Hillside, Ventnor: Some Delightful Evening

Kurt spends his time trotting the world seeking the finest. He’s a respected reviewer with over 20 years experience, so knows a thing or two about it and isn’t shy to give his opinion – Ed.

(This little piece has been written for another journal, but I thought why shouldn’t VB get it first”¦)

Hillside, Ventnor: Some Delightful EveningWhen you go out to eat, sometimes that is all you do. Coat off, drink, eat, coat on, and out. Sometimes that’s perhaps all you actually want.

But sometimes – and, for me, make that ‘quite often’ – it is agreeable to make of your meal an ‘evening’. Unhurried, comfortable, dolce andante “¦

My never-to-be-forgotten Bohemia lunch in Jersey was one of those occasions: a leisurely four hour festival of (extremely) good things to eat and drink, in an atmosphere of enjoyable bonhomie. And, last night I found another, right here in Ventnor.

My friend Debby is living 72-hour weeks right now, and at the same time having her home’s interior torn out. She was feeling a tad frazzled so, on the emailed advice of Mr Gary Bonsall from London, I suggested a gentle evening at Hillside Ventnor, just down the road from her home. The choice could not have been better.

Hillside, Ventnor
Hillside is a Georgian house, chastely renovated as a 23-bed hotel and dining room by Danes, Gert and Anna. They have mixed the clean, unfussy lines and style of decoration we connect with Scandinavia with the old stones in a most relaxing way. You feel comfortable the moment you arrive in the little garden in front of the dining room.

Some Delightful EveningWe arrived at 6.20 and, on Gert’s advice, took a small bottle of Joseph Perrier champagne in the garden whilst awaiting dinner. Awaiting? Oh, yes. Dinner is at seven. Look at the menu? There is no menu.

At Hillside, you are invited, as it were, to a private home: you eat what is served. You book 24 hours in advance, the chef buys the food required (there is a choice between meat and fish), and that is your dinner. I’ve done this only twice before: once near the Marché in Nice, circa 1979, and one last year in Maastricht. Both results were splendid. So was this.

The food was in no way pretentious – a little smoked chicken, avocado and pine-nut starter, a very nice piece of stuffed veal with delicately swirled potato and tiny carrots (Debby had a fine-looking grilled salmon), and a deliciously light little lemon sponge with raspberry coulis and fresh mint.

I was horrified to see other diners leaving the mint! It is not what my friend Montmorensy calls ‘gar nichts’ and the profession ‘garnish’ (M is right!): you pull it apart with your fingers and mix it with the lemon … yummy!

Hillside, Ventnor: Some Delightful EveningAn excellent bottle of 2008 Sancerre rosé, a little Montbazillac with the pud, and a nice Calavdos on a Danish chaise longue on the verandah, to end “¦ and the whole served by mine host with more warmth and style than I can ever remember meeting with in a restaurant.

We got to the end of our 2½ hour evening, feeling that we had been the only people in the room (we certainly weren’t), and that everybody’s efforts “¦ and Gert’s in particular … had been wholly devoted to making sure that we had a wonderfully relaxed and enjoyable evening out. We did, my friend, we sure as Hell did.

Oh, I suppose you want to know price. Bill for two, with all that very fine drink: 100 pounds. A couple of Ventnor parking fines.

Hillside, 151 Mitchell Avenue, Ventnor PO38 1DR

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Cynic
13, May 2014 5:10 pm

Why wait a year to get rid of these slavery form of contracts that do little other that a political ruse to reduce the the number of people (about 1.4 million nationally) being counted as unemployed?

Stewart Blackmore
13, May 2014 5:26 pm

I am delighted that Cllr Pitcher has lifted, word for word, the labour Party policy on zero hours contracts – but it would be more impressive if he gave credit where its due! Ed Miliband said exactly that in a speech when the shadow cabinet met in Scotland last September and reinforced it again on 25th April and yet again this week. If Cllr Pitcher would like… Read more »

Cynic
Reply to  Stewart Blackmore
13, May 2014 5:45 pm

“Last week UKIP leader Nigel Farage told the Express he wanted to “tackle” the practice, saying: “I do not believe in banning zero-hours contracts. But I do believe there is a very strong case for expecting large employers to sign up to a tough code of conduct as to how they are applied.”

So UKIP policy is NOT to ban zero0hour contracts?

retired Hack
13, May 2014 6:24 pm

It may be useful to refer Cllr Pitcher back to the reply the IWC gave OnTheWight on 23/9/13, when they were asked what the Council’s policy was on zero-hours contracts. The answer then was that it “doesn’t employ anyone under zero-hours contracts whereby the employee agrees to be available for work as and when required so that no particular number of hours or times of work are… Read more »

retired Hack
Reply to  retired Hack
13, May 2014 6:37 pm

Furher to the above, employment arrangements of the Cowes Fireworks type were around long before today’s exploitative zero-hours contracts. As an example, Southern Vectis, when it was part of the National Bus Company in the 1970s, took on dozens of summer drivers and conductors and laid them off in September. After that they were invited to go on “availability” for the winter, which meant they could be… Read more »

Geoff Lumley
13, May 2014 8:34 pm

Chutzpah of the highest order. I look forward to next week’s Council debates with even more relish than usual……..

Colin
14, May 2014 8:49 am

Zero hours contracts are fine when used in the correct situation and manner. Unfortunately the less scrupulous employer uses them to their advantage. On the other hand, they then get the duff attitude they deserve from the employee. If there was less unemployment then employers would have to offer proper contracts to get and retain staff. But with the levels of unemployment that exist (that’s the real… Read more »

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