Walter F Stowy
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Stowy here, ladies and gentlemen - your intrepid Sunday Times hotel inspector.
I’m just back from visiting the winners of the Good Hotel Guide’s annual César Awards and this is the best list in seven years.
Not that they’ve ever been bad.
The Good Hotel Guide focuses entirely on independently owned hotels in Britain and Ireland, banging the drum for a style of hotel-keeping that has been all but forgotten in the recent mania for fancy taps and designer everything: one where the location, the warmth of the welcome and the quality of the cooking matter most.
Its Césars go to properties that are outstanding in their own class, not those that conform to a stereotype.
Now and again, though, I’ve felt that the editors have erred a little on the side of the have-a-go heroes of the hotel world and lost sight of the overall quality of the experience. Not this year. Six of the 10 properties are stunners. Two, Ballyvolane House and the Gurnard’s Head, have a kind of magic about them that comes when a sensational location and a singular sense of style collide. Only one is a dud.
If you’ve behaved particularly well recently, and fancy spoiling yourself as a reward, I suggest that you book at least one of the better properties here today. Because tomorrow, the new edition of the GHG will be published, and everyone will be at it.
1 THE STAR CASTLE, ST MARY’S, ISLES OF SCILLY
Island Hotel of the Year
“Well, you’ve picked your moment,” the receptionist said as she showed me to
my room a week or so ago. “The weather hasn’t been this good since, oh ...
June.”
I’ll say. I arrived on a dazzling day to be in the Scillies: the sky a faultless blue, the Atlantic playful as a kitten. Did it colour my perceptions? Of course it did. The hotel is set in a small but exquisite 16th-century castle with views of St Mary’s harbour. From the battlements, you can watch the sun set over secret bays and distant headlands. Much of the appeal of a hotel like this is its location, and when mother nature is feeling cooperative - well, you wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.
The room: number 224, and I’d recommend it. It was in the garden
annexe, and both vast and well furnished - thick, creamy curtains,
high-quality bed linen, two big armchairs, and a flat-screen TV. The rooms
have their own sun decks too, just in case you luck into weather like mine. 8/10
The food: the weakest link here was the pudding. In late September, my
summer-berry confection seemed fake. As for the seared Cornish scallops and
locally caught cod, however - hallelujah! 8/10
The service: unfailingly polite and efficient. 9/10
Value for money: 9/10
Does it deserve its César? Yes - even when the sun doesn’t shine.
01720 422317, www.star-castle.co.uk
; doubles from £144, half-board
2 THE GURNARD’S HEAD, ZENNOR, CORNWALL
Dining Pub of the Year
The rest of the Stowy family was with me when I came to Zennor, and we were
the last to arrive that day. I’d told them beforehand that we had a
three-month baby, but nobody had thought to keep a room for us in which you
could fit a cot. They had to move the chest of drawers into the corridor.
It wasn’t a great start, then, but things picked up. This is a laid-back,
right-on kind of place - they take their food sourcing very seriously - and
if you need looking after, or are travelling with children, I wouldn’t
recommend it. If not, I can’t think of many places that will suit you
better. The location, on the last stretch of Cornwall coast that hasn’t been
swamped by tourism, is superb, and so is the food. I wish I’d known about it
in the days before my son was around.
The room: make sure you arrive early, so you get a bigger room. In
ours, the bathroom was an oversized cupboard, and the pretty, pale-blue
walls could have done with a lick of paint. 6/10
The food: the meal of the year. A fillet of roast hake with rosemary
mash, pancetta and spinach, served with a béarnaise sauce, was an entirely
successful combination of flavours and textures.10/10
The service: pubby, but also friendly and enthusiastic.7/10
Value for money: 9/10
Does it deserve its César? Yes. 01736 796928, www.gurnardshead.co.uk
; doubles from £80, B&B; main courses from about £15
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Obviously Stowy needs to be reminded when hs is Scotland, in ways that looking out of the window simple doesn't do.
Tartan has it's place, but not in the decor of such a well appoiinted establishment as Bealach House. For most of us comfort, good food and a warm welcme is more than enough.
Derek, Inverness, Scotland
The Lindeth Fell Hotel is always excellent. I have been going for years. They even keep a bottle of Tavel Rose for me! It is always warm and friendly even on the coldest Lake District day. The food is excellent. Lindeth Fell full deserves this award. Well done and I will be back soon
John Clark, Grimsby, UK
Think he is a but harsh about the rooms at Bealach. I am relieved there is no tartan! They are bright and have lovely views. He does not mention the spacious guest lounge and conservatory. As there are only a maximum of 6 guests there is plenty of space for relaxing. Food certainly is excellent.
Carol, Nottingham, UK
I love the Tresanton - had the best Christmas ever!
Stuart Cousins, Storrington, West Sussex, UK
Good afternoon
Thank you very much for the good news
Just would like to mentionned that under the top picture it does say 'book a table at The Great house,Gliffaes, Wales' but The Great House is in Lavenham Suffolk.
Could you please amend the text?
Best regards
Celine RICHARD
RICHARD Celine , lavenham, UK
The Hotel Tresanton is not a great hotel. My wife and I stayed at the Tresanton for 3 nights, the whole experience was poor. There are many great hotels in the UK, but the Tresanton is not one of them
Paul, Leeds, England