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Tuddenham Mill

May 4, 2012 British

Paul Foster’s Tasting Menu at Tuddenham Mill

Having eaten Paul Foster’s GBM Menu the night before, we moved on to his tasting menu.This is a better reflection of both the ethos of the kitchen, and of their technical skill.  Ingredients can be foraged from the meadows around the mill and the emphasis is very much on local and seasonal produce.  Paul is a very accomplished chef, and here you get a better sense of his vision and his developing style.

Mussel broth, with lemon spots, cucumber, stonecrop, buckthorn, dill and a dash of parsley oil

This is a delightful dish, and begins the evening with the lightest and most delicate of broths, teeming with flavour and scent.  Everything is crisp or succulent, and thought through.  The lemon puree adds acidity, but by being combined with agar allows you to taste it in droplets, rather than overwhelming the dish.   As summer approaches, this is the perfect starter.  [For molecular cooks, the lemon dressing is achieved by combing lemon juice and agar in a water bath at 90ºC for 1 hour – I shall blog it once I’ve tried it this weekend]

Now, Hubby and I were gossiping so much about our racing finds at Newmarket, that I managed to completely miss photographs of two courses.  This is not unusual if I’m enjoying a menu!  One of those dishes is the hake brandade, with a slow cooked hen’s egg, and a scattering of crispy bacon.  The egg of course perfectly cooked at 62ºC, with its unctuous yolk breaking over the salty hake.

Asparagus, chickweed and cobnuts

Here seasonal ingredients are the star, with new season asparagus, asparagus purée, raw asparagus,  chickweed, and grated cob nut. 

The second photograph I missed was an amazing beer dish, with a Adnams beer noisette, a slightly sweet pickled onion, some melt-in-the-mouth oxtail and flaxseed.  I may not have taken a photo, but my note book is full of little stars.

Salt baked lamb rump and shoulder, with yoghurt,
wild garlic, celeriac an celery leaf

The lamb is slow cooked and is succulent and fall-apart tender .  The salt-baked celeriac is echoed in the celery leaf, which provides a brighter note, accompanying the satisfying sourness of the yoghurt, with the metallic tang of the wild garlic.  I’m not terribly keen on lamb, though I will always try it, having once eaten sensational lamb cooked by Albert Roux.  Whilst this didn’t have the finesse of Mon. Roux’s dish, it more than made up for it in flavour.  I am a firm convert again, and think it’s particularly interesting that it’s the “lesser” cuts Paul uses which have really delivered on flavour in several of his dishes.  It’s admirable to see a kitchen steering away from predictable ingredients and combinations.

Egg custard tart, apple, buttermilk, nutmeg

Yes, you probably gather from my photo that I delved straight into the dish before remembering to take a photo – of course it looks prettier than this!  As well as the custard, there were crisp batons of green apple, slices of raw apple flavoured with caramelised toffee apple, and buttermilk.  Very dense, smooth and creamy, with a distinct savoury edge delivered through the saltiness of the custard.  This almost has the savouriness of a cheese course.

Chocolate mousse and soil, sea buckthorn granita, and hazelnut 

This dessert has many elements: there’s chocolate soil (made with cocoa, ground almonds, flour, butter and sugar), a chocolate mousse scatter with cocoa nibs, a sea buckthorn granita, powdered hazelnut scattering (made with hazelnut butter mixed with maltose), and a tiny garnish of yarrow.  Somehow like the best jaffa cake deconstructed – but better.  Where others rely on orange, Paul uses the acidity of the sea buckthorn to contrast to the rich earthiness of the chocolate.  One would imagine the whole dish to be slightly too bitter and tart, but the various nut elements ground the dish.  There’s also the contrast of textures and temperatures at play, all working harmoniously on the plate.

I enjoyed Paul’s Great British Menu, but on the whole I prefer this one – the dishes are more complete, and worked together better to give sense of direction to the meal.  Tuddenham Mill isn’t far from London, has rooms (which deliver room service breakfast!), and staff who are enthusiastic and charming.  I understand it’s also possible to go on a foraging walk around the meadow, which would be fantastic fun.  Add in a trip to Midsummer House and Alimentum, and you have a culinary weekend you’ll be talking about for a very long time.

Tuddenham Mill
High Street
Tuddenham

Suffolk IP28 6SQ

Tuddenham Mill on Urbanspoon

May 2, 2012 British

Paul Foster’s GBM Menu at Tuddenham Mill

By happy coincidence I found myself booked into Tuddenham Mill whilst Paul Foster, the Mill’s Head Chef, appeared on the Great British Menu.  Even better, Paul’s menu was already available to guests, and we were able to try the complete menu before some of the dishes had even aired.

