Monday 20 February 2017

CANADA | History, wildlife & the great blue yonder: 3 days in the Avalon Penisula, Newfoundland's East coast

Larry and I flying the flag at Signal Hill in St John's, Newfoundland

A little about how Newfoundland came to be


One of the first things the effervescent Larry Hann - our guide from McCarthy's Party during our time in Newfoundland - first told us in his delicious Irish / Canadian hybrid accent, was that "cod is king in Newfoundland." In fact, if you say the word "fish" in these parts, it's automatically assumed you mean cod. The reason? This humble creature can be traced back as to why Newfoundland is here today.

The Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador is the most easterly in the country (outlined in red on the map below), and in it you'll find Newfoundland. An island, built much like an iceberg with most of its mass beneath the water, it used to be its own self-governed country and Britain's oldest colony, with locals even driving on the left, until it joined Canada as the tenth province in 1949.

The cold Atlantic waters around the island don't get above 10C, and the nutient-rich soil that was once on the land, gradually migrated into the sea over time, thanks to the slow grind of glaciers. These nutrients, combined with the cold ocean, made the fishing areas around Newfoundland one of the richest in the world. And it was mostly cod.

the location of Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada
This abundance of fish drew a big crowd. The English and Irish would travel across the ocean on contracts to haul it. But over time, rather than risking their lives with the treacherous journey there and back each season, and to protect their fishing rights, they eventually decided to just - stay. And thus, the first permanent European settlement in all of Canada came to be (more on that below).

Newfoundland's unique location as the point of the New World that is closest to Europe, has also meant it's been the site of many transatlantic firsts, such as flying, and communication cables (more on that below too). And during the 9/11 attacks, any aircraft that was heading west over the North Atlantic during that time was told to make for the airport in Newfoundland, the point of land they could reach the quickest. So many craft were grounded in the city that day, that schools were open to house the thousands of stranded passengers.

Newfoundland has that winning combination - unique history, extraordinary wildlife, and a stunning setting - that makes it such an ideal place to visit. I knew nothing about this province before my trip, and given that it's less than a five hour flight from London, and the prospect of successfully swimming with whales is pulling me back, hard (more on that below), I can't imagine it will be my last. 

Larry even did a private tour with Canadian rock legend Bryan Adams once, who reckoned Newfoundland and Labrador should be declared as the 7th wonder of the world. It really is that beautiful.

Here's my guide on how you could spend a terrific three days around the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland's East coast.

around St John's in Newfoundland




Day 1 | HISTORY AND VISTAS


MORNING


Today's full driving itinerary on Google Maps 
here.

1) Soak up the views whilst driving the coastal Baccalieu Trail

Take the scenic route from the capital of Newfoundland, St John's, to Cupid's Cove Plantation, along the spectacular coastal drive know as The Baccalieu Trail. You'll pass bucolic fishing villages and sensational scenery - be sure to stop for photo opps.

While you're on the road, keep a look out for moose. They're not native to the island, but there are a heck of a lot of them - around 125,000. Introduced in 1904 from New Brunswick province, they're mainly around for their meat, and 25,000 big game licenses are issued each year, allowing locals to hunt them. But what's comforting to know is this isn't a sport - moose are only ever killed for their meat, a popular source of protein for the locals. It can even be preserved in a can or bottle. 

It's also worth noting that these huge beasts cross roads, and when they do, it can be a very dangerous thing indeed. Many people are killed each year from vehicle collisions with moose, and Newfoundlanders will rarely drive after dark for this reason.

scenes from Trinity Bay and Bay Roberts, Newfoundland
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2) Visit the site of the first permanent English settlement in all of Canada

Cupid's Cove Plantation is the fourth oldest permanent European settlement in North America, and the oldest in all of Canada. In 1610, a British fellow called John Guy brought a small group of colonists to this protected harbour, turning Newfoundland from a seasonal fishing ground into a home. And the rest makes for some great history.

The migrants from England and Ireland were attracted by the abundance of cod in the surrounding waters. They would lightly salt it and take it down to the Caribbean to trade for sugar and Jamaican rum, or what the locals coined as 'Newfoundland screech'. And getting 'screeched in' is a Newfoundland right of passage. Something about drinking rum and kissing a dead fish. Sounds like a good night.

