Monday 11 August 2008

Brixham fish in the heart of the Cotswolds - the Inn For All Seasons

We’ve been driving along the A40 between Cheltenham and Oxford for many years. It’s a winding road which can be annoyingly slow if you get behind a lorry, but it does pass through some glorious countryside and past quite a few roadside inns. Some of these are clearly struggling for custom, but this can’t be said of the Inn For All Seasons, just before Burford at Barrington. The car park often seems fullish and there’s a sign outside promising FRESH FISH (in big letters). Is this the secret of their success?

The fish is delivered from Brixham in Devon, and does indeed seem to be fresh. It’s also varied and well-prepared. There’s a cosy bar (for this is very much still a pub where one can drop in for a pint) as well as a restaurant alongside, and the atmosphere is very much English countryside – local farmers alongside Cotswold society and visiting tourists. The menu has a good choice of meat and poultry – but our attention was riveted on the fish specials board in the bar. And what an excellent choice it offers: gilt-fin black bream (with stir-fry of fennel and lime butter sauce), roast loin steak of monkfish (on Paris mushroom with chorizo sauce), or fillet of Bibury trout (and lightly curried brown shrimp butter).

We started off with half a dozen oysters from County Louth, small yet very plump and a great start. Starters of Scallops with bacon and salad and Dart salmon nicoise (a generous piece of salmon atop new potatoes, French beans, anchovies and hard boiled egg – fantastic!) set us up nicely for the main event. I must admit I was hoping to see Dover sole on the menu, but the grilled plaice, large and meaty with butter, parsley and lemon more than made up for it. Jenny had a Thai fish curry with rice, mixed fish in a chunky and very spicy sauce. We were both very well pleased.

The wine list is not long but well-chosen and offers a good range, including a nice house Champagne at £27.50 which proved excellent value. There was no room whatsoever for dessert, but a pot of coffee nicely rounded off our evening. I noticed an excellent selection of rare malt whiskies behind the bar. The Inn For All Seasons is a beacon of great fish in the Cotwold countryside – drop in next time you’re passing, or even better stay for a couple of nights and enjoy the surrounding valleys and walks. More at http://www.innforallseasons.co.uk/.

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