille from Just Food.
Madeline from Pure Sushi told
me she was delighted with her award at the Mitchelstown Festival and we treated
ourselves to a six pack for this evening. Some sweet stuff too. In addition to
the cakes from Amandine (who have a permanent stand in the Mahon Shopping complex),
we spoiled ourselves with a bag of gorgeous mixed chocolates from Benoit Lorge .
As you know, I regularly buy Irish, buy local. But
it is not always easy. Lorge has quite a reputation in the chocolate field and
many of you may have seen Eve Chocolates from
Dennehys Cross highlighted in the Evening Echo during the week.
Yet last week, at the English Market, two US travel agents
told me they were disappointed to find only two Irish chocolate products on
sale in an otherwise well stocked chocolate shop there.
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