Paul has spent time in some very impressive kitchens before moving to Tuddenham in 2010, and worked at Le Manoir aux Quat’Saison, at the eponymous Sat Bains, and had stages at The French Laundry and L’auberge de lille in Lyon.  Here his style is a combination of local and foraged ingredients, and modern techniques.  Tuddenham Mill itself is perched on a beautiful stretch of water, and has retained many of the traditional elements of the mill, whilst providing a modern dining experience.  On the night we ate this menu Paul wasn’t actually in the kitchen, but he did cook us his tasting menu the following night, which is reviewed here.

Pork neck carpaccio, pork skin scratchings, 
croquette of pig’s head, ribwort plantain purée, and budding chickweed

The pork neck carpaccio is delicious, as are the croquette, full of rich yet almost delicate flavour. By contrast the fine shaving of turnip was over-soused, and overwhelmed the radish, green apple and asparagus, which were raw. I have no problem with raw ingredients, actually I rather like them, but the contrast did mean that there wasn’t as much cohesion to the dish as I might have expected, and distracted us from the pork. The ribwort plantain (which is sautéed with shallots and chicken stock) is lovely, but might have achieved a little more umami intensity.

Ray noodles, with chicken skin, foraged sea vegetables 
including stonecrop and sea aster, pea mousse and lemon gel

Next, by far the dish I was anticipating most – the barely cooked common ray, with chicken skin, foraged sea vegetables, pea mousse and lemon gel.  The ray is brined, and then barely poached in a water bath for 10 minutes at 48ºC.  The threads of flesh are then pulled from the fish like noodles, and plated in a brown butter and soy dressing.  I absolutely love this dish, couldn’t fault it.  The ray is succulent, delicate and delicious.  The foraged elements work perfectly with the dish and are piquant, individual, but not overpowering.  The pea mousse is sweet, but also slightly earthy, and the chicken skin provides the umami element.  I’ve had fish with chicken several times before, but here it’s up to you to combine the chicken in the quantity you want – and this for me makes the difference… It doesn’t overpower the dish, it sits alongside it comfortably.  The lemon purée is mixed with a little agar then piped around the plate – it provides a clean hit of citrus, with a good mouthfeel.  This is one dish I will definitely make at home.

Goosnargh duck breast and hearts, broccoli, 
hazelnuts, and pink fir potatoes with douglas pine
The skin of the duck is blow-torched, before putting it in the water bath for 40 minutes at 60ºC.  The resulting breast is moist and delicious.  The hearts are very tender, and not too gamey, and they’re served with a broccoli purée, and broccoli in a smoked garlic dressing.  The combination of the nuts with the purée is delicious.  The potatoes are vac packed with the douglas fir infused flavouring, and they do take-on the flavour successfully, but I think the dish is just as good without them.  
Whipped sea buckthorn, with Italian meringue, 
puffed rice, damson purée, ground ivy, and ginger syrup
Whipped sea buckthorn, with Italian meringue, puffed rice, and ginger syrup. The sea buckthorn juice is mixed with sugar and agar, then heated, before eggs are beaten into it.  The curd is then set and whipped. The flavour of the buckthorn is delicious – sweet and sour, almost like physalis, but more rounded out.  The blowtorched meringue adds a caramel flavour, and the puffed rice adds further texture.  I enjoyed the flavour of the sea buckthorn – the dish is sweet and sour, silky and crunchy, light but full of ‘mouth feel’.

Overall I thought the least consistent dish in the menu was the starter, but purely because of the interaction of the ingredients.  The standout dish for me is of course the ray – it’s a fantastic technique and brings out the best in the ingredients – I hope it remains on Paul’s tasting menu for some time to come.  The tasting menu is though I think a better reflection of Paul’s skills, and you can read about that here.


Tuddenham Mill
High Street 
Tuddenham 

Suffolk IP28 6SQ


Tuddenham Mill on Urbanspoon

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I’m passionate about food, its provenance and its sustainability. As a technical cook, I like to see what’s happening in the kitchens of Michelin starred restaurants, but you’re just as likely to find me at home making sourdough. You can find some of my recipes in In The Mix 2, an award-winning Thermomix cookbook.

I’m also truly blessed – I can open my fridge at any time and know it’s crammed with all manner of loveliness – but that’s not the case for everyone. There are people all around me in the UK who rely on food banks to feed their kids, and themselves, and every box of cereal or teabag makes a difference. You can donate food to your local food bank, or time, or money, and if you want more information the best starting place is http://www.trusselltrust.org.

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