The original site of Cupid's Cove was rediscovered in 1995, and active archaeological work continues to this day every summer. It's a fascinating place to visit, and the archaeologists there will happily show you around, and maybe even tell you a folktale or two.

368 Seaforest Drive, Cupids, NL
cupidslegacycentre.ca

archaeological excavations at Cupids Cove plantation, Newfoundland
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3) Explore the Bay Roberts shoreline and visit the Cable Museum

Meet up with the lovely people at Bay Robert's Tourism, who will gladly take you on a saunter around the beautiful bay. We got some great insight into the history, nature and culture of this thriving community by
 Lois Dawe, and also popped into the Cable Building for a meander around the museum and galleries.


These guys also do a lot of culinary events, including the Newfoundland Fishcake Championships (HELLO). Plus, they have a very tempting Toutons and Tunes tour, which involves enjoying toutons (fried bread with a slick of molasses or jam) with capelin (little silver fish, the same ones that attract puffins and whales) - a picture of that above - whilst listening to some traditional folk music, and having an all round good jolly.

Cable Building National Historic Site, 321 Water Street, Bay Roberts, NL A0A 1G0


4) Local lunch at Skipper Ben’s, Cupids

This is a lovely spot. A very quaint restored 1890's seaside property in the heart of the oldest English settlement in Canada, right next to the water. With very welcoming owners. Get the fishcakes. And the chowder.


Skipper Ben's, 408 Seaforest Drive, Cupids, NL A0A 2B0

lunch at Skipper Ben's in Cupid's, Newfoundland

AFTERNOON


5) Visit Heart's Content, where the first transatlantic telegraph cable was pulled ashore

Back in the old days, getting news from North America to Europe took at least 10 days by boat. But then, in 1866, the first transatlantic telegraph cable, a tangible and physical thing connecting these two continents, was pulled through the Atlantic and hauled ashore at Heart's Content. The first morse code message was sent through this cable, and global communications changed forever. 

Just imagine; a great big ship, dragging a cable through the ocean, from Ireland to Newfoundland. It's an incredible feat. There were nine years of several failed attempts prior to this, and the story behind it is a terrific one. 

That was 150 years ago, and I attended the anniversary celebrations. A monumental milestone that Newfoundlanders are rightly proud about. It's humbling to think just how far communications technology has progressed since then.

Website

Highway 80 | Heart's Content, Heart's Content, NL A0B 1Z0

views from Heart's Content, Newfoundland
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WHERE TO STAY


6) Doctor’s House Inn and Spa, Green’s Harbour


Just an hour from St. John's, and a million miles from anywhere. That's the strap line for Doctor's House Inn and Spa, and it's spot on. This is an elegant Tudor mansion, with a 100 acre ocean-front estate, and could possibly be Newfoundland's best kept secret.

There are glorious grounds and gardens, along with several barns, chicken coops and outbuildings, with Newfoundland ponies, cows, sheep, goats, and other very happy animals, roaming the property.

At check-in, the very lovely owner (pictured below - I forget his name - drat), mentioned Newfoundland is one of the best places in the world to spot whales, from land. He told me guests often see them from their room balconies. And he wasn't kidding. Like clockwork the next morning, I woke up, pulled back my balcony door, and heard the unmistakable spout of a whale. I looked across into the bay, and in the distance saw two dark shapes slipping in and out of the water, spouts occasionally spraying with abandon. 

What a way to start the day.

doctorshousenewfoundland.com
21 Old Hopeall Road, Green's Harbour, NL, A0B 1X0

the beautiful property and grounds of Doctor's House Inn and Spa, Newfoundland
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Day 2 | WILDLIFE AND THE GREAT BLUE YONDER


MORNING: OPTION 1


The full day's driving itinerary for Option 1 on Google Maps here.

1) Go find those whales, puffins and seabirds

Around a one hour and ten minute drive from Doctor's House Inn and Spa, you'll come across Witless Bay Ecological Reserve, a place alive with the rhythm of 400 million beating wings, along with 40 tonne whales pulsing through the clear blue waters.


Get out onto the ocean with Gatherall's and their Puffin and Whale Watch Tour. We were out in the morning on a foggy and very atmospheric Atlantic, with the dramatic granite rock islands of the reserve appearing through the mist. The whales were being shy, but boy, I've never seen (or smelt!) so many sea birds. 

