Fringe scandal

Picture: Mary Evans Picture Library
It’s now less than two weeks until the start of the Wanstead Fringe. Tickets are now available for another event – and it’s not like anything that’s been staged in the Fringe before.

fringeweblogoScent and Scandal will be a multisensory mix of the sights, smells and drinks of Jazz Age London in what promises to be a fascinating evening at the Duke. Historian, author and local resident Lucinda Gosling of Mary Evans Picture Library will team up with Lizzie Ostrom of Odette Toilette, purveyor of olfactory adventures and author of ‘A Century of Scents’, for the event which will tell the tales of naughty debutants and scandalous affairs. Drinks suitable to the period will be available, and there will be a goody bag for each guest.

Tickets are available from the Wanstead Fringe site here.

Double bravo, Wanstead

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Wanstead and Snaresbrook cricket club has been celebrating its 150th anniversary this year, and on Monday the year was crowned by winning the Essex cup, having won the Essex league at the weekend. The Women’s team too won their league. Altogether a fantastic achievement – congratulations to the team and to the whole club.

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Harvey’s. Wow.

Harvey’s, Wanstead’s new old greengrocer, is now fully open, and don’t the shoppers of the High Street know it. The queue for the till snaked right round the shop on Saturday morning as people of all ages tried out the offering.

The interior is bare brick with decorations made from the old Harvey’s red shutter. Fruit and veg are piled into wooden boxes with brown paper bags on hand. There were fifteen different types of tomato, four kinds of courgette, exotic things as yet unidentified and wide range of pasta, oils and herbs. Fresh dates too. The shop is promising long opening hours which helps make this a truly exciting development. The only thing missing is some greengrocer’s apostrophe’s.

Reviews of Bombetta

The early reviews of Snaresbrook’s new star restaurant Bombetta are coming in, and they are good.

Fay Maschler, the Evening Standard’s legendary reviewer, seemed very impressed with the place, writing:

[su_quote]The restaurant is the creation of Ben Milne and his wife Joanna Anastasiou Milne, who own The Chef’s Deli, a wholesale supplier of cheeses and salume to the restaurant trade, which occupies part of the premises. Thundering wheels of cheese, dangling sausages, an outside table with a bunch of fresh herbs in a jug, a painted line to mark a “terrace”, an open grill, larky chandeliers and a neon Bombetta sign Tracey Emining from within; all beckon seductively. [/su_quote]

And then in pure restaurant-review-speak, she adds:
[su_quote]Drawing on the two meals tried I would say that pig’s head bruschetta is not to be missed. The covert pieces of meat winnowed out and laid on small squares of grilled bread are fatty enough, salty and sassy enough to put appetite on alert ready for, say, lamb with deer mocetta (venison ham), scamorza (sheep’s-milk curd cheese) and peppers threaded onto the flat sword-like skewers. Small but potent, the meaty bombs oozing cheese come with a pile of salad leaves. The pork of my imagining accompanied by scamorza, ’nduja and basil wrapped in pancetta is also good but less particular.   [/su_quote]


There was a favourable review too in Methods Unsound by Wanstead local Toni Ratcliff, which gives this useful bit of background:

[su_quote]Bombetta London’s menu draws inspiration from the Italian farming communities of Puglia where villagers would gather together at the butcher’s shop to eat pieces of meat that had been rolled up with cheese and cured meats, and then roasted over a fire. These meaty treats are called Bombetta, and this idea of communal sharing of simple dishes and delicious meat on sticks is what Bombetta London have now brought to Wanstead. I don’t know about you but that sounds pretty good, huh?
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She adds:
[su_quote]
Bombetta London, as its namesake implies, mostly caters for carnivores. If you are of the vegetarian persuasion then this may not be the place for you. BUT if you enjoy eating delicious meat with a twist, in a laid-back, tapas-y, sharing-plate style with added tasty sides then you should get your butt down there. The interior was inviting, the vibe was relaxed and the staff were all super lovely and really knowledgeable on the menu (which is handy considering that a lot of it was in Italian and did require some Googling), and most of all the food was really good. We will definitely be back for seconds, and not only because it is just at the end of our road.
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Wansteadium’s food blogger Suki Orange says:
“Everything the Bombetta team have done here shows real class. The style and atmosphere of the restaurant have made a silk purse out of what could have been a sow’s ear of a bit of land. The staff balance informal friendliness with knowledge of what they are doing, and the creativity of the menu shows real flair. Delightful too to see they are sourcing some products from other Wanstead traders such as our fishmonger Wanstead Fish. Visit here are going to be a real treat, though class like this does not come cheaply.”

* Bombetta is one of the restaurants taking part in the Wanstead Fringe Restaurant Week, where discounts will be available to anyone producing a copy of the Wanstead Fringe programme. Watch this space for more details.

Fruit corner

greengages-pub-domainTwo offerings in Fruit News.

Guerrilla gardener Marian Temple writes:
“For those of you who don’t know what greengages are, they are a green plum, with a wonderful flavour. I have harvested my neighbour’s tree but won’t need them all. At present they are in my garage fridge – they’re wonderful as stewed fruit and excellent for jam. Get in touch with me at marian@wansteadium.com. Donations to Amnesty International will be welcome, as will any offers of excess damsons for my Amnesty Jamnesty stall.”

*And second is an intriguing-looking project running in the railway arches near the Wanstead Tap. Called Urban Orchard it’s inviting people or groups to collect ripe apples, deliver them to the arches (and get paid for doing so), and will then turn them into genuine local cider. It’s the latest project from Simon Wright, the Wanstead-based purveyor of ginger beer under the Hawkes label

Churchill still MIA

smallerchurchill Mosaic03THIRD (1)No word yet on what was the result of the repairs of the massive Churchill portrait which formerly was hanging in the George (as we reported last month). Wetherspoons told us it had not been removed, as was the gossip, but was simply being repaired following water damage. Nothing more yet, but the artist behind the work, Carole Edrich, who made it for the first Art Trail, has sent us this photograph for anyone not familiar with the picture. Each photograph which makes up the mosaic was taken within quarter of a mile of the Churchill bust outside Manor House.