Sitting alongside sandwiches of fresh bread with local ham and cheese there are sharing platters of local meats and fish. If none of these take your fancy there is a full lunch menu with favorites such as steak, cottage pie or fish and chips all with a local twist and elegantly presented.
So as we sat alongside the roaring fire sheltering inside from the cold I decided to go for the meat platter (I knew I was having fish that night but that's for another post!) which I was reliably informed was quite big but that I could probably eat myself! I paired this with a glass of house shiraz, while my wife opting for the cheese and ham sandwich on focaccia. The platter arrived beautifully presented on a slate with a jar of duck liver parfait and various rolls and little piles of meats alongside two local cheeses with fresh soused carrot rolls and onions, all topped with pea shoots served with fresh beer bread. This was an elegant sophisticated platter and would have been perfect for two sharing as a starter or light lunch. The flavours were excellent with the parfait silky and creamy and the cured duck a lovely sweet salty tang to it, alongside the Bellingham blue cheese which was stunning and really deserved a vintage port. The focaccia also came elegantly presented on a board with a side order of fries in a little bucket. In fact the only complaint I'd have was having to ask what each thing on the platter was and the waiter not being able to tell me without going to see the chef, but that's slightly picky as the service was faultless apart from this.
The platter was very filling due to the richness of so many of the components so it was decided that one dessert to share would be sufficient. And what a dessert it was. Chocolate and mulled wine tart with cranberries and orange sorbet. It was a delight of textures, flavours, aromas and temperatures. And all for a fiver! The warm tart was light with a thin sweet pastry, filled with rich but not sickly chocolate and just the right amount of mulled wine to taste the spice and a little alcohol but then the wonderful chocolate richness came through. The cranberries gave a wonderful sharpness to complement the sweetness and then another layer of sharpness came through with the sorbet. It would be easy to serve this with double cream and make it hugely heavy but with yet another flavour of Christmas from the orange it was a wonderful palate refresher as every mouthful of tart had a wonderful rich citrus flavour which was intensified with the contrasting temperatures. This was no ball of ice either, it was thick and velvety and coated your mouth with a tingle. This was quite simply beautiful and the picture really doesn't do justice. Should really have asked Santa for a new camera!!A pair of cappuccinos finished the meal with the fire still burning before coats and scarves were adorned to head back into the chill Irish wind and the total bill came to just over £30. I'd say this was excellent value for very good food in a lovely atmosphere. Next time I go back I'm going to ask for a seat downstairs which has a cosy wine cellar/library fusion feel about it. I'll look forward to it.

