A blizzard of puffins with their colourful beaks, as far as I could see into the mist. Did you know, they're only about 10 inches tall - pictures are often zoomed in and people tend to think they're as big as penguins. There are 300,000 pairs of Atlantic puffins in this reserve, and 2.5 million seabirds in total. They were flitting about in the sky above us, clumsily and hilariously landing and taking off on the water, diving into the deep, and darting through the ocean beneath on the hunt for capelin.

If you look up, don't open your mouth!

gatheralls.com

90 Northside Road, Bay Bulls, NL, A0A 1C0

puffins, puffins everywhere, with Gatherall's in Newfoundland
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2) Have a picnic lunch at North America's most easterly restaurant 

If you start your morning with Gatherall's, head 40 minutes south to enjoy lunch by a lighthouse.


A Newfoundland picnic, made in North America's most easterly restaurant, found inside a lighthouse built in 1870. Expect the likes of fabulous daily baked molasses bread made on site, chutney-glazed ham and Brie sandwiches, orzo salad, freshly squeezed lemonade, and homemade cakes and tarts, with local Newfoundland berries. 

You'll find it at the end of a 1km walk along a natural isthmus, with the Atlantic surrounding both sides of the path. You'll have the company of whales, seabirds and a view that goes on forever. Unless it's foggy, which made for some atmospheric eating.

Point to note, these guys are very popular and get booked up well in advance, so do plan ahead with your reservation.

lighthousepicnics.ca

Lighthouse Picnics, Ferryland, NL A0A 2H0

an atmospheric Ferryland Lighthouse, Newfoundland
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MORNING: OPTION 2


The full day's driving itinerary for Option 2 on Google Maps 
here.

1) Snorkel ALONGSIDE whales. Maybe.

How brave do you think you are? Would you get in the water alongside a 40 tonne whale?

If the answer to that is HELL YES WHERE DO I SIGN UP (along the lines of my response), then you have got to do this. Around a one hour and fifteen minute drive from the previous night's accommodation, very close to the capital of St John's, you'll find the guys at Ocean Quest. Their big draw? They offer a three hour close encounter Snorkelling with Whales tour. Watch the video at that link for the type of experience that is very possible, and often takes place. It looks INCREDIBLE.

When it comes to the natural world, as much as it's one of my greatest passions, I believe I am mostly jinxed. I've never seen the Northern Lights, or whales in the water from a boat, despite several previous attempts at both. So, despite my visit timing with peak whale season in Newfoundland, I didn't actually get to snorkel with whales. We didn't even spot any. They were clearly otherwise engaged. Or more accurately, the silver capelin fish the humpbacks follow and feast on, had probably moved on by that week, and hence, so had they.

But we did see speedy dolphins. And snorkelling in the 5C Atlantic as a whole was a pretty awesome experience. Check out the video below.

oceanquestadventures.com

40 O'Leary Avenue, St. John's , NL A1B 2C7


2) Cod and chips lunch at Chafe's Landing, Petty Harbour

What to do after a foggy morning snorkelling in the freezing Atlantic on the hunt for mammals? Get fish and chips from Chafe's Landing, a 25 minute drive away. Newfoundland cod, skin-on fries, a dressing of bread crumbs, locally grown savoury (a herb), and onions. Gravy for the chips. A cup of tea. And vinegar out of a Corona bottle. It totally hit the spot and warmed the cockles - fantastic.

chafeslanding.com

11 Main Road, Petty Harbour, NL A0A 3H0


pre-snorkel with Ocean Quest, and post-snorkel cod and chips at Chafe's Landing, Newfoundland
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AFTERNOON


3) Drive back to St John's

my room view of St John's harbour from
Sheraton, Newfoundland

Head back to Newfoundland's capital, and use this time to do some exploring at your own leisure.


WHERE TO EAT


4) Dinner at The Reluctant Chef, St John's

These guys offer a "set" 5-course meal that changes completely every two weeks. Their Red-Seal chef works with the sommelier to create food with a unique and local flare, designed to be enjoyed with the wine pairing.

thereluctantchef.ca

290 Duckworth Street, St. John's, NL

WHERE TO STAY


5) Sheraton Hotel, St John's

A very comfortable stay was had at the Sheraton, and my room had some glorious views of overlooking the historic St. John's harbour. Watching the fog roll in and obscure everything, then roll out again within half an hour, was very cool.

sheratonhotelnewfoundland.com

115 Cavendish Square, St. Johns, NL, A1C 3K2


Day 3 | ST JOHN'S & THE SURROUNDINGS


MORNING


Today's full driving itinerary on Google Maps 
here.


1) Hike the trails around Signal Hill, the highest point in the capital  

Work up an appetite at the historic site of Signal Hill, by hiking the five kilometres of trails. Especially the famous North Head Trail, boasting a unique traverse along the Narrows of St. John's Harbour, and into a colourful community called the Battery.

It's worth noting in the winter, this part of the world can reach -20C, or -30C with wind chill. The salt water in St John's harbour freezes, but all the ships that pass through it keep it open. In September 2015, icebergs actually made it to St John's - it's very unusual to see them so far south. A huge piece of ice, the size of Manhattan, had broken off from Greenland, and fractured off into smaller pieces. Global warming...

Website

230 Signal Hill Road, St. John's, NL

fabulous views from the top of Signal Hill, Newfoundland
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2) Lunch at Signal Hill Chocolate Cafe


You could take a packed lunch, or make a pit-stop at Newfoundland Chocolate Café, inside the Signal Hill Interpretation Centre.


Website

Signal Hill National Historic Site Visitor Information Centre, St. John's, NL


AFTERNOON


3) Visit 
Cape Spear, the most easterly point of North America


Head to the place where the sun first rises in North America, Cape Spear. It's at the most easterly point of the continent, and is home to the oldest surviving lighthouse in Newfoundland and Labrador. 


Time this visit with a good weather forecast. You'll have some stunning views of the Atlantic, and can enjoy the many walking trails. You might even have some better luck than me, and actually spot a whale in the water.

Website
Cape Spear Drive, NL

views from Cape Spear, Newfoundland
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4) Sample the favourite local tipple at source at Quidi Vidi Brewery 

  
Quidi Vidi is a great name. It's also a place that's been brewing world-class beer for the past fifteen years. They've got eight brands at the moment, and their most recent is the Quidi Vidi Iceberg beer. Can you guess the unique ingredient? It's pure, unsullied iceberg water, harvested from ones that break off Greenland and drift south towards Newfoundland. Now that's pretty cool.
oysters at Blue on Water,
St John's in Newfoundland

You'll be hard-pressed to find Quidi Vidi beer outside of Newfoundland, as they only really make enough to just about meet the local demand. Those locals like a tipple or two.

quidividibrewery.ca

Quidi Vidi Brewing Company, 35 Barrows Road, Quidi Vidi, St. John’s, NL A1A 1G8


WHERE TO EAT


5) Dinner at Blue on Water, St John's

A hotel with a fantastic restaurant attached, we had a great meal here on our first night. Including some very fine oysters from PEI (Prince Edward Island). 

blueonwater.com

319 Water St, St. John's, NL A1C 1B9


Note: I visited Newfoundland as a guest of Newfoundland Labrador Tourism, as part of a media package. All views remain my own, as always.

Wednesday 18 January 2017

How to be a part of the global voice of opinion with YouGov


getting opinionated on
YouGov over breakfast
What do Londoners like most and least about living in London? Would people support raising National Insurance to fund the NHS? How many hours of box sets are Brits happy to watch in any one setting? What do people across Europe and Asia think of America for electing Donald Trump?

All interesting questions, right? And likely ones you have opinions on too. These are just a handful of examples of the types of surveys you can find on YouGov, the global community of over 5 million people across 38 countries, who share their opinions on... well, everything.

The nice people over at YouGov got in touch with me to let me know what they're about, and why it's a good idea to sign up and participate in their online surveys. Great if you are, like me, of the opinionated persuasion. Or you like the idea of helping shape public opinion - anything from favourite brands, to government policy. And YouGov are the most quoted research company in the UK, so your opinions will help make the headlines too. Plus, you can redeem points for real cash and prize draws for the surveys you fill in. 

YouGov members share their opinions all day every day, all around the country. YouGov then analyse that information and publish select findings on their website on a daily basis. They call their database the YouGov Cube, and they're pretty certain it's the largest daily updated record of people's habits and opinions in existence.That's quite impressive.

Joining is free and quick and you can do so here. I did, and shared some thoughts on the state of global politics over this epic breakfast spread ✌️ 

my favourite thing about
London are the views 
💙
Here are the answers to those first few questions: history comes out on top when Londoners were asked what they liked most about living in London, with cost of housing and living coming out on the bottom; the majority of people would support a raise in National Insurance to fund the NHS, Brits are happy to watch four hours or more of box sets; and people across Europe and Asia now have a lower opinion of America and Americans because of Trump. Quelle surprise (!)

Note: This is a sponsored post in partnership with YouGov, as part of their campaign to encourage people to register on their website, and take part in some surveys! 

Monday 19 December 2016

LATVIA: 4 places to eat during Riga Restaurant Week

a frosty Riga Town Centre, Latvia
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Riga Restaurant Week and the European Region of Gastronomy


Next year, Riga is going to have something big to shout about. The capital of Latvia - along with the surrounding Gauja River Valley (which includes the central Latvian cities of Sigulda, Cēsis and Valmiera) - will become a European Region of Gastronomy. Only three gastro-centric spots on this continent are awarded the accolade each year, and in 2017, Riga-Gauja will wear this badge alongside central Denmark and the Danish city of Aarhus, and the Lombardy region of Italy.

The popularity of Nordic cuisine has seen a surge in recent years, with Scandinavian-influenced restaurants and pop-ups springing up in most of the world's major food cities. But food from the neighbouring Baltics? Not so much.


That's a great shame, because we're talking about similar climates with four distinct seasons, equally bountiful natural larders, and innovative and ambitious chefs, all eager to showcase the quality produce that can be found not far beyond their front door.

autumnal sunshine in Riga's central park
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 To coincide with Riga's big culinary gig next year, I was invited to visit the city during the autumn biannual Riga Restaurant Week (they do another in spring), that took place in October. The premise of this event - and one I know Budapest does too, as I happened to be there during theirs - is for restaurants across the capital to put on set three-course menus at a very reasonable 15 or 20 Euros, that run for the whole week.

It's a great idea for an emerging foodie city. It encourages people to try somewhere new, means almost everyone can treat themselves to some of the finest seasonal dishes on offer in the city, and all for not very much at all.


Latvian cuisine, as it stands, might not be the most refined. Its pillars are often noted as rye bread, fish from their internal waters, curd-based dishes, meat cooked in pork fat, smoked meats and fish, and nuts and berries. Their ancestors engaged in a lot of hard physical labour, and needed heavy sustenance to fuel it. So traditionally, meals are dense. But these days, restaurant kitchens have modified traditional recipes, coming up with contemporary versions that add a sophisticated and light touch, which both taste great and are a joy to look at.

My guide below suggests a few restaurants to try that take part in Riga Restaurant Week. A second post to follow suggests ways in which to fill the rest of a two day trip, both in and around the city (LATVIA: how to spend 2 days in and around Riga). My advice: if a visit to Riga wasn't on the cards, 2017 is the year to change this. Coincide it with their spring or autumn restaurant week, and you'll leave very well fed indeed.



Where to eat in Riga


1) Valmiermuizas Embassy


Dzintars Kristovskis, a European Region of Gastronomy 2017 ambassador, and Head Chef at 
Valmiermuizas Embassy, began his career at a kebab house over 10 years ago. Things have changed a lot since, and in his restaurant today, there are two main focuses: showcasing local Latvian ingredients, and serving great beer.

The beer comes from the Valmiera-based Valmiermuiza microbrewery, where it's brewed slowly and deliberately. Their intention is to maintain and develop traditions of beer making and drinking in Latvia, complimented by elegant food from Dzintars kitchen.


Expect menus crafted from locally grown products, including seasonal wild herbs and plants from Latvian meadows and forests. I enjoyed ox heart tartare with pickled celeriac, confit onion, elderflower, blackcurrant, and cider and charred onion consomme. There was a gloriously sharp square of seabuckthorn candy with spruce salt. Venison came with rowanberry, pear, parsnip and ale sauce. And dessert was moss (actual foraged moss), chocolate, charred quince, cranberry sorbet, and chicory sponge. All that, for 20 Euros.


valmiermuiza.lv/en

Valmiermuiza's Embassy, A.Briāna Street 9a, Riga

Riga Restaurant Week dishes at Valmiermuizas Embassy, and chef Dzintars Kristovskis
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 2) Rocket Bean Roastery


We all know Scandinavians and those from the Nordic countries are big fans of coffee. It's the Finns that come out on top as the highest consumers of coffee per capita in the world, with Sweden also featuring in the top echelon. And in neighbouring Latvia, the coffee-quaffing theme continues.

Rocket Bean Roastery is a coffee production site, coffee shop, restaurant, and coffee equipment store. Here, you can get a fabulous pour over, as well as really great food from their Michelin-experienced chef, Artūrs Taškāns. I really like the idea that in the evening, the coffee shop-by-day atmosphere is transformed into an intimate and atmospheric dining venue, with candlelight and clinking wine glasses.


I popped in at lunch and ordered a la carte, as the three courses offered as part of the restaurant week would have been too much, considering I had that planned for the evening. But it included the likes of mushroom soup with rice noodles, slow-cooked egg, crispy piglet belly, and finger lime. And venison chop with kale, black-pepper beetroot purée, and venison broth sauce.


I ordered an absolutely gorgeous onion soup with chives and sour cream, then some truffle mashed potatoes with kale, chives and chervil, a chocolate mousse cake with flower petals, homemade bread, and a great Colombian Chemex brew (I am aware this was also three courses - it seems I just can't help myself). I went out the back to check out the roastery and got coerced into a game of table tennis with chief roaster Aigars, before eating. I lost, but it was close. What a nice bunch of people.


rocketbean.lv/en

Rocket Bean Roastery, Miera Eela 29, Centra Rajons, Rīga, LV-1001

beautiful food and great pour over coffee at Rocket Bean Roastery, Riga
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 3) ENTRESOL


A Provence chateaux and shabby chic is the interior theme at ENTRESOL, a restaurant with multiple award-winning chef Raimonds Zommers at the helm. Classic dishes are cooked with contemporary methods, so don't be surprised to find parts of your meal dehydrated, fermented, or cooked in a sous-vide.


From the a la carte, Latvian dishes are easily identified with an icon, for diners that want to specifically experience the local cuisine. Prices for mains usually range between 12 to 20 Euros, so the three courses for 15 Euros, or 20 Euros with the drinks pairing, is a real steal. 

Starters came in the form of a trio of delightful knapas (Latvian small plates): venison tartare with potato foam, white mushroom broth with beer meringue, and dried brown trout with quince jelly and sour cream. For mains, slow-cooked sea trout with pumpkin purée, quince, and vadouvan curry sauce, and dessert was an autumnal plate of apple, five ways.

entresol.lv/en

ENTRESOL, Elizabetes Iela 22, Centra Rajons, Rīga, LV-1050

Riga Restaurant Week dishes at ENTRESOL
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 4) FERMA


FERMA is most definitely my kind of restaurant. Art Deco accented interiors that are an ode to the functional modernism of the mid-twentieth century, great service, and high-end food without the stuffiness. 

Nestled in the quiet part of the city overlooking Viesturdārzs Park, it's a space that reflects the very middle-class neighbourhood its in, promoting langurous lunches and long evening meals. I hear in the summer, you can enjoy a country-style picnic on the terrace, prepared in a real smoking house, and cooked over an open fire.

A chef at the age of 23, the owner of the first private culinary school in Latvia at 25, and chef-patron of his own restaurant at 29, Māris Astičs is the accomplished man behind FERMA. It's only here that you can order a steak of aged Latvian beef, the house bread keeps with the traditions of Latvian breadmaking and is how the kitchen starts each morning, and local products feature prominently on the menu: wild venison, Baltic salmon, Latvian shrimp, and so on. 

As part of the 20 Euro deal (only available between 12pm - 5pm here), I had a glorious and silky pumpkin and quince soup with goat cheese and wild mushroom toasts, root vegetable stew with porcini cream and wild deer roast beef with juniper glaze, and a sea buckthorn cream cake with basil and honey biscuits.

fermarestorans.lv/en

FERMA, Valkas Iela 7, Centra Rajons, Rīga, LV-1010

Riga Restaurant Week dishes at FERMA
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Note: This is a sponsored post in collaboration with the Riga and Latvian Tourism Boards. All views remain my own, as always.


Related posts
LATVIA: How to spend 2 days in and around Riga